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Undeserved Unkindness

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Many people were not enthused with Zach Wilson pre-draft. Many people weren’t impressed with his Pro Day even though it was impressive. And now more and more people hating Zach Wilson post-draft.

Every year, there “has” to be a rookie the FF community generally despises, mocks, or is down on. Last year was Herbert to a small degree. He didn’t quite meet the Josh Allen level of hate but he was one many criticized. We saw how that evaluation turned out in his rookie season.

In 2019 it was Daniel Jones and Drew Lock. Jones on a bigger level because he was a first-round pick. Now granted, he hasn’t been great. But neither were many QBs after two seasons…and he had no Saquon and got a new coach/scheme last year.

2018 was probably the FF Community’s meanest moment (& I admit I was part of that collective). I regret that stance. Allen was constantly ridiculed. Laughed at. Never Josh Allen etc. For the first two years he wasn’t good – until a Year 3 breakout. And boy, did he break out! Now he’s considered Elite by many that threw big stones and jabbed him with sharp sticks. I’m not there yet with the label “Elite” but he’s definitely a good football player. Josh Allen is now viewed as QB2-5 in all formats. Shame on us. Sorry #BillsMafia. You were right. To be fair to us doubters though, Allen’s numbers in college were suspect. Big Arm. Bad completion percentage. Lots of INTs. Wyoming, not Oklahoma. He sure proved many – and when I say many, I mean most wrong.

So Danny Dimes has this year to prove himself but already the FF Community is 0-2 with Allen & Herbert. Yes, I can go back to 2017 and mention Mitch Trubisky as the whipping boy, who is now a backup. Ok, I’ll give it to you. You’re 1-2. Not a great record in any sport though.

It is now 2021 and although many are apprehensive about Mac Jones most seem to like him if not love him. However, Zach Wilson not so much. He looks too young. Has an opinionated mother on social media, he went to BYU, and he’s now on the Jets. All help intensify the disdain for the New York Jets new franchise QB.

But, why?

Allen’s best season saw a startling 56.0% completion rate, 8.6 YPA, 28 touchdowns but also 15 INTs. And that wasn’t even in his final season at college. I saw validity to that argument. Sorta like Ricky Vaughn from Major League. Big Arm. No Aim. Bust Potential.

But when we look at Zach Wilson’s best season which was his final season there is no comparison. We’ll compare anyway. With the other four that make up the BIG 5 of the 2021 QB Class. So just basic stats first.

Taking everyone’s best stats:

  • For Mac Jones, Zach Wilson, and Trevor Lawrence, that’s 2020
  • For Trey Lance, that’s 2019
  • For Justin Fields, that’s a mixture of 2019/20 (which helps him here)

Mac Jones is the best. And arguably Zach Wilson is second. Trey Lance’s touchdown to interception ratio is the best, but his accuracy is also the worst. Completion percentage along with YPA – Jones and Wilson are comfortably ahead of the rest.

How about play action?

Unfortunately, there is no data on Lance on this or the next stat. Wilson again just behind Jones with Fields and didn’t throw a pick. T-Law, the second coming, is significantly last.

How about the deep ball? The first stat we’ll look at is the percentage of deep ball throws.

Wilson is arguably the best here. Fields and Jones looking good. T-Law is definitely the worst again by a fair margin. So the arguments – “Wilson had an easier schedule.”

Counter Point 1: Lance played in Division II and no one seems worried about that. Wilson had a great one year but the year before wasn’t nearly as good.

Counter Point 2: Let’s insert Joe Burrow into the mix since we’re talking about “a great one year”.

Counter Point 3: T-Law showed little growth over his college career. Should that be worrisome?

But Mac Jones was better than Zach Wilson. Yes, that is 100% true.

But Jones also had first rounders in DeVonta Smith, Jaylen Waddle, and Najee Harris and 2022 day 1 prospect John Metchie.

Wilson had seventh-rounder Dax Milne. If we use the competition argument we need to look at supporting cast. But, he’s going the Jets!

Adam Gase is gone. Wilson has weapons in the revamped Jets offense with Elijah Moore, Corey Davis, Jamison Crowder, and Denzel Mims. New York also has an improved offensive line as well as a stable of RBs including Michael Carter. Add in a new respected coach. The Jets may have been the laughingstock of the league for some time, but they’re trying to turn things around and build around Wilson. The right way.

Just because the Jets have been bad doesn’t mean they will continue to be. So before you get on the Twitter bandwagon like everyone else, do your research. Find out yourself. Form your own opinion. And FFS, have evidence to back it up!

Could Zach Wilson bust? Yes.

Could any and all of the 2021 QBs bust? Yes.

Could all be great? Probably not, but it could happen.

Anything is possible in the NFL. Remember that.

