Dynasty Macro and Micro: Chapter 2

Guys, I have to come clean. I made a dumb mistake last week. I was using multiple data sources and made a formatting error, and long story short, my pass-to-rush ratio data was flat-out incorrect. It’s not even an even split. To avoid a mix-up like this happening again, I am just going to use Fantasy Points Data moving forward.

The good news is that the Pass-to-Rush Ratio was much higher in Week 1 than I had indicated. There were 43% more passing plays than running plays.

The bad news is that it went down in Week 2. Passing plays dropped by 9%.

The worst news is that we’re down 17 passing TDs relative to the first two weeks of last season (which was down from the year prior).

So, if making a very public mistake isn’t bad enough, the fear of an increasing run rate is starting to look like a trend, which I was hoping not to see. This was one of the more significant concerns we contemplated in Chapter 1. What’s happening?

The Macro

The cat-and-mouse game between OCs and DCs has gotten more nuanced on the defensive side. OCs are taking the cheese and running the ball when that’s precisely what the defenses want them to do—run less efficient plays (and offenses). 

In short, running the ball seems like a reactionary waving of the white flag by perplexed OCs and confused QBs. Oh, you’re going to take my big plays away? Okay, we’ll take our 4-yard gains on 15-play drives and hope we don’t commit a turnover or a penalty. Defenses are daring offenses to thread multi-play 70-yard needles and surprise(!) field goals are way up as those drives stall.  

TL;DR – Defenses have the advantage right now against old-school offenses. Everyone is talking about play action and pre-snap motion, and rightfully so. Still, Ben gets to the heart of why that’s been so successful for the Shanahan and McVay disciples – my interpretation, in short – they’re making defenses react instead of reacting to the trickier defenses. 

I hope I was correct in Chapter 1 and that the pendulum swings back toward more pass attempts, play volume, and touchdowns as the season progresses. But if it doesn’t, and we’re in for a run-heavy season, how should we manage our dynasty rosters?

It’s only been two weeks, and we don’t want to overreact. I’m not here to provide definitive answers but to give you some questions as food for thought and opine in definitive terms. 

1. Should we be starting more RBs in our flex spots? 

I’ve built WR-heavy teams for years and used them in flex spots for their higher floor and ceiling due to spike weeks. But with RBs closing the opportunity gap and WR spike weeks becoming rarer, relying on RBs with higher floors may be the better play until passing trends shift back.

2. Should we be spending most of our FAAB on Running Backs?

This depends, but generally, I think this is prudent. I also think the answer to this one has always been yes, but now it’s for a different reason. 

3. Is play action going to become more effective? 

It’s always been a hack, but I think there’s a solid case to be made that it already has…

4. Should we stop trading running backs for wide receivers?

In Dynasty, I don’t think so. In Redraft this year, maybe think twice? 

5. Should we start trading lower-tiered WRs for more RBs?

Like #2, I think the answer has always been yes. But now, again, it may be for a different reason. Instead of getting rid of roster-clogging WR5s, and waiting for RB opportunity windows, we might just be looking for a floor in those 3rd and 4th flex spots until the scoring comes back.

6. Should we value top-tiered WRs more in a league that runs more and passes less?

I think the answer is yes. If wide receivers are generally devalued, the top-end guys become more valuable. It’s been like the tight end position since the Gronk/Kelce era began. There’s a handful of guys you want, followed by a sea of sameness. 

For now, these are all just theories and musings. I believe in Dynasty, we’re still in “zoom out and wait-and-see mode.” My only action item is to focus your Faab dollars on RB and perhaps trim the fat at other positions to acquire more RBs. This is a dynasty best practice regardless, and you can still flip them for picks if your teams are too redundant when they get their windows of opportunity. 

If this is how things will go, there will be a strong RB class in 2025. 

The Micro

I promised WR talk last week, and that’s what you’ll get!

Nico Collins – Watching that Sunday night game, I regretted not being more bullish on Nico. After a quiet first couple of years in the league and a more pronounced emergence following the Tank Dell injury in 2023, I felt skeptical about the late breakout tied to a franchise-changing QB. Through two weeks, he has looked nothing short of an absolute monster. He’s made several clutch and ridiculous grabs at different levels of the field, and his underlying metrics show strength. Nico runs a route on over 85% of the team’s dropbacks; he’s got 46% of the team’s air yards (absurd considering his running mates), .257 targets per route run, a ridiculous 3.8 yards per route run (somehow up from last year’s “unsustainable” number). He’s been Stroud’s first read on over 33% of dropbacks, leading the league in receiving. That’s a long way of saying what’s evident now… he’s elite. 

