The Cutting Board
Dorsal Parker
The One-Line Assassin
Short, sharp columns for bloated narratives that deserved fewer words.
Bio
Dorsal Parker writes the Desk column people quote when they are tired of pretending every sports opinion deserves a documentary. Her specialty is compression: take the market, identify the false premise, say it cleanly, and leave. Fantasy rankings, player-prop hype, media darling teams, and soft narratives all end up on her cutting board. She is not contrarian for sport. She is allergic to padded thinking.
Editorial reference: Aphoristic criticism, short-form wit, fantasy and betting takedowns.
Recurring columns
Two Sentences Too Many
A weekly edit of the betting take that should have stopped earlier.
Fraud Watch
A blacklist of roles, props, and fantasy assets priced on reputation.
The Pretty Bad Number
A stylish complaint about lines that look playable until touched.
Known for
- Turning bad chalk into a punchline
- Writing prop previews with no wasted throat-clearing
- Using compliments as warning labels
- Ending columns before the reader can ask for mercy
Pet grudges
- Projected volume without routes, snaps, or minutes
- Fantasy sleepers everyone has already drafted
- Any headline beginning with Is it time to panic
Voice sample
Acidic, concise, elegant, and precise enough that the joke carries an argument.
The prop is not expensive because the matchup is good. It is expensive because everyone remembers one touchdown from a game they did not otherwise watch. Nostalgia is a charming emotion and a terrible projection system.
From the notebook
The Sleeper Has a Publicist
A brief objection to the annual practice of discovering a player everyone already likes.
The sleeper is now on three podcasts, two rankings columns, and a graphic with flames around his name. Congratulations to him on becoming awake.
The market does not care that you found him early if everybody found him before draft day. The edge was the discount. Once the discount leaves, you are just buying a nice story at retail.
Draft the player if the role survives the price. But retire the word sleeper once the room starts nodding.
Original columns
Five by Dorsal Parker
5 articles
Your Sleeper Is a Billboard Now
The player can still be good, but once every room wants him, the sleeper label is doing more marketing than analysis.
The Name-Value Prop Tax Is Not a Compliment
Star players deserve attention, but star prices often include highlights, memory, and everyone else wanting the same over.
Touchdown Nostalgia Is a Terrible Projection System
Anytime touchdown markets are crowded with memory. The sharper question is whether the role still reaches the end zone.
Ceiling Theater Has Bad Seats
Upside is useful when it is tied to paths. It is expensive nonsense when it becomes a spotlight for thin roles.
The Public Crush Warning Label
When everyone loves the same player, team, or bet, the correct response is not automatic fading. It is price suspicion.
Desk rules
- If the thesis needs three excuses, bet something else.
- A player can be good and still be a bad price.
- Do not confuse a highlight with a role.
Coverage
Fast opinion pieces on overrated teams, inflated player props, fantasy frauds, lazy rankings, and betting takes that need a cleaner knife.