QB Salary Breakdown 2013 – Who’s VALUE-ABLE?

Russell Wilson is the best value at QB when considering salary

Russell Wilson is the best value at QB when considering salary

The quarterback is the most challenging position on the football field. This player touches the ball on almost every play and is essential to success. That’s why it makes sense to find a solid QB and lock him up to a long term contract. Obviously this is easier said than done. My opinion is that teams pay too much for mediocre talent. I’m going to breakdown AND RANK who I believe are over, under, and fairly paid QB’s.

Team                                            Contract                    2013 cash

Underpaid
Russell Wilson Seahawks        4 years, $3M              $749,193
RG III Redskins                        4 years, $21.12M        $5.28M
Colin Kaepernick 49ers           4 years, $5.13M          $1.28M
Cam Newton Panthers             4 years, $22M             $5.51M
Tom Brady Patriots                  5 years, $57M              $11.4M
Andrew Luck Colts                   4 years, $22.11M         $5.53M
Matt Ryan Falcons                   6 years, $72M              $12M

Worth Payment
Aaron Rodgers Packers           7 years, $130.75M        $18.68M
Joe Flacco Ravens                   6 years, $120.6M          $20.1M
Roethlisberger Steelers            8 years, $100.12M       $12.51M
Peyton Manning Broncos          5 years, $96M               $19.2M
Drew Brees Saints                     5 years, $100M             $20M
Andy Dalton Bengals                 4 years, $5.22M             $1.3M
Christian Ponder Vikings           4 years, $10.16M           $2.54M
Eli Manning Giants                    7 years, $106.9M           $15.27M
Michael Vick Eagles                  1 year, $7.5M                  $7.5M
Josh Freeman Bucs                  5 years, $32.42M           $6.48M
E.J. Manuel Bills                        4 years, $8.89M             $2.22M
Ryan Tannehill Dolphins          4 years, $12.67M            $3.17M
Jake Locker Titans                    4 years, $12.59M            $3.15M

Overpaid
Mark Sanchez Jets                   5 years, $58.25M          $11.6M
Philip Rivers Chargers              7 years, $98.31M           $14.04M
Sam Bradford Rams                6 years, $78M                $13M
Jay Cutler Bears                      5 years, $49.9M             $9.98M
Matthew Stafford Lions            5 years, $76.5M             $15.3M
Tony Romo Cowboys              7 years, $119.5M            $17.07M
Carson Palmer Cards              2 years, $16M                 $8M
Brandon Weeden Browns        4 years, $8.08M            $2.2M
Blaine Gabbert Jaguars          4 years, $12.01M           $3M
Matt Schaub Texans                5 years, $69.7M            $13.94M
Matt Flynn Raiders                  2 years, $11.5M              $5.75M
Alex Smith Chiefs                    3 years, $24M                 $8M

Conclusion

My list is pretty easy to understand.  The current QB’s who are underpaid are the ones who had breakout seasons last year.  I used to laugh hysterically at Russell Wilson’s numbers and call him the worst fantasy QB in the league.  It’s funny how quickly that can change.  RGIII is great if he stays healthy.  Kapernick proved any and everything in the playoff game against the Packers.  I think Cam has a huge skill set with a weak mental aspect to the game that can develop.  Brady is Brady and Andrew Luck proved it wasn’t all luck.  These QB’s are all solid and you can build a team around them.

The next section is easy to decipher because the QB’s who are worth it are the one’s who have won Superbowls.  Rodgers, Roethlisberger, Brees, Flacco, and both Mannings are deserved of the money they make.  They’ve proven it before and they are all veteran QB’s who with the right team, show they can win it all.  The next part of that list are players who generally aren’t getting paid that much and are unproven.  All Ponder has to do is hand the ball off.  Dalton is making squat.  Vick is a huge question mark with upside potential.  I’m still not sold on Freeman.  Manual, Tannehill, and Locker haven’t shown much.

The 0verpaid players are the ones who make a lot of money and don’t lead their team to victory.  They all have fundamental flaws to their games which prevent them from taking the steps forward.  Sanchez isn’t an NFL QB so I don’t care how much money he makes, it’s too much.  Rivers shows glimpses of being a quality QB but he’s not able to control his emotions.  Sam Bradford seems to win some games but I don’t see stardom in his future.  Cutler and Stafford both throw too many picks and get by more on stats than wins.  I actually like Tony Romo but I don’t think he should be making as much as he does for reasons stated above.  If I owned a team, I’d chose an unproven rookie over Carson Palmer.  Weeden and Gabbert suck although Weeden has some upside, Gabbert doesn’t.  Matt Schaub isn’t bad I just think he’s making too much money.  Matt Flynn has had one good game stat wise in a game that didn’t mean anything.  Alex Smith can’t throw the ball but is a smart QB.