But let’s give the kid a chance. Wilson has played well enough to deserve that chance. I’m not here to proclaim that Zach Wilson is a sure thing. I’m here to proclaim that he isn’t an automatic bust.

If he ends up the best QB in this class, many will be surprised. I won’t. But I’ll be celebrating. And I am also ready if he does fail. Despite being crowned the next best thing since Andrew Luck, instead of everyone thinking that Zach Wilson is going to bust…

Shouldn’t we be more worried about Trevor Lawrence?

Just a thought.

Is Terry McLaurin an Elite Fantasy WR?

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Terry McLaurin was known as a diamond in the rough in dynasty fantasy football circles after his rookie season, and he’s certainly a household name in the fantasy football world in 2021. But what karat of diamond are we talking about here? I’d say he’s been at LEAST a full karat diamond through his first two seasons in the NFL, but does he have the right combination of talent and opportunity to become an elite, three-karat diamond in 2021? Let’s put Terry McLaurin under the loupe and see if we can determine just how bright he’ll shine on fantasy football rosters this year.

Talent

Growing from a surprisingly efficient rookie season to a locked-in alpha with 134 targets and over 1,100 receiving yards in 2020, McLaurin has done nothing but impress fantasy managers thus far in his NFL career. Even by looking only at Matt Harmon’s Reception Perception analysis for McLaurin, it’s obvious just how good he is at what he does.

Matt Harmon’s Reception Perception chart for Terry McLaurin

Sure, McLaurin was below average in terms winning along the sideline, but the green everywhere else on his chart shows he can win in so many ways that alpha-level WRs win, whether it’s short-area targets that move the chains like a slant (see Michael Thomas), or deep possession catches down the middle of the field via the dig or post.

Even the nine route was a part of his bag, where he was above average purely from a route-running standpoint. We could see a lot more conversions on those nine routes with who is under center this season.

Situation

Seemingly out of nowhere, The Washington Football team was able to turn the football portion of its organization around last season, bolstered by a stout defense (Chase Young and co.) and led fearlessly into battle by Ron Rivera, who simultaneously kicked cancer’s ass while coaching this football team to an NFC East division title.

Even though the adrenaline of that season has worn off in 2021, the Football Team has to be excited for the roster they are putting together on offense. Sophomore running back Antonio Gibson is a candidate to absolutely crush for the team under offensive coordinator Scott Turner, and this could really open things up for McLaurin and the rest of the receiver room (Curtis Samuel, Dyami Brown, et al) downfield.

The key, of course, to unlocking all of this potential on offense is their new journeyman starting quarterback, Ryan Fitzpatrick. Despite his age, (38) Fitzpatrick has been more magic than tragic with solid surrounding talent as of late, and he’s built up a penchant for pushing the ball downfield. If he can stay healthy for 17 games, (potentially a tall ask) there’s reason to believe this offense can sustain fantasy success for McLaurin AND the other weapons on the team.

Projection

By leveraging Analyst Depot, our very own founder Chalk has built out his own team-by-team and player-level projections, which I decided to take a look at and play around with to explore different outcomes for McLaurin’s fantasy production.

Starting with Chalk’s projection as a baseline, he’s given McLaurin about a 24% target share on just over 600 pass attempts for the season from the Washington Football Team, leading to 145 targets for our Alpha WFT WR1.

Apply a 64.8% catch rate and 13.7 yards per catch (YPC), and McLaurin’s projection ends with a reasonable 145 targets, 94 receptions, 1,288 yards, and six touchdowns. This comes out to 258.8 fantasy points in PPR scoring and 15.2 PPG, which was good for WR20 last year. All this to say, Chalk’s projection is fairly conservative in my mind, and there’s upside for much more production beyond this projection.

According to Pro Football Reference, McLaurin’s best YPC rate was 15.8 in his rookie season, and his best catch rate was 64.9% last year with a clown car of QBs (respect to Alex Smith though) throwing him the ball. If the Fitzmagic-McLaurin Connection can improve McLaurin’s production to a 66.8% catch rate (3% improvement on last year), and McLaurin’s YPC lands at 14.5 (0.5 yards above his average over the past two seasons), we’re looking at 145 targets, 97 receptions, 1,405 yards, and six touchdowns. This comes out to 273.5 PPR fantasy points and about 16.1 PPG, good for WR14 last season.

If you really want to get crazy, (like 99th percentile outcome crazy) if you give McLaurin a 68.9% catch rate and 15 YPC, his stat line for the year becomes 145 targets, 100 receptions, 1,500 yards. Add a two more TDs because more receiving yards generally lead to more TDs, and you’ve got a 298-point season, good for 17.5 PPG and WR7 in 2020.

This is much more a bet on McLaurin’s efficiency with Fitzpatrick improving as McLaurin grows to be a potential superstar in the league. It also shows just how much would have to go right for McLaurin to reach bona fide WR1 status, and that’s already assuming a team with a solid run game and defense ends up throwing 600 times (35-36 attempts per game) this season.

