Even the most novice fantasy owners know who the elite players
at every position are. Why? Because anyone can usually look at
the fantasy-point total from the previous season and figure it
out. After all, big year-end totals don’t just come from
a series of small numbers…right?
Fantasy football is a game about numbers at its very core, but
it is so much more than that. Championships are not necessarily
won because a certain player has bigger numbers at the end of
the year than everyone else. Instead, fantasy titles are more
often won by those owners who get good-to-great performances consistently.
Just as importantly, how often is an owner’s core players
outperforming their peers at their position? Last but not least,
when are those players delivering their biggest performances?
There is nothing wrong with reviewing last year’s final
numbers and making some determinations for the upcoming season
based on that. It is just an incomplete means to an end and one
that can get monotonous if the numbers don’t provide some
kind of perspective. As we all know, not all fantasy-point totals
are created equal: few players have or ever will go on the four-game
run Le’Veon Bell enjoyed from Weeks 11-15 last season. Odell
Beckham Jr. did more in 12 games as a rookie than most receivers
will ever do in a year. But were either of them the most consistently
dominant player in fantasy football?
To answer that question, I have chosen to utilize a system that
places a value on a player’s rank – relative to his
position he plays – from that given week. Although I will
provide some observations below, the goal is to let the numbers
– or the rankings, as it were – do the talking. Much
like Red Zone Report,
my hope is that as the years pass, we will begin to see some trends
emerge and draw some solid conclusions based on that.
For those readers that remember last
season’s Consistency Rankings Analysis, I have eliminated
the player’s scoring average and value – the standard
deviation concept I use for my Big Boards. (Sorry folks, there
is only so much information that can fit on a page.) I have replaced
them with the following designations that serve as the basis for
my scoring system:
- For quarterbacks and tight ends:
“top 1” indicates that a player was the top
scorer of the week at his position and “elite”
refers to when a player finishes among the top five players of
his position. “Clear starter” (CS)
is someone who is ranked inside the top 12 (a QB1/TE1 in other
words), while any mention of “backup range” refers
to when a player lands outside the top 24 (a QB3/TE3 in other
words).
- For running backs and receivers:
“top 1” indicates that a player was the top
scorer of the week at his position and “elite” refers
to when a player finishes among the top 10 players of his position.
“Clear starter” is someone who is ranked inside the
top 24 (a RB2/WR2 in other words), while “backup range”
refers to when a player lands outside the top 36 (a RB4/WR4 in
other words).
Below are the other column headers: OR – Overall rank PR – Position rank (based on total number
of fantasy points at the end of last season) SRS – "Simple Ratings System"
(explained above); essentially a consistency score that assigns
varying point values based on weekly rank and position.
Notes: Any weekly rank that appears in a red box was a negative
point total for that week. All rankings/concepts based on a 12-team
league PPR league where rushing and receiving touchdowns are worth
six points, passing scores are worth four points and owners must
start one QB, two RBs, two WRs and one TE. Players had to participate
in at least eight games to qualify.
The top-scoring running backs will almost always top this
list for a number of reasons, but primarily because they face
the least amount of resistance as it relates to competition
relative to their position and the fact that most fantasy leagues
require two starters at the position. With committee backfields
now the norm in the NFL, the 5-10 backs (give or take) that
end up getting featured each year are going to put their 18-22
touches per week up against the 24th-best back, who may see
10-12 on average. The 24th-best receiver each week (and each
year) is usually either a top receiver for a more run-heavy
team or a 1B option for a pass-heavy team. The WR24 could easily
see the same 8-10 targets in any given week as the WR1 does.
As great as Murray’s season and fourth-place SRS finish were,
he was never able to earn the top spot in any given week, which
was about the only obstacle keeping him from overtaking Lynch
and giving Bell and Forte a run for their money atop the SRS
leaderboard. Antonio
Brown (ninth) found himself in a similar position, netting
four top-three finishes (three seconds and one third). Had Brown
managed to turn one of those top scoring efforts into a “top
1” performance, he would have edged Gronkowski for the No. 5
overall spot on this list. Regardless, it says a lot about any
receiver to perform as a top-12 wideout 66.7 percent of the
time and as a top-24 wideout in 86.7 percent of his games given
the level of competition he has at his position.