So there you have it.  All the QB’s broken down by value when considering how much money they are making this year.  If you want my advice, any single player in the underrated column would be nice to have on your fantasy team this year.

By |2013-07-15T11:01:14-04:00July 15th, 2013|Sports|1 Comment

Ali Frazier 1 – Polarization Sells

Frazier's famous left hook to knock Ali down in the 15th round of Ali -Frazier 1

Frazier’s famous left hook to knock Ali down in the 15th round of Ali -Frazier 1

I finished watching an hour long piece on Ali – Frazier 1 and it was wonderful. I had seen a documentary on the Thrilla in Manilla so I was already somewhat educated on the rivalry of the two fighters but this hour long segment had me captivated. In one corner you had a hard working, poor boy from South Carolina who grew up working the fields and in the other a middle class, trash talking, pretty boy who converted to Islam. Frazier, “the white man’s champ”, let his skills in the ring do the talking and Ali was a master of trash talking, promoting, and showmanship. There was no middle ground in this fight. “If you were rooting for Ali you were black liberal or young, against Vietnam and for the Civil Rights movement. If you backed Joe Frazier you were a representative of white, conservative America.” These conflicting viewpoints is what made this “the Fight of the Century” and is considered the greatest heavyweight fight of all time.

Any event that is seen by 300 million people around the world can be considered legendary. It was a global event and I thought to myself what is it that made this fight so epic and why can’t I think of many events of recent time that was of this magnitude. The answer was that you had two polar opposite sides. People had to make a decision of who they wanted to win the fight and that stood for what your beliefs were. You couldn’t like both fighters because than you were a weak minded, wishy washy, individual who stood for nothing, This idea, combined with the fact that this actually was a fight between the greatest heavyweight champs at the time, is what created the buzz around an even that makes history.

“Fight of the Century” type events don’t seem to happen anymore. Is it that the fighters don’t garner enough interest? Is it that the genius of Muhammad Ali and his gift of self promotion isn’t found so readily anymore? Without Ali’s personality, this fight doesn’t turn out this way. He was the catalyst. He made it happen. If there were two Joe Frazier’s all you had was a fight. Ali’s personality created this global event by talking, taunting, and believing in something bigger than boxing. Boxers nowadays are just that, boxers. No one cares that much about simply boxers. The draw of this event was the hoopla surrounding it. It combined war, race, talent, and what kind of person you were into one event. We don’t see that anymore in 2013. People have such a large pool of information to pull from that there are so many events that one event doesn’t come together like it once did. There is more education, more options, more choices to make. It’s not black and white anymore but millions of shades in between. I think the stars have to align perfectly for something like Ali-Fraizer 1 to happen. You’d need a soccer match between nations that stand for completely opposite beliefs to gain that type of attention. This is why I wrote that polarization is needed to transcend an event to that next level. This principal can be taken in just about any verse type competition. Creating that interest lies in more than the event but what the event stands for. For some reason it doesn’t seem to happen like it once did.

By |2013-07-14T12:08:49-04:00July 14th, 2013|Sports|1 Comment

America is Wrong With Aaron Hernandez

nfl_g_hernandeza2_jv_600

YahooRevelation after revelation about the shooting death of Odin Lloyd has appeared to tighten the net around former New England Patriot Aaron Hernandez. However, defense attorneys with experience in both high-profile criminal cases and murder investigations caution against passing swift public judgment on Hernandez’s fate.

Why? Because of a simple phrase we’ve all heard so many times it’s become rote: innocent until proven guilty.

This case is absurd. Carlos Ortiz, who prosecutors say was with Hernandez when Odin Lloyd was killed, told cops he was informed by the second alleged accomplice that “Mr. Hernandez admitted to shooting Mr. Lloyd.”

