SEEING THROUGH THE CHAOS
unsplash-image-tqwHkQuM-KM.jpg

Articles

A collection of currently published articles here on Signal Focused.

THE STILLDRAFTABLES: 2025

“In 1972, a crack commando unit was sent to prison by a military court for a crime they didn't commit. These men promptly escaped from a maximum security stockade to the Los Angeles underground. Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire... the A-Team.”

For those old enough that this intro rings a bell and perhaps that A-Team theme music just kicked off inside your head… congratulations on reaching middle age!

I have a buddy who hates looking at photos of himself as an adolescent… he just doesn’t enjoy the look of that in-between growth phase of no longer appearing a child, but far from looking like a man.

The same could be said of the dreaded middle aged look. You can still recall what your prime used to look like, but what you see in the mirror each day is no longer that. You can see it when you pull up the 2025 sorted images of Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise, Uma Thurman or Cameron Diaz… they still have that star power and charisma, but it looks again like a metamorphosis is taking place. No longer prime, but far from old age.

If you happen to have “be an awesome grandparent!” on your Bucket List, then passing through this second phase of aging is a kind of rite of passage that must be traveled. Humility, grace and humor can be your allies during this sometimes difficult part of your journey.

I recall being in my early thirties and I’d kind of roll my eyes when my Mom would say something like “enjoy your youth now, because when you get to be my age and your memories all pile up upon one another, it starts to feel like Christmas comes once a month.”

The older I get, the more that feels like a prophecy coming to fruition.

But fret not, the many players we will be discussing here in this article have in fact NOT reached middle age, even though listening to fantasy pundits may lead one to believing so. These players all still look in the mirror each morning and see someone perfectly in their extended prime.

Each player we will cover here has already reached or will reach at some point in the season, the beautiful age of thirty at a minimum. Some have even been enjoying their thirties for almost half a decade already. All still have the talent to be STARTERS in the NFL and are currently rostered virtually everywhere, even in the age-hating dynasty realm.

For a little context, here are those four actors mentioned above when they were the same age as THE STILLDRAFTABLES.

That looks a whole lot more like PEAKING than it does declining.

Same goes for these football players.

I’m a big UFC fan, and believe the same qualities and talents needed to excel in the NFL are needed to survive an MMA match with a never ending supply of youth being infused into the roster each year.

When you look at the three weight divisions that parallel the weight of most NFL players, we can see at what average age fighters peak and win championships.

The average age when a Middleweight (185 lb max) wins a UFC championship is just under 32 years old, with outlier championships being won by fighters aged 38 and one almost 39 years old.

For Light Heavyweights (205 lb max) the average age is also close to 32 years old, with outlier championships being won by fighters aged as much as 41 and 42 years old.

Finally, the average age when a Heavyweight (265 lb max) wins a championship is over 32 years old, again headlined by an outlier fighter who tasted his 45th birthday cake well prior to claiming another title.

I could lay out a long list of historic fantasy seasons produced by players over 30, and your response could be “Yes, but those were all outliers.” Guess what… the players used in this article IMO have already established themselves as outliers simply by surviving and thriving as long as they have, outlasting the vast majority of their draft class peers in becoming so.

Make no mistake, this is a stance directed toward 2025 Redraft and especially Bestball (not dynasty) where as high stakes competitors we spend endless hours navigating all possible angles to form internal projections and expectations for both what a player should (floor) and could (ceiling) produce in the coming season. Age and perceived trade values hold no sway here.


If I’m going to create a blockbuster hit and return to this article year after year to produce successful box office sequels, I’ll need a few ground rules to follow.

Rule 1: All players featured must be at least 30 years old at some point during this season.

Rule 2: A hand selected A-Team can be formed from the player pool going inside the first 8 rounds.

Rule 3: THE STILLDRAFTABLES must be selected from the pool of players drafted from rounds 9 through 20.

I base all of my fantasy gaming on the standard FFPC ADP and TE Premium scoring system, as they are the best I’ve come across.

This article wishes to shine a true spotlight of respect on these aging yet special talents.

We live in a moment where the top quarterbacks drafted in the first eight rounds happen to be on the younger side, with almost all still remaining in their twenties.

The eight round cutoff tries to separate the players drafted to be “starters” vs. the players drafted from rounds 9 through 20 which tend to be backups, handcuffs or simply depth.