Conclusion

It pays to be conservative with projections given the nature of offenses scoring more points across the board in 2020 with no crowd noise, making it harder for defenses to defend, etc. Combine this with the fact that we don’t know how fast-paced or pass-happy this offense is going to be in year two under Ron Rivera, and I’m willing to say McLaurin is NOT a lock to be an elite, WR1 fantasy option just yet.

That said, he’s on the cusp of shining bright like a diamond, and has the upside to shine even brighter if things break his way. I believe in betting on McLaurin as an ascendant talent (third year breakout anyone?) who might be in the best offensive situation of his career thus far, right at his Underdog ADP of 34 overall (WR14).

You can follow Andrew and call him out on Twitter, @AndrewMackens

 

 

 

The Undrafted | Casserly vs. Falcone 3

This week on “The Undrafted”, a fantasy football podcast focusing on dynasty game theory, Scott (@DynoGameTheory) has Angelo (@Angelo_Fantasy), on as a guest. They talk about their favorite rookie quarterbacks, some Scott Fish Bowl Strategy, and two great fighting rivalries. Tune in or be tuned out!

ACL Recovery Outlook | Saquon Barkley & Courtland Sutton

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Saquon Barkley and Courtland Sutton both suffered ACL injuries last season. Widespread concern has overtaken the fantasy community due to the severity of the injuries and the potential both players have to be ready for week 1.

As a Certified and Licensed Athletic Trainer, I will provide a breakdown of ACL injuries and what we can expect from Barkley and Sutton in 2021.

ACL Injury Overview

The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) primarily prevents anterior translation of the tibia on the femur. This is a fancy way of saying that the shin is prevented from moving forward by the ACL. These forces occur on the lower leg with lateral cutting, stopping/going, and landing (eccentric forces) from jumping.

ACL diagram

Barkley and Sutton both tore their ACLs in Week 2 of the 2020 season. Although they play different positions, the demands put on their bodies are similar – cutting, jumping, stopping, and going. Although no rehab is exactly the same, you can assume they share similar rehab time frames in their return to play protocols.

ACL Injury Rehab

The Rehabilitation Protocol for ACL Reconstruction provides guidance and timeframes to clinicians and patients. The protocol provided above outlines general assumptions of what the athlete should be doing around the stage of healing that they are in.  There are different school of thoughts as to if protocols should be followed exactly or if they are more guidance in nature, but regardless what school of thought you take you can assume Barkley and Sutton share similar timelines outside of any setbacks.

Most ACL protocols have athletes doing lateral jumps and cuts with boxes and/or cones paired with eccentric quad work (eccentric or controlled loading of a muscle puts the most stress on muscles) anywhere between the 3-5 month mark.  Both Barkley and Sutton are around the 7 month mark currently so we can safely assume they have been doing dynamic movements such as cutting, running, and jumping at this point in the rehab stages respectfully.

2021 Outlook

Since both Sutton and Barkley had their injuries occur on September 20, 2020 and the 2021 season starts on September 9th, they will both be around the 10-11 month mark post-operative.  Surgery to fix intracapsular ligaments like the ACL can be delayed a few weeks following injuries due to the amount of swelling following the rupture of these ligaments.  Since the ACL resides inside the capsule in the knee, the swelling is isolated and not allowed to dissipate typically resulting in a very swollen knee.  Due to the swelling, surgery is not a possibility until the swelling reduces, and this is why Saquon was delayed in surgery for an entire month.

The question that is on everyone’s mind is “will they be fully ready to go Week 1?”

Return to sport typically occurs anywhere between 6-12 months. On the lower end of the spectrum (6 months), we have seen superhuman Adrian Peterson return to play and lead the league in rushing (in now way am I saying Barkley and Sutton break the rushing/receiving records this season). However, 9-12 months is more common for return to sport, but there is no exact science for return to sport as studies have shown.

With no reported setbacks in their rehab processes to date for both Barkley and Sutton, combined with the fact that they will be nearly a full year removed from their injuries and rehab process, I fully expect them to be on the field for their respective teams on Week 1.

Saquon Barkley is projected as the —– and Courtland Sutton projects as the —— this season according to our 2021 projections.

Contrarian Dynasty Strategies I Actually Believe In

It’s Not Easy to Win a Fantasy Football Championship

It’s simple. All things considered equal, there is a 1/12 chance of winning a 12 man dynasty league. While you may feel confident in your own abilities to improve these odds, there is no dynasty player on the planet who can fairly project favorable odds in a standard league. Winning a league necessitates taking some risk in drafts and trades, as a “safe roster” might make the playoffs, but is disadvantaged against teams with players who have achieved the upper levels of their range of outcomes. Of course, anything can happen in the playoffs, but having upside built into your team can increase your team’s ceiling. If this upside manifests itself, your team can become a true championship contender instead of a fringe playoff pretender.

