NFL Mascot Bracket: Round 1

The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done: and there is no new thing under the sun.”

-Ecclesiastes

Or as General Disarray once put it, “Simpsons did it!”

Just because something has been done before doesn’t mean it’s not worth doing again. When I saw this tweet from Ian Hartitz the procrastination portion of my brain was activated and I knew I wouldn’t be getting anything remotely productive done this morning.

A serial procrastinator can’t unsee this. Or ignore it. And does the world really need another article telling them that Mac Jones is a better QB than Cam Newton when it’s already painfully obvious? Maybe. But it needs round one of the NFL All Mascot Challenge more.

The Bracket

Seeding

I basically followed the compass clockwise starting with the North divisions on each side.

The Rules

Originally I thought that the human characters shouldn’t have weapons, but quickly realized that would result in all human mascots getting toasted. So I am allowing weapons appropriate to the historical period of the mascot, but animals vs armed humans get at least a 2-1 advantage to balance this out.

Animals vs animals and humans vs humans will fight in single combat. There is only one aquatic animal, the Dolphin, but in order to get to a fair fight, I am allowing each animal to fight the other in its own natural turf.

Round 1: FIGHT!

The NFC

Bears were destined to win round 1 against the Packers, as a Bear would basically eat the “cheese packer” and then eat whatever cheese he was packing for dessert.

Vikings vs Lions was a little tougher, as Vikings were some tough mofos what with all the raping and pillaging and axe throwing. But with a 2-1 advantage, I’m banking on the Lions chomping some serious Viking ass as they try to wrench their axes free of some Lion kills. Plus after seeing fellow pillager after fellow pillager get chomped, fear would set in, even for a hardy crew of Vikings.

Cowboys vs Eagles would have been tougher if there had been no guns allowed, but Cowboys were generally good with a shot, and even outnumbered two to one, could pluck multiple eagles out of the air without reloading. Not a rout, but Cowboys take it.

Sorry George

Since the WFT has neglected to choose a mascot for two years in a row, their mascot is George Washington by default, vs a Giant. Since I am not allowing for out of period weapons, Washington without an army and equipped only with a musket fires a single shot at the Giant, and is quickly clubbed to death and eaten whilst reloading. WFT, just pick one already, it’s going on year two. Be the Rhinos for fucks sake. Anything is better than nothing.

Panthers vs Falcons was a tough one. After all, both are apex predators in their respective realms. A Falcon can attack from above with blinding speed, and could do some serious damage to the panther, but I think the panther could use terrain to its advantage, and eventually strike. The Falcon would have to basically peck the panther to death, whereas the panther only needs a single strike to win. Plus, after reviewing multiple cat vs bird videos on youtube, I’m liking claws vs beaks. Check out this Lynx:

Buccaneers vs Saints was tough. As someone already pointed out, Saints are already dead, so how do you kill that which is already dead?

But how did these people become Saints in the first place? Let’s just examine two at random, St. Valentine and St. Peter. St. Peter was crucified UPSIDE DOWN by Nero, the biggest and craziest bastard of all the Roman Emperors, so you know he got it bad. Valentine, under “Claudius the Cruel” (who sounds like a WWE character), was beaten to death AND beheaded. Point being, I don’t think having “God on their side” is going to help much in death because it certainly didn’t in life.

If we’ve learned anything from Pirates of the Caribbean—the most trustworthy source of historical information about Buccaneersthey are into some seriously voodoo shit. I wouldn’t put it past them to figure out how to cast Saints into hell, and given what we know about God, he’d probably just let it happen as some kind of sick lesson.

Edge, Buccaneers.

Cardinals vs Rams is counter-intuitive but an easy call. A ram basically has one method of attack, banging its head into stuff. What is that going to do to a cardinal? Nothing, and making contact would be damn near impossible. I mean just look at these assholes, they’re the obvious meatheads of the animal kingdom.

Meanwhile the cardinal would just fly around pecking the ram until it collapsed exhausted and then calmly pluck its eyes out. Brutal, but efficient.