I have no idea why this case is taking so long. If Hernandez was anyone else who didn’t just sign a contract for 40 million dollars, he’d be locked away for life. I’ve been following this case somewhat closely and all evidence points to Hernandez. The murder took place near his house, the car at the scene was the car he rented, he had problems with the victim, he destroyed his surveillance, he’s had a history of violence in the past, and he did it. The guy who was with him said he did it. Is it possible this guy Carlos Ortiz did it? He’d have to be a mastermind and I have a feeling he’s not. I see where there could be reasonable doubt that someone else in the car pulled the trigger but SOMEONE IN THAT SUV PULLED THE TRIGGER. It was most likely Aaron Hernandez who was shutting up someone who knew something about a double murder that AARON HERNANDEZ WAS ALSO INVOLVED IN. This guy fucking did it. Put him away for life. If he gets a Ray Lewis, this system is flawed.

Not many things bother me but this particular case does. He can’t get off here for being famous and having money. Normal people wouldn’t be able to work the system like this. Aaron Hernandez is a thug who needs to be taught a lifetime lesson. I’m not a detective but from what I’ve read, it doesn’t take much to put the pieces together. Reasonable doubt my ass. The fact they can’t find the murder weapon is even more proof he did. The fact that he hid the proof IS THE PROOF. He fucking did it. Stick it to him.

By |2013-07-11T22:51:08-04:00July 11th, 2013|Sports|3 Comments

Sabine Lisicki is Everything Wrong With Woman’s Sports

Sabine Lisicki crying like a baby while getting her ass whoooped

Sabine Lisicki crying like a baby while getting her ass whooped

TheSunUKMARION BARTOLI became the 18th different woman to win Wimbledon after she crushed tearful Sabine Lisicki.

If I were a Sabine Lisicki fan, I would pick a new player to root for. I watched a few sets this morning and was appalled to see a woman crying DURING the match. She’s getting her ass kicked and then starts weeping while she’s serving. It’s like she couldn’t possibly fathom that she could play this bad that she had a complete meltdown. This is the reason why women earn less than men. She plays a fantastic tournament, beats the best tennis player in the world earlier, and then instead of finishing with dignity, she gives me a reason to wonder what the fuck she’s thinking. A League of Their Own said it best. There’s no crying in sports, ever. The last time I cried during a sport was in Tecmo Super Bowl when Bud would use the front center DL and sack my Q instantly. You get ridiculed for crying. You look weak, unstable, emotionally beat. Why would you let your opponent see you crying? This is never a good look.

The only time it’s ever acceptable to cry is after winning a championship. If MJ is allowed to cry after winning, anyone can cry. However, no one, ever, is allowed to cry when they are losing while playing. People will respect you less. No one forgets Oliver McCall crying against Lennox. Big Baby was a big baby when KG yelled at him. You have a screw loose if a sport makes you cry. I know tensions can rise during sports but if I were a coach, I wouldn’t want a player who was mentally weak. Leave the tears at the door.

By |2013-07-06T13:38:17-04:00July 6th, 2013|Sports|1 Comment

76ers Draft Was Smart?

Nerlens Noel from Kentucky - Flat Top

Noel Nerlens from Kentucky – Flat Top

The 76ers draft was surprising and active which is better than boring and predictable. The Sixers got rid of their best player, Jrue Holiday, for Nerlens Neol and a 1st round pick next year that is a protected top 3. Some experts had Noel being drafted as the top pick of this year’s draft! Next they selected Michael Carter Williams from Syracuse who obviously won’t fill Jrue’s role but may develop into a guard. Notice I didn’t say good or bad, just a guard because it’s far too early to tell. I’m sure fans are upset that we traded our best player but this is a savvy move. There is nothing to be upset about.

The worst team in basketball is the team that finishes in the 9th playoff spot. They aren’t good enough to compete and are not bad enough to get a high pick. That is the Sixers. They have mediocre talent, a big man who won’t play, ever, and voids on top of voids to fill in their line up. Noel is only 19 and 6-11. That’s a pretty good start. Thadeaus Young is the only other player on the Sixers with NBA talent. Michael Carter is 6-6 and was ranked by ESPN as the top point guard prospect. Those 3 players give you a nucleus to build around. We are going to suck next year. That’s just the way it is. Don’t let expectations get too high, we will finish in the basement. Guess what? We WANT to finish in the basement. Line up 2 bad ass picks next year in what is hopefully a stronger draft class. We are REBUILDING!!!!!!!

