Post Week 4 Look

Dated: 2 Oct 2008
Posted by Chris

Another exciting week of Football and now it’s time to plan for week 5.

From a FFIWOT strategic point of view this is a slow moving week. Lets face it, our strategy is to pick diamonds in the rough at running back and sell them later int he season when their stock is high and other players have few viable options.

Another strategy is to wade through bye weeks and key injuries and offer solutions to competitors in a challenging position. If this were real estate they would be motivated sellers selling off their prized assets at a discount because of market and personal conditions.

Looking at the former strategy, we have already had a lot of play on the up and comers of the league. Good luck trying to get Aaron Rogers (QB GB), Matt Forte (RB Chi), or a DeSean Jackson (WR Phi).

There aren’t a lot of surprises from here that we don’t at least have a suspicion about. Lets face it, the first couple weeks of the season is all about discovering new talent and we have all been discovering. Most of the emerging talent yet to be spotted are sitting on benches waiting for an injury to happen. We’ll be ready for that but not right now.

So we are going to take a different tack. Before we get into that, lets look at our second main strategy above of being the right guy with the right offer when some poor sap is hurting because he didn’t prepare for his bye week or a key injury hit and his bench is thin. There isn’t a lot of that happening this week.

Byes for week 5 include: Cleveland, New York Jets, Oakland, St. Louis

That roughly translates to B Favre (QB NYJ), J Cotchery (WR NYJ), L Coles (WR NYJ), and S Jackson (RB STL) as key players sitting the week out. Yes there are other names but if you own Cleveland players you probably have them on the bench this coming week any way until they can prove something.

The bottom line is that there are just not enough key players effected by the bye this week to motivate a lot of sellers out there unless they did a really bad job of preparing after a bizarre alignment of players came their way.

So at first glance it would appear that we are screwed this week. Not really. When they zig we zag. People in the leagues I’m in seem to be grabbing the best talent available based on 4 weeks of performance. That sounds like a good strategy on the surface but it is the last thing you should be doing and not just because everyone else is doing it.

FFIWOT Rule: Every week, do an analysis of your running backs and wide receivers. Find the week you will be at your thinnest which will undoubtedly be a bye week. Plug in your substitutes and then look at the remaining (if any) players at that position. They should be diamonds in the rough. If they are sub par players, be ready to drop them if they are good players you should be looking for opportunities to trade them every week.

What I’m seeing with people picking up the best talent available is people picking up players who they would never start unless there were major injuries on their team and even then they would start them reluctantly on a team destined to loose.

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Example: If you have a league that starts 3 wide receivers and you never have more than 1 on a bye from here on in and you have 4 good receivers, why in the hell would you pick up Ike Hilliard (WR TB) as your 5th? That is a wasted bench position as he is not suddenly going to be a consistent top 20 receiver.

In all likelihood he would remain on your bench not good enough to trade or even to start in your bye week. If you claim you are hedging against two injuries or an injury plus a bye then you are playing to loose. It is better to loose that week you are afflicted with bad luck than to tie up a valuable bench spot with dead wood.

You are much better off betting on a long shot in this position. Find a guy on a bench behind a talented wide receiver who has a history of injury or who your crystal ball says is going down. Maybe its a rookie who you think will become this year’s Calvin Johnson (WR Det).

The point is, while everyone else is picking up the Ike Hilliard’s and Derek Mason (WR Bal) because he had a good week, you need to look for people with huge upside. That brings us to my next point.

If you have no more up and comers to scout and grab, then pick up some down and outers. If you have some Ike Hilliard types (sorry to pick on you Ike, I’m a old Giants fan who grew up in Tampa so I like Ike, he just works for my example) then you should be looking to make deals for some of the following people:

Wide Receiver:

Randy Moss (WR NE)

Braylon Edwards (WR Cle)

Andre Johnson (WR Hou)

If you get an impatient guy then Marques Colston (WR NO)

and if you are a really optimistic gambler Chad “Ocho Cinco” Johnson (WR Cin)

Running Back:

Ryan Grant (RB GB)

Laurence Maroney (RB NE)

Selvin Young (RB Den)

Sure, probably none of the guys above are going to give you an immediate return and most are not (yet) on the waiver wire but if they are, grab them. If not you could trade your Ike Hilliards for some of them at this point.

These are proven entities that are having a bad start. Even if they take until mid season to turn things around think about what you will have at crunch time by taking a gamble with a bench seat now

One final word.