49ers vs Seahawks was easy because as I learned from the Audubon society, Seahawks don’t actually exist. But given that we are dealing with multiple mythical creatures, I’ll allow it and sub in an Osprey. I believe a wily old prospector, armed with only his wits and his gold pan, could dispatch an Osprey pretty quick with a well-timed wack or maybe just a nice exhalation of breath that has never known a toothbrush.

The AFC

A Bengal tiger would kill the shit out of a raven, see above. Bengals beat Ravens easily; quoth the Bengal, “Nevermore.”

Steelers vs Browns is our first matchup of human v human. The Browns are named after their original owner Paul Brown, which, I mean, Jesus WFT you can’t do worse than that. Steelers were named after the burly-ass steel workers who pour molten hot steel all day, get all sweaty, and as we learned from the Simpsons know how to party. Edge Steelers.

Dolphins vs Bills is another tough matchup as we have our first matchup with an aquatic animal (dolphin) vs a land animal (bison). The field would basically be a stadium with a pool at one end and astro turf at the other. Neither animal would be afforded food.

The Bison eats about 25 pounds of food per day. Similarly a full grown dolphin eats about 23 pounds of fish per day. So basically both animals would avoid the other’s turf as much as possible as both would have a distinct disadvantage there.

However, as both animals begin to starve to death, the dolphin would have one distinct advantage: water. Both animals need it to live, but only one lives in it. As the bison, deranged from lack of nutrients, gingerly approaches the edges to sip water to stave off death, the dolphin could mount quick nose jabs as he attempts to drink, preventing him from getting water and forcing the bison to expend energy on evasive maneuvers.

Eventually the bison would die from dehydration, and the emaciated dolphin would outlast him in one of the most brutal matchups of the first round.

No matchup in the first round illustrates America’s love of an overpowered military overdog like Jets vs Patriots. I’ve seen countless posts touting the superiority of laser-targeted smart missiles, the brutal efficiency of napalm-dumps, and the sheer speed a Jet could muster. But we should know a few things about Jets by now: they are expensive, have to be housed in massive hangars, and their precision is overrated.

What do we know about Patriots, the founders of our country? Masters at subversive, guerilla warfare. Able to take advantage of terrain to surprise their enemy. And successfully took over the airports of the massive British Army.

Given the fact that they had the wherewithal to not only assess but take over the airports of the British army despite planes not being invented for another 130 years, I have no doubt our wiley forefathers would be able to hide from the missiles and the strafes, avoid the napalm, and sabotage the Jets as they returned to their hangars to refuel.

Believe in the underdogs folks. Patriots over Jets.

Texans vs Colts is just cruel. These are baby horses, and we’re not dealing some idolized figure of a Texan. We’re dealing with your average Miller-Lite-swilling tank-wearing meth-snorting trailer park texan out of some shit hole like El Paso or Waco (don’t worry I can say this I’m from Alabama). He’d just run over the Colt with his 2005 Camaro and be done with it.

Another fallacy I’ve run into on twitter is that the Titans are a sure bet for the final four because they’re gods, and you can’t beat a god right? They’re immortal, all-powerful, right?

Really? Seen anyone making sacrifices to Hera lately? What about Zeus? When the leaves turn do we assume that Hades has taken Persephone again? Gods only exist because of our belief in them. Without belief, they are not only powerless, they cease to be.

Titans vs Jaguars would be decided by the Jaguar simply licking its paws and ignoring them. Hell it could be an army, they would simply disintegrate as they withered under the blasé gaze of the jungle cat, and no animal can do IDGAF like a cat.

Broncos vs Chiefs has already been decided in real life. Chiefs win as they use their bows, ropes, and general horsemanship to break the broncos and make them their bitches.

What exactly are the Chargers? Are they lightning bolts, as the nickname Bolts would suggest? If so this whole thing is over as energy can not be destroyed. Are they Superchargers, as their disco theme song would suggest, which means they are an inanimate car part, which could be soundly defeated by a socket wrench? Or are they a bunch of people “charging down the field,” as the original owner’s own words for naming the team would suggest?

