Billy Black Actor Gil Birmingham: ‘Twilight’ Is...

We’d never thought of it this way, but Gil Birmingham may be right: The Twilight series ...

Steve Guttenberg to Director Dr. Ravi Godse: Gimme More...

Funnyman Steve Guttenberg’s plea for more screen time came a bit too late. But Movie ...

BTR Launches New Premium Feature: Host Your Show Using...

Starting this week, as a premium host on BlogTalkRadio you can host your show using Skype, ...

 

Your show will start playing after this message

Profile

FantasySportsZone


Country: United States

Language: English


On Demand Episodes

Listeners

  • Adam Voisin live
  • Fantasy Football
  • Marc Ronick
  • SeanRoto
  • Manny Iglesiais
  • Adam Ronis
  • Wyverex /Wavecritter
  • Dr. Thomas Keister
  • Gametimedecisions
  • Momonoski
  • Snooper
  • Bryce in Omaha
  • Gridiron Blog Roll
  • FFToolbox.com
  • Pro Hockey Weekly
  • Wire Tap
  • Darryl Houston Smith
  • Greg Kellogg
  • Through Black Eyes
  • The Program

Comments

Primetime21

Primetime21

Great new show had me hook on the 1st show. Rhett has a good voice for radio and gald to add it to my favorits

Fantasypros911.com

Fantasypros911.com

Fantasy Sports will be a winner with these two guys.This is top notch information from two guys who play the game. I do not like the fact they dawged on my man Milton Bradely. Tony Cincotta Fantasy Baseball Mafia Live Fantasy Baseball Mafia's Wiretap The Red Sox Nation AFFC Fantasy Baseball Championship

FantasySportsZone  

FantasySportsZone is a fast paced, high energy 30 minute show dedicated to the Fantasy Sports fan. With over 20 years experience in Fantasy Sports Rhett Oldham will give you the insight you need to win your Fantasy League

  • Featured Episode

    FantasySportsZone

    FantasySportsZone

    Date / Time:

    Category: Sports


    FantasySportsZone is pleased to announce that Tony Cincotta from the Fantasy Baseball Mafia and Johnny Archive from MLBlogs.com will be on the show. As usual we will be talking about "Why Am I Still on The Waiver Wire" and "Washed Up or Just in the Rinsed Cycle" but our focus on this show will be on "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR TEAM DURING THE SEASON". Don't forget to tune into the Fantasy Baseball Mafia Show at 4PM EST on Tues Adn Thurs and the Johnny Archive FantasyBaseball Show 6/29 at 1030am
  • On Demand Episodes

    Original Air Date:

    FantasySportsZone

    FantasySportsZone is a 30 minute, fast paced, interactive show that is dedicated to the true fantasy sports fan. Today's guest is Jeff Boggis from the Fantasy Baseball Empire. Rhett Oldham brings over 20 years of Fantasy experience to the show and truly enjoy talking about Fantasy Sports.

  • Date / Time:

    Fantasy Baseball Is Losing It's Fantasy Fields

    As I sat and watched the All Star Game on Tuesday I think I had more fun watching the Hall of Famers come out to great applause before the game than I did watching the actual contest.  Seeing one of my favorite pitchers, Bob Gibson, brought back a wave of nostalgia when players stayed with a team their entire careers meaning he is a forever Cardinal.  Seeing Mr October, Reggie Jackson, reminded me of great players in great situations rise to the great occasions.  Watching the graceful and dignified Hank Aaron brought back thoughts to when I saw him hit a home run in Busch Stadium and how important it was for me to be there.

    Most importantly I thought about Yankee Stadium itself.  The House That Ruth Built and the field that Joe Pepitone tried to burn up!  Never a greater moment happened in baseball or sports when Lou Gehrig stood on that very field and told us how lucky he was.  The graceful Joe DiMaggio and the flamboyant Mickey Mantle, the quiet Roger Maris, who still holds the single season home run record in my book, Don Larson's perfect game.  Yankee Stadium IS baseball, since 1923, and now it is being torn down for some new ball yard across the street....what's next, Citgo Field in Boston while Fenway is torn down and  the Green Monster is being sold off in pieces on Ebay!