I’ve never been a proponent of rebuilding because the fans don’t deserve year after year of bullshit rebuilding, it’s a nonsense term. However, I’m for it in this case. The Sixers weren’t going anywhere with only the #11 pick in the draft this year and Jrue running the show with Jason Richardson as your starting 2 guard and Spencer Hawes as your center. Evan Turner sucks too. There was no choice. This was a wise move by San Hinkie and makes me think he knows what he’s doing. He also speaks the truth, “it’s fair to call the Sixers’ trade for Andrew Bynum “a failure.” I truly believe this move will benefit the Sixers long term.

You’re next you no talent, no jumpshot, no heart, piece of water trash.

By |2013-06-28T14:34:37-04:00June 27th, 2013|Sports|3 Comments

Why Oh Why Aaron Hernandez?

Talk about a sleeper going to the wayside. It’s hard to call Hernandez a sleeper but I think that’s exactly what he is with Gronk injured for the rest of his life (he’s due back early on this season but we know that will never happen). Hernandez was mostly injured for the first part of last season but with Gronk out in weeks 11-16, he averaged 56 yards a game and had 3 TDs, not to mention 85 yards a game in 2 playoff games. He was a legitimate top 5 TE for the Patriots with Gronk constantly injured. My guess is Hernandez would have gone in the late 5-6 rounds and I would accept him on my team in a heartbeat. Guys who I’d rather have ahead of him would be Jimmy Graham, Jason Witten, Heath Miller, and Vernon Davis. Dennis Pitta and Brandon Myers would also be on that watch list. I honestly believed that Hernandez was going to be a fantasy stud with the Patriots discarding all of their WR’s and having him as a prime receiving target. The murder story on this poor sap is excruciatingly painful to read about.

USA Today – Prosecutors allege that Hernandez picked up Lloyd around 2:30 a.m. on June 17th and that they drove through Boston before heading back to North Attleborough. McCauley claimed that Hernandez was unhappy that Lloyd had spoken with people that he didn’t like at Boston nightclub several nights earlier. The prosecutor alleges that several people heard multiple gun shots near an industrial park close to Hernandez’s home around 3:23 a.m. and says that home surveillance cameras captured Hernandez carrying a semiautomatic firearm as he and two other men returned to his home at 3:30 a.m.

What a thug. This could be a case of some of the worst decision making known to man. He’s in the neighborhood of receiving 40 million dollars over 5 years for playing football and this is his course of action for taking care of someone for talking shit. Why can’t these guys just stay in their house with their wife and kids and watch Disney movies? The footage had to have been so plain and simple to see that he must know that he is dead to rights. You can tell in his expression that he knows he’s fucked. He doesn’t even look like he cares because they probably have so much evidence against him that he knows there’s now point of wasting emotional energy. How dumb do you have to be to leave a rental car under your name at the scene as well as dumping the body close to where you live? Talk about wasted talent. #TebowforTE

Aaron Hernandez

Boston has had a rough run this year.

Boston has had a rough run this year.

By |2013-06-26T21:55:51-04:00June 26th, 2013|Sports|0 Comments

Lucky or Good?

golf sign

An age old question asks, is it better to be lucky or good? The easiest answer is that it’s better to be lucky short term and being good will pay off in in the long run. Doing something poorly and having it result positively only takes you so far. This post is going to look into my golf game because it’s where my idea for this post spawned from.

I’ve been playing a good amount of golf lately and I feel like I’ve been improving with every round. What’s started to happen is that things that I consider “lucky”, might actually be happening because I’m getting “good”. My hole in one is something that is probably as lucky as you can get because you are trying to put a ball that is 1.680 inches wide into a hole that is 4.25 inches across from 150+ yards away. The odds of a Tour player making an ace: 3,000 to 1, Low-handicapper making an ace: 5,000 to 1, Average player making an ace: 12,000 to 1. This also brings me back to the 65 ft basketball shot that I attempted a few more times the other day and wasn’t even close to putting it in. The shot that I made was pure luck, no skill behind it. So these two events were what I would consider mostly luck but what happened today on the golf course was something different.

