2010 First Quarter Stock Report
10/7/10
Aggressiveness is a characteristic that tends to reward fantasy
owners more times than not. In the NFL, an offensive line will sometimes
hold up long enough to give the quarterback enough time to beat
man coverage down the field and make the defense look foolish against
a fierce pass rush. More often than not, though, when a defense
brings the heat and forces the action, crisis management becomes
the name of the game for the opposing team.
In that same vein, I hope to apply that same kind of pressure
to the owners in all of my leagues by beating my opponents to
the punch in regards to personnel moves. Sometimes, reaching a
conclusion about a player too quickly is much like trying to blitz
Peyton Manning – dangerous and painful. However, coming
to a correct conclusion two weeks or two minutes quicker than
your opponents is considered foresight. Fantasy owners can be
a uneasy lot, knowing that one two-or-three-game losing streak
can wreak irreparable damage to his/her team’s chances to
make a visit to the fantasy postseason. But just as it is in the
NFL and in life, it’s hard to land the big prize by playing
scared. Thus, I will strive each week to help each of you become
a smart blitzer, so to speak.
NFL coaches are fond of saying how they like to break down the
regular season into four four-game segments. At the end of each
quarter, they not only like to be at least .500, but also to have
a fair gauge on what players are going to carry the team's momentum
into the next part of the season.
Except in some rare cases, only two fantasy teams per league
get a chance to play 16 games in a season. Still, I buy into the
methodology of taking the pulse of your fantasy team after four
games. By now, some trends are starting to emerge, players are
in regular-season shape and owners can get a pretty good sense
of where their team's strengths and weaknesses lie. As a result,
trading at this point of the season doesn't seem as rushed or
cutting bait with an unproductive player doesn't seem as hasty.
Much as I suggest in my open each week, I'm an aggressive owner,
one who trusts his preseason ranking of players well into the
season, all while putting a fair amount of weight into what has
transpired so far. I typically don't wait until Week 4 to trade
because I feel I am reasonably sure about a player's prospects
before then, especially if his early-season production is matching
up with what I forecasted for him in July and August. (Certainly,
as we enter into the back end of the second quarter of the season,
what a player is doing in that season becomes more and more important
than my preseason rank or analysis of that player.) My belief
is that while the risk of a player letting you down is higher
with a small sample size early in the season, the reward for buying
low is worth the chance. For example, the time to grab someone
like Ben Roethlisberger, Ray Rice, and Marques Colston at a slightly
discounted rate is running out.
Quite often, fantasy sports - football in particular - is much
like the stock market. While it is highly unlikely that any player
will take off like a tech stock in the late 1990s and earlier
part of this decade, some players provide incredible return to
their investors in just a short amount of time. But while some
stocks are built for the long haul, others will come crashing
back down quickly. As easy as it is to sell low, almost no owner
wants to take the chance on selling high for fear they will miss
out on a historic season and look foolish in the process. Certainly,
it makes some sense to not cut the cord with a player who is performing
at an otherworldly level, but not good investment sense. No one
likes to part with the next big thing, but think about it...if
a $15 stock is performing at the level of a $50 stock, do you
really believe that stock will continue on to $100? It might,
but history suggests it won't barring a perfect storm of events.
And if that same stock holds steady at the $50 level and you were
able to re-invest in two more stable $25 stocks, didn't you do
yourself a favor? Like investing, fantasy sports can often be
won by diversifying your portfolio, in other words, spreading
the risk and reward in equal parts over your entire team instead
of counting on Adrian Peterson or Drew Brees to carry your team
each week.
On the other side of the spectrum, other players' values tank
so quickly that owners can't get out fast enough, almost to the
point where they are forced to hold onto that investment in hopes
that the disappointing player can regain some value before the
end of the fiscal year. But using that same $15 stock mentioned
above, is it worth giving up on when that same stock is performing
at a $2 level? If it can rebound to $10 by the end of the year,
the answer is probably no.
Seeing as how the investment year is broken down into quarters
- just as coaches break down the season - now seems as good of
time as any to conduct a quarterly stock report. Which skyrocketing
stocks are destined to fall? Which underperforming ones will rise?
Who are some of the best buy-low and sell-high players? Let's
take a look...