I will begin creating my A-Team by selecting the four players aged 30 or more drafted inside of the first eight rounds that I am targeting and committing to drafting here in 2025.

To lead my A-Team, I’ll start with the oldest birth certificate holder to be drafted inside of those first eight rounds.

Representing Colonel John 'Hannibal' Smith we have TE Travis Kelce!

Classified photo of ‘Hannibal’ taken off the coast of Monterrico, Guatemala.

TE TRAVIS KELCE

To start, we are getting a FOUR ROUND discount from his second round price at this time last year.

By now I have to think the carousel of insane media bookings, travel, parties, etc. based on being one of the most famous “power couples” on the planet has to be winding down. I’d expect Travis in 2025 to have kind of his own second year leap regarding getting things dialed in and buttoned down vs. last year as more of a rookie at the whole super(duper)stardom thing.

I’ve read he has been slimming down and letting his hair grow out, and hope it’s for the 2025 season vs. possible future wedding photos.

I did see a few 2024 shirtless images floating around where Kelce’s back-fat amount looked a wee bit too familiar, so losing the rumored 25 lbs should provide a noticeable boost to his quickness and endurance vs. remaining on the heavy side. I believe he’s ditched the no-beard, mustachio’d disguise, which although quite Marlboro Manly, just didn’t quite work.

He’s also commented often how he considered 2024 a down year, so his expectations remain high for himself.

Count me as one who thought WR Rashee Rice was perhaps snatching his pebble as 2024 began, but a three week sample in this era where the first month of the regular season is more of a glorified preseason, with teams working through issues and trying to begin to jell, and I’ve pumped the brakes a bit on that thinking. Rice now looks to be serving something close to a four game suspension to start the season, opening up a return to reliance on Old Man River.

Kelce has displayed extreme durability, playing an average of 19 games with 166 targets per year over the past six seasons, when including playoffs.

Tight End G.O.A.T. Tony Gonzalez was 21 years young as a rookie vs. Kelce being 24, and Gonzalez played through his age 37 season with continued excellence the entire way. Those extra five seasons put his career numbers a bit out of reach, but Kelce only needs 896 yards receiving to pass Jason Witten and place himself 2nd in all time receiving yards for a TE.

I believe that going for the first THREE-PEAT in NFL history had the Chiefs in more of a controlled, paced and conservative mode in 2024, but being completely dominated in the Super Bowl may have lit a new fire under Mahomes and Coach Reid. With a return to health and a more aggressive mindset, I can easily imagine the Chiefs being in the running for the highest scoring team in 2025.

I have been drafting Travis Kelce automatically from any draft slot in the 6th round, but more recently he has been going in the 5th round and I’ve drafted him there as well. I believe he will have a better fantasy season than last year, where he finished as the overall TE4 in total points scored and the TE5 in average points scored.


Up next we have the A-Team role of “Face” being played by WR Davante Adams!

Getting business accomplished from a penthouse overlooking the Mediterranean Sea.

WR DAVANTE ADAMS

Just like the smooth talking ladies man “Face”, Adams knows how to score, leading the entire NFL in total touchdown receptions over the past four seasons with 59 TDs.

The actually middle aged QB Aaron Rodgers is still elite at throwing the football, but even his resume does not include what QB Matthew Stafford has accomplished over his career. Stafford has been on the throwing end of setting the NFL record books on fire, with Puka Nacua setting the NFL record for receiving yards (1486 yards) by a rookie in 2023. Add that to currently holding the TOP TWO single season receiving marks in NFL history when throwing to Calvin Johnson (1964 yards) in 2012 and more recently with Cooper Kupp (1947 yards) in 2021.

Even Puka’s response to having Adams come to the Rams reminded me of David Johnson’s response to when Chris ‘CJ2K’ Johnson was traded to the Cardinals. He had no problem stepping aside and letting the established veteran have his runway. Here is a recent quote from Nacua: “17 (Adams) is gonna lead the way for us, and it's gonna be fantastic to be out there on the football field with him.”

As someone drafting Adams with the expectation that he leads the Rams in targets this year, that is music to my ears.

All reports revolving around Davante coming to Los Angeles have been glowing. He seems rejuvenated as a NorCal native returning to play for a California based team for the first time since his college days at Fresno St.