Today I made 5 putts that were between 10-15 feet. This is pretty surprising because I just as easily could have missed every one of them, shot 5 strokes higher, and wouldn’t think I was becoming a better player. To give you an idea of this effort, a study found that nearly everybody makes almost every putt from inside two feet. Go a little farther away, to three feet, and golfers begin to miss (even Tour pros make only 85% to 95% of their three-footers). Step back to five feet and pros hole about 65%, while amateurs, if they’re lucky, are making about 50%. And at six feet, the best in the world, the PGA Tour Professionals, sink about 50%, plus or minus 5%. From 10 feet, no one consistently holes better than 25%. And from over 15 feet? One in 10, best case, even for the pros. So what I did today was a pretty impressive display for me. This got me thinking that was what was happening on the course today was pure luck like the aforementioned scenarios or was it possible I was actually making them because I’m improving. The answer is pretty commonplace in that it’s a combination of both. I’m probably improving as well as getting a little lucky.

The idea of luck is a wild concept. What would it take for this blog to be more popular? I’ve read my work from years ago and I know that this blog is getting better in both content and presentation. If someone or something stumbles across this website and changes up what I’ve been doing and helps me take it to the next level am I getting lucky? I can’t control anything other than what I post but it would require some sort of lucky break that I have no control over. I feel like lucky breaks are part of our culture and that not everyone knows when they are going to happen. You can stumble into them sometimes. Being lucky is a great quality to have but it’s not something you can rely on. You need to be have the total package and luck will find you. The idea of luck is amazing though because some people will attribute luck to acts of god. I for one, do not.

By |2013-06-23T22:14:36-04:00June 23rd, 2013|My Brain, Sports|1 Comment

Ace in the Hole

Riverwinds Golf Course, Hole 15, 147 yards - Ace

Riverwinds Golf Course, Hole 15, 147 yards – Ace

I have been defying odds. At this pace I should be winning powerball by weeks end. Today marked the 2nd, and much more, extraordinary event of my existence. The one attempt 70 ft shot was pretty impressive but today was the first time I’ve ever had a hole in one on a par 3.

Shee and I decided to leave work a little early and play a round of golf at Ron Jaworski’s Riverwinds . Shee is only 4 months recovering from ACL surgery and decided that APete was a good comparison for what he should be able to accomplish. It was an absolute perfect day and he steps up to the first tee and blasts one down the middle for a great start to the round. Everything was going swimmingly during the round and we were both enjoying the day. I managed to hit a par 5 in two and make a birdie but that was my only good hole on the front. We both were 48 on the front and were trying to talk our games up for the back.

Hole 15 was a short par 3, 147 yards, and I had the honors. I pulled out a 9 iron and lined up the shot while commenting, “I’m going to open my club face a cunt hair (vulgar I know but the truth is the truth) and put this in the hole.” So I make my swing and connetct with good contact. I could tell it was on line and said something to the effect that it’s looking pretty good. Shee lost it in the sun but caught a glimpse as it hit the green. It was too tough to tell but my feeling was that it was the right direction but I over hit it. Shee hit his shot and we proceeded to the green. At this point we looked at the green and didn’t see any balls. Shee said we had to walk up together just in case. As we get closer I peered behind the green and didn’t see any sign of a ball. Shee was a few steps ahead and pointed out the ball mark. At that point I think I realized that I had my first hole in one. We looked in and the ball was sitting right in the hole. I put my hands up in cheer and Shee nearly tackled me. It was pretty amazing. The feeling of the hole in one lasted the final 3 holes (where I had 2 birdie putts and a par putt on) and I still have a bit of high. I’ve probably played 200+ rounds of golf with maybe 800 chances at par 3’s and I finally nailed one. Some people can go their hole lives but I was able to claim the elusive hole in one. Ron Jaworski is going to send me an autographed football for the accomplishment. Thanks to the Shee for being a witness.

Scorecard

My ballmark on the 15th hole that resulted in a hole in one

My ballmark on the 15th hole that resulted in a hole in one

By |2013-06-20T21:26:55-04:00June 20th, 2013|Sports|5 Comments

Ray’s Got Game

“Whatever Ray is making, it’s not enough.” (3 Million)

“That three was so ridic, a fade away with 5 seconds left and the season on the line? Swish City.” – The Shee

Ray Allen jumped up my list of NBA players with this clutch shot last night. Lebron too. Fans won’t forget Ray’s shot but they will forget that when the Heat were down 5, Lebron got a good look at a 3 and completely missed the rim, the rebound bounced around and Mike Miller got the ball right back to Lebron and he rose up and knocked one down. After the aforementioned point of the game I made a comment to Jeff that Lebron seemed a bit frazzled and I’d want Ray to take the shot if my team needed it. Obviously Chris Bosh thought the same thing.