Tank Dell – Don’t worry, I still have a crush on Tank Dell, and given they’ve got one of the OCs and QBs that I still have faith in, I think Tank will eat. He was also one drop of a slightly off-target pass from having a good Week 2. Those plays will come. Dell is lining up in the slot about 29% of the time through two weeks, which I think is a healthy number. His Expected Fantasy Points per game (per Fantasy Points) are more than double his current 5.6. This is because his Air Yard Share is an excellent 30%. As importantly, he’s still running 80% of the routes, even with Diggs in town. Better days are ahead for Tank Dell. 

Rashid Shaheed & Chris Olave – Are we sure Olave is the #1 in New Orleans? That question probably comes off as too much of a hot take, and we’re still pretty sure, but the question was much more absurd two weeks ago than it is as of this writing. Through two games:

ShaheedOlave
Routes3232
Air Yard Share43.9%24.4%
Targets98
Receptions76
Yards16992
Touchdowns2Almost 1
1st Read Targets86

 

They haven’t been in any real battles yet; it’s been two blowouts.

Olave is set for positive regression in one of the league’s sharpest offenses, known for high pre-snap motion and play action. Interestingly, Scott Barrett noted the Cowboys had Diggs shadow Shaheed after his long TD last Sunday.

Malik Nabers – If you follow this website, you know our collective fondness for Malik Nabers. Jax Falcone has been leading the charge since January, but let’s have fun with his metrics anyway! He has run a route on over 93% of NY’s dropbacks. His Air Yard Share is 56%! He has commanded over 35% of the team’s targets, averaging .337 targets per route run, and get this: he has been the first read 50% of the time! Despite Daniel Jones’s situation, Jax was right all along. Malik is too good to fail. His team knows it, and now you do, too. 

Chris Godwin – We’ve seen him be the #2 in scoring WR in fantasy before, so we’ve known the upside was there, but after a year in excellent player purgatory (banished to the outside), one of our new favorite OCs, Liam Coen, has brought the prodigal WR home to his ideal role as a big, athletic slot. Thus far, he’s run 65% of his routes from the slot. Get this: his first downs per route run number is .27! For comparison, Nico Collins and Malik Nabers, who we just gushed over, are sitting at .18 (excellent!) and .12 (very good!), respectively. He’s getting peppered with .37 TPRR and has a 36% Air Yard Share. Expect some regression and the good times to keep rolling—Godwin’s back to being a monster. 

Jaxon Smith-Njigba – After a disappointing rookie year, I reluctantly attributed it to a bad offensive situation under Shane Waldron (don’t get me started on the Bears right now). Then Week 1 happened (two targets, two receptions, 19 yards), and I began to get nervous. Then Week 2 happened, AND HE TOTALLY REDEEMS HIMSELF! Through 2 weeks, his aDOT is at a very healthy 9.83 (because they started using him downfield). He got 16(!) targets in Week 2, 12 receptions, and 117 yards.

His YPRR is sitting at 2.26, his target share is at 26%, and his TPRR is now at a very happy .3. I don’t place too much weight on aDOT alone, but that’s what is most significant here. After teams misused him at or near the line of scrimmage during his rookie season, seeing him get work downfield and thrive confirmed that we didn’t miss badly on him as a prospect.

Quentin Johnston – Speaking of prospects we might have missed on… When I was geeking out on stats Monday, I noticed QJ, the biggest bust of the 2023 WR class, actually had some decent underlying metrics. Tuesday morning, I fired off a half-joking, half-serious tweet. Little did I know it would become the most viral (for me) tweet I’ve ever concocted. 

Though the tweet about him seemed overly cautious, I have severe doubts about QJ. In Week 1 against the Raiders, I thought using low aDOT crossers would maximize his potential. Week 2’s stats looked better due to garbage-time catches, but it was against a weak team. While he was a first-round prospect for a reason and might be salvageable if used right, I’m still skeptical. I’ve taken risks on hyper-athletes before, but to me he’s not worth a second-round pick—maybe a third.

I was going to write about disappointing players, but with all the bad news this season, I’ll save it for later. Until next time, zoom out, take the long view, consider adding more RBs, and hope for touchdowns to return.

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Joe Kuvetakis
Joe Kuvetakis
Dynasty Degen. BBM Junkie. CPFFL, LOED, and GFL for life. 25 years of fake football experience.

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