Week 8: Weekend Recaps and Monday Night Previews

Hey FPF community,

Welcome to the week 8 edition of my Monday article. We had some great battles at Lachine on both Saturday and Sunday, so if you’re interested in reading a detailed recap of your own team, your upcoming opponents, or a potential playoff opponent, here’s your chance! In this week’s article, I’ll be recapping three games, including The Infantry vs. Touched by an Angeletti, Trailer Park Boys vs. Masters of Coin, and the South Side Speedsters vs. New Wave.  In addition, I’ll put the spotlight on two Division 5A battles at Saint-Laurent tonight in Buffalo Wild Wings vs. Tip Top Shape and Voodoo vs. Spartans and give my predictions on each of these!.

 

Things on my mind this week:

  • I’ll take 100% of my Winter Monday’s like today. In fact, I’ll let Spring tease me whenever (She? He?) it wants.
  • Playing in FPF games where the opponent fields a 5-man roster is cool for the stats, I guess, but isn’t too fun to participate in. Apparently though, something happened in my game on Saturday that hasn’t happened in the 15-16 years of FPF and something the app can’t handle. The game was ended at halftime as one of their players got injured and were down to 4 guys, but their 6th man who they were waiting on, showed up at the half. They decided to keep playing, but still with 5 guys, however once the scorekeeper clicks End Game on the app, there’s no way to go back into the game to record stats. Luckily, Alexi Dubois is a champ scorekeeper and recorded the stats on his phone and inputted them in the back-end the next day. Shoutout to Alexi!
  • If I was the emergency backup goalie for the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday night, I would have shat the bed. While I was wrapping up my flag game, the now legendary David Ayres, had no idea what was coming his way, but he made history being the oldest goalie to win his first NHL game, and is now the talk of the hockey world.
  • What is with the parking at Catalogna on Sunday nights? It’s insanely packed each and every week.

 

Don’t forget to catch all the content FPF has to offer this year, from the other articles from FPF media members, including Peeze’s Saturday article which has the Power Rankings and Game Picks for all the Men’s divisions, to the Calling The Audible podcast, live on Thursday nights, the fantastic Game of the Week videos, to all the field snapshots posted up on the FPF Instagram page!

 

Weekend Recaps

 

The Infantry vs. Touched by an Angeletti (Div 4A)

The first drive of the game, with The Infantry on offense, pretty much foreshadowed how this game would go. It started with Sean Semerjian connecting with brother Rory for a quick slant from the left slot (Rory was often hit on quick slants and developing in routes from the left slot all night). Sean often rolled to both sides to gain time, and while Dilan Daoust’s first pass attempt with the offense was rolling right, was dropped (and he heard it from his teammates/friends from the sidelines), he quickly made up for it, with the next 3 catches, often making spin moves to shake defenders, and ultimately put 6 on the board with a back left corner TD route coming out of a trips left formation. Hitting both Rory and Dilan on the drive, and having both of them make guys miss tackles is what really drove The Infantry offense all night. Unable to convert on the XP, The Infantry went up early 6-0.

Not to be outdone on the first drive of their own, Shayne Feinberg hit both Mike Knopp (sideline hook) and while rolling left, caught his snapper, Freedman, in stride for 9 and 8 yards respectively. The drive ended on the next play with a TD, as Feinberg made a nice read to hit Cory Schiffman’s corner route from the right slot, a ball that landed just over the head of Rory and over Mike Collard’s shoulder. The 23-yard-deep ball, probably thrown 35 yards out however, was a terribly wobbly ball, a wobbly deep ball that was seen later on in this game… Unable to convert their own convert, the game was tied 6-6 after 1 possession each.

After being beat deep, both Rory and Collard were looking to make up for it. Once again, a couple of delayed out routes by Rory led them down to the 5 in just 2 plays, and Collard, playing as the snapper, made an easy catch on the quick drag to the left and made one cut up the middle for the score. Once again, The Infantry however, could not convert on the 1-point convert attempt, this time well defended by Ryan Castiel, getting his hand in on the out route pass attempt.

On TBAA’s next drive, Feinberg was just slightly off on his timing, reading Rockman’s fly route too late, and throwing one to Mike Knopp on a jump ball that was in coverage. Only able to gain 7 yards from a Castiel drag, they decided to go for it on 4th and 3, from their own 17-yard line, and while on the run, Sean Semerjian came up with the huge tackle preventing the 1st down and was actually credited with a 1-yard sack.