As I was placing the “PR” next to each player, I noticed
something that made me do a double take; Cooks was ranked 116th
in total fantasy points last season. However, the main reason
I decided to mention him and his place in the standings is because
he was the WR50, which means 43.1 percent of the top 116 overall
scorers in fantasy last year were wide receivers! Taking it
one step further, the player directly above him on that same
list was Steven
Jackson, who finished as the RB25. While Cooks was a valued
fantasy property in PPR leagues prior to his season-ending thumb
injury, Jackson was a weak start for at least half of the season.
In other words, even if we assume that backs such as Bradshaw
(RB21), Sproles (RB22), Gore (RB23) and Ivory (RB24) were every-week
starters in 12-team leagues – which they were not for various
reasons – there were roughly twice as many starting-caliber
receivers on a weekly basis as running backs!
It is cliché nowadays to say the NFL is a passing league. After
all, 56.6 percent of all offensive plays last year were passes
(obviously that does not include calls that began as pass plays
and turned into a quarterback scramble, a lateral, etc.). Still,
the observations in the previous paragraph are substantial insomuch
that for a true 2:1 difference in starting-caliber players at
one position, one would be inclined to believe that the league-wide
pass-run ratio would be something closer to 66-34 or 67-33.
Certainly, a receiver’s one point per catch is going to help
him make up ground on running backs over the course of the season
and pass plays do generate significantly more yards on a regular
basis, but I’m not sure I was prepared to see there were THAT
many more quality options at receiver than running back.
C.J.
Anderson’s SRS score (29) would have been on par with Lacy
were it not for the “backup range” points he accumulated in
six games while waiting his turn in Weeks 1-8. This system rewards
consistency as much as weekly excellence, so the fact that a
player like Anderson can finish at No. 33 while only playing
about half a season speaks to how incredibly dominant he was
and the relative lack of high-quality fantasy options at his
position.
It’s not as if I needed to remind you, but Beckham’s 13th
place finish in SRS despite missing a quarter of the fantasy
season is nothing short of incredible. One more “top 1” or two
more “elite” weeks would have catapulted him into the same range
as Luck and Foster, who incidentally was the only player that
missed multiple games and still outperformed the rookie.
Two results that really surprised me were at No. 53 (Hopkins)
and No. 54 (Miller). Hopkins was a top-12 receiver only three
times last season and posted as many WR3 games as he did “backup
range” games (four). Admittedly, we can chalk some of that up
to the fact that Andre
Johnson owned a 26-12 edge in red-zone targets in 2014,
but it may be something future owners want to consider if they
are eyeing Hopkins as a potential low-end WR1/high-end WR2 this
season. Most of Miller’s 14 SRS score was built on the strength
of his 11 “clear starter” finishes, which means he was a rock-solid
RB2 last year, but would have been stretched to be a fantasy
team’s RB1. Can he ascend into RB1 territory in 2015 with added
competition (Jay
Ajayi) and upgraded talent at tight end and receiver?
One of the categories I like to track when putting together
this piece is the average ranking of each player for the first
half (Weeks 1-8) and second half (Weeks 9-16) of the fantasy
season. Nine players (Gronk, Lacy, Bell, Anderson, Brees, Rodgers,
Newton, Ryan and Beckham) finished with average weekly rankings
below 10 in the second half, and all nine enjoyed a better score
in the second half than they did the first. In 2013, only six
players posted sub-10 average rankings in the second half of
the season, three of which ended up being a drop-off from their
first-half performance. Let’s file that information away as
notable, but far too small of a sample size to draw any real
conclusions from at the moment.