There are different ways to add upside to your team. Commonly, you will hear players reference “boom/bust” players as “week-winners” that you should look for in your flex spots. While this is a valid dynasty strategy for including upside into your roster, with the rapid expansion of the fantasy football industry, players are taking advantage of the ever expanding depth of information available at their fingertips. Such strategies are becoming widely adopted, lessening the potential edge that can be gained by them. This is the same reason why “sleepers” are increasingly difficult to identify come draft season, as public ADP and analyst rankings draw closer to one another.

Finding New Ways to Win

Contrarian dynasty strategies are ways to differentiate yourself from others and improve your team’s overall ceiling. They look to capitalize on value as it inevitably falls, given the inflation of other assets that are propelled by common strategies. Draft cost and trade value charts present zero-sum gains, with every movement up the ranks met by corresponding movement(s) that offset one another. If there are common strategies favoring certain types of players, there will be a corresponding “defavoring” of players that don’t fit conventional draft strategies, creating value.

While “contrarian strategies” like Zero RB or Zero WR present benefits in certain cases, they have become more and more popular over time, arguably falling out of the contrarian label altogether. So we really have to look deep into the widely adopted strategies of the fantasy football industry to find true contrarian strategies that provide an edge in dynasty leagues and dynasty tournament leagues. At the same time, such contrarian strategies run the risk of being counterproductive to team goals or are outright ill-advised. Here is one of the contrarian dynasty strategies I believe in to maximize upside, and justification as to why.

In Full Rebuilds: Prioritize RBs

The Concept

The key to this strategy is the state of the team. In general, analysts advise drafting running backs in rookie drafts, but often as final pieces to contenders. On the other hand, rebuilding teams, especially full rebuilding teams, are advised to stay away from them initially, as wide receivers, quarterbacks, and tight ends have more long term staying power in the NFL (for more information, feel free to check out the Positional Breakout Timings portion of my earlier analysis of rookie breakouts). All the above information is certainly valid in my opinion, so why do I value running backs over other positions in rookie drafts for completely rebuilding teams?

In the link above, I dove into the fantasy relevant positional rookie finishes of the past five years and discuss shifts in perception that must be made to breakout timings. Running backs clearly emerge as the top position for early fantasy football success, hitting their value apexes sooner on than other positions. In full rebuilds, your team needs all the help it can get, and maximizing the value of every draft pick is imperative. Since the distance to apex is far lower, if you can sell your assets at or around that apex, you will see faster turnover of value for your team, allowing you to keep stockpiling value at a comparatively fast rate.

This is no easy task however, as running back peaks can end so quickly, whether through injury, replacement, or the loss of efficiency due to either the natural wear and tear on the running back themselves, or due to the performance of other units (eg. the offensive line and the offense’s success as a whole). Moving off running backs before it is too late is not only difficult to identify, but is emotionally difficult as well. Fantasy managers easily fall in love with running backs during their peak, as their performance becomes a cornerstone of their team, dominating week after week and consistently outscoring top wide receivers and tight ends. Despite these risks, this strategy injects significant upside into your team build, which can be essential to the transformation of complete rebuilds into contenders in a comparatively short time period (vs a similar strategy on other positions like WR or TE).

If employed correctly, and given some luck, this strategy can move up your contending timeline significantly. This is especially useful in paid leagues, where there is an effective “clock” running against you depending on your financial commitment to the league, but it is applicable to free leagues as well.

Execution

In order to implement this strategy, I’ve found that investing in running backs in the first round of rookie drafts is best, as later on there are dead spots in value caused by fantasy managers chasing positional needs, which is especially an issue at running back due to its positional scarcity. I’ve commonly seen this play out in the second round of rookie drafts, where the top running backs have long gone off the board, leaving some teams scrambling to fill out their rosters. This can lead to massive reaches to fill their roster spots in this area of the draft, creating a “trap” of sorts in this range of the draft for rookie running backs.

If not in the first round, I find myself waiting until late in the draft, identifying talent I like with suboptimal landing spots or situations that have potential for solid opportunity, and taking shots on the relatively early upside of running backs relative to other positions. In the off chance that I hit on these late picks, this can speed up the period until the value apex, leading to quicker fantasy success and/or peak trade value. Often low draft capital backs have little long-term security, which can make moving off these later-round backs beneficial (eg. James Robinson, Philip Lindsay).

Final Thoughts

Upside is an essential part of any championship team in dynasty leagues, however due to the mass proliferation of information caused by the fantasy industry’s massive growth, edges are increasingly difficult to come by. Using contrarian strategies that run opposite to established schools of thought within the fantasy community is one way to retain potential advantages, and find unique ways to maximize your team’s ceiling. Thank you for reading!

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