Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Fantasy Football industry expected to lose over 60% of their revenue

LAS VEGAS -- The NFL lockout has led Bruce Taylor to take some painful steps: He scrapped publication of a fantasy football magazine that sold 161,000 copies last year, laid off an employee and took out a home equity loan.
Although NFL players and owners are still trying to figure out how to divide $9.3 billion in revenue and save the regular season, it's already too late for some people who make their living from the widely popular fantasy football industry.
Usually by now, thousands of the estimated 24 million people who play fantasy football each year already have begun preparing for their leagues of made-up teams, with fortunes resting on real-life individual performances of their favorite NFL stars.
But as NFL franchises and players skip offseason workouts and free agents go unsigned amid the labor unrest, companies that depend on fans poring over statistics and incremental personnel moves to form their fantasy teams have coped with the reality of lost revenue.
The fantasy football industry brings in about $800 million per year. While everyone involved hopes that most of that money still will be there if the NFL resolves its labor dispute, some -- including magazines that help fantasy players select their teams -- already are declaring 2011 a lost year.
"We'll be lucky if we make one-third of what we make in a normal year," said Taylor, the 46-year-old co-owner of Seattle-based Fantasy Index Magazine, Inc., which isn't publishing its Fantasy Football Index magazine for the first time in 25 years.
"It's tough because we've had to lay somebody off -- I've got another employee that I should lay off, but I don't have the heart. We're a small company," Taylor said. "I try and be philosophical about it because when you hitch your wagon to somebody else's horse, you're going to take your lumps."
"It's a lot of money -- they should fight over it -- but I wish they'd fight over it faster," he said.
About 32 million people in the United States and Canada play fantasy sports each year, a number that has grown 60 percent in the last four years, according to an Ipsos Public Affairs poll commissioned by the Fantasy Sports Trade Association, the industry's largest trade group.
In fantasy sports, participants assemble teams made up of real players and gauge success on how well those players perform in actual games, sometimes putting money on the line against their opponents. Football is by far the most popular fantasy sport, though players participate in leagues year-round for many sports.
The pastime's popularity has become far more visible recently, with high profile players such as Jacksonville Jaguarsrunning back Maurice Jones-Drew bragging about drafting themselves, a cable sitcom called "The League" that follows friends playing together and an entire NFL.com pregame show dedicated to fantasy roster decisions.
Paul Charchian, the trade group's president, said companies aren't as jittery now as they will be in August without a resolution (although the NFL and its players are working this week to come to an agreement). Even now, Charchian says, they're already starting to see lost business.
"It's still June, but normally right now, revenue is already starting for the football season," he said. "Once hockey and basketball end, a lot of people start turning their attention to football."
Charchian said his company, LeagueSafe, which lets fantasy owners pay league fees online, has seen less than half the revenue so far this year than it had collected at the same point last year.
Taylor said his company is down to the equivalent of four full-time employees from six last year, with one layoff and another unfilled vacancy.
To keep Fantasy Index operating, Taylor and his business partner took out home equity loans a few weeks ago, he said.
"If we crash the ship into the rocks, we can at least have lines of credit to get it afloat again," Taylor said.
Charchian said the industry has about 150 companies, including 15 publishers printing 25 magazines. Most aren't printing this year, including those run by larger companies, he said.
One possible result of the lockout is that the NFL could play a shortened season. That would throw off fantasy leagues, which usually schedule playoffs that coincide with the final games of the NFL's regular season.
Chris Fargis, a 31-year-old options trader from New York who plays in about four fantasy leagues each year, said he's not worried about the NFL lockout in terms of picking up fantasy winnings, but he'd hate to miss out on the games that bring him together with friends.
"Football season, and a big part of that being fantasy football, is a really fun thing that we all enjoy," Fargis said. "The social element of it is so big for me."
Taylor said Fantasy Index plans to release versions of its information through the company's website, and he believes most armchair players will come back to the magazine next year.
"I don't care who wins or who loses (the lockout)," he said. "As long as they get it resolved by next year -- and hopefully by this year. Everybody wants football."
Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press 

Vikings new stadium deal possibly as soon as Wednesday

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At a time when it has seemed that the powers-that-be in Minnesota would fail to work out a deal for a new Vikings stadium and then risk losing the team to Los Angeles, indications have emerged that a deal could be close.
Mike Kaszuba of the Minneapolis Star Tribunereports that an announcement on a deal for the stadium could come as soon as Wednesday.
Of course, a deal was announced — to much fanfare — last month between the Vikings and Ramsey County, where a stadium would be built in Arden Hills.  But the state of Minnesota remains a key player in the governmental equivalent to the ill-fated Triangle of Authority, and without the approval of the Legislature, nothing will happen.
Per the report, the proposed cost of the $1 billion proposed project has been reduced by nearly $200 million, the Vikings have increased their share above $407 million, and the three parties have resolved who would own and operate the new stadium.
We’re not sure how $200 million has been carved out of the project.  And we doubt that there are firm guarantees that the $200 million won’t somehow slide back in once it’s too late to put the toothpaste back in the tube.
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No mas  Los Angelos?!

Is T.O. no mo'? Not so.