Despite his age, Adams retains his super swagger and self confidence and would be a betting favorite for an NFL’s Biggest Diva Award in 2025.

I was lucky enough to land Adams in the 4th round of an early Big Gorilla, but have gladly drafted him in the early-to-mid 3rd in two other Big Gorilla’s and a Main Event already. If his price rises moving forward, I’ll likely follow the ADP all the way up into the 2nd round if need be.

The sky really is the limit here.


There were many cool options to cast as show favorite B.A. Baracus, but I went with the player I’m going after the hardest this drafting season, and that player is RB Alvin Kamara.

B.A. field testing Anti-Drone technology on the outskirts of Yuma, Arizona.

RB ALVIN KAMARA

Playing for pride alone with the 2024 Saints, Kamara averaged over 113 yards from scrimmage, which paces for a season of 1931 yards had he played in all 17 games.

Now he gets Kellen Moore who just coached RB Saquon Barkley to a 2283 yards from scrimmage season. Not too shabby.

With Kamara you not only get a top notch ceiling, but a floor that has seen him gain at least 1330 yards from scrimmage in seven of his eight seasons in the NFL.

His longtime offseason strength and conditioning coach Andreu Swasey (University of Miami) was hired by Deion Sanders this offseason to help out with the Colorado Buffaloes, so instead of traveling to Miami like he has his entire career, Kamara followed Swasey to train in Boulder, Colorado.

Training for the first time at high altitude, Karama mentioned “you can’t run away from that elevation” and it’s something you must deal with daily. He credits this wrinkle in his preparation for 2025 and said “I feel like I’m in a different type of shape” than ever before.

In what I consider a perfect reply to a reporter asking him if he has a goal to reach 1000 yards rushing for the first time, he replied “From my rookie year till now, I never came in like ‘I’m gonna break 1000 yards’, I’m just like ‘I’M ABOUT TO BALL!’”

Even with being sniped a few times, Kamara is my go-to 4th round selection, and I’ve managed to draft him in 9 out of 17 drafts so far, including 2 of my 3 FFPC Main Event teams.

I’m all in.


Finally, we have the role of the lovably crazy ‘Murdock’ going to the only player that can embrace that role with full authenticity… WR Tyreek Hill!

Murdock ‘Wild Westing’ on the Pantanal, near the Bolivia-Brazil border.

WR TYREEK HILL

Like Murdock, “He is either mentally unstable or exceptionally good at pretending to be so.”

I can understand being let down by the 2024 performance of Tyreek Hill, especially considering he was in that mix going NUMBER ONE OVERALL in some drafts just last year.

After back-to-back 119 reception, 1700+ yard seasons, it was either Hill or WR Ceedee Lamb as the first WR off the board the last time we drafted, and now we see around 14 other wide receivers being drafted before Tyreek.

I’d label that as a knee-jerkoff response to a forgettable season overall from the Miami Dolphins.

Fast forward to 2025 and we have a few things working in our favor.

First off, Tyreek has his full body health back, as his wrist injury has been addressed, his speed remains elite and he’s still being quoted as “chasing that 2,000 yards receiving season.”

Hill had to deal with a relationship heading toward divorce last season, which can be as bad as it gets when children are involved. That seems to be behind him now, and it’s encouraging to read that he’s refocused on football and has returned to going to church, as that can indeed help keep you grounded during turbulent times.

His QB Tua Tagovailoa is also back to full health, and although it’s easy to paint a player as injury prone when you pull up their career stats and see one season where he reached more than 13 games played after five seasons in the NFL, we still have to understand that injuries are unpredictable.

Miami has upgraded their offensive line and coach Mike McDaniel has one season to prove he’s capable of adjusting to the league-wide adjustments to how teams play his Dolphins. With an entire offseason to focus on just that, I’m betting he succeeds and schemes new ways of getting the ball in Tyreek’s hands in space.

Trading away a staple of their 2024 offensive success in TE Jonnu Smith further shows me that his temporary adjustment to defensive scheming was just that… temporary. This move tells me the focus will return to his dynamic playmakers and speed will once again rule the day.

Although he’s going into his fourth season with Miami, it sounds like this is the first offseason Tyreek has fully understood and bought into their system. All of these mini-victories can add up and snowball in a good way.