Given that there is no team named “The Tesla Coils” (Washington? Anything?) I’m going to go with the above rather than the Bolts (not the official name or Mascot) nor their on-field Mascot (which would have turned this whole thing into a pillow fight). So they’re a bunch of people wearing sporty 60’s garb charging down the field.

Who get absolutely decimated and mauled as they get hacked and chopped to bits by the Raiders.

Disagree with my choices? Let’s get into a pointless fight on twitter, because that’s what it’s there for.

Preseason August 14 and 15 Observations

The big takeaway for the Bears is that Fields looked absolutely as advertised, even if it did take him most of the second quarter to get going.

There were a ton of games Saturday and Sunday so I won’t cover all of them but I’ll cover all of the rookie QBs and anything else that stood out.

Bears vs Dolphins: Preseason Week 1

The big takeaway for the Bears is that Fields looked absolutely as advertised, even if it did take him most of the second quarter to get going. He created space with his legs, threw accurate passes from both inside and outside the pocket, and showed the potential that the Bears offense could have with him under center.

Damien Williams entered the game early after David Montgomery left immediately after his first carry with a noticeable limp. Williams looked much like he did the last time we saw him with KC, showing good burst and catching passes out of the backfield.

Tua Tagovailoa actually looked pretty good prior to a really bad decision to throw into tight coverage in the end zone, resulting in a drive killing interception. Malcolm Brown actually started in front of Myles Gaskin but did little with his carries. Jaylen Waddle had a good return and flashed his speed but did little in the passing game.

Jacoby Brissett looked more than capable as a backup and could be a good fill-in QB if Tua goes down.

Broncos vs Vikings: Preseason Week 1

Credit: NFL.com

Drew Lock looked surprisingly sharp in this game, connecting with KJ Hamler for a beautiful 80-yard touchdown, and Trinity Benson on a short TD for 4 yards later in the first quarter. Lock also connected with Jerry Jeudy on a 33-yard catch and run, giving hope to Jeudy owners if Lock gets the starting nod which looks likely at this point.

Bridgewater should have had a rushing score in addition to his passing score to Benson in the third quarter, but simply did not look as explosive as Lock.

Javonte Williams looked powerful and decisive as a runner, and had a nice TD along the left edge called back on holding. Definitely a value in later rounds.

Minnesota struggled to get anything going under Browning, and Kellen Mond did not look ready for primetime, even against the 2s and 3s.

Saints vs Ravens: Preseason Week 1

Credit: NFL.com

Taysom started and was looking good at first. The first interception was not his fault as his receiver quit on a drag route, causing the timing throw to fall into a defenders waiting arms. However he should have been picked off on a subsequent drive, showing his accuracy still remains a work in progress.

Jameis looked hesitant in his decision making when he went in, sharpened up later but also had a pick and didn’t really establish himself even against the 2’s. Neither QB staked their claim to the starting job.

The Ravens offense did not look good, and Dobbins struggled to make anything of the few carries he got. McSorley looked decent, and Devin Duvernay actually had a decent game. With Batemon likely starting on IR, he could provide some value in very deep leagues.

The surprise of the night was a dominant rushing performance for Tony Jones Jr., rushing for 82 yards and a touchdown on just 7 carries, and catching 5 balls for 38 yards. Dynasty leagues should take notice.

Jaguars vs Browns: Preseason Week 1

Credit: NFL.com

After a quick fumble and recovery on his first snap in the NFL, Lawrence recovered his composure and unleashed a few zip passes that proved his worth as the first overall pick. The stat line is less impressive than his throws.

Chiefs vs 49ers: Preseason Week 1

Credit: Sports Illustrated

Lance was the other big news of the day, showcasing a really powerful arm on an 80-yard touchdown to Trent Sherfield. He also looked ready for the big stage, though he did take a couple of sacks where he waited too long in the pocket and should have thrown the ball away. His receivers didn’t do his stat line any favors with multiple drops.