Terrell Owens | Wide Receiver

Team: Cincinnati Bengals
Ht / Wt:  6'3' / 224
Age / DOB:  (37) / 12/7/1973
College: Chattanooga
Contract: view contract details
Share: Share



Recent News - RotoWorld

Agent Drew Rosenhaus told ESPN'sSportsCenter Tuesday that free agent Terrell Owens (ACL surgery) will not retire, despite one report claiming T.O. had considered hanging 'em up.
Rosenhaus also made two revelations: 1) Owens tore the ACL in early April, and he's had "many, many weeks" to recover. 2) The torn ACL is to Owens' left knee -- the same joint in which he tore his meniscus late last year. "Terrell Owens will be ready and playing at the start of the season," said Rosenhaus. "All this retirement talk is nonsense. There's no discussion of that." Jun 28, 11:49 AM

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Get yer popcorn ready!  So T.O. is NOT retiring, and we can expect him to be playing this fall afterall.  

My only question is who wants him?  

Warren Sapp warns teams about free-agent safety Michael Huff

Michael Huff will become an unrestricted free agent once the NFL lockout is lifted, but former Oakland Raiders teammate Warren Sapp believes interested teams should think long and hard before signing the safety.
Sapp, now an NFL Network analyst, didn't hold back Tuesday when asked on a Dallas radio show if the Cowboys should court Huff, who played high school football in the area and at the University of Texas.
"Michael Huff leaves something to be desired," Sapp said on KESN-FM's "Ben and Skin Show," via The Dallas Morning News. "I watched Huff for two years not pick a pass off in practice. I seen him make a couple plays lately. I'd really be interested to see his tape and watch his last couple of years because his first two make you want to throw up watching him practice.”
Huff was the seventh overall pick in the 2006 NFL Draft, but Sapp painted the picture of an entitled young player who didn't exert the proper effort to reach his full potential.
"I went so far with Michael Huff, and you can ask him this, that my last day in Oakland, I waited in the parking lot for Michael Huff," said Sapp, who played for the Raiders from 2004 to 2007. "I waited in the parking lot because I wanted to talk to the young man because he made me want to throw up watching him practice. I mean, the scout team would complete ball, after ball, after ball. I'm like, 'You're not going to make one play? I mean, you're not even going to put your hand on it and knock it down?' "
Despite his perceived shortcomings, Huff was named to The Associated Press' All-Pro second team last season. He finished with a career-high 94 tackles, two forced fumbles, seven passes defensed and three interceptions. The 28-year-old has never missed a game in his NFL career.
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Pretty strong words from Sapp, and I always respect the QB Killa's opinion, but 2007 was a long time ago.  Maybe his play last year is an indication that he learned that in this league the hard work is necessary to be a good player.  Then again, maybe he was just hustling for pay day in a contract year.

PFT: Current talks look like a final push to complete the deal

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Now that I’ve had a chance to get the rest of the IV sedative out of my system and otherwise recover fromTuesday’s necessary evil (which wasn’t nearly as evil as I thought it would be), I’m ready to articulate my interpretation of the latest round of labor talks.
For starters, four days of negotiations are twice as good as two, and the willingness to double down indicates the kind of commitment needed to get a deal done.
The fact that the owners and players aren’t present strongly suggests that the process has moved from concepts to concrete, with the lawyers taking all the things on which the parties agree and creating the guts of a new Collective Bargaining Agreement.  At one point in the past few weeks, there was a report that the process was 80-to-85 percent complete.  The reality is that 85 percent or more of the expired CBA wasn’t in dispute in the first place.  The parties were focused on several big issues and a group of secondary matters, with much of the arrangement between them not in question.
Streamlining the process of documenting the matters on which they agree and ironing out the remaining areas of disagreement gives the parties a chance to present to the federal court in Minnesota the paperwork necessary to launch in earnest the process for approving the settlement of the Tom Brady class action as of Tuesday, July 5, the first business day after the Fourth of July weekend.  The fact that the talks are being held in Minnesota could be, in this regard, much more than coincidental or symbolic.  If they get the paperwork completed, they’ll be in position to file it quickly.  If they have questions about the format of the filings necessary to get things moving quickly for court approval, they can communicate directly with Judge Susan Nelson and/or her staff.
The decision of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and NFLPA* executive director DeMaurice Smith to fly to Florida on Tuesday and return on Wednesday so that Goodell can speak at — and thus fully legitimize — the NFLPA* rookie symposium has much more meaning than we (I) first thought.  If this thing wasn’t close to being done, there’s no way this happens.  And if there was any reason to think a roadblock to resolution could happen, at a minimum the two men would have traveled separately.
I’m not just saying all of this because it meshes, sort of, with my prediction of an agreement in principle by Thursday, June 30.  Albert Breer of NFL Network says that “[t]he parties’ legal teams are expected to trade proposals on the framework of a settlement, in an effort to move the process toward conclusion, and they will intensify their focus on the key issues, most notably the revenue split.”  Also, deeply buried in Jason Cole’s report on the Carl Eller class action was this potential treasure trove:  “A source very familiar with the circumstances indicated that thelawyers were working on paperwork toward a possible settlement.”
We’ve suspected for two weeks that the process is much closer to completion than the parties are letting on, but that both sides wanted to avoid creating a sense that an agreement was inevitable, in order to allow the issues to be resolved without the weight of media and fan expectations — and without one side feeling compelled to give in if the other side decided to take a hard line as to any lingering issues.
As we’ve said before, it would be brilliant for the parties to announce that the situation has been resolved before the upcoming three-day weekend.  Though that may not mean the announcement of a handshake deal on Thursday, it could mean the announcement of a dotted-i’s and crossed-t’s legal document being filed in court on Friday.
That would be even better.  Since it would mean that a handshake deal already was in place, and that the parties agreed it was in their mutual interests to keep it quiet until the paperwork was complete.
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Freedom from the lockout?!~
Hopefully!