Joe Bryant said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			
	
		
			
				False Start said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			Almost 100 more votes then the 2nd highest answer. 199 votes with 126 for a year or longer. Makes me wonder why this was even a question in the first place. People way smarter than us have been suggesting that this is a year long ban. Anything else seems like pure hope but reasonable logic took control in this poll.
Knowing Gordons history and recent transgressions, bias has to be involved for anyone to not think a year or longer. Someone said the think there may be something we have not heard of yet? What? These things are supposed to be confidential yet it came out anyways. There is very little we dont already know. 
		
		
	 
I always question what groups of people are thinking.  
 
 
And I'm always pretty leery of using the "people way smarter than us have suggested this so we better take what they say as gospel". This board pretty much exists because people have their own opinions.
And, there's always things we don't know...  
 
 
J
		
 
		
	 
I would go even further and say that by far the best opportunities for a profit, from a fantasy standpoint, come when "everyone agrees" about something and they wind up being wrong. When there is a lot of disagreement over the future, many contrasting ideas compete in the marketplace and player pricing tends to be pretty efficient. When there are no competing theories being offered, there is nothing forcing accountability in player valuations, and they have a much easier time getting out of whack.
In this case, I happen to think the majority opinion will ultimately prove correct. In other instances, such as valuations of players who suffer multiple injuries, I think the "conventional wisdom" has gone unchallenged for too long and now represents a systemic error. Even though I'm on the side of the majority on this one, I'm grateful for the presence of a vocal minority pushing back against my beliefs and preventing them from becoming entrenched and automatic.
To use a personal example... last year, "everyone agreed" that Knowshon Moreno was an afterthought in Denver's offense. And I thought everyone was right on the money. I could list all the reasons Denver's front office had given suggesting they simply didn't like Moreno very much (and the fact that they let him walk without even attempting to re-sign him, despite his relatively small cost, reinforces the belief). Still, a small but vocal minority pushed back hard against that conventional wisdom. I didn't agree with them, but the fact that they were there and pushing caused me to re-evaluate the possibility that, in fact, I was wrong- along with "everyone" who agreed with me. And because of that, I decided that I was possibly undervaluing Moreno, and started taking flyers on him in several of my leagues. Not because I thought he was good, but because I was open to the possibility that I was wrong.
In our staff dynasty league, I drafted Moreno in the 17th round, and immediately emailed the league comparing the pick to having to wear roll-up sunglasses to middle school, or getting poison ivy on my eyelids. The player comment I left on MFL was "
I'm strongly convinced this is a wasted pick, but I've been wrong before. It was back in 2007. I almost lost a league because of it. A 17th is a small price to pay to hedge against the infinitesimal chance it happens again. And who knows, maybe some team is willing to sign him next season after Denver lets him walk in free agency. Probably the Raiders- that sounds like something stupid enough for them to consider." I didn't draft Moreno because I thought he was good, I drafted him because I was open to the possibility that I was wrong. And it's a good thing, too, because I was wrong.
If I'd participated in a draft three weeks ago, when my assumptions about Gordon were going unchallenged, he wouldn't even be on my board. After all, "everyone knew" that he was going to get a full year off, right? If it were a dynasty draft, there would be a virtual 0% chance I landed him. All the recent discussion and dissent, however, has opened my eyes to the possibility that I'm wrong, and has forced me to re-evaluate what kind of unchallenged risk discounts I've been applying. I've started looking at him as a late-round flyer in redraft. I've started sending out feelers to the Gordon owners in my dynasty owners to see if they're ready to under-sell him in disgust yet.
I think that this disagreement is an unambiguously good thing. It makes me a better fantasy owner. It leaves me with more accurate player valuations. While I may not always agree with the manner in which Soulfly presents his case, I'm glad that he's chosen to present it, and that he's been so dogged despite heavy opposition because "everyone agrees" he's wrong. The quality of my opinions tends to be directly proportional to the quality of the opinions of those who disagree with me.