In the beginning, I thought I could handle it. "Come on,"
I heard, "a little bit can't hurt you." I relented. I
never truly knew just how deep and ugly the monster could be, then
again, one never knows the end at the beginning. As humans, if we
knew the end, we would never do half of the foolish things we do.
In this case I never understood the depths of despair, self-degradation
and total humiliation, which could result from my actions. Had I
an inkling, I would have never descended to the level I did this
fantasy season.
It all began innocently enough with a phone call. Although I
felt I had drafted well, I was full of doubt. More doubt than
the usual "drafters remorse." I compared my draft with
those made on this web site and felt okay, but the doubt still
lingered. I phoned my brother to see what he thought, but he deferred
his opinion to another web site. I thanked him for the information;
little knowing this would be the beginning of the end for this
fantasy season.
I went to the site to study their mock drafts
they raised
doubts I had not considered before. Still full of doubt, yet living
on my past, I received the information, filed it under "later"
and began the season. Immediately my worse fears began to emerge
as truth. Players were not performing as expected, the points
were elusive, it just did not feel right. Although I was third
in my leagues after the first few weeks, I began to feel the constant
gnaw of sheer panic. I again began to search the sites, this time
I went to more than just the normal two or three. I needed answers
so I spent the next few days researching every site I could find.
What I discovered horrified me. Pundits everywhere were questioning
my selections. They advised me to trade, dump, play, bench or
quit. They said I looked terrible
I agreed. After all, they
were experts, I only a mere mortal. By week three I sprang into
action.
After a few days of research on-line and off the tube, I began
a concerted plan to revamp my entire draft through free agency
or trade. Plaxico Burress barely had 150 yards with the future
looking bleak, I dump him opting for the Packers, Terry Glenn.
It seemed logical. Glenn had a fresh start and Donald Driver had
yet to emerge, besides Stewart only has eyes for Hines. With T.J
Duckett warming the bench, I traded him for Lamar Smith who seemed
to have the starting role in Carolina. I rid myself of William
Green in Cleveland, he couldn't even hang onto the ball. There
was no future for these guys this year
everyone said so.
Now I felt comfortable with my line up. I had solid people at
every position with enough specialty players to fill in the gaps
during the off weeks. I usually have a surge of confidence when
I have achieved this level of comfort, but something kept nagging
at me. The question became, "Who do I play against whom?
What are the proper match-ups to maximize my scoring potential?
I had always been decisive, now I waffled at every thought.
Once again I doubted myself and sought the advice of the experts.
By now I was becoming obsessed with victory at all expense, though
now I was losing. I only had one television and computer in my
"War Room," I need more information quicker. Without
telling anyone, I went to the local Radio Shack and purchased
two small black and white AC/DC TV sets. I figured this way I
could minimize five or six web sites while I viewed CBS, ESPN
and Fox before the beginning of each Sunday. At this point I was
still in denial, besides, my wife did not need to know her husband
was becoming hopelessly addicted. I was becoming an infoholic.
I woke up at 5 am on that first Sunday and fired up the CPU, it
purred on all cylinders. Before my better half was even considering
getting out of bed, I had already been on 12 web sites and watched
ESPN, The Weather Channel and Fox Sports for three hours. As I
heard her rising I stashed the TV's and dumped the history from
the computer. I quickly connected with my game sites and tuned
into my usual media bill of fare. By the time she walked in for
her first cup of coffee, I had already made my changes. As far
as she knew, all was normal for the always-stressful Sunday venue.
As pre-game began, I began the day pacing, checking, re-checking,
then contemplating my selections for the weekend. By game time
I was ready. I reveled in the accomplishments of my players; by
the end of the first set of games I was well on my way to a 100-point
day with a possible victory, there things cracked. By the end
of the day I had scored my 100 points, but lost by a mere 74 points.
I was devastated, depressed, disconsolate in desperate search
for answers, there could only be one. I had to dig in to dig up
more information. I did.