The Infantry had a great chance to go up 2 possessions with the ball 16 yards away from the endzone, and while Sean was able to shake the rusher a couple of times to gain a few extra seconds, his 2 incompletions, and a short 3-yard gain left them in a 4th down situation. Like TBAA, Sean had no choice but to run for it, and seemed like he had space on the field to make it for a 1st down, he ended up 3 yards short on a good 4 down stand by TBAA.

Fired up by their defensive stop, Feinberg was on a roll on their 3rd drive of the game, going 4/4 for 40 yards, hitting 4 different receivers and ending with a Castiel touchdown as he ran an in route from the left slot, to the back right of the endzone, which is always tough to cover in a zone defence. The key on this drive was that TBAA were successful on their 1-point convert attempt to go up 13-12.

With 2 minutes remaining in the half, I heard a confident Dilan Daoust in the huddle as they were huddling up say “let’s punch this ***** in before halftime”. This drive was a little more unconventional than the others for The Infantry, as Sean hit their WR sub, Ashton Rooney for 7, then ran for 2 yards, and ended the drive by being backed up by the TBAA rusher, Andrew Knopp, and just launching one into the left endzone for Julien El-Sayegh, who made an incredible play on the jump ball to come down with the 31-yard TD. With their 3rd convert unsuccessful, and the score at 18-13 for The Infantry, they may have scored a little too quickly, as TBAA had 4 plays remaining to score and would be starting with the ball in the 2nd half.

Luckily for The Infantry, Feinberg’s first 2 passes were way overthrown to the sidelines attempted for Castiel (fly) and Shiffman (deep out). On their last play, TBAA went with a double QB option to be able to launch it to the endzone, but it was batted down cleanly by Sean Semerjian.

 

Halftime score: 18-13 for The Infantry

 

Touched by an Angeletti started their opening drive of the 2nd half like I expected, connecting on the short routes, with a couple of hooks to Mike and Andrew Knopp for 8- and 9-yard completions. Driving the ball with confidence, the game took a turn for the worst for TBAA, as Feinberg was scrambling in the backfield and fearfully, almost blindly, threw it deep in the middle to one of his safety blankets, Ryan Castiel. It cost TBAA, as it was thrown too deep and picked off by Ashton Rooney.

The Infantry once again had a chance to go up 2 scores, and this time, Rory Semerjian took full advantage of the situation, as he went off on the drive. First for a 15 yard catch and run (an in route from the left slot, caught in the middle of the field as defenders cleared the area, and made a stop-and-go move), then caught a 25 yard TD strike, and ended it with a post route from the left slot, catching it in the back right of the endzone for the XP to get all 7 points on the drive to pad The Infantry’s lead 25-13.

The Angels knew they needed a quick score at this point, and it started well with a 28-yard catch by Schiffman, followed by a hard, precise ball thrown into tight coverage by Feinberg. The pass went for 11 yards and brought TBAA to the 1-yard line, but Andrew Knopp, while concentrating on making the catch in tight coverage, got poked in the eye on the play, leaving him a little stunned on the play. Feinberg though, was able to settle his team down and while on the run left, made a quick shovel pass to Castiel cutting in underneath the trips left formation. Score was 25-19 as the XP was no good due to an absolutely nasty 1 handed pick in the back, right corner of the endzone that Rory made seem like child’s play. Granted, it was a lobbed ball with not much speed on it, but it he made it seem like an everyday catch and there was no hollering from his teammates, as its likely a catch they’ve seen him make 1000 times already.   

This was, at the time, what I considered the key drive of the game for both teams. The Infantry wanting to score to go up comfortably, and TBAA absolutely needing the stop to have a single possession to go for the tying score. As I alluded to at the beginning of this recap, Sean, Rory and Dilan Daoust could not be stopped. Sean went 5/5, gaining back-to-back first downs (12 and 11 yards), letting the clock tick down, and eventually hit an open Daoust for an 11-yard TD, as he ran an awesome post corner route from the right slot, leaving the safety in the middle post with himself alone in the corner. To boot, he added the 1-point conversion as well, pretty much sealing the deal for his team. With time running out and needing another quick score, Feinberg just launched another wobbler deep, which was easily picked off by Rory. The Infantry added another score, a nice deep ball to their sub Ashton Rooney, beating his defender on a fly, which officially iced the game, a 39-19 victory for The Infantry. 