Stocks Destined To Lose Value Quickly
It might appear to be a no-brainer to pick on the QB who absorbed
nine sacks and a concussion in less than a half of work in Week
4, but Cutler owners need to understand this has been brewing
for a few games already. Detroit sacked him four times in Week
1, Dallas racked up countless pressures in Week 2 and Green Bay
did the same in Week 3 while adding three more sacks. In the Packers’
contest, Cutler had 2-3 potential interceptions wiped out by penalty
or drops, so it was only a matter of time before the Week 4 disaster
happened. What makes it worse is that of all the sacks Cutler
took vs. the Giants, I felt as though six of them were his fault
(as in holding the ball too long after taking a short drop). Admittedly,
the Giants’ defense finally played up to their immense talent,
but a combination of a weak offensive line and Cutler’s
indecisiveness didn’t help matters.
The Bears have no semblance of a running game (ironically, this
time Mike Martz is not to blame), which means there is no foreseeable
end to Cutler needing to carry the offense on his shoulders. So
unless Martz morphs into a conservative, dink-and-dunk play-caller
or Cutler speeds up his decision-making, the Giants’ debacle
won’t be the last time the QB leaves the stadium in much
worse shape than he entered it. Those of you who regularly read
this column were alerted to the fact that it may be a good time
to sell Cutler after Week 2. Those of you who religiously followed
my Big Boards in August may recall that I soured on Cutler more
and more as the summer went on because of the punishment he may
incur behind the Bears’ o-line and the fact the Bears face
the Vikings and Jets in Weeks 15-16. The pre-bye schedule may
allow Cutler to restore a bit of value over the next couple of
weeks – at Carolina (four sacks in four games) and vs. Seattle
(a defense that has allowed 596 yards and four passing TDs vs.
one INT in two road games so far) – but the evidence is
starting to suggest Cutler should be on someone else’s roster
sooner than later.
In the case of Benson, I’m making a slight assumption –
he hasn’t lost a ton of value already. With three TDs through
four games, there’s a good chance that his stock hasn’t
fallen off much in the eyes of most fantasy owners. But dig a
bit deeper and you’ll find that Benson should start looking
over his shoulder sooner than later. Granted, I’ve probably
never been one of Benson’s biggest fans, but a 3.3 YPC over
80 carries with a long run of 13 yards after four games isn’t
the type of thing that will keep defensive coordinators up at
night. Meanwhile, second-year RB Bernard Scott is cruising along
at a 4.9 YPC clip with a long run of 12 yards in just 15 carries.
Whether Benson likes it or not, the Bengals are transitioning
into more of a balanced offense than they were last year (which
highlights Scott’s game), so his high-volume workload is
doing more to hold the offense back this year than controlling
the clock, which worked well in conjunction with the Bengals’
strong defense last season to pick up a struggling passing game.
For what it is worth, I compare this backfield somewhat to Brandon
Jacobs and Ahmad Bradshaw in New York, with the one difference
being that Benson doesn’t avoid contact like Jacobs does nowadays.
For the Giants to be competitive now, they need Bradshaw (a speedy
injury risk himself) to give them the breakaway threat that Jacobs
cannot. Similarly, for the Bengals’ offense to complement their
defense, they must be able to break a big play in ways other than
forcing the ball into double teams in the direction of Chad
Ochocinco or Terrell
Owens. Perhaps Benson can start showing some explosion in
upcoming games vs. Tampa Bay and Atlanta, but the first half of
the season should have been one that Benson could dominate; the
second half of the schedule is a bit more taxing. Why not turn
to a RB they have already compared to Chris Johnson to spice up
the offense?
DeSean Jackson: Sell, Sell, Sell!