Trey Sermon looked good…like really good. Nothing too spectacular, just decisive, quick, and powerful. He could easily take over this backfield if Mostert stumbles out of the gate.

Clyde Edwards Helaire looked good for the chiefs, as did Byron Pringle, who caught a 10-yard touchdown early in the game, while Mecole Hardman had 1 target and no catches.

It will be really hard for Shanahan to keep Lance hidden away on the bench for long, and he has to be rethinking his stance after Saturday’s display.

Jets vs Giants: Preseason Week 1

Credit: NFL.com

Of the rookie QBs, Wilson was probably the least impressive. He did have nice zip on his completions along with a couple really bad interceptions. He didn’t do anything wrong or disconcerting to Jets fans, just didn’t shine as bright as the other four. He finished 6 of 9 for 63 yards, no TDs, no picks.

Preseason Game Observations August 13

Cardinals vs Cowboys Preseason Week 1

The best entertainment of night 2 of the preseason was not on the field.

It was in the Cardinals play-by-play booth in the form of what appeared to be the literal manifestation of Pepper Brooks from Dodgeball.

“Have you ever heard of ‘this, that, and the other’?” Play by play announcer Dave Pasch seemed stunned into silence, so “analyst” Ron Wolfey asked again. “Have you?”

Stammers, followed by stunned silence. Wolfey at one point during the broadcast openly wished to have his nose broken to “get the blood flowing up here” and at another point asked Pasch if he liked Chinese food for no apparent reason in describing a QB run.

It was fucking hilarious. We have a new national treasure.

In terms of the game, Rondale Moore looked good, ran some end arounds and caught 4 passes in quick succession. Got open underneath and could be a weapon in the slot. Kirk caught a long ball but did so only after a blatant push off that should have been called for offensive pass interference.

Edmonds looked spry catching the ball, and Eno Benjamin shined most running against the second and third team of Dallas’s already second rate unit.

For Dallas, Gallup had a nice grab on a screen pass and used his legs to get to the first down. Gilbert looked more comfortable than he did in the HOF game and had some nice throws, so maybe don’t sell all Dallas assets on the cheap if Dak goes down.

Falcons vs Titans Preseason Week 1

Credit: Yahoo Sports

No Pitts, no Julio, no Henry, nobody and nothing of interest really. I tried watching this game but continually felt my eyes glazing over. The only takeaway is that A.J. McCarron is really, really, really bad.

Darrynton Evans was having a nice game until going down with a knee injury clouding Henry’s backup picture. Could be Brian Hill.

None of the Falcons backup running backs did much, leaving that situation unsetlled and my Javien Hawkins dynasty pick looking like a waste. It felt like it at the time.

Bills vs Lions Preseason Week 1

I looked up Jared Goff on google and this was the best image I got

Goff struggled early and finished ok, 7/9 for 56 yards. Boring stuff.

Swift didn’t play and Jamal Williams looked like absolute dog shit. But it’s preseason and you can tell no one really gives a crap.

Singletary actually looked really good running the ball for the Bills, showing decisive burst through the line and getting chunk gains. With Moss out and an ADP in the 10th round, he could be a valuable bench stash/flex play if Moss misses significant time.

Preseason Game Observations: August 12

Thursday’s preseason games had some interesting implications for 2QB dynasty and redraft leagues. I’ll be focusing on those as well as a few observations on running backs and wide receivers.

Eagles vs Steelers

Credit: USA Today

Hurts performed better than his stat line and did a few things that showed his stage in the maturation process. For one, he was plugging along nicely on his first drive until Zach Ertz let a perfectly thrown ball bounce off his hands on third down, killing his first drive.

On the next drive Hurts chose to dive, narrowly missing a first down instead of trucking the defender, which ended the drive as well. Had this been a regular season game he likely would have made the extra effort and gotten the first with his legs, but giving up on the play in preseason shows he is thinking the right way to stay under center for the Eagles.

Also, on a play where he was scrambling to his right to extend the play, he threw the ball out of bounds instead of trying to make something happen.