In a very early Big Gorilla, I drafted Hill at the 1st-2nd round turn prior to seeing his ADP stabilize more closely to the middle of the 3rd round. No reason to create a rift in the force by bucking ADP when it works in your favor.


That wraps up my personal 2025 A-Team.

There were many other qualifying players worthy of spotlighting, but only four can make the team. A few players that I respect, but after 17 leagues have not drafted yet due to their current ADP or simply my chosen plan of attack are RB Derrick Henry, WR Mike Evans, WR Terry McLaurin and RB James Conner. I HAVE drafted TE George Kittle and TE Mark Andrews a couple times and RB Aaron Jones and WR Calvin Ridley many times, but they just missed out on making the cut.

Looking forward to seeing an entire draft class of players including guys like RB Christian McCaffrey, baby-faced QB’s Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen, WR’s Deebo Samuel, Chris Godwin and Coutland Sutton and TE David Njoku break into their 30’s next year as the new recruits trying to audition for roles in the 2026 sequel!


Now that the drinks have arrived and you’ve enjoyed your appetizer, we’re on to the main course: THE STILLDRAFTABLES: 2025

The power of this image alone should raise each player’s value by a round or two!

“Every movie has a hero. This one has them all” ~The Expendables

It’s a shame how young movie goers missed out on an era when guys like Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis, Jean Claude Van Damme and Jason Statham were each kings of the summer blockbuster season. At least they can access those films on demand, but it’s not quite the same as living through those times.

Going to a movie theater and watching those awesome upcoming films trailers or seeing new posters lining the walls for films such as The Terminator, Rocky, Snatch, Bloodsport, Conan the Barbarian, Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, Die Hard, Pulp Fiction, First Blood and Predator… ah, the good old days.

A similar thing can be said bout those new to fantasy, but going back and watching historical seasons of NFL football just isn’t that common, sadly. They may have missed out on an era when guys like Austin Ekeler, Cooper Kupp and Stefon Diggs really were 1st round selections.

Wait a second…that was only the draft before last year in 2023!

Not all, but many of the THE STILLDRAFTABLES: 2025 were living in the first round of drafts for multiple seasons before being replaced by the more promising youngsters. Fast forward a few years and this cycle will repeat as players like Ceedee Lamb, Ja’Marr Chase, Bijan Robinson and Justin Jefferson all creep toward age 30 if they are lucky and good enough to stay in the spotlight even that long.

Drafting proven old timers lacks the pizzazz of drafting the shiny new rookies or second year breakout players, but just remember this… you can click on the Rome Odunze or Matthew Golden types for that one cookie worth of drafting excitement now, or you can draft the less exciting Cooper Kupp and Stefon Diggs types who will give you two cookies worth of excitement as they carry you to a championship.

As that magical and hard hitting quote from Lord of the Rings goes…

“Much that once was is lost… for none now live who remember it.”

Well I remember when all of these STILLDRAFTABLES were in their prime-prime and just like the old movies, those were some fun times.

These players can usually all be drafted after round 8 is complete, so the risk of them flopping has a minimal impact on your starting roster, but if they HIT…. BINGO!

(PSA…no, I do not actually play Bingo)

Moving from left to right, here we go…

WR ADAM THIELEN

You want an outlier? How about the oldest wide receiver currently playing (and starting!) in the league.

Carolina has some promising youth at wideout, but the savvy Thielen has a bag of tricks that has worked for years in the NFL, does not rely on pure speed, and never has. That non-reliance on pure speed will be a common trend here.

Thielen has averaged more than seven targets per game over his last nine regular seasons. The Panthers brought him back as a leader and a trusted target for Bryce Young to lean on with both the ‘on schedule’ plays as well as to provide a crafty veteran who knows where Bryce will want to look to when plays break down. He has scored at least 4 TD in every season since becoming a starter.

2023 saw him reach 103 receptions and 1014 yards, and even working through a hamstring issue last year, he managed a season with his best (12.8) yards per reception in the past four years.

During the 2024 money weeks of Week 12 through Week 17 when league championships are determined and grand champions are crowned, Thielen was a ‘WR1’ finishing as WR12 overall, outscoring players like A.J. Brown and Ladd McConkey in total points, and his average score was neck and neck with Ceedee Lamb.

This is recent history folks. Like… the last time we counted stats for fantasy football recent.