In two games where Kevin
Kolb played a significant part of the game, Jackson has seven
catches for 49 yards and no touchdowns. With Michael
Vick, Jackson has posted a healthy 9-288-2 line combined in
the other two games. Certainly, there is more to it than the QB
(facing the weak secondaries of the Lions and Jags certainly helped
in Vick’s games), but the long ball is just not as much a part
of the gameplan with Kolb under center as it is with Vick. I don’t
want to paint Jackson as simply a deep threat, but Vick stretches
the field more than just about any other QB in the league. Most
of Kolb’s dink-and-dunk style last week can be attributed to a
coaching staff that was probably scared of losing a second QB
behind a leaky offensive line. Add to that the fact Kolb has taken
very few snaps lately and you have a recipe for the numbers we
all saw in Week 4. While the elite receivers and tight ends usually
remain the top option in the offense regardless of the QB in most
offenses, it doesn’t always work out that way. In the Eagles’
current predicament, more Kolb will likely mean more Brent
Celek and LeSean
McCoy (whereas Vick’s game buys more time for Jackson and
Jeremy
Maclin to get open downfield). While I recognize that Vick’s
rib injury may only be a 1-2 week injury, owners of the Eagles
passing game need to recognize Vick excelled against the softest
pass defenses he could face in Week 2-3. As Kolb returns to the
lineup, Philadelphia enters a difficult part of its schedule.
Jackson is too good to keep down for too long, but understand
that even when Vick returns, “Fraction” isn’t going to automatically
return to 20-point fantasy days again on a consistent basis.
Pettigrew is a fine all-around TE, in fact he was one of the
few such TEs to come out of the 2009 NFL Draft. But while his
new fantasy owners are probably thrilled with the production they
are getting out of him, expect his numbers to come back to earth
once starting WR Nate Burleson returns in Week 5 or 6 and to fall
dramatically when QB Matthew Stafford comes back. For anyone who
watched the Lions’ loss to Green Bay, the announcers highlighted
Pettigrew’s penchant for dropping catchable balls –
which has been a season-long issue for him. The return of Stafford
is important in this case because he has the arm strength necessary
to make Calvin Johnson a threat on every play whereas Shaun Hill
does not. On a completely healthy Lions’ offense, Pettigrew
will be the fifth option on most plays – behind Johnson,
Burleson, Tony Scheffler and Jahvid Best. If you can squeeze some
value from the seventh-ranked TE in PPR leagues right now, feel
safe in doing so.
Other noteworthy players drafted early
who may not live up to their draft spot: Brandon
Jacobs (no longer a starter or the full-time goal-line back
and has seemingly lost his desire to run up the middle on a consistent
basis), Jerome
Harrison (has been completely been phased out of the gameplan
by HC Eric Mangini’s favorite player, Peyton
Hillis), Cadillac
Williams (has acknowledged his time as the featured back is
coming to an end), Justin
Forsett (the acquisition of Marshawn
Lynch turns him into a third-down back at best), Johnny
Knox (his deep speed is useless as long as Cutler doesn’t
have the time to throw), Steve
Smith – Giants (never a great bet for a lot of TDs, plus Hakeem
Nicks has quickly joined him as Eli
Manning’s co-favorite targets) and Steve Smith – Panthers
(even though Matt
Moore looked bad in two starts, he could feed Smith the ball
and found him out in space; Jimmy
Clausen has not)
Undervalued Stocks (Underperforming Players
Likely To Well Exceed Their Current Market Value)
Flacco, Rice and the Ravens in general are one example of why
I believe in my Preseason Schedule Analysis method of fantasy
forecasting. For many owners, it is too easy to look at last year’s
numbers and say that a player is bound to impress/regress based
simply on the changing of one or two factors. Looking back, owners
should kick themselves if they didn’t see that Baltimore
faced the stout defenses of the Jets, Steelers and Bengals in
three of the first four weeks. (As luck would have it, the Browns
– Week 3’s opponent – have sported a pretty
decent run defense themselves so far.) Because Anquan Boldin has
already had his breakout game as a Raven, I must turn to the other
Ravens who may be seen as untrustworthy fantasy starters right
now. Flacco simply has too many weapons not to thrive in the coming
weeks with the Ravens facing a host of weak secondaries from the
AFC East and NFC South, not to mention a banged-up Broncos secondary
this week, followed by the Patriots and Bills leading into the
Week 8 bye.
