A) give: 1.04(Worthy) & 1.09(Daniels/Brooks/Ladd) Or B) get: 1.07, 2.03, 2.05 & Fields 12 Tm; .5ppr; Single QB; dynasty In rebuild: QB: Russ and Bryce WR: London, Reed, Dotson, Nabers, Odunze Not concerning myself too much with position; I want high value potential targets that I can flip for positional needs later. I think the trade is more than fair, but it won’t take much for Worthy’s value to explode especially since more than half the league is Chiefs fans.
@MaddHATTer @ChefBoyRPete thanks for the discussion. These are the reasons I come here almost exclusively. It not only helps me hone what I think the true and perceived values are of players, but helps me recognize my own blind spots that need more looking at.
I plan to take Wright at 2.04 and then hammer RB in the 3rd with my 4 third round picks.
My goal in the third and early fourth is to take Penix then Vidal, Gurrendo, Tracy, and Laube.
I actually have Lloyd faded or at least graded behind most of that pack (Wright, Vidal, Shipley, Davis, Laube, Lloyd is how I have them graded)
Also have IG faded late, but my view on him is changing as I’m starting to look at him less as an RB, and more as a replacement for Deebo
As a prospect I had wright and Lloyd above benson but ahead of the rest for sure. A lot of times because of age and such. Many bust after the draft I switched Lloyd and wright but both had nice upside
I think we’ll see more 12 personnel and 2-3 WR sets, rather than 3-4 receiver sets. Just based on trends in the NFL, 12 personnel is the next logical step
Add in all the strong-dynamic TEs coming into the NFL we were talking about earlier, and you start to see why LV would take Bowers when they just drafted Mayer in the 2nd, or Cinci would take All when they just signed Gisecki, etc
Again…I’m just speculating, but I think we may be on the brink of a shift in NFL offenses
Teams have evolved to earth movers at guard over the past couple years on top of that. The Chiefs having and using massive DTs was not very widely talked about in terms of their success vs the Ravens and Niners; compare that to the cowboys personnel vs GB as you stated. I’m a Chiefs homer, so I’m biased.
I think the Bowers pick alongside Mayer was great. I didn’t love it at the time and it was a head scratcher when i saw it, but it was a great pick.
@A440 do you have your own rating system, you’ve made reference to it a couple times. Are you in the FF industry, or just an exuberant home leaguer?
You obviously know your shit.
You may be wrong, but you back it up.
Not saying you’re wrong just that we all have wrong takes as long as they come from good process they’re good takes.
Take my TEP rant above as an example, back around 2000-2005 when Charch was touting “Do the Opposite” strategies, we did a lot of analysis regarding the actual game theory of FF, and there’s an incredible amount of intuitive ideas that are misconceived as true.
We did a lot of analysis of scoring and roster changes and what the actual impacts are on value, rather than on perceived value.
Keep in mind that the end of the 90s saw a dramatic shift away from the RB-RB-RB approach which had dominated FF since the beginning. It was now becoming more reasonable to take WRs, TEs, and QBs than it ever had been before
It was Moss and the Vikes, and then “The Greatest Show on Turf” that really changed the game
Jerry Glanville Oilers were ahead of their time. If only ppr was around then.
For the last 15ish years, I had written off FF, because I thought that it was so saturated that there was no advantage to knowing the game. But since I’ve been back, I realized most don’t actually understand the game they’re playing BECAUSE online does all the work for them. And most of online is talking heads that know more about the NFL and less about FF. And the difference is subtle, but very deep
So there’s plenty of room to gain advantage
Throw in continual offense-supporting rules and Belichek’s algorithmic approach to play calling, and it brought about 2 decades of complex offensive layers, utilizing all personnel on the field to move the ball.