Setup before Ray Ray swishes the biggest shot of his career.

Setup before Ray Ray swishes the biggest shot of his career.

Last night’s game was one of the best NBA games I’ve witnessed in a long time. Lebron guarding Parker and him stepping back from 3 land and nailing it to put his team up was heroic. Later Parker owned Chalmers in the lane which proved Lebron is the only guy on the floor who can stand a chance covering Parker. Bosh played the OT of his life with a great 3 point play to start it and the risky block on Green to seal it. Was Manu fouled on the play where San Antonio should have called a timeout with 11 seconds left? Probably but whistles are silent in situations like that and there’s nothing wrong with that. I was thoroughly entertained and the sense of a season ending with a loss was evident in the 4th quarter. The tension and pressure were high and you could feel it exuding from Lebron (the head band got removed by his powering up like in DragonBall). I let out a yelp when Ray swished that 3 because I couldn’t contain my excitement. It was truly one for the ages.

By |2013-06-19T08:41:41-04:00June 19th, 2013|Sports|0 Comments

Tom’s Treasures Part 2

Part one of a few of my favorite items can be found here. This will continue the list.

Favorite Pornstar – 90’s Jenna Jameson


I had a hard time making this entry. I don’t think all of these pictures are from the 90’s but they are close enough to that time period to give the idea of what the best pornstar of all time looked like. I feel bad for all the young kids of today who get to see a washed up, plastic, pill popping, rail thin Jenna because she wasn’t always like that. Before ClubJenna and when she was with Vivid, Jenna Jameson was/is the best thing that ever happened to porn. She even had heartbreaker tattooed on her ass so all the guys knew what they were dealing with. It isn’t a contest really. She had the looks, the body, and then even the brains to revolutionize the industry. Jenna in her prime was a work of art rivaling the Sistine Chapel.

Favorite Professional Sports League – NFL
nfl
Far and away the best professional sport. 16 game season, playing once a week, every game is meaningful, hard hitting, talent shines, and nothing’s for certain. The NFL is the polar opposite of baseball and why I love one and can’t stand the other. Even though I’ve never played football I get such a kick out of what these players are able to do and how dedicated they are to their sport because without complete focus, they have no chance. I grew up playing basketball and even though that’s my favorite sport to play, the NBA is a so-so run league. The NFL has hit the nail on the head and with the rise of Fantasy Football (we actually used to play back in the 90’s when Pishy would score by hand), I’m completely hooked. Throw in some action on the games, a beer, a lazy Sunday and I’m in paradise.

Favorite Actor – Kevin Spacey
KevinSpacey
I enjoy Kevin Spacey’s acting. He’s cool, calm, and collected one minute and then at the drop of a hat he can turn ballistic. He gets in tune with the character he’s portraying and then makes you believe he’s the character. It’s acting 101 but he does it better than most. Seven and the Usual Suspects stand out as ultimate villains. American Beauty was obviously one of his main hits and I particularly enjoyed the Big Kahuna which I’m sure no one has seen. I know he did House of Cards as well which I’m sure was great. I could have picked Pitt, DeNiro, Nicholson, Hanks, or Damon for this category but I like Spacey’s style more.

Favorite Album – Dark Side of the Moon
darksideofthemoon
The Dark Side of the Moon’s themes include conflict, greed, the passage of time, and mental illness, the latter partly inspired by Barrett’s deteriorating mental state. For me this is the album I listen to when I’m fucked up. Not so much anymore but Evan can attest to my late night escapades stumbling in at 2am and blaring DSoTM. I’d usually be asleep by Time but when I was listening it was like magic. At 43 minutes if I remember correctly, it’s the perfect length of not being too long or too short. The tracks on it are all top notch and I really can’t think of any other album that is close to this one. I’m not alone either as it remained in the charts for 741 weeks from 1973 to 1988. With an estimated 50 million copies sold, it is Pink Floyd’s most commercially successful album and one of the best-selling albums worldwide.

Favorite Shorts – Dockers
dockers_shorts_goldrush_
The shorts are 20 dollars. Most shorts are just shorts but I can’t find anything wrong with the Docker’s shorts. They are priced right, pockets are fine, length is a tad short but not noticeable. They last a long time and you can buy 10 different colors if you wish. I have no reason to try another pair

By |2013-06-18T23:05:05-04:00June 18th, 2013|Movies, Music, Sports|0 Comments

Categories