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Around SBN: The Gift Of The 2003 Tigers

I am not qualified to post this.

One of my favorite products of the Redskins-Titans game was only subsequent to the on-field product, strange as that sounds to admit after weathering a grueling offseason of counting down the months/weeks/days/minutes/seconds 'til kickoff, was that crafty devil Dillweed's impressive analysis of the first string offensive line play-by-play at Post Game Heroes.

As Dan Steinberg points out that analysis just happened to break opinion from every single local newspaper's coverage of the offensive line, namely:

Now I don't know the author's football background, and his name is Dillweed, but for the record he's come to an opposite conclusion of everyone else, including the coaching staff: that Wade actually played ok, and that Jansen was actually the worst performer of the bunch. Anyhow, Dillweed has promised to do this all season.
Now I don't know who is right and who is wrong. Having not slogged through every single newspaper (as Dan has) and reviewed the Post Game Heroes analysis with the game footage in front of me to attest for accuracy, I'm not "qualified" or "credentialed" to speak towards a conclusion for or against Post Game Heroes or the local media. Dillweed's analysis certainly appears to be accurate as he goes into extreme detail that would be more complicated to invent than record.

I am not certain that the local newspapers have reached a conclusion about the line's play that is mutually exclusive with Post Game Heroes, so I'm going by Dan's word on that. But were that the case the conclusion many fans would probably reach is that Post Game Heroes got it wrong and the wisdom of the masses (of local reporters) is better judged.

Yet I watched the game with my own eyes and nothing about the PGH's line analysis jumps out at me as false per my recollection -- which was admittedly affected by alcohol. I didn't think Wade performed better than everyone else on the line, but I don't necessarily absolutely believe that I'm right about that; countless times I've believed that a player did worse/better on the field than was actually the case after a second viewing, a statistical analysis, or a dialogue with other viewers.

And all that was really said in the PGH analysis was that Todd Wade made two good blocks and one bad one in the run game. The offensive line was largely evaluated on the two sacks it allowed against Jason Campbell that resulted in fumbles, one lost. Though as was documented elsewhere neither of those happened to be Todd Wade's fault:

In Saturday's game, Jason Campbell was sacked twice--resulting in two fumbles--on the Redskins' first two offensive series. Campbell took responsibility for one of the sacks, saying he mis-read a blitz after the Titans overloaded the left side.

The other sack was the result of a stunt by defensive tackle Tony Brown, who raced past right tackle Jon Jansen to get to Campbell.

Said Bugel: "Jon happened to trip on Randy's foot, and that's why the guy got through clean. They ran it three times, and two of the three times we picked it up, and the bad one was a sack."

And although it is just one anecdote in a larger sample size, that example happens to coincide with PGH's analysis.

But what does Dillweed know? I mean, he's just a guy... with two eyes just like mine. Just a guy... who does what I do. He's just a guy... and so am I. So count me among those predisposed towards believing his analysis -- my bias is out in the open. Because if you can't count on a guy named Dillweed posting on the tubenets with what appears to be credible analysis of a game I watched then you certainly cannot count on a guy named Skin Patrol posting on the tubenets with what frequently appears to be idiotic, confusing, or factually incorrect analysis. Commenter FW at The Bog made this concern explicit, emphasis mine:

So what qualifations do Dillweed possess that should make me trust his assessment? Anyone can chart plays and give an opinion. But do they have the quantity and quality of understanding to give an accurate assessment? The internet is great technology but, man, it sure does give power to any old Joe Schmoe.
Despite what FW might think, I've always felt the inclusivity of the internet was one of its greatest strengths. In a marketplace (and I'm stealing the language of another, soon quoted) of ideas the greater the "quantity" very likely the better the "quality". The internet isn't unique to the media in that some people are simply better at this thing than others. An impartial observer would have to admit that Ben strings together sentences and concepts a bit better than yours truly. Just as it is probably true that either the Washington Post or the Washington Times better covers the Redskins in the opinion of some fans than the other, which is why some people subscribe to or choose to read the coverage of one over the other (I love them both!). And consumers of that coverage aren't likely basing their decisions on the "quality" or "quantity" of David Elfin's "understanding" vs. that of Jason La Canfora's, as if we could possibly grasp those obscure qualifications merely from looking at the two men's resumes -- which, incidentally, most readers of the Times and Post likely haven't. I don't know which Journalism school either man went to. I don't care, really.