On the other side, Najee Harris looked much better than he did at the HOF game, showing impressive burst and the ability to quickly get to the second level of the defense through trash at the line. He had two runs called back with holding, and on both he gained about 9-10 yards. Neither of the holds freed him and one should not have been called.

JuJu Smith Schuster caught a lot of short passes out of the slot and hauled in all of his targets. While his yards per reception is going to go down, his receptions should go up. Dionte Johnson had a nice game as well.

Patriots vs WFT

Credit: The Sports Rush

This was the truly interesting game. Cam looked a lot like what we saw last year. He did not have a pass deep, and I think never threw further than 10 yards beyond the line. Almost all of yardage came from short passes that Jonnu Smith and James White took long, making their catches at or around the line of scrimmage. Newton narrowly avoided a fumble, and the offense simply was not clicking with him on the field.

Then Mac Jones came on the field.

Jones immediately showed what the Patriots have been seeing in recent practices: accurate throws, quick decisions, excellent pocket presence and footwork. While he was confined mostly to checkdowns, he was making excellent anticipation throws on time, in traffic, and on target. His first drive should have ended with a long touchdown along the left sideline but Kristian Wilkerson let the pass bounce off his hands.

Jones did miss Gunner Olsweski on a deep route later in the game and was obviously upset with himself, but had that been Nelson Agolhor or Kendrick Bourne, both absent, maybe that’s a completion.

Essentially, with Cam under center the offense looked stagnant. It didn’t click. With Mac under center it clicks, and it was obvious to anyone watching the game.

Another Pats camp storyline did not pan out, and that was the ascendence of N’Keal Harry. Whatever he has been showing in practice did not show up on the field, as N’Keal was overshadowed by Kristian Wilkerson. He just wasn’t getting open.

Antonio Gibson got a few carries and three receptions for WFT, but the rest of the offense was pretty boring to watch as the starters only saw a few series. Terry was Terry and Fitz looked sharp. The defense was the star of the show as one would expect.

Top QB2 Draft Targets for 2QB and Superflex Leagues

2QB Leagues are rarely won on the strength of the QB1. Most competitive teams will field an especially strong QB since few teams are waiting to draft their first QB.

Having a strong QB2 is essential, and knowing where the value exists at that position is key. Teams that opt for safety at this position usually sacrifice valuable players at important skill positions like WR2 and WR3 and RB3 when they grab “safe” QB2s in the mid-rounds.

For the purposes of this article I am using 2QB ADP rankings from fantasyfootballcalculator.com and we are only looking at QB13 and above (assuming a 12-team league). If for some reason someone like Brady, Hurts, or Tannehill falls into your hands in later rounds, jump on that opportunity as long as you’ve secured both starting RBs and at least two starting WRs.

This article will assume your draftmates know what they are doing, and as always we will embrace upside and risk over security.

QB2 Target #1: Jameis Winston

As I mentioned in my perfect draft article, I think Winston is a potential league winner in 2QB leagues this year:

What if I told you the league-leader in passing yards just two years ago would be available in the 10th round in a 2QB league? What if I told you that quarterback played with poor vision and had corrective surgery AFTER this season? And what if I told you this same QB got to sit and learn behind one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time, and gets to play for one of the top offensive minds in the NFL, and is about to be handed the keys to one of the better offensive systems of the past decade?

-Yours truly

Winston is safely available in the 10th round, and even better, if you are looking for insurance against a total implosion, you can get Taysom Hill one round later. Realistically though, I don’t think Payton would start him if he didn’t think he had exorcized Winston’s turnover demons.

Winston doesn’t have to totally cure his decision-making woes to perform like a top-8 QB this year. He just has to curb them enough to not put the Saints in a position to lose winnable games, which will result in him getting yanked for Hill quick.

Given his upside (at least 4700 passing yards and 30+ TDs) there is no other QB available this late who can deliver those kind of stats. He’s worth the risk.

