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Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Programming Idea: Fantasy Football

Fantasy Football has nearly become a sport unto itself. For football fans, it's the next best thing to actually watching football. And for some, being "involved" in the sport in this way is much better. So a fantasy football league would be a great community gathering event for a library of any size. But manually running a fantasy football league is tough work. Thankfully, Yahoo has a full set of tools available to create and run a league through their Yahoo Fantasy Sports section. They do all the work and the cost is next to nothing.

For a librarian on a tight programming budget, the fact that running a league through Yahoo Fantasy Football is free is the best part. The only costs might be a few prizes for the top players or the pizza and wings that would be a necessity at any "Draft Day" event.

Yahoo allows for the creation of fully customizable leagues where nearly every setting is editable. Leagues can be created in the two most popular fantasy sports styles: "Head-to-Head" or "Points". Definitions of nearly every term used in fantasy football (and details on how Yahoo's system in particular works) can be found at Yahoo's help pages.

The Fantasy Draft itself can be turned into a huge event with a few pizzas and wings and soda. To get the rest of the community involved, it would be easy to take a whiteboard and post the league standings somewhere in the library. Weekly league meetings could even be held (on Sunday afternoons of course and with a little football on a TV) to encourage people to stick with the league.

While a season-long fantasy football league is not a "traditional" library program, it definitely fits in with the idea that many librarians share that libraries should be community meeting places.

1 comments:

Paul said...

Thanks for the post John. Yes, I agree. Fantasy Football is a great way to reach out, build community, and provide practice in information literacy skills. The amount of research and analysis lends itself to info lit. If anyone would like more information on this connection, please check out these posts (http://researchquest.blogspot.com/search/label/fantasy%20sports) on my blog Research Quest.

John, I hope your post encourages others to think about starting up leagues. I've talked to both public and academic librarians looking to start leagues at their libraries.

Additional resources can also be found in the handouts from my LOEX presentation with The Fantasy Football Librarian (http://www.loexconference.org/2008/sessions.htm)