Regardless of whether you were on the right or wrong side
of Roethlisberger’s six-touchdown double-feature in Weeks 8-9,
it is noteworthy that nearly half of his 40 SRS score came from
those two games. If we merely make those weeks “elite” instead
of “Top 1”, he falls from No.22 on this list to somewhere in
between Ryan at No. 27 and Eli
Manning at No. 34. The biggest shocker, perhaps of all 200
players, was Newton’s 21st place finish. I owned Cam in my most
important league last year; suffice it to say that I did not
feel like I received seven “clear starter” performances from
him nor do I recall getting a combined five “Top 1” or “elite”
efforts out of him either. Conversely, I enjoyed the relative
consistency that Romo provided me in another league and would
argue that owning him in the aforementioned league probably
would have netted me 1-2 more wins and a few less lineup headaches
over the course of the season. The biggest difference between
Romo and the other two quarterbacks I just mentioned? You guessed
it – two “top 1” finishes apiece for Big Ben and Newton.
Now that we have two years of data to compare, let’s see how
the analysis is holding up so far at the top of the leaderboard
at each position (SRS, followed by player and year):
Top 10 SRS Performances
by Position, 2013-14
Rk
QB
RB
WR
TE
1
91 – P. Manning 2013
104 – Charles 2013
65 – C. Johnson 2013
91 – Graham 2013
2
74 – Brees 2013
100 - Bell 2014
63 – A. Brown 2014
74 – Gronkowski 2014
3
67 – Luck 2014
94 – Forte 2014
58 – D. Thomas 2014
62 – Olsen 2014
4
66 – Rodgers 2014
78 – Lynch 2014
57 – Beckham 2014
52 – Bennett 2014
5
62 – Wilson 2014
74 – D. Murray 2014
45 – J. Jones 2014
48 – Graham 2014
6
54 – P. Manning 2014
68 – McCoy 2013
43 – D. Thomas 2013
48 – Gonzalez 2013
7
49 – Brees 2014
67 – Foster 2014
41 – J. Gordon 2013
40 – V. Davis 2013
8
40 – Roethlisberger 2014
63 – Forte 2013
41 – J. Nelson 2014
39 – J. Thomas 2013
9
40 – Newton 2014
63 – Moreno 2013
40 – E. Decker 2013
38 – A. Gates 2014
10
37 – Rivers 2013
47 – Peterson 2013
39 – D. Bryant 2014
30 – Fleener 2014
Let’s get to the answer of the question that I’m sure
everyone has been seeking for nearly a year: what players
were “elite” in more than half (at least eight of 15)
of their games in both seasons? Here’s the list:
That’s it. That’s the list. It bears mentioning there were only
13 total instances of a player posting eight or more elite weekly
performances in a season over the last two years and that Peyton
Manning fell one such effort shy of joining Forte in the exclusive
club. While it is not a revelation that Forte was such a dominant
fantasy force in former HC Marc Trestman’s offense over the last
two years and admittance to this “club” is very difficult, it
was a bit of a surprise that at least one of the following players
– namely Charles, Graham, Lynch, Antonio
Brown, Bryant, Demaryius
Thomas and maybe even Lacy – didn’t find his way onto the
guest list as well.
Shifting our focus to the “clear starter” range, only 20 players
registered at least 10 such performances (keep in mind that is
top 12 for quarterbacks and tight ends, top 24 for running backs
and receivers) and 34 players had nine. There are 192 players/defenses
taken in a typical 16-round, 12-team draft. Subtracting 12 kickers
and 12 defenses to make the percentages more realistic for the
sake of this article, we are left with 168 players. Dividing 20
into 168 tells us that only 11.9 percent of all position players
(drafted or undrafted) were clear starters in at least two-thirds
of their games. Lowering the threshold to nine “clear starter”
games gave owners a 20.2 percent (essentially one-in-five) chance
to find a player who delivered a starting-worthy performance at
least 60 percent of the time in 2014. Last summer’s Consistency
Rankings Analysis yielded similar results, as 23 players registered
10 or more “clear starter” efforts and 33 finished with nine.