[Quick Aside: This is not at all an attack on journalists. But Journalism school does not train individuals to accurately and intelligibly analyze the sport of Football. Rather it exists to  promote good Journalistic habits such as writing and reporting (which is why those guys are so much better than me in both those areas; I didn't go to journalism school. Philosophy, for full disclosure). Without knowing anything about Dillweed except that he has an awesome pseudonym, there's no reason to presume that he's less qualified to analyze football than any newspaper's particular beatwriter. And sometimes being qualified to discuss football in virtue of, say, having played it at a competitive level, doesn't necessarily mean you'll be any good at analyzing it in the first. So, like, take that.]

A similar though more nuanced criticism against the "citizen journalists" of the internets was leveled by Richard Schickel though the subject of that discussion was the invasion of book reviewing by the unqualified masses. This would be Books Haven or some nonsense and I'd be pining idiotic on literature.

A brilliant SB Nation colleague of mine responded to that criticism as relates to sports citizen journalism, blogging, more eloquently than I possibly could. In response to Shickel's observation, not unlike FW's above, that credentials are important:

And we have to find in the work of reviewers something more than idle opinion-mongering. We need to see something other than flash, egotism and self-importance. We need to see their credentials. And they need to prove, not merely assert, their right to an opinion.
Sunday Morning Quarterback, in a post that is well worth reading in its entirety, responded:
Their - our - credentials are in the substance of the writing and the thoughts it expresses. Same as any writer, ever, anywhere, in history; we're back to the market. Our right is as human beings.
And with that the discussion is over. The greatness of any literary work was never predetermined by the fact that its author went to Oxford or Harvard or had published a lot of critically acclaimed works prior, that an author knew the subject more intimately than all others, or even that an author's credentials were clearly stated/proven before the product was read. To take an example from Shickel and SMQ, I haven't the foggiest idea where George Orwell went to school. I don't know what his writing credentials are. And that hasn't mattered in the least to me because his authority is derived from the greatness of his product, just as is true for every writer, ever, in history. Had he published 1984 anonymously, perhaps under the name Dillweed on a tubenet blog, it would affect exactly none-at-all the greatness of that book.

By the way, I'll be out today relocating to a new town in order to pursue my own credentials at Law School later this month. I say that only to apologize for a lack of posts, of which this is probably the only one today, though regular blogging resumes tomorrow. My good friend at Behind the Steel Curtain and I have some interesting stuff planned for this Saturday's game against the Steelers, so stay tuned. Or don't. Because what qualifies me to talk about the team I love?

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Commenter FW
and his or her ilk reinforce a popular tendency to assign authority to individuals based on who has provided that individual the outlet and not whether that individual's work can stand on its own.

Dillweed charted all those plays, looking at each one individually, and I take that at face value. As it happens, lifetime Eagles fan, season ticket holder and Curly R reader/lurker Wilbert Montgomery, who played football through high school and was coached by Eagles linebacker great Bill Bergey, looked at those charts and thought based on his experience that Dillweed may have played or coached football at some point.

But does knowing that someone who knows something about football approves of the analysis change your opinion on it?  And what if Dillweed knows nothing about theoretical football, which would make Wilbert Montgomery wrong, yet still someone that 'knows' something about football?

Think of this big wide world of people vomiting words onto teh internets like drunks into a giant toilet like you think of movie reviews.  Who knows what these guys quals are, and how many times have you read a review and said, if that guy hated it, I'm definitely going to see it.

=====Curly R: The Redskins Blog=====

by thatguyben on Aug 15, 2007 10:36 AM EDT reply actions  

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