Rice can probably be had for the likes of Benson or Matt Forte
right now due to his “slow” start and the knee bruise
that helped the coaching staff decide to play Willis McGahee over
him for most of Week 4. For some perspective, Rice had 295 yards
rushing and one score to go along with 134 yards receiving through
four games last season. Despite a very difficult schedule to date
thus far, he has 304 total yards and no scores. Assuming the knee
bruise doesn’t turn into a year-long ordeal, he’ll
get better and it will probably start this week in a home game
vs. Denver. (Yes, I recognize this is the same Broncos’
defense that kept Chris Johnson bottled up, but Baltimore actually
has a two-dimensional offense.) It’s not unthinkable Rice
still finishes around 1,800 total yards. In case you doubt me,
Rice went for at least 5.3 YPC against Cincinnati and Cleveland,
two respectable run defenses up to this point. Also keep in mind
that OC Cam Cameron didn’t really unleash Rice until about
the fifth game last season and it wouldn’t be all that surprising
if he did so again in 2010. His breakout game is coming…
In the preseason, fantasy “experts” look for any number of reasons
why to promote or downgrade certain players. My rationale for
downgrading Mathews included several factors, including his injury
history and the uncertainty surrounding his role (or lack of one)
at the goal line. For Mathews’ owners, those fears were realized
earlier than expected and now Mike
Tolbert has become someone that has become a fantasy factor.
I never expected Mathews’ to live up to the first-round pick that
many fantasy owners used to acquire his services, but the pendulum
has probably swung too far in the other direction now. This is
Mathews’ job with a bit of Darren
Sproles sprinkled in and Tolbert (sometimes, but not always)
at the goal line. The Chargers don’t have the easiest run schedule
going forward, but the presence of a lethal passing attack and
absence of an elite run defense like the Steelers or Jets on the
schedule means Mathews will rarely ever face a eight-man box or
impossible matchup. In 12-team leagues (especially PPR), the rookie
is a solid RB2 going forward. If the Mathews’ owner in your league
is tiring of him, make sure he/she doesn’t have that problem much
longer. Tolbert will continue to be a factor, but Mathews will
gradually reassume his lead-back role.
Hines Ward: Buy, Buy, Buy!
This duo is probably is a no-brainer, but I was able to acquire
both in separate experts’ leagues over the last week, which
indicates that even the “experts” lose faith in their
mid-round picks earlier than they should or forget the reasons
they drafted the player to begin with. Ben Roethlisberger is a
top 10 QB in fantasy and the impact his return has on all things
Steelers probably can’t be overstated. Under OC Bruce Arians,
Pittsburgh has morphed into a passing team and I don’t expect
that to change just because the Steelers went 3-1 in the four
games Big Ben was suspended. So, the timing to pick up Ward or
Wallace is now going into the team’s Week 5 bye as their
owners are probably not only looking for bye-week fillers, but
to also cut bait with players who aren’t meeting their expectations.
Ward is a perennial 80-90 catch, 1,000-yard WR (as he demonstrated
in Week 1 with Byron Leftwich under center) while Wallace is a
receiver that numerous Steelers players (such as Ward) and officials
raved about as being the most advanced receiver they had seen
from a second-year player. Wallace is unique in that he is a young
speed receiver who is already a fine route runner, so with the
scheme and QB now in place, Wallace is great shape to meet and
possibly exceed the production Santonio Holmes posted as a Steeler.
Had Wallace not exploded for 100 yards and two TDs in Week 3,
many of his owners may have already set him free. With that said,
it’s a safe bet those same owners were expecting a bit more
from him than a 6-111-0 line in the other three games combined.
The stat that probably captures Fitzgerald’s season to
this point: 19 catches on 45 targets. For those of you who don’t
have a calculator handy, that is a 42% connect (or catch) rate
for a WR that has caught 63% of the passes Kurt Warner threw his
way over the past two seasons. Fitzgerald has established himself
as one of the top 2-3 receivers in the league, but even someone
as accomplished as the Cards’ star cannot be asked to dominate
down the field when Arizona has already lost the battle before
the ball has been released. In years past, if the Cardinals would
have fallen behind like they have in two of the first four weeks
of this season, Fitzgerald would have enjoyed a field day. Instead,
he has struggled to maintain an YPC over 10 yards! Fitzgerald
is one of several players I’m trying to acquire over the
next week. Even though I don’t expect new starting QB Max
Hall to find his inner Kurt Warner anytime soon, I suspect he
will move this offense. And when he does, Fitzgerald will have
a chance to live up to his WR1 status again.