QB2 Target #2: Joe Burrow

Credit: WAFB

Burrow is barely a QB2 at his fourth round ADP and QB13. But after he caught his stride as a rookie, before his knee injury, Burrow was performing like a top-five QB as a rookie with one of the worst offensive lines in the NFL.

Much has been made of one beat writer report during camp that claimed Burrow was looking scared in the pocket and missing throws that seemed like “layups” last season.

Since that reports, beat writers are reporting steady progression.

I think Burrow may have another shaky week before he hits full stride, but also think there are few QBs available after the first 12 with his combo of talent, volume, and skill players around him. Cincinnati has one of the most talented WR trios in the NFL along with Dallas and Tampa, and despite lingering concerns about the offensive line, I think Burrow is poised for a potential top-10 finish, especially in leagues that offer yardage bonuses.

QB2 Target #3: Ryan Fitzpatrick

Credit: Business Insider

If there is a better guy to root for in the NFL, I don’t know who it is. But at a 6th-round ADP, we need more than a good story to settle on for Fitzmagic as a QB2.

Was he that good with Miami last year? Yes and no (literally). His splits are downright schizo. In the first 6 games, he had three games where he threw for under 200 yards, and three games where he threw for over 300. He had a QB rating as high as 154.5 and as low as 44.6. In two games he had a total of five picks and zero TDs. In another three he had seven scores and no picks.

So is there really reason to believe that Fitz will even out in his 16th year in the league? Basically no. He will have better weapons this year, and for the first time in a while no one knocking on the door, but if you draft Fitz as your QB2 be ready for a roller coaster.

QB2 Target #4: Matt Ryan

Credit: Blogging Dirty

Matt Ryan is the anti-Fitz: a picture of consistency, and for some reason a guy I absolutely can not stand. Maybe it’s his goofy-ass face.

But the guy is practically a lock for 4500+ yards and 25+ TDs every year, and even at his 5th-round ADP, he should probably be above Fitz. We know he will give owners at least 3, maybe 5 weeks where he finishes top-five, and with Pitts replacing Julio, one could argue his team actually upgraded his pass catchers.

It’s just that his upside is so limited, and his outcome so predictable. I’d rather roll the dice with Fitz and take a WR or RB in round five before they dry up.

QB2 Targets #5/6: Justin Fields and Trey Lance

Credit: NBC Sports

These guys are basically identical in skill sets, situations, coaches being dumbasses and trying to ignore reality, and season outlook. Both Shanahan and Nagy are desperately trying to avoid the glaringly obvious: these guys are ready to start week 1, and they are not going to do their teams (or their careers) any favors by starting the veterans.

Dalton, while serviceable, is long past his prime, and Jimmy G just never really became that good. The coachspeak is still going strong, and unfortunately I think both of these guys will miss the first few games of the season in the name of pure obstinance. But both are available in round 8, and once they hit the field, I like both better as weekly plays than Lawrence.

If you can tolerate a less-than ideal QB2 the first few weeks (like Goff, available in round 12-13), then targeting one of these guys in the 8th isn’t a bad strategy.

QB2 Target #7: Trevor Lawrence

Credit: ESPN

Speaking of guys you don’t want to root for, there’s Trevor staring at you in round 5. Personally I won’t be drafting him because if I’m going to pay that price, I’d rather just take someone boring and predictable like Ryan than risk going through the inevitable rookie jitters the first few weeks.

But since he is always compared to Andrew Luck, let’s just assume he does something akin to Luck’s rookie year: about 4300 yards, around 23 TDs, and 18 INTs. Good, but not great QB2 numbers.

The Rest

Tua is not a terrible pick in round 6, but I want more than just a shot at mediocrity for that level of investment. Derek Carr and Sam Darnold in the ninth are decent warm bodies to fill the slot, but brutally uninspiring. After that, the only ones worth consideration are pairing Cam with Mac Jones, but only if you have bench spots to burn. If not it’s a good situation to avoid as neither one will perform great when they do start. Probably the best of the rest is Roethlisberger in round 7, but as previously stated I think I would rather roll with Fields or Lance and take my early-season lumps.

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