FFIWOT Rule: Most leagues will let you sort all players by some stat like fantasy points scored YTD. Do this for kickers and make sure there isn’t a much better kicker than the one you have sitting as a free agent.

This is of the most neglected positions in fantasy football and one of the most unpredictable. Just because a guy was good last year and so you ended up with him in the draft based on this doesn’t mean he is good this year.

With kickers, it depends a lot on their offense as well as their range and accuracy. Shop around.

Repeat the above exercise with defenses. I just picked up Tampa Bay as a secondary defense in one of my leagues without a competitor bidding.

Good luck

-Chris

Changing of the Guard at Running Back

Dated: 7 Nov 2007
Posted by Chris

Ok, so for a while it looked like there was a glut of running backs and it was the wide receiver position that needed attention. Well, it looks like the RB position is not going to stop being the force that drives fantasy football anytime soon.

Three trends have converged to make having a quality fantasy back with several backup options essential to success.

The first is not really a trend but rather a norm in the NFL. Backs go down and there are always stars that end up on IR. This year is no exception with the likes of Ronnie Brown, Deuce McAllister and Cadillac Williams all gone for the year. You have a score of other starters who have had injury problems such as Steven Jackson, Rudi Johnson and Brandon Jacobs.

The second trend is the disappointing seasons for so many quality backs. Sean Alexander, Larry Johnson, Frank Gore, Steven Jackson, Travis Henry and Laurence Maroney to single some out. There are differing reasons for each one’s problems but in the end they are producing far less than what was projected on opening day.

The third trend, in my opinion is more of a reaction to the first two than a trend in general and that is of the two headed beast at RB. I don’t see a lot of great running backs I see a lot of very mediocre running backs with coaches trying to plug in whoever is running better that week.

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I don’t care how a coach frames it or positions it, you run a two back system because neither one of them is good enough to step up at take the starting role. If they are both that good you flip a coin and trade the other.

We seem to be at one of those historic points in the NFL where we are approaching a changing of the guard. Every now and then the slate gets pretty much wiped clean and a new generation of talent comes to the front.

Times like these are magnified when you have a few years without a super-talent back like a Jim Brown, Walter Payton, or Barry Sanders type. Then comes Adrian Peterson and we look and realize just how mediocre even the top backs currently look in historical perspective.

Take a look at three of the top backs from the past couple years. Larry Johnson and Sean Alexander maybe haven’t had the gaping holes of years past to run through. Even though LT has righted the ship for the most part seemed to have trouble when the leads and the schemes designed to open up lanes for them were not there (IE Martyball). Without the advantages these back have looked pretty average at times.

I see Adrian Peterson and I think back to Walter Payton and Barry Sanders playing all those years on sub par teams where the defenses knew they would be getting the ball and they ran for big gains anyway. Does anyone think that Minnesota will be passing the ball up and down the field? Peterson is clearly, all by himself, the top tier of RB in the NFL.

The bottom line is you need to have the best of the that vast third tier of talent beyond all the second tier starters below Peterson. This year proves again that every available space on a roster early in the year needs to contain running backs.

If you picked up your running backs on Tuesdays then you should be winning games in November.

Fantasy Football Week 3 Injuries

Dated: 22 Sep 2007
Posted by Chris

Look over the injury report and make a decision now. Set your lineup and don’t look back. You can always change your mind later but make a decision now and assume it is final.

Injury Report

Baltimore Ravens QB Steve McNair Groin QUESTIONABLE
Baltimore Ravens WR Mark Clayton Toe QUESTIONABLE
Baltimore Ravens MLB Ray Lewis Triceps QUESTIONABLE

Cincinnati Bengals WR T.J. Houshmandzadeh Knee PROBABLE
Cincinnati Bengals K Shayne Graham Hip PROBABLE

Dallas Cowboys WR Terry Glenn Knee OUT

Denver Broncos TE Stephen Alexander Calf QUESTIONABLE
Denver Broncos WR Javon Walker Shoulder PROBABLE
Denver Broncos WR Rod Smith PUP

Detroit Lions RB T.J. Duckett Ankle OUT
Detroit Lions RB Kevin Jones Foot DOUBTFUL

Green Bay Packers WR Greg Jennings Hamstring PROBABLE
Green Bay Packers WR James Jones Hamstring PROBABLE
Green Bay Packers RB Vernand Morency Knee DOUBTFUL

Houston Texans RB Ron Dayne Chest QUESTIONABLE
Houston Texans RB Ahman Green Knee PROBABLE
Houston Texans WR Andre Johnson Knee PROBABLE

