5/20/10 
                 
                Some call it gamesmanship, some call it cheating. I myself call 
                it fun, but gamesmanship can often become less than amusing when 
                another owner takes issue with a move you’ve made. No matter 
                how things turn out, fantasy sports—like real sports in 
                at least one way—will constantly expose those who push the 
                limits, bend the rules, and stir controversy among their fellow 
                owners. While most fantasy leagues might have those who play the 
                role of the frugal Bill Bidwell, the no-nonsense Tom Coughlin, 
                the self-promoting Jerry Jones, or the chemistry-killing Daniel 
                Snyder, just as many have the harebrained Al Davis or the ingenious 
                Bill Belichick. And trouble soon follows. 
                 
                Any owner involved in that kind of trouble knows that a different 
                viewpoint can be helpful. And who wouldn’t want the benefit 
                of two viewpoints like, say, those of the devil and the angel 
                on Pinto’s shoulders in Animal House—well, 
                maybe “benefit” is not quite the right word in that 
                particular case. Here’s hoping it helps anyway… 
                 
                The Guardian Angel 
                 
                Come on! This is supposed to be fun! This is a game, and that 
                means there are rules. There’s a structure in fantasy sports 
                that is tough to come by in reality. The rules are not here to 
                limit any of us, they’re here to keep things fair for everyone. 
                If owners start bending the rules, they’ll eventually break, 
                and then no one ends up having any fun. Those who break the rules 
                cheat the rest of us. 
                 
                You show respect to your fellow owners by wishing them good luck 
                and being a graceful winner or loser. You show respect to the 
                league by following the spirit of the rules, not by trying to 
                find loopholes and taking advantage of other owners who do the 
                right thing in playing by the rules as they stand. The game stands 
                above all else, and its inherent ethics keep it pure. Win a good 
                clean fight and there is no feeling quite like it. That’s 
                why we play. 
                 
                The Fallen Angel 
                 
                Come on! This is supposed to be fun! There’s no morality 
                in games. This is precisely why we play them: to escape the morality 
                we’re forced to muddle through daily. The rules are the 
                rules. You follow them to the letter. But you don’t follow 
                them blindly. You use the rules to guide your team to victory. 
                Those who choose to ignore the flexibility built into the rules 
                as they are written ignore their own potential. 
                 
                You show respect to your fellow owners by trash-talking a good 
                game before the real game starts, by getting their goat, by competing 
                with them to the best of your ability. You show respect to the 
                league by pushing the rules as far as they go so that they can 
                be strengthened in the future. The game stands above all else, 
                and you compete with all you have. Winning by taking any advantage 
                you can is the way you play. Win a nasty tooth grinder and there 
                is no feeling quite like it. That’s why we play. 
                 
                …And Here on Earth 
                 
                There are of course many variations of those diverse viewpoints. 
                Bringing money into the equation brings even more variety. But 
                another cause of controversy lies in the title “fantasy 
                sports” itself: Is the game more about the fantasy or the 
                sport? Are owners stat-tracking or are they role-playing? 
                 
                Take the fantasy aspect out for a moment. In real sports, more 
                than just an owner is involved. Fans fuel the franchise. Lose 
                them and you’ve essentially lost your livelihood. The players, 
                the coaches, the trainers, the scouts, and hundreds of others—along 
                with their respective families—give the franchise a heartbeat. 
                At the moment those people are hired, morality and ethics are 
                born. There are rules on and off the field which most at least 
                try to follow. Break them and get caught and you have a good idea 
                what will happen. 
                 
                In fantasy sports, the lines are a little blurry. There you are, 
                the owner, with only the league above you and the rest of the 
                owners at your level. You have no responsibilities to fans or 
                players or coaches. There are rules for the game on paper, but 
                the rules outside the game become more subjective. Morality comes 
                into play at times, but where the ethical line is drawn is anyone’s 
                guess. If an owner feels cheated out of money or pride, or cheated 
                by another owner’s neglect or recklessness, things move 
                beyond the league rules and into reality, where dogma can differ 
                from person to person. 
                 
               
               All that said, one might conclude that the best leagues are 
                those without the rebels, rogues, and trouble-makers, those in 
                which every owner follows the same ethical standard. Aside from 
                being almost impossible, that can lead to a pretty boring league. 
                The best leagues are those where every owner is a stat-tracker 
                and a role-player. That is, every owner knows his or 
                her stuff, and learns more each week; but every owner also develops 
                a persona. They become a Snyder or a Davis or a Belichick—or 
                more likely something in between. 
                
  
   
 
   
                  Rogue? 
 
   
                  Rebel? 
 
   
                  Trouble-maker? 
 
   
 
  
              This column aims to take a wide angle at the controversy those personas 
              are bound to create, while trying to tackle that controversy before 
              it becomes chaos. After all, this is a game. Despite the cash and 
              egos flying around, the name of the game is fun. 
               
              Everything from seemingly harmless trash-talk to underhanded collusion 
              can cause hard feelings among owners… and even divide an entire 
              league. Whether you’ve been the accused, the betrayed, or 
              just an innocent bystander wondering which side to take, this column 
              is for you. E-mail the Devil's 
              Advocate with a description of the controversy brewing in your 
              league (or a potentially unpopular move you’re about to make), 
              and I’ll give one of those emails an outsider’s viewpoint 
              in each future column. Maybe you’re right, maybe you’re 
              wrong; there are always two sides to a controversy. Both sides will 
              be explored in hopes of finding some middle ground that helps you, 
              and that any league can use to bolster its rules and maintain that 
              rogue ownership that makes fantasy sports all the more entertaining.  |