You can (and should, especially in bestball formats) draft Thielen in the teen rounds, making him a very low-risk bet.

WR KEENAN ALLEN

After spending his first eleven seasons in southern California, Keenan had to pack his long sleeves for his stay in Chicago last year, and his arm tattoos were never seen again. Money talks, but if given the chance, I’d say a return to warmer weather is firmly in his 2025 plans.

There are still a hand full of NFL teams that could use a solid route running wideout, and some I’d generalize as flat out desperate for one. We shall see where he ends up, but he’s definitely not washed up.

Combining his last two seasons, we have a stat line of 178 receptions, 1987 yards and 14 touchdowns. Not done. Far from it.

Rewind just a few months and let’s see how Mr. Allen did during those aforementioned W12-W17 Money Weeks and we see a WR11 overall finish, going toe-to-toe with Amon-Ra St. Brown during the most important weeks of the fantasy season.

It’s not often you can draft two players in the teen rounds who outproduced players being drafted in the first round last year.

My advice is you do just that.

WR STEFON DIGGS

Here we have our third STILLDRAFTABLE and our third player who had pockets of 2024 spent as a WR1. Before going down with injury, Diggs was the overall WR8 in fantasy through the first eight weeks of the season.

All accounts are he is way ahead of schedule and on pace to start the season as usual. Although I love rookie Kyle Williams, I believe Diggs will command the alpha target share for one of the more promising young quarterbacks in the league in Drake Maye.

New England went through an ugly post-Brady stretch, but all signs point to a team back on the rise to becoming competitive again after only winning four games in back-to-back seasons.

I’ve been snatching up Diggs toward the top of our given 9-20 round range, and have noticed that as the weeks roll by and his health and status on the Patriots appears better and better, he has risen up draft boards, and IMO he is worth the rise in price.

TE ZACH ERTZ

Let’s get one thing straight, tight ends have boring ass seasonal highlights. They rarely get those exciting YAC runs and they don’t make many defenders miss. You can make a meme out of Ertz being a “catch and fall” guy, but there’s no doubt about that catch being made.

Don’t pretend that highlights of LaPorta, McBride or Hockenson have some sort of ‘excitingness’ that Ertz lacks. They do not. Kittle and Bowers, maybe.

Ertz just made the Commanders 2025 promotional poster, along with QB Jayden Daniels, which doesn’t mean much, but it does mean something. He remains in their 2025 plans. I enjoy paying attention to which players are featured on NFL promotional posters. Sometimes they tell a story you may have missed.

For some strange reason that I love, Ertz is falling to like the TE20 range after finishing his first season with Daniels as the overall TE7 last year. His old legs even held up late into the season, finishing the W12-W17 Money Weeks as a TE1 even with a late BYE week off, ranking TE12 in total points scored, and TE11 in average points scored.

Falling all the way into the 12th round range, it makes stacking him with Daniels quite pain free.

WR DEANDRE HOPKINS

It has been a while since Hopkins has dominated, but the many ways he can dominate are still in play. He was never known for his speed, yet was considered the best wide receiver in the NFL just a short while ago.

He has a full toolbox of moves and glue-sticky hands and he still has elite body control, the skill I have valued most along his journey. From how he can time his jump or torque his body mid-flight into the correct position to allow a feather-light toe tap on the sideline, to how he gracefully can one-legged slide and pop right up, fully in control like he’s still in his prime.

You can see all of that in his 2024 highlights.

I can still cherry pick a 12 week sample (W3-W14) from 2024 where Hopkins scored more than a player currently being drafted in the top three rounds: Marvin Harrison.

After playing on a garbage Tennessee team for that bag of money, he had to try to learn Andy Reid’s offense on the fly. Pretty tough ask to absorb a playbook mid-season, yet he still managed to do what he always does, score touchdowns.

The Baltimore Ravens do not have another player with the skill set of Hopkins. What they have has been quite good, but Lamar Jackson still has ZERO Super Bowl appearances in his seven years in the league, so I’d guess it is not good enough.

Enter Hopkins and his Red Zone prowess, and you have a piece that might help them reach the promised land.

I’d be willing to bet that Hopkins gets involved more than anyone thinks, and will set his total touchdown over/under at 7.5 TD’s for this 2025 season. You can draft him at the very end of drafts, so he’s all upside, no risk.