 

Final score: The Infantry 39 – Touched by an Angeletti 19

 

 

Trailer Park Boys vs. Masters of Coin (Div 6)

Because of the aforementioned traffic in the parking lot on Sunday in Lachine, I was there a little late to the Trailer Park Boys vs. Masters of Coin game, and the score was knotted at 6-6. The MOC score came off an Antoine Meunier interception which was later converted in a 3-yard TD by snapper David Nahon, while Meunier, as QB, took a 29-yard run to the house. When I got there, the tone of the game was a little tense as players were psyched up when making big plays on both sides of the ball. The handing back of flags were a little more aggressive than usual, and minor contact while being deflagged was received with an intentional extra second stare down, just to give you an idea of the edge I’m referring to.

When I first got there, Antoine Meunier had just gotten picked off by Josh Jagodnik after throwing a lob pass over the middle of the field; already Meunier’s 2nd INT in 3 drives. After a couple of short plays, Benji Ziegler and Dayan connected on a nice hook and go with Dayan pumping the defender on the hook in the right slot, and going over top to Ziegler for the 19-yard score. The 1-point convert was good on a nice back on the endzone read by Dayan to find Adam Rabinovitch in the back middle of the endzone. On the next TPB possession, Antoine Meunier saw his brother Fred streaking down the left slot, but was well defended by Salonichios. On the play though, F. Meunier was shaken up, but couldn’t come off the field to gather himself as the TPB’s were playing with no subs. On the next play however, the brothers hooked up for 17 yards as Antoine bought time, evading rusher Zak Sigler. The drive was successful, as Meunier was able to easily locate Will Richard 21 yards down field as he was wide open on a corner route from the left slot. On a very similar XP conversion as MOC, it seemed as if the TPB’s took a page out of MOC’s playbook as Antoine lobbed it to the back middle of the endzone to Phil Ramsey, tying the game at 13 apiece.

While neither Masters of Coin now Trailer Park Boys could score on their last possession before the half, I have to mention that Rabinovitch made a smart play. The context was 4th and 10 for TPB’s from the half with 2 plays remaining. Rabinovitch has an easy pick, had his hands up waiting to catch it, and at the last second let it go, to have 1 last play from the half instead of from their own 1-yard line. In the end, it didn’t result in a Masters of Coin Touchdown to end the half, but it’s a smart play that doesn’t in the stat sheet that’s worth mentioning. Good defensive and situational awareness on his part to make that split-second decision after having put his hands up.

 

Halftime score: Tied 13-13

 

Masters of Coin first possession of the 2nd half was a little rusty, but it doesn’t help when you have Will Richard rushing, who ended the night with 4 sacks on defense, as he tipped the first pass, forced Dayan into a low ball on the out route, and it followed by a bad snap by Nahon over Dayan’s head for a 9 yard loss (marked as a sack by Richard).

Now starting at the half after MOC punted the ball, Antoine Meunier marched down the field with some dink and dunk plays, resulting with a nice pass fired in on the out route to Will Richard for the go-ahead touchdown score. The XP was no good after Fred Meunier reached too high for a ball that wasn’t destined for him, and may have been caught by Phil Ramsey. While Masters of Coin drove down the field, notably through the great route running of Benji Ziegler on a wheel route (marked as an 11 yard catch but felt more like 20 yards), the impact of Will Richard was felt once again, with another big 7 yard sack, this defensive play, paired with an aggressive short game by Trailer Park Boys, forced MOC into a 4 and out, 9 yards away from their own endzone. I felt like at this juncture in the game, Trailer Park Boys had a great position in the game. They had a chance to a) go up 2 scores, and b) take time off the clock in the process of doing so. And that is exactly what Antoine Meunier did, leading his team down the field on a 7-play drive, and waiting until ref Craig O’Brien would signal 5 seconds before snapping the ball each time. It must have been a frustrating drive for the MOC defense, in particular Zak Sigler, who was inches away from sacking A. Meunier several times on the drive. Instead, it either bought the TPB Quarterback extra seconds to deliver strikes or run up the field, each time, able to get key first downs for his team. Like their previous TD on the out route, they converted on the same side of the field, but this time to Phil Ramsey instead of Richard for the 2-yard score.

