What Did We Learn From The First Half Of The NFBC Season?
Posted: Wed Jul 12, 2006 4:42 am
I'm sure I'm not alone in wondering what the hell I was thinking about when I made certain selections in my nine different leagues I'm trying to manage now. It's possible that a few of you are scratching your heads over your picks too right now. Honestly, I thought Randy Johnson would bounce back in New York and Ben Sheets would stay healthy in Milwaukee. Really I did!
This is a thread to vent if you'd like, but I also wanted to profile the first half of the NFBC competition. We have 35 leagues in the three cities, not counting the satellite leagues. Here's a quick look at the races in each level of events:
Ultimate Leagues: It's an interesting range with $40,000 on the line in our two Ultimate Draft Leagues and one Ultimate Auction League. Only 2.5 points separate the top two teams in the Ultimate Auction League, while 16.5 points and 8.0 points separate the top teams in the two other leagues. I have a feeling all of these leagues will still go down to the wire.
Auction Leagues: Last year all of these leagues seemed to come down right to the very end as bidding for players has a tendency to level the playing field. This year five of the 10 leagues have the top two teams within four points of each other. The other five leagues have leaders ahead by anywhere from 9.5 points to 13.5 points. Interesting, but there's still a lot of time left.
Main Event Leagues: Of the 22 leagues, four are decided by 0.5 points right now. Four other leagues have the top two teams within five points of each other. Most leagues have at least four teams within 6-8 points of the top spot. Six of the 22 league leaders have double-digit leads, with our overall leader having the largest lead of 22.5 points in Las Vegas League 9.
Not to jinx him, but David DiDonato has had a great first half as our overall leader. He leads LV9 by 22.5 points and he leads the Ultimate Draft League by 16.5 points. Great job David.
On another note, it's tough to repeat in the NFBC as only four owners defended their 2004 league titles in 2005. We'll see if any of those can win three straight titles, but right now it looks tough. Our 2004 and 2005 NFBC champions are also struggling to become the first owners to win two national titles as they are both in the bottom tier of their main event leagues. But there's still plenty of time to turn things around.
Good luck in the second half and we'll see what the dog days of summer have in store for us. If you want to vent about the players who have become dogs for you, feel free to do so here!

This is a thread to vent if you'd like, but I also wanted to profile the first half of the NFBC competition. We have 35 leagues in the three cities, not counting the satellite leagues. Here's a quick look at the races in each level of events:
Ultimate Leagues: It's an interesting range with $40,000 on the line in our two Ultimate Draft Leagues and one Ultimate Auction League. Only 2.5 points separate the top two teams in the Ultimate Auction League, while 16.5 points and 8.0 points separate the top teams in the two other leagues. I have a feeling all of these leagues will still go down to the wire.
Auction Leagues: Last year all of these leagues seemed to come down right to the very end as bidding for players has a tendency to level the playing field. This year five of the 10 leagues have the top two teams within four points of each other. The other five leagues have leaders ahead by anywhere from 9.5 points to 13.5 points. Interesting, but there's still a lot of time left.
Main Event Leagues: Of the 22 leagues, four are decided by 0.5 points right now. Four other leagues have the top two teams within five points of each other. Most leagues have at least four teams within 6-8 points of the top spot. Six of the 22 league leaders have double-digit leads, with our overall leader having the largest lead of 22.5 points in Las Vegas League 9.
Not to jinx him, but David DiDonato has had a great first half as our overall leader. He leads LV9 by 22.5 points and he leads the Ultimate Draft League by 16.5 points. Great job David.
On another note, it's tough to repeat in the NFBC as only four owners defended their 2004 league titles in 2005. We'll see if any of those can win three straight titles, but right now it looks tough. Our 2004 and 2005 NFBC champions are also struggling to become the first owners to win two national titles as they are both in the bottom tier of their main event leagues. But there's still plenty of time to turn things around.
Good luck in the second half and we'll see what the dog days of summer have in store for us. If you want to vent about the players who have become dogs for you, feel free to do so here!