This is a short-term recommended buy, but Celek can only benefit
from Kolb’s re-insertion into the starting lineup. The well-chronicled
best-friends-and-road-roommate angle may get overplayed from time
to time, but in this case, it is warranted. With that said, it
takes more than a tight bond off the field to get my attention;
each player’s strengths must match up to make that friendship
carry over to the fantasy box score. As I touched on above, Vick’s
arm allows him to stretch the field vertically and his running
ability allows him to stretch it horizontally. Conversely, Kolb
– who possesses underrated arm strength or athleticism himself
– looks bland by comparison, has been pigeonholed as a pure
West Coast QB whose best asset is accuracy. Because the Eagles’
coaching staff restricts Kolb’s ability to show off his
arm strength and athleticism, it means the players who specialize
in the short and intermediate games will start to resurface. Among
those players are slot WR Jason Avant and Celek, who has been
dropped in a money league or two of mine already. If he is sitting
out on your waiver wire too, scoop him up and see what you can
get back in return for him if Vick is forced to miss at least
two games.
Other noteworthy players who may rise
from the early-season ashes: Fred
Jackson (modest upgrade as he re-assumes the lead-back role,
although owners would be wise not to trust him as anything more
than a RB3 at any point this season), Marques
Colston (has started slow before, but as Drew
Brees’ most trusted option – especially on third down – it
is only a matter of time before the touchdowns start coming),
Percy
Harvin (the threat of Randy Moss opens the middle up for him),
Mohamed
Massaquoi (will start producing at a low-end WR3 or high-end
WR4 level once Jake
Delhomme comes back)
Stocks On The Way Up (Players Whose Value Is
About To Skyrocket)
Derek Anderson has been every bit as inaccurate as most of us
expected him to be (he’s currently completing 52% of his
passes in a league that expects at least 60%) and has reminded
us that even a player like Fitzgerald is not so good that he can
turn a below-average NFL quarterback into a legit starter. With
news that Hall would be taking over as the starter on Wednesday,
it ended speculation that started at the end of the preseason
when HC Ken Whisenhunt announced that his undrafted rookie free
agent was the best QB in camp. So with Steve Breaston and Early
Doucet due back soon from injuries, Hall will have a chance to
put the accuracy he displayed as a three-year starter at BYU to
good use. If his college career is any indication, he will throw
his share of interceptions but he almost cannot help but be more
efficient than Anderson. Hall immediately becomes a mid-level
QB2 in fantasy with potential for much more if he can carry his
preseason performance into the regular season.
Very rarely do those of us who write about fantasy football get
to enjoy somewhat immediate gratification. Sometimes, we play
our hunches and other times we research player histories to uncover
potential likelihoods. When Oakland allowed Bush to steal (and
convert) a goal-line opportunity in Week 4, I felt somewhat vindicated
for keeping the faith that he would eventually carve out a split
backfield role with Darren McFadden. But when McFadden exited
Week 4 in the fourth quarter with a right hamstring injury (as
opposed to the left hammy which sidelined him for most of the
preseason), it opened the door considerably for Bush to assume
a greater role within the offense. As of press time, we don’t
know to what extent McFadden will be limited or how long he will
be out, but the former Arkansas Razorback has been a hamstring
injury waiting to happen over his three-year pro career. In typical
Bush fashion, he is chugging right along with a healthy 5.3 YPC
since returning from his thumb injury (granted, on a very small
sample size – 10 carries).
Assuming the goal-line job is his going forward regardless of
McFadden’s status – as it was in Week 4 – Bush
could very well be on his way to earning at least a 50-50 split
with a couple of solid performances if McFadden cannot play over
the next game or two. The Raiders have raved all season long about
McFadden’s ability to contribute in the passing game and
his increased toughness as a runner, so it is not as if he is
going to just go away in fantasy. McFadden could quite easily
emerge as most valuable property of the two in PPR, but McFadden’s
latest injury is just another reminder of why Bush should be the
lead back, even if Al Davis doesn’t see it that way.
Much as is the case with Ward and Wallace above, the return of
Roethlisberger will do wonders to improve the stock of Miller,
who has posted a meager 10-100-0 line through four games. It’d
be foolish to think Miller is going to repeat the career year
he enjoyed last season, but in this offense, he’s a short-yardage
weapon who is a pretty solid TE in PPR leagues. And because he
is an accomplished blocker as well, he is unlike most of the new
generation of TEs who are “rocked-up” WRs that get
pulled from the field on running downs. He’s not flashy
in fantasy or reality, but the kind of stable force in both realms
that allow QBs like Roethlisberger and fantasy owners alike to
count on him every week.