    To me Fantasy Baseball captures that youthful enthusiasm of going to your first game if only for a moment each day.  To be that 6 year old kid sitting in the bleachers, 600 feet from home plate with my little league glove, waiting for Ted Simmons or Joe Torre to hit one to me and really believing they could.  Having my Aunt Trula teach me how to keep score and helping me with my pork chop sandwich that my Mom made for me before we left.  Standing in line on Bat Night with my Dad so I could watch Roberto Clemente roam right field and try to throw out Lou Brock going from first to third.  Man, that is fantasy baseball.

    But fantasy baseball continues to defy actual baseball and owners throw it in our face when they tear down Tiger Stadium in Detroit, Comiskey Park in Chicago, or Sportsman's Park in St Louis.  These places can be rehabbed and saved so that owners can have there luxury boxes and allow us to cherish our memories.  But everyone wants new and new means better they say. 

    I could see bulldozing the Vet in Philly, that place was ugly from the start and so was Riverfront in Cincy but I bet if you asked the fans of those cities they would tell you they loved those cookie cutters.  Mike Schmidt and Greg Luzinski hammering long balls and the Big Red Machine that had one Hall of Famer after another made those places special.  The cookie cutter in St Louis is special to me, I was at Bob Forsch's no hitter and  I witnessed greatness in Whiteyball in the 80's.

    Yankee Stadium will go down and I guess the same will happen to Wrigley eventually.  Doris Kearns Goodwin writes about the Dodgers at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn and the Polo Grounds and Willie Mayswhat it meant to her.   It is a distance memory to most or for me, only something to read about as something in history but it should never happen. 

    Fantasy baseball is a great pastime that gives us the opportunity to make new memories and cherish pennant races, if anybody even buys pennants anymore.  It allows us to maintain friendships and cultivate new ones.  It allows us to connect with the new players as the owners tear down the actual structures of our childhood.  Pretty soon the "Field of Dreams" will only be something that can be seen on VHS, wait DVD.

  • Date / Time:

    I Still Want to Win...Or At Least Finish In the Money!

     
     
    I Still Want to Win It This Year...Or at Least Finish in the Money

    by Rhett Oldham

    As we run up to the All Star Break it is time for all of us to make an honest assessment of our teams.  We all start the season with visions of the Yoo Hoo Shower but mighty Casey still seems to strike out more times than not in Mudville, as does Adam Dunn and Mark Reynolds but that is for a different story!  So we are looking at our teams at midseason still hoping against hope that Chone Figgins will rebound, Travis Hafner has something in his bat, Victor Martinez still has the magic that  made us trust our 3rd round pick on him, and Roy Oswalt isn't as bad as he has shown.  Under the guise that this may not happen,  owners must have a contingency plan to push your team out of the doldrums and make a run at your league championship or at least push the upper tier to get in the money.  Let's examine some ways to get there.

    If you are in the upper third of your standings it is much easier to look for holes and deficiencies and make minor adjustments via free agency or minor trades to shore up catagories that you may need help in. 

    The mistake many owners do in this position is look at their team and think they need to make the "blockbuster trade" that will create huge buzz in your league.  What they fail to realize is that Blockbuster trades are HUGE shakeups and can be just as detrimental to your team as they can be successful.  I have seen teams trade themselves out of the championship because they did not want to sit tight with the solid team they drafted and traded for more so than people who were reluctant to pull the trigger in that 8 player deal.  On a side note, I agree with Patrick Dicaprio about those 8 player trades, lazy way to deal and hard to decipher.

    If you are in the this position, concentrate on catagories tiers where you can move up a few points here or there with minor moves.  If you are in a keeper league, move your keepers as late as possible for keepers with similar skills or a 2 for 1 that can fill a hole without creating a vacuum in another position.  Most importantly remember, a big shake UP can create a big shake DOWN.

    The hardest spot in Fantasy Baseball in my opinion is to be in the second tier of the standings.  Your team continues to tease you but has consistently fell short because of players with wild weekly swings, Justin Upton comes to mind, and as a result you are within shouting distance of the top tier but the holes in your lineup create a ceiling that your team cannot punch through.  Here is where the owner has to determine what type of gambler you are.