Now down 25-13, Masters of Coin knew they needed to go in the hurry up offense with around 8 minutes left. I loved the way they attacked the defense and that everyone knew the importance of getting the ball and themselves back to the line with urgency. From the Trailer Park Boys perspective, maybe it was because they were 6 without any subs, or someone got hurt and needed the break, but I hated the fact that they called a timeout on the MOC drive. Between quick hooks, slants, and an 8-yard run by Dayan, Masters of Coin got to the redzone in just 3 plays, and scored 2 plays later with Sigler running a quick out route from the left slot, taking about 3-4 minutes off the clock. I was impressed with the quick score and they even converted the XP. Score was at 25-20 for TPB.

Trailer Park Boys still had the lead, and needed a good drive with at least 8-9 plays with a couple first downs (and hopefully for them, another score) to ice the game. It was truly a heartbreaking drive to see A. Meunier run to the edge, stop, and lob it over to no one, miss his 6-yard out route to Ramsey, and then take a deep shot to Will Richard that all went incomplete and never gave his receivers a chance to make a play. They (obviously) decided to punt it to the 10 and let the strength of their team, their defence, lead them to victory, but I can tell you, I felt it, and I’m sure they did too, but they were letting the game slip away after going 3 and out so quickly.

MOC had 2 minutes and 5 plays left in their favor, and thanks to their previous extra point conversion, only needed the touchdown to win the game. Dayan started easy, hitting snapper Nahon on a quick out that went for 7 yards. Then hit Ziegler on the sideline for 11 getting them over midfield. On a key 3rd down, Zak Sigler made a great diving catch for 6 yards, enough for the 1st down. Dayan on some of his passes throughout the game, and twice on this drive, was throwing the ball way too short, and luckily too, as if one had been higher off the ground, it could have been picked off by Antoine Meunier who was covering his face with his hands as he almost ended the game for his team. The game had 2 plays left, and TPB’s went to a man defence, and Antoine had Ziegler smothered on coverage, leaving 1 last play from the 5 for Masters of Coin to get the win… and on a great smash out route, BENJI ZIEGLER GETS HIS TEAM THE TRILLING LAST PLAY VICTORY TOUCHDOWN.

 

Final score: Masters of Coin 26 – Trailer Park Boys 25

 

 

South Side Speedsters vs. New Wave (Div 5B)

This was a great matchup coming into it, as we had 2 of the top dogs in division 5B facing off against each other. The 5-1 South Side Speedsters vs. the 4-2 New Wave on Lachine’s Sunday Night Football.

New Wave started with the ball in this game, and it didn’t take long to notice that their receivers have good hands. Not only that, but the team has considerable size, with guys towering over defenders. Names like Gallant (at QB), Nic Gorenc, Dylan Cernik and snapper, who I believe is Corrado Johnston, come to mind when seeing this team’s size. Gallant really likes his deep hooks on the sidelines and has a cannon of an arm to get the ball there quickly. On 2 such catches on opposite sidelines, it led to 33 yards gained, 7 yards short of the endzone. The drive however, was cut short due to a great tip by the SSS rusher, which ended up in the arms of Nicolas-Emmanuel Pierre. SSS – 1st drive The first South Side Speedster drive looked good, hitting the routes underneath, with hooks and drags, along with a 3-yard run by quarterback Ben Reid. Their drive, like New Wave’s ended up in the redzone, but Reid was zoning in on Dawson Pierre in the back of the endzone and attempted his first pass over defenders and it was picked off (nicely) by Nic Gorenc, coming seemingly out of nowhere to snag it away for a touchback. Despite Gallant’s powerful arm and maybe because of his 6-foot-5 starting height, he tended to overthrow many of his receivers on Sunday night which is where many of his 20 incompletions came from. At least though, they are balls that are somewhat in the vicinity of his receivers and have no chance of being intercepted. I mention this because this drive went 3 and out, and they even ended up punting from inside their 10 since they had a rusher interference penalty applied on them.