Let’s take a closer look at the positional breakdown of the two
“classes” over the first two years of this study:
Clear Starter Performances
by Position, 2013-14
QB
RB
WR
TE
Total
10 or more - 2014
3
9
6
2
20
10 or more - 2013
3
13
5
2
23
9 or more - 2014
5
15
10
4
34
9 or more - 2013
3
16
10
4
33
The following is a list of players that recorded at least nine “clear
starter” performances in each of the last
two seasons:
Charles, McCoy, Forte, Graham, Murray, Lacy, Peyton Manning,
Brees, Antonio Brown, Lynch, Jeffery, Fred Jackson, Olsen and
Demaryius Thomas.
Now we’re talking. Gronkowski probably deserves to join
the 14 players above, but we can’t just ignore his seven-game,
injury-riddled 2013 campaign or change the rules for one player.
But if we add him to the list, we have 15 players that have earned
the “reliable” tag over the last two years. However,
before we stack our 2015 draft board with those players at the
top, let’s take a closer look at them and their current
situation:
Three players (McCoy, Graham and Murray) have changed teams.
Four others (Forte, Manning, Brees and Jackson) figure to be featured
much less prominently this year than in the previous two. A strong
argument could be made that Jeffery (more defensive attention
with Marshall gone) and Thomas (less volume as a result of a more
balanced offense) could be included in that bunch. That leaves
us with six players (Charles, Lacy, Brown, Lynch, Olsen and Gronkowski)
as players that owners can feel ultra-confident in heading into
2015. Of those six, Charles will be 29 by the end of the season
and Lynch is already there. Lacy and Gronkowski each stayed healthy
last season, but both players’ physical style of play makes
them risky bets to put together a string of multiple healthy seasons.
Brown will likely see his numbers drop to 2013 levels (110 catches,
1,499 yards and eight touchdowns; admittedly still very good)
thanks to the likely continued emergence of Martavis Bryant and
Olsen could see his production slip a bit with big-bodied rookie
WR Devin Funchess in the mix this year.
Final thoughts
Although the numbers looked slightly depressed for receiver enthusiasts
on the top-10 chart above, I believe the absence of a huge gap
between No. 1 and No. 10 at the position is actually positive
news for those owners who like to load up at the position in the
draft after the top backs are gone. (Look at the gap that exists
between Nos. 1-10 at every other position and that includes two
years of data!) For example, there was a significant falloff from
Foster’s 67 SRS and Forsett’s 42 (19th) in 2014; only 15 backs
after Forsett scored in double figures on the SRS scale (which
is a very low threshold). Even more telling, most of those backs
were likely undrafted (such as Forsett and Anderson) or mid-to-late
round selections (Ingram, Hill, Bradshaw, Lamar
Miller, etc.). As most owners likely remember and the big
SRS chart above shows, Hill and Anderson weren’t even all the
useful on a regular basis until midseason, Sproles was a risky
start after September, Asiata was completely hit-and-miss (mostly
miss) once the Vikings committed more to McKinnon and Bradshaw
did not play after Week 11. While the distribution among running
backs was much more compact in 2013, the number of players to
post at least 10 on the SRS scale was similar among backs in 2013
(19) and 2014 (21).
In years past, I have been reluctant to pass on what I consider
to be effective depth (i.e. potential RB3/4s) at the running back
position in the fourth to seventh-round area, sometimes doing
so at the expense of taking a hit at my final starting receiver
spot. It is a choice I have made over the years in part because
I believe in my ability to find a useful asset on the waiver wire
at receiver. The back-heavy draft approach also insulates my team
at a spot that takes more punishment than any other fantasy position
and keeps a potential starter away from my competition. I believe
that strategy is one of several that has helped me win a pretty
decent sum of prize money over the years and will probably remain
a solid fantasy football strategy for the foreseeable future.
But as is the case with just about everything else in fantasy,
it has its limitations (much like another strategy we will discuss
in a bit).
