Week 4 preview!

Cheating and week 1 review

David, Ben & Addy don't think the Patriots are the only cheaters in the NFL, find out what's really going on! We also review the upsets and surprises from week 1, preview all the week 2 action and offer condolences if you made some popular fantasy mistakes. Don't miss out on the fun! 

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Join Our Pick 'em League

Want to prove you know more about the NFL than the guys?  Here's your chance.  Join our Yahoo! Fantasy Football Pick Em League

The Group ID# is 4360 and the password is OOB. 

Make your picks every week and each week we will reward the winner with a free gift.  That might be a T-shirt, a mug or maybe even a bag of crawfish. Just like the NFL any given Sunday you could win any given prize. 

At the end of the season the player with the best record will receive the grand prize of a brand new NFL jersey of your choice up to $250.

Homegating Contest

When it comes to watching the game there is no right way or wrong way there is only your way.  Show us how you like to watch by sending us pics on social media with the #homegating.  We will then judge if it is in fact the right way.

Win some Out of Bounds swag and grand prize of a dinner from Omaha Steaks. 

You have two ways to enter.

1. Subscribe to our email updates on our webpage. That automatically enters you into every drawing we do.

2. Post a picture of your home setup.  Doesn't matter if its your man cave, your favorite half time dish or even your vintage 2010 Seahawks Jersey.  You can post on our Facebook page, on twitter or instagram with #OOB and your choice of #homegating. Every individual post is an entry into the drawing. (Limit of 5 entries)

We will draw a winner on December 21, 2015

The Redskins are so bad they make you look responsible

You won't believe how much drama surrounds RG3 and the Washington Redskins, they make the Kardashians look like responsible adults. And Russell Wilson claims to have a drink that can cure concussions! Addy makes his return to the show! You won't want to miss the fun with Addy, David and Ben!

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The Real Cost of a QB

Russell Wilson finally got paid. Rather than being forced to play out the final year of his rookie contract, Wilson was rewarded by the Seahawks with an $87.6 million contract with $60 million guaranteed. It’s definitely a great day to be Wilson, but is it a great day for the Seahawks?

Recent history would say no.

The Ravens let Joe Flacco play out the final year of his contract, and he led them to a victory in Super Bowl 47. The team was forced to pay Flacco an exorbitant amount of money, and the Ravens were forced to cut ties with eight starters from the championship team. If you’re keeping score at home, that’s more than any other Super Bowl champ in history.

Since paying Flacco, the Ravens haven’t finished better than third in the AFC North and are 1-1 in the playoffs.

So what’s the moral of the story? The quarterback of your team can’t do it all on his own.

Wilson fell into a fantastic situation when the Seahawks drafted him in 2012. They had a great run game, a phenomenal defense, and a good offensive line. The Hawks were the definition of a team that was a quarterback away from winning, and Wilson took the reins and ran with it. He minimized turn overs, took advantage of the playmakers around him, and made plays with his feet when he had to.

So how bad of a deal is this for the Seahawks? Time will tell. Just to name a few upcoming contract issues - Kam Chancellor and Michael Bennett have already made it clear they want more money and the team will be forced to give Bobby Wagner a new contract soon. There isn’t going to be enough money to go around for everyone and soon it will be up to Wilson to prove that he’s capable of being successful without such a talented roster.

Fun with fireworks and NFC East Preview!

Off-season karate, state of the AFC East and more!

David's gone, people are violating rules and buying the weirdest things

David's gone, so Ben and Addy actually have a good show! They're talking about some surprisingly wise financial decisions some players are making, bringing the legendary status of Peyton Manning down to earth and more!

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Out of Bounds 204

Check out the latest in NFL news from David and Ben. Help us get #JagDown trending!

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The Seventh Deadly Seed

The 2011-2012 was the Packers year. Sure, they had just won the Super Bowl in the prior year, but the ’11 season was special for Green Bay. Aaron Rodgers crushed every defense they faced and the team cruised to a 15-1 record. The Packers were the number one seed in the NFC.

The Packers were a lock to repeat as NFC champions at least and very likely win consecutive Super Bowls.

Except they didn’t even win a playoff game.

After all their offensive records, going undefeated at home and basically looking unstoppable, the Packers fell victim to a Giants team that barely squeaked into the playoffs.

The 2011 New York Giants should have stayed home in January. They went 1-5 in a crucial stretch of games in November & December and they already lost to the Packers in New York.

I would have bet my house that if the Giants played the Packers in the playoffs 100 times that year, they’d have 100 loses.

But I was wrong and so was everyone else. Even the most hardcore Giants fans were certain that game would be the Giants last of the season.

It was one of those golden moments in sports history. The type of moment you will never forget. You witnessed something so unexpected and special.

This is exactly what’s so great about the playoffs and it’s also why the post season isn’t as cool as we think.

It’s time to stop talking about changing the playoffs and just change the format. The league needs to add in a seventh seed in each conference for the playoffs. We need more of these moments. The Arizona Cardinals were the only team that actually won in Seattle in 2013, who wouldn’t have wanted to see what they could have done in the playoffs as a seventh seed?

Pundits will complain that adding in more teams to the playoffs will water down the level of competition. It’s simply not the case.

The 2012 Ravens barely qualified for the post season and when they arrived to play the top seeded Broncos in the divisional playoffs they were supposed to get laughed out of Denver. The Broncos had beaten the Ravens just a few weeks ago in Baltimore. Peyton Manning was going to get taken out for the second half to rest after putting up a huge lead.