Now playing defence, Nic Gorenc already with a pick, made a great bat down with lots of traffic coming in the form of overlaying crosses. With Gorenc chewing up tons of space away from Reid, Reid went to star Dawson Pierre on a safe 7-yard hook which Pierre took it upfield for 16. On the very next play, in a man defence, Reid made a great read, throwing a great ball to Steven Boulay-Bourque’s post route from wide right, hitting him in stride with a defender draped all over him. And they were able to convert on the XP, Reid to Dawson Pierre after gaining some time from the rush. On New Wave’s next drive, it was clear that Gallant liked his deep matchup Cernik vs. Boulay-Bourque. The first one, he overthrew Cernik, but on the very next throw, Boulay-Bourque clearly interfered with Cernik, a 32-yard penalty, setting the ball at the 1-yard line. After some great defence by the Speedsters, with a nice bat down by Olivier Claveau, an incomplete pass by Gallant on the out route to Doucette and overthrowing no one in the back of the endzone, it took a key 4th down play to change the rhythm of the game. Gallant, squeezing one to the front left pylon on the out route in double coverage was batted down incomplete. I believed the SSS’s had played a great redzone defense, until I saw the flag for rusher, Will Tremblay, having hit Gallant’s arm (which was the right call — I recall hearing a slap of skin after following the ball’s trajectory to the endzone). As tough as it is to stop an offense on 4 downs, it’s an even harder task to ask them to do it for 8 plays in a row, and they couldn’t, as he hit Corrado Johnstorn for the score. They were also able to convert on the extra point attempt to tie to the game with Cernik catching one in the back corner of the endzone. And if you though, damn that was a long paragraph…the drive was truly as long as this paragraph suggests.

Game tied at 7.

With 4 plays remaining, the SSS’s looked to do the classic Bellicheck and score before the half and then start with the ball on offense in the 2nd half. The 2 key plays on the drive were a) Snapper Olivier Claveau going towards the left sideline for a deep 18 yard out, which he caught on the sideline before tapping both feet in, and b) Boulay-Bourque’s 3rd drag route of the game (always catching it in stride), which he took to the house for 16 yards after 2 New Wave defenders were only able to pull on his shorts, but never his flag belt. XP was no good after claveau’s out route from the right was incredibly close to being in, but the refs judged his flags did not cross the goaline.

Halftime score: 13-7 for SSS

After scoring on the last drive, the SSS had a chance to go up 2 possessions, but the Pierre brothers came up with 2 big drops (1 each) that forced the Speedsters to punt the ball to New Wave.

So New Wave had a great opportunity to tie the game, and it started well with another sideline throw and catch, a great catch by Spencer Fitzpatrick (who became a more utilized target in the 2nd half) just getting his feet to Tony-toe-tap in bounds for a 14-yard sideline catch. Unforuntately, that was all the drive had to offer New Wave, as a bad, low snap, 2 overthrown passes by Gallant and a run that counted as a 1-yard sack led to a turnover on downs.

New Wave couldn’t afford to give up another score. All night, when Ben Reid wasn’t releasing it from the pocket, he was getting the best of rusher Gianni Johnston, just able to swivel his way around Johnston. This drive was different however, and Johnston came alive with back to back sacks of 7 and 6 yards, firing up his teammates on the sidelines, which forced Reid and the SSS offense to punt.

While Gallant once again went deep to Cernik on the left side of the field, it was yet another overthrown, incomplete pass. As I mentioned, Fitzpatrick was a greater source of the offense, and connected with him running a post corner route from the right slot that went for 22 yards, and a 2nd time as well, on a well timed 6-yard out route for the touchdown. With the game tied at 13, the XP was critical, and Gallant found Doucette on him running to the back corner of the endzone to go up 14-13 on the Speedsters.

The SSS’s needed a good drive here after punting on their previous 2 possessions, and used snapper Olivier Claveau to gain them yards. The thing is, though he caught 4 balls for 41 yards on the drive, he took 2 flag guarding penalties back-to-back to net out to 31 yards. They did make it to the 1-yard line, but once again, with Reid on the run, as he rolled left, he stopped and try a cute little lob pass that would have made it over 8/10 defenders, but not Jared Gallant, and he was able to pick off Reid, his second RZ interception thrown.