Other noteworthy players about to
see their value go up: Brett
Favre (obvious upgrade given the acquisition of Moss, but
fantasy owners need to keep expectations realistic…Favre has looked
old and made numerous poor decisions this season), Bernard Scott
(Benson is not a good bet to keep his job or stay healthy all
season long), Felix
Jones (short-term upgrade for as long as he can stay healthy),
Ryan
Torain (another obvious upgrade with Clinton Portis’ return
this season in some doubt), Kenny
Britt (a potential long-term injury to Justin
Gage allows the underachieving, but talented Titans WR to
carry the passing game), Brandon
Tate (will assume Moss’ place in the starting line up as well
as his deep ball role in the offense although he can’t be expected
to perform anywhere close to that level), Aaron
Hernandez (the one true mismatch the Patriots can throw at
opponents with Moss’ departure)
Penny Stocks (Wildcard Stock Picks)
It’s safe to say the entire Green Bay running game is a
cry for help. The trade of Marshawn Lynch to Seattle earlier this
week closes the door on a potential avenue for the Packers, although
there is a slight possibility Willis McGahee could still get traded
before the trading deadline (possibly to the Packers). But if
GM Ted Thompson was reluctant to deal a fourth-rounder for Lynch
– a back they loved when he was drafted back in 2007 –
it’s pretty safe to say he won’t do it for McGahee
(and I have a hard time believing the Ravens will part with their
goal-line back for a fifth- or sixth-round pick). All of this
leads us back to Starks, who is the only in-house candidate who
has the talent necessary to eventually take over this backfield.
For those who may not remember, Starks was being hailed as Ryan
Grant’s eventual successor this spring and summer before
he injured his hamstring. The former University of Buffalo standout
hasn’t been able to stay healthy for some time – so
he is a bit of a long shot – but with Aaron Rodgers and
the dynamic Packers’ passing offense keeping defenses on
their heels, there are few RB situations that are more conducive
to consistent fantasy production at RB than Green Bay.
Just like Starks, it’s not so much that Dixon is an unknown
quantity; it’s just that he has virtually no role right
now. Again, just like Starks, Dixon is a talented RB who needs
one break (or a few more weeks in Starks’ case) to become
a weekly starter in fantasy. And it is exactly that kind of player
that fantasy owners need to make sure they have one spot on their
roster for, at least in the 12-team, 18-player leagues I play
in. As far as fantasy RBs go, Frank Gore is about as good as it
gets, but his physical running style tends to lead to injury.
And since Gore only played a full 16-game schedule once over his
first five seasons, it would seem there is a pretty good chance
his sixth season will be interrupted at some point as well. If/when
that happens, Dixon becomes an awfully enticing trade chip or
short-term fantasy starter. In such a scenario, I would expect
Brian Westbrook to receive a fair amount of work in the passing
game, but Dixon is already one of the better backup RBs in the
league in my opinion.
Since the weekend of the NFL Draft, Mike Williams has been talk
of the town in Tampa. Virtually everyone acknowledged that while
Benn was drafted two rounds higher than Williams, it was the latter
who was a remarkable talent and a potential WR1, with the biggest
knock being that Williams could not stay out of trouble in college.
So far, so good on that front. However, Benn has pretty much been
ignored since injuring his ankle at some point during OTA’s.
What cannot be forgotten is that Benn actually (and rightfully)
invokes comparisons to a young Anquan Boldin. Benn’s progress
already figured to be slow to begin with considering the complex
nature of the “Z” receiver in the West Coast offense
OC Greg Olson runs and was obviously set back due to his missed
time in the preseason. He flashed some fantasy potential in Week
3 vs. Pittsburgh with three catches for 33 yards. While the Bucs
haven’t promoted him to the starting lineup just yet, it
is only a matter of time before makes that jump. Sammie Stroughter
– the current starter – is stretched as the starting
outside receiver and fits much better in the slot. If Benn is
finally starting to grasp the offense as the Bucs suggest he is,
he has a shot at significant fantasy value at some point during
the second half of the season.
Suggestions, comments, musings about the article or fantasy football
in general? e-mail me.
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