Of course none of that mattered when the game started. Manning struggled to get anything going against a fired up Ravens defense, and the Broncos defense couldn’t get off the field when they needed to. Baltimore clawed its way to a stunning victory in a double overtime thriller. Pretty impressive for a team that supposedly shouldn’t have bothered traveling cross country.

This is exactly what makes the games worth watching. It doesn’t matter how amazing you were in the regular season, the teams you’re most confident will win can still get embarrassed in prime time.

Don’t pretend like you don’t want to watch.

Judging by the current success of the NFL, we seem to be nowhere near oversaturating the public with more football. And why wouldn’t you want more? 

The NFL playoffs bring out the absolute best in sports. Who doesn’t want more Malcom Butler game saving interceptions? How about more thrillers like the Seahawks playing the best eight minutes of football to steal the game from the better team in the 2014 NFC title game?

Yes, more of that please.

The ratings and money are there, the league just needs to figure out how to do it.

Right now, there are four post season games each weekend nationally televised on Saturday and Sunday. By adding in two more teams, there needs to be an established “fair” time slot for these extra teams to play in.  If you schedule an extra game for Friday or Monday, then the winner of the game would have considerably less or more time to prepare than their next opponent.

Another aspect to consider - who gets a bye week in the expanded playoffs? Right now, the top two seeds in each conference don’t play until the second weekend in the playoffs. By adding in a 7th seed, the number 2 seed in each conference would host this 7th seed. This would mean only the top seed in each conference would earn a bye unless the league finds another creative way to schedule the match ups.

In 2014, ESPN broadcasted an NFL playoff game for the first time ever. The fact that there is a new network in the mix means changes are coming. How do you think the playoff format should be changed? When should the games be aired? Who should play in the opening round? How many teams should earn a bye week?

Post below and share what you think!

Also be sure to check out and download “The Heist” It’s the latest dubstep track from our friend Cryoshok who created the theme music for our podcast.

The NFL is Rigged

I’m the new guy so I thought I better just get this out of the way.  I used to religiously follow the NFL and after Elway lost that second Super Bowl I just sort of lost interest as a kid.  Then when I started working in sports talk radio in the late 90’s I started following it again.  The guys at the station were obviously super in to the NFL but there were a couple guys who followed the WWE.  That’s when I realized the NFL is rigged.

I know it sounds crazy but I don’t really view the NFL all that much different than the WWE.  To me both are sports entertainment.  The biggest difference to me is that the athletes in the NFL don’t know it’s all predetermined.  Well, maybe not all….but I’m getting ahead of myself.

Let’s start at the realities of the industry.  The NFL is a $45 Billion industry.  That’s a lot of money.  You know where else there is a lot of money involved in the NFL?  Vegas.  Each week an estimated $50 Million is wagered on the NFL.  That’s  $800 Million for just the regular season.  Vegas doesn’t run solely on the NFL sports bets but it sure doesn’t want to see it go away.  Lastly, refs in the league make an average of $173,000 a year to memorize an incredibly complicated rule book that week after week they seem to get wrong.

I know what you’re thinking, “…what’s that got to do with fixing an NFL game?”  Nothing.  Maybe everything.  That rule book and how it’s plays are interpreted makes it pretty simple to get the outcomes you want.    You see it’s my belief that those random holding and pass interference calls that seem to happen at the most inopportune times aren’t always just bad calls (or good calls in some cases).

See the NFL is invested in who wins each week.  Outside of what happens in your bathroom nobody wants to see the Browns in the Superbowl.  They have super stars that they want to face off that are going to sell tickets and drive ratings.  All that makes the NFL worth more.  Despite their  previous nonprofit status they are indeed a profit machine.

Vegas is also invested.  They are the ones setting the the lines for games each week.  They can’t afford to be wrong too often than not.  They need games to be close enough that gamblers will be enticed to spend their money week after week.  It’s in their best interests to make sure they know outcomes.

Which leads us to the refs.  Now I don’t think all the refs are dirty.  Maybe they are, but not all of them need to be.  There only needs to be a handful to fix a game here or there.  Again, I know what you are thinking “Ben, I think we would know if there were bad refs in the league.”  People didn’t know that Tim Donaghy was fixing games for years in the NBA.  Sure he was caught but it’s suspected that is only because his bookie who had mob ties turned on him.

How does it work?  How do these three entities work together to get the results that will make the most money, get the results they desire and still fly under the radar?  It’s pretty simple.  Bribe, blackmail whatever you need to do find a couple dirty refs.  Make sure they are different teams of refs so that you have the opportunity to fix as many games as you might need to on any given week.  Then look at the schedule, look at the line and figure out which team or teams do you need to advance in order to make the whole thing work.

What’s great about this system is that you don’t have to fix every game.  You only have to fix one maybe two a week.  Suddenly the Browns are 1-5 again and Peyton Manning is in the hunt for another disappointing playoff run.  Not every ref you have in the pocket has to actively throw a game so it’s not as obvious as Earl Hebner in Montreal Screw Job.  It’s almost perfect.  The rule book is so complicated and the game is already so difficult to call a wonky call here or there is almost just part of the game.  All the while it seems like everything is on the up and up.

How many times have you heard “It’s a game of inches” or “One play can totally change the outcome of a game.”?  That only feeds in to the ability to fix games.  In this age of “on any given Sunday” truly any given Sunday a team can win or cover a spread thanks to a little help.

What do you think?  Is it fixed?  Is it not even possible in your mind?  Would it ruin the experience of the NFL if you found it was fixed?  Let us know in the comments below or call in to appear on the podcast.