    I am almost always opposed to a drafting strategy that punts catagories from the outset.  By using that strategy you have to have everything land just perfect to win your league.  Six months of perfect rarely happen in fantasy baseball and that is why I do not use that strategy very often.  But at the halfway point with nothing to lose I will employ this strategy because three months of luck is easier than six.  Lets look at some of these strategies.


     If you are in the mid tier you are for sure taking a 1 or 2 in a catagory.  You have two options obviously, load up to make a move or punt it entirely and trade off the excess.  Three catagories that this is common are saves, steals, and batting average.  If I am at the bottom of standings in steal and I have Ichiro and Victorino they are not helping my team but trading them to someone who needs help in those catagories allows me to shore up my power numbers or my strikeouts.  Don't fight over 2 points, concede the catagories and make a 12 point run in homers and RBI plus your should get a boost in your run catagory.

    High batting average guys like Joe Mauer are not helping me if I am getting 2 points in that catagory but if I parlay him to a better strikeout pitcher and low batting average catcher with power then I helping my team out immensely in multiple catagories.

    I am last in one of my daily leagues in saves due to closer injuries and I am also at the bottom in ERA and WHIP.  What I have done is the opposite of punting catagories, I can't concede THREE catagories, so as a result I am trading for as many closers as I can get.  I now have six closers on my roster.  They will help in all three deficient catagories and since it is a daily league I rotate my five starters as they pitch to keep up in Ks and wins.  It is a risky strategy but I am in 7th place, I have to do something!

    Finally, if you are in the bottom tier of your standings you do have some options to keep you interested in your fantasy teams.  If you are unsure if you still have a chance I will quote a theory from my friend Johnny Archive.  He calls it the Firecracker 540 rule.  If on July 4th, you are 5 spots out of the money and/or 40 points behind in the standings you have to start looking out for next year.  I feel that theory is a great rule of thumb.

    If you are in this position I hope you are in a keeper league.  If you are not then you still have an obligation to complete the league and stay competitve.  If you are not, it still applies to you .  Take two minutes out of your day to check the standings and make a free agent claim, answer trade offers in a timely fashion, move injury players to the IR slot, and keep up with the September call ups.  Too many owners bag the season once football starts and miss out on preparing for the next season.  Also if you just quit you risk the chance of not being asked back to the league. 

    If you are in a keeper league you want to offer trades to league leaders that help them to win this year and help you prepare to dominate next year.  The second place team has Hanley Ramirez but can make up a huge amount of points in wins.  You offer him Zambrano, Dice K, and Hardy for Hanley.  He has to look at it because he is in it to win it.  As an owner you want to bring back the 5 best players you can for next year.  Trade as many spare parts as you can to get those players.

    Fantasy baseball is fun and I love playing it but let's face it, it is a six month grinding season that takes committment no matter where you are in the standings.  By using these tips you can still have fun and be part of the pennant stretch.

  • Original Air Date:

    FantasySportsZone

    FantasySportsZone is pleased to announce that Brett Greenfield and Jason Sarney of FantasyPhenoms.com will be guest hosts on our show. Great website and full of information and a must look for any fantasy league player.

  • Date / Time:

    TRADING FOR THE BUY LOW PLAYER.....YEA RIGHT....WAIT THERE IS A WAY

    On the True Guru show last week, Mike Podhorzer from the Fantasy Baseball Generals asked me about "Buy Low" candidates and if there is such a thing anymore.  So many websites and articles talk about players who were drafted high and now are underperforming are prime candidates.  That is great advice until you actually try to trade for them and find out everyone else knows who the buy low players are as well, making your trade strategy worthless. As a result, how do you acquire those players without having to totally overpay for them...there is a way.

    Most articles I have read about Buy Low Players infer that you can acquire a preseason Top 100 player for 3 players on your reserve slots and a bag of balls.  The owners of these top 9 rounds players will be so happy to unload these players that they will take anything for them is the insinuation.  We all know in practice that just doesn't happen. 

    If we have one of those players we continue to hang on to them, hoping against hope, that they will catch fire and award our preseason belief that they are really an upper tier player.  If that player continues to underperform most owners are too prideful and too stubborn to admit to our colossal mistake. 