This drive was the key one in the game, as there was about 4 minutes left in the game (plus 5 plays) and New Wave had the chance to kill the clock and go up as many as 9 points. It started poorly however, with 2 overthrown incompletions, and when I mentioned this team is tall, man Gallant was overthrowing giants. Knowing time was against them, the Speedsters used both of their timeouts on the first 2 incompletions. Unfortunately for the SSS’s, they let 23 yards on a deep hook from the snapper in the middle of the field. Those 23 yards, coupled with a drag route by Doucette for 7, and Gorenc for 11, it was 1st and goal from the 2 with 6 plays left in the game. 1st down – Gallant almost converted with Doucette who made a fantastic diving catch, but his elbow hit out of bounds BEFORE his 2 feet were in bounds in the back middle of the endzone. 2nd down, 5 plays – Gallant overthrows Cernik on the left sideline. 3rd down, 4 plays – Gallant throws it out of the endzone. 4th down, 3 plays…. Buying time against the rusher, Gallant waits, waits… until the middle of the field opened up and connects with Cernik for the TD! New Wave decided to go for 1, converted on it, and so were up by 8 with 2 plays remaining.

Reid managed to hit Dawson Pierre, coming in over the middle for 18 yards; taking them 3 yards over the half. For the last play of the game, Reid, backing up, threw it to Boulay-Bourque as the 2nd QB. Now, the rusher didn’t come over to Bourque’s side, and no defender came from the endzone to attack Bourque, so he had all day. But for some reason, he ran up to the line of scrimmage and forced a ball to Nicolas-Emannuel Pierre, well covered by Dylan Cernik and was batted down incomplete. I was a little confused, as he could have been more patient and waited until someone got more open since he had no pressure coming towards him.

It was a great battle in which New Wave came out on top.

 

Final score: New Wave 21 – South Side Speedsters 13

 

 

Monday Night Football Previews

Buffalo Wild Wings (4-2) vs. Tip Top Shape (2-3-1)

This is actually a really important game for Tip-Top Shape, as they are in the 9th seed coming into this one. Unfortunately, it’s been David de Andrade’s, statistically at least, worst season as a Quarterback, on pace for career low in completions, passing yards, passing TD’s and career high’s in INT’s and sacks. While I think he has a bounce back game tonight, I don’t think it’s enough to matchup with what the BWW’s bring to the table. Tristan Rinaldis is having a great season so far, and has 4 main guys that have combined for 865 yards of Rinaldis 1064 total passing yards and have caught 22 of his 25 TD passes.  I think the Buff Wild Wings just have too many ball hawks on their side for Tip Top Shape to contend with. If Tip Top Shape is to win though, they will need a stellar performance from Daniel Abelard to majorly disrupt the Wild Wing offense. I believe Terry Tam gets his first TD of the season, but in a losing effort.

Prediction: Buffalo Wild Wings 33 – Tip Top Shape 26

 

 

Voodoo (2-3-1) vs Spartans (3-3)

This one is another important game with one team in the playoff picture (Spartans) and the other right there, looking for every win they can get to squeak into the 7 or 8 spot (Voodoo). This is a classic offensive battle between a 3-headed monster at WR with Daniel Hernandez, Alexis Bessette, and Andrew Grant vs. the 1 stud on Voodoo in Pat St-Amand, with his 428 yards and 16 TD’s. While that statement may be unfair to guys like Etienne Vaillancourt and snapper Martin Bergeron on Voodoo, as these 2 guys, particularly Vaillancourt, are guys with very reliable hands, it is hard to ignore the 16 stat line Pat St-Amand has put up so far. Obviously, this is the Spartan’s #1 priority on defence, but even though that’s obvious, and you know it’s coming, it’s still really hard to stop it, so it must be said.  This one will actually be a really close game and think it will come down to whoever has the ball last with 5 plays remaining. So, what I’m really saying is who I think will have an extra possession, and I think the Spartans will have the ball last, and score on those last few plays, not leaving enough plays for Voodoo to make a comeback

Prediction: Spartans 28 – Voodoo 27

 

If you made it ’till the end, thanks for reading! I hope you enjoyed the analysis as much as I enjoyed writing it. I’m always open to new ideas, suggestions, or shoutouts, so feel free to email me @ [email protected], or message me on Facebook (I’m pretty sure I’m the only Ignacio Valdes-Manzanedo on FB in Montreal). If you feel like you prefer talking FPF over a pint, I sometimes host trivia, and often attend trivia as a player at NDG’s own local pub, Honey Martin, on Tuesday nights. Come swing by and we’ll analyze divisions, teams, game strategy, and playoff races!

Cheers,