We are all trying to show enough in 2025 to make THE STILLDRAFTABLES: 2026 sequel!

WR AMARI COOPER

The OTHER teamless former stud, Cooper now falls to the very bottom of draft boards, despite being one season removed from a 1250 yards receiving season in 2023 where he managed an impressive 17.4 yards per reception.

Like Hopkins, Amari had to learn on the fly after being traded to Buffalo mid-season. We used to complain how wide receivers moving to a new team would tend to suffer stat-wise and expect a slow process of getting up to speed with a new system and new coaching terminology and a new quarterback to get timing down with, yet here we are being flat out ruthless to Cooper and Hopkins who had to do their best without the benefit of an offseason worth of prep.

I still think they are better than a LOAD of the players being drafted near them in 2025.

Take a look at the chest muscles in THE STILLDRAFTABLES image of Cooper… those belong to Amari, not Sylvester Stallone.

The moment Cooper signs, he’ll rise up draft boards. Why not just beat everyone to the punch now?

Drafting the unsigned also has the added thrill of following the news and rumor cycles while waiting for that pen to reach paper.

WR COOPER KUPP

Right off the bat we get to look forward to having two revenge games per season against the Rams. That should be fun. I wonder if he’ll be out to show them he’s still hard to cover.

Kupp was paid handsomely to return to his home state and the area where he was born, raised, and went to both high school and college. Go pull up his Eastern Washington stats for a laugh. Ungodly amazing stuff, like four consecutive seasons of Triple Crown worthy stats.

Speaking of Triple Crowns… Cooper Kupp in 2021 and Ja’Marr Chase just last year are the only two players to win such an award in the last 20 years.

Kupp crushed right out the gate last year, scoring 32 fantasy points Week 1 prior to suffering a bad high-ankle sprain in the following game, causing him to miss a month of action. As a Kupp owner in 2024 I was surprised by how the Rams seemed to just phase him out of their game plans over the final three weeks of the regular season.

For that stretch run after returning from injury and prior to being phased out, Kupp went on a seven week roll (W8-W14) where he was the WR4 overall, averaging the same 18 fantasy points per game as Lamb was averaging over that same time frame. Wow… that sure doesn’t sound washed up to me.

His 2024 highlights included all of his typical magic, as he just understands how to play the game of football at a very high level.

I’ve drafted Cooper Kupp in 8 of my 17 completed drafts in that round nine range and it would not surprise me at all if Kupp wins the Seattle Seahawk’s Triple Crown in 2025.

RB AUSTIN EKELER

Lastly we have RB Austin Ekeler, who is coming off a season where his rushing and receiving averages were the best he’s had in six and five years respectively. Having a fresh start with Washington seems to have rejuvenated him.

I owned a bunch of Ekeler and J.K. Dobbins last year at their bargain prices, and had very high hopes after the fantasy regular season came to an end with one of my teams sitting in 8th place out of like 14,000 teams in last year’s version on the Big Gorilla.

Both Dobbins and Ekeler going down with injury in Week 12 just crushed my dreams and had me respectfully decline an invite from the super cool Eric Balkman to come on his FFPC podcast to talk about my magical season.

The worst part was Ekeler was just starting to blossom, scoring over 17 fantasy points in three consecutive games before going down to a gigantic concussion while being used on fucking SPECIAL TEAMS!?! Idiots.

His season basically ended on that play and my big fantasy dreams ended along with it.

It can look bleak being the second wheel of a two running back tandem, but the best part about players like Ekeler is their consistent inclusion in the passing game. His usage with the Commanders left mouths full of meat on the bone, but he almost always managed to give you double digit fantasy points, with that exciting stretch run pushing 18 points per game before the rug got pulled out from under him.

New year, new opportunities. Sign me up at his bargain basement pricing.


That wraps up our 2025 ‘A-Team’ as well and THE STILLDRAFTABLE: 2025.

It will be fun to watch these players all show what a 30 year old is made of and raise the bar on how we value them. We shall see if some can repeat and make the cast of future Summer Blockbuster sequels as well.

Getting to pour the newly minted 30 year olds into the player pool each season and watch them fight it out with the established veteran 30+ year olds will be like watching a Gangs of New York battle every offseason.

My popcorn will be ready.

Hope you enjoyed. :-)