Jacksonville Jaguars WR Matt Jones Heel PROBABLE
Jacksonville Jaguars WR Reggie Williams Back PROBABLE

Kansas City Chiefs WR Eddie Kennison Hamstring OUT
Kansas City Chiefs RB Priest Holmes IR OUT

Miami Dolphins QB Trent Green Ankle PROBABLE

Minnesota Vikings QB Tarvaris Jackson Groin DOUBTFUL
Minnesota Vikings RB Chester Taylor Hip QUESTIONABLE
Minnesota Vikings WR Robert Ferguson Ankle PROBABLE

New England Patriots QB Tom Brady R Shoulder PROBABLE
New England Patriots WR Donte’ Stallworth Knee QUESTIONABLE

New York Giants WR Plaxico Burress Ankle QUESTIONABLE
New York Giants RB Brandon Jacobs Knee OUT
New York Giants WR Steve Smith Shoulder OUT
New York Giants QB Eli Manning R Shoulder QUESTIONABLE

New York Jets WR Jerricho Cotchery Shoulder QUESTIONABLE
New York Jets RB Thomas Jones Calf QUESTIONABLE
New York Jets QB Chad Pennington Ankle QUESTIONABLE

Oakland Raiders RB LaMont Jordan Back PROBABLE
Oakland Raiders RB Dominic Rhodes Suspension

Philadelphia Eagles K David Akers Left quadricep PROBABLE
Philadelphia Eagles WR Kevin Curtis Quadricep PROBABLE
Philadelphia Eagles WR Greg Lewis Hip PROBABLE

San Francisco 49ers WR Arnaz Battle Groin PROBABLE
San Francisco 49ers WR Darrell Jackson Back PROBABLE

Seattle Seahawks RB Shaun Alexander Wrist PROBABLE
Seattle Seahawks WR D.J. Hackett Ankle OUT

St. Louis Rams QB Marc Bulger Ribs PROBABLE
St. Louis Rams WR Drew Bennett Thigh PROBABLE

Tampa Bay Buccaneers WR Ike Hilliard Ankle QUESTIONABLE
Tampa Bay Buccaneers RB Carnell Williams Ribs QUESTIONABLE

-Chris

Notable Injuries for Week 1

Dated: 8 Sep 2007
Posted by Chris

The big day is tomorrow. Some of you may be locked out changing your lineup because a game has been played but other leagues let you make changes to any player who has not played. If you are in the later group, its time to make your adjustments to your line up.

Here are the injuries of note for fantasy owners:

Denver Broncos at Buffalo Bills:

Stephen Alexander TE Calf Questionable

Daniel Graham is looking like a good start

Philadelphia Eagles at Green Bay Packers:

L.J. Smith TE Groin Probable
Donald Driver WR Foot Probable
Greg Jennings WR Hamstring Questionable

Keep an eye on the other receivers getting a chance this week in Green Bay

Atlanta Falcons at Minnesota Vikings:

Bobby Wade WR Ankle Probable
Robert Ferguson WR Ankle Questionable

A lot of people are big on Bobby Wade as a sleeper pick.

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New England Patriots at New York Jets:

Tom Brady QB Right Shoulder Probable
Chad Pennington QB Pelvis Probable
Thomas Jones RB Calf Questionable

I’m guessing we won’t see Marques Tuiasosopo or Matt Cassel unless it’s a blowout. Leon Washington will certainly have his chance to prove that he should still be the starter.

Carolina Panthers at St. Louis Rams:

Drew Bennett WR Thigh Questionable

Its too bad that the Rams have no other receivers to fill Bennett’s spot if he can’t go :-)

Miami Dolphins at Washington Redskins:

Clinton Portis RB Knee Probable

Detroit Lions at Oakland Raiders:

Kevin Jones RB Foot Doubtful

I still think there will be a good tier 2 running back in Detroit this season. I think it will be Tatum Bell but I will admit I have Kevin Jones sitting on my bench on one team.

Chicago Bears at San Diego Chargers:

Muhsin Muhammad WR Ankle Probable

When you are in your 12th year you know how to play through pain.

New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys:

Terry Glenn WR Knee Out

Like you needed a reason to start TO. Wow, watch out.

Baltimore Ravens at Cincinnati Bengals:

Mark Clayton WR Ankle Probable
T.J. Houshmandzadeh WR Knee Probable

I wouldn’t bench either of these guys.

Thats it for this week. Rest up, we have a big day tomorrow

-Chris