    Most owners are also smart enough to realize that when a trade offer comes over that has no name players who have started off moderately well for my 5th round pick that it is a Buy Low offer.  On most occasions that trade offer will not only be rejected but the insulted owner will be wary of any offer that you send him in the future.  So how do we acquire that player for the price we want without insulting the owner who has him?  That is the $64,000 question.

    I find the best way to pluck that underperforming star off your rivals roster is make him the second player in the deal, not the focal point.  Let me give you an example:

     

        Team A need a closer and has depth at Third Base to trade.  Team A also could use a 5th OF and sees that Alex Rios is on Team B's squad. Team A makes an inital  trade offer of Aramis Ramirez for Joe Nathan and Alex Rios.  Team B see this offer and may believe that is too much to give up but is intrigued at the prospect of making a significant upgrade at 3B.  If Team B does not take the offer he may counter with a different offer that requires you to even up the offer with a fast start OF in the mode of Xavier Nady.  Team A may not want to give up that much but you now have dialogue with Team B for a Buy Low candidate without making it an obvious move that is insulting.

    The key to the transaction is to make the Buy Low player the "Add On" or "The Throw In" and not the main player.  By diverting the attention away from the underperforming player the owner does not feel you are trying to take advantage of his player's poor start and you are getting a player who you think will perform closer to standards after you acquire him.  Everybody wins!

    Astute owners can still acquire the Buy Low candidate but have to learn the art of subtle negotation to make it happen.  By using this technique you can make it happen.

     





  • Original Air Date:

    FantasySportsZone

    FantasySportsZone is pleased to announce that Todd Farino from FantasyGuruRadio and FantasyBaseballSearch will be on our show this week. We are also extremely excited to have Mike Podhorzer-Associate Editor of The Fantasy Baseball Generals and The Fantasy Baseball Rountable Show. This week's show will feature "The Power of the Veto"

  • Date / Time:

    THE 7 WORDS YOU CAN’T SAY( OR DON’T WANT TO SAY) IN FANTASY BASEBALL

    THE 7 WORDS YOU CAN’T SAY( OR DON’T WANT TO SAY) IN FANTASY BASEBALL

    By Rhett Oldham, FantasySportsZone

     

    In honor of George Carlin I have made up my own list of the “7 words”.  Unlike George’s list, most owners can say the words on television but the words they say afterwards are a different story

     

    1. Quit, if you join a league then you join the league for the season.  If it is June and you are in last place and I look at your roster and see Gallardo and Liriano in your lineup, I know that I have a problem with my league.
    2. Untouchable, nothing frustrates an owner more than to make a sweet offer and find out that he won’t trade Miguel Tejada because the other owner is a huge fan of the Astros and never trades his hometown players.  Make a trade already!
    3. Collusion, we all do our homework, prepare for the draft, make our free agent moves, work buy low trades, and we are finally in a position for the Yoo-Hoo Shower and what happens?!?!  The guy you are chasing trades three spare parts to his buddy in last place for Chase Utley and pulls away to win the league!  Nothing makes an owner more frustrated.
    4. Fleece, when you make a trade at the beginning of the year everyone is trading on speculation.  If your player ends up being at the wrong end of the speculation nothing gets your goat more than to hear the rival owner brag about how he “fleeced” you.  Even if he did, he just lost a trading partner for now and ever more!
    5. Veto, I did my research, found out my opponents weaknesses, and targeted the player I want to trade for and we made the deal happen.  It is time for the Championship with this last deal to put me over the top and the other owners veto my deal because they also see that it will ensure my championship
    6. Injury, before the season I drafted, Peavy, Bedard, Kazmir, Snell, Soriano, and Chad Cordero plus traded for Carlos Zambrano.  My draft strategy of having an awesome pitching staff has ended up giving me 5 points in ERA and WHIP combined!  Injuries are part of the game, the part of the game I hate!
    7. Commish, more specifically a bad one.  If the guy takes the job then do it.  If the commish just sits there and plays and doesn’t do anything it promote the league, keep up interest, step in on disputes, or make it more fun then don’t take it on.  It’s not like you are going to put it on your resume so do something, anything, to make us feel like you want the league to be successful!

Extras

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/FantasySportsZone/feed

Everything Else

Listen

 

Participate

 

Services and Terms

 

Corporate

 

BlogTalkRadio

 

© 2009 BlogTalkRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.