Sorting Out Free Agency (And a Trade!)

Free agency is one of my favorite parts of football.  This is probably because my favorite team never seems to be in the playoffs so I guess it gives me a false sense of hope going into the next season.  A couple of needs get fulfilled with players that I haven’t seen play in the Buccaneer’s system and all of a sudden I can argue them into the playoffs in my head.  The Jaguars also always look like they’ve built a dangerous roster in the offseason, and then we remember by week 2 that Blake Bortles is still the quarterback.

Free agency answers a lot of questions for fantasy football as well.  Every year, the beginning of March changes the destiny of at least a few players that might be question marks in keeper leagues. Just because the player takes the biggest check doesn’t mean that they are putting themselves in the best position to put up their best possible individual numbers.  I’m going to do my best to decipher the first week of signings and trades right here.  This was a busier year than last year for the skill positions as far as I remember, so if I forget someone you wanted to read about, forgive me.  Let’s get started with one of the fastest players in football…

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2017 Rankings: Way Too Early Top-100, Part II

Welcome to my Way Too Early Top-100 Fantasy Football rankings. We have finished up the first week of free agency so we have a pretty decent idea of who will be where in 2017. This is purely a ranking of the 2017 season only and not beyond, so we’ll leave the dynasty talk to our boy, Matt Hayes. With the draft still on the horizon and plenty of time for injuries and off the field shenanigans, I’m guessing that this list is going to look a lot different come September. As always we can hash it out in the comments section (please let me know if you find a double).

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2017 Rankings: Way Too Early Top-100

Hey everyone!

As each day goes on, MB and I will be going further and further in our NFL draft content, bringing you only the best as draft day draws closer and closer with each day passing. However, we are taking a short pause in the content to bring our look at the Top 100 for the upcoming 2017 season.

There has been a few notable changes in terms of franchise-tagging players, and different personnel changes that are definitely just beginning in what is going to be another crazy offseason. However, it is still great to have a slight idea of some players you were wrong about last year, but want to target this year, or even players you are still expecting to turn it around before it’s too late.

So, without further ado, here is a way too early look at the Top 100 for the upcoming 2017 season (standard scoring).

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Razzcast 23: The Orange Episode

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Yeah, this time it’s Tehol’s fault I veered into the political realm, but the good news is, we don’t spend too much time addressing the elephant in the room, aka Rome burning, but we did have a plethora of NFL news to talk about, including the story that broke during the recording sesh, which was Brandin Cooks being traded to the Patriots. The Brock Osweiler trade to the Browns, along with Alshon Jeffery, Kirk Cousins, and Danny Woodhead are all bantered about with Zach, Matt Bowe, and Tehol. Along with a story from Zach about how Tehol stalks him with an auto-tuned rapper. Or something. I already forgot his name, but he dresses like Prince, but without the immense talent to project sex appeal in such garments. And we finally talk about the OA finale and start the hype train on Game of Thrones. Choo choo! (I sexually identify as a train during these times.) Here’s the newest Razzcast, with bonus technical difficulties towards the end of the cast, because #productionvalue!

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The Winning Criteria for Fantasy Football Lineups

The Winning Criteria for Fantasy Football Lineups

Throughout the years I’ve heard things like “always start your studs” and “don’t get cute”. These phrases usually come about when a person is trying to determine who to start and who to sit. The purpose of this article is to explain the criteria most likely to produce a winning fantasy football lineup. I will use historical data to back my theories. You will learn how to use data to build a criteria for each position. This will help you identify the best possible starters. You’ll be able to reference this criteria for both DFS and full season leagues. When you’re done reading you’ll know my criteria for creating winning fantasy football lineups for NFL DFS and my full season fantasy football leagues.

But First, The Misconceived Criteria

Before we go into specific criterion for each position we will hash out some basic misconceptions when creating fantasy football lineups. Common misconceptions that pollute our minds when creating lineups and rankings. The reason I want to talk about the misconceptions first is because the misconceptions are used as the baseline criteria for most fantasy team managers. We are going to change that today.

Misconception #1: Always Start Your Studs

Nothing could be further from the truth, sometimes. Not starting your studs is going to be hard. But you have to buy-in to this before moving forward with this article. You’ll soon see that predicting upside is fairly easy to do and on any given Sunday rolling the dice with your RB3 over your RB1 isn’t such a roll of the dice. So I submit to you today that you indeed do not need to always start your studs. When following the position by position criteria I outline later in this article this will start to become a much more palatable idea.

Misconception #2: Ride The Hot Hand

Some people firmly believe in riding the hot hand. But more often than not NFL football players rarely out perform the previous weeks strong performance. DFS players in-particular fall victim to recency bias. Just look at the ownership percentages on FanDuel and DraftKings. The table below shows us the percentage of players that outperformed their previous weeks performance when the previous weeks performance was 5 points over projection. 5 points over projection means: if the player was projected for 20 fantasy points but scored 25 fantasy points.

Position Percentage Outperform
Quarterbacks 37.90%
Running Backs 43.60%
Wide Receivers 40.66%
Tight Ends 26.20%
Defenses 49.27%
Kickers 38.02%

As you can see, less than 50% of the time a player out performed the previous weeks “hot hand” performance. The only time I ride the hot hand is when I’d start the guy anyway. We will go into this more in-depth position by position next, but here’s the basics for those of you without access to the member only content.

  1. The player is consistently the focal point of the offense.
  2. The player is not impacted by game flow. Meaning they produce regardless of the score, down and distance.
  3. The weather is “good football weather”, read more on this topic here.
  4. The defense isn’t known to take away a player. Researching how the defense attacks teams with similar weapons pays huge dividends. As an aside, FPA (fantasy points allowed) usually doesn’t paint a clear picture when you drill down into how teams game plan. Pass performance of not only the player in question but players of similar talent really can help you make the right call. As the season begins to unfold, say by week 5, you can really start to narrow things down. This plays a large role in our criteria so let’s jump into that now.

The Baseline Criteria

Since we can’t predict the future, we have to lean on historical data and forward looking information to create our criteria. Basic information such as weather, home/road, Vegas over/under and implied team totals help get the party started. Then we look at defensive performance, particularly the weakness of a defense and if they tend to funnel production toward a particular area of offense. This has nothing to do with hot hands or who you drafted with your 1st, 2nd or 10th round. It’s all about identifying opportunity and capitalizing on it. Injuries, particularly to the offensive line, play a major role in everyone’s production. Therefore, how offensive line injuries impact each position needs to be reviewed. Let’s break down the criteria for each position so you can create winning fantasy football lineups going forward.

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