I began by reading every update in Sportsline daily. I actually
began to believe things like, "Randy Moss is a must start
he
is due for a break out game." I knew on Wednesdays Hector
the Projector and Victor the Predictor came out with their pearls
of wisdom. I consumed these reports like they were a last meal.
I believed every word they had to say. If Bettis was going to
have a down week, they knew it
I dropped him. If Brian Griese
was going to have a large game, they knew it
he played. With
all of the time they spent gathering their information, I knew
they had to know it all. Still, there was more information to
gather.
I have always been an avid viewer of NFL 2Night on ESPN. The
hosts are ex-players with years of experience in analysis. They
had to know the playing field better than anyone. Besides their
insight was backed with real statistics plus the latest news in
team decisions and injuries. I believed they had to know everything.
While searching the bill of fare for sports on morning, I noticed
the show was replayed at 2 a.m. my time. I began watching the
first program with my trusty note pad, then waking up to catch
the rerun early the next morning. Since I did not want to disturb
the slumber of the family, I began watching it in the War Room.
I figured as long as I was here, I should use the half hour to
begin doing even more research. I searched, downloaded, watched
taking notes in silence with the determination of a bulldog. No
one was going to beat me for the rest of the season; I needed
to win out in all leagues to make the play-offs. I had one single
purpose in life
win at all cost. This too was for naught.
My early morning research was short lived. After a week of sleepless
nights on my part, my wife discovered what I was doing on the
computer in the room. When I was finally busted I had been reading
Melissa Stark's articles. I should have known I was sick when
I began to find them insightful, but no. After my spouse pointed
it out to me, in no uncertain terms, I realized I had bottomed
out. I had reached the dregs of fantasy football. I had placed
winning above everything with research as the cornerstone of the
gambit. I was hopelessly addicted, cornered, there was no way
out. I had to face reality
I was hooked.
When I arrived home that day my wife was waiting for me, so
was a counselor and a few close friends. It was a fantasy infoholic
intervention. They sat me down and told me how much they cared.
They showed how concerned they were for my well-being. They pointed
out my addictive behavior was ruining my life, my marriage in
addition to my health mentally and physically. Although I chafed
at their comments, deep down inside I knew they were right. I
had to go "cold turkey" giving up my obsession to win.
I had to face I was lost, so was my season. It was enough. I mailed
in my line up for the rest of the season, then entered a 12-step
program.
I am working hard at coming to grips with my addiction. I no
longer have access to the World Wide Web. I am not permitted to
view NFL games, not even the Raiders. I can no longer tune in
on the latest happenings in the NFL from Mort, but I have had
time to reflect. I have realized all of the experts are not really
experts. In fact, many of them have never played the game. I also
realized what I had lost.
From time to time I have people write me seeking my advice about
their fantasy teams. I try to write them as quickly as possible
with my best choices given their situation. For the most part
I am pretty close to being right. (Frank, I am sorry for advising
you to start Curtis Martin against the Raiders.) What I have found
is the reason I am fairly close to right, if not almost genius,
is because I shoot from the hip with little consultation with
any experts. I used my gut feelings. I had lost this confidence
with myself.
It is going to be a long off season staying away from the NFL
draft, free agent deals and the NFL rumor mill (I understand Dallas
has a new coach), but I will be back next year stronger than ever.
Next season I will have no doubts about performance in the NFL,
no one really knows anything because the variables are too great
for any mind to get around. Realizing this, I will draft with
abandoned, trade with no trepidation, acquire without fear. Next
year I will be a fantasy giant, on top of the world stressed to
the max. Next season will be the first season for the rest of
my life, I will embrace it with no fear. Addiction can be beat,
but not my fantasy team. Fearing to lose is what drove me over
the edge, the fear is now gone. Now if I can just stay up on all
of the information to insure success, I know I will be okay.
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