In leagues that require only two starters at receiver and utilize
a flex – like most of the money leagues I play in – it makes a
lot of sense to horde running backs, especially if you are able
to land a top-10 wideout with a first- or second-round pick. A
three-receiver format makes the approach a bit dicier because
it puts the owner at risk of possibly creating two weaknesses
at a position the format is placing a higher priority on than
any other, based on the number of slots that must be filled at
that position. A Jordy
Nelson-Allen
Robinson-Pierre
Garcon trio may end up filling the WR1, WR2 and WR3 slots
on your team with great success, but what happens if Nelson misses
multiple weeks? Owners should always strive to have options that
can potentially step into the slot above them (WR2 becomes a passable
WR1, WR3 becomes a passable WR2 and so on), something that becomes
pretty difficult when they focus more on building running back
depth than anything else. Virtually every team is going to come
out of the draft with at least one weakness, but it is essential
that an owner does not create additional ones simply by using
early-to-mid round picks on players that won’t start more than
a handful of games for your fantasy squad if the team stays relatively
healthy.
Using my SRS charts over the last two seasons and a score of
40 as a baseline, I can make the case there are going to be about
seven backs – as was the case in each of the last two years –
worthy of being considered a fantasy RB1 at the end of the 2015
season. (There will obviously always be others on the brink and
two quality RB2s can sometimes be as good – if not better – than
one great RB1 and a revolving door at the RB2 slot.) However,
this SRS analysis calls into question whether owners should spend
more than one early-round pick (preferably their first pick) on
a running back and subscribe to a one-back theory (as opposed
to the zero-RB strategy that has become popular in recent years).
The premise of zero-RB strategy is solid– build a rock-solid
supporting cast at the other three important fantasy positions
and spend all your late-round/free-agent/trade resources on the
most turbulent and volatile position in fantasy football – but
I recall very few teams in all of the years I’ve played in high-stakes
leagues that: 1) have won without at least one elite running back
(no matter what the rest of the supporting cast looks like) and
2) doesn’t have to surrender at least two premium players in order
to secure such a back. In my experience, many of the teams that
go receiver-heavy in the draft start out fast but fade around
November when NFL teams becoming slightly more committed to running
the ball. Those observations are the main reasons why I’ll probably
never attempt a zero-RB strategy; it is extremely difficult to
win in highly competitive leagues with a team that begins the
season with two known weaknesses at the most important position
and probably even more difficult to talk a rival owner into dealing
one of the top 3-5 fantasy backs in those leagues.
I’m pretty certain Ameer
Abdullah will emerge as a decent RB2 option in PPR leagues
by the end of the season, but I’m not willing to start him as
a RB1 or RB2 for the 6-8 weeks I think it is going to take him
for him to get to that point and hope it happens faster. What
if Joique
Bell stays healthy or Theo
Riddick plays a larger-than-expected role in the passing game?
If either one of those scenarios plays out, Abdullah’s owners
spent the first 1-2 months of the season hoping for something
that didn’t happen and are stuck with a back in a three-headed
committee as a reward for their patience. In most of the leagues
I play in, roughly 70 backs and 75 receivers are rostered in any
given week and the trade deadline is over after about Week 8,
making injuries about the only avenue in which an owner can pluck
the next gem off the waiver wire after that point. My title teams
have almost always been buoyed by my ability to find a second-half
stud at running back and/or receiver, but it has been fairly uncommon
when I have done both or find two studs at the same position in
the final weeks.
I have long been a believer that while some draft “strategies”
work better than others, none are all-encompassing and should
be utilized in every situation, so don’t misunderstand
what I have said in the last few paragraphs. For example, I cannot
defend using a top-three pick on a receiver when the incredibly-talented,
high-volume running backs are available. However, I’m not sure
I could pass up pairing Bryant or Julio
Jones with Demaryius Thomas or Beckham if presented the opportunity
near the turn (and my projected RB1s were gone). Pair them up
with a Vincent
Jackson-, Allen Robinson- or Jarvis
Landry-type in the sixth or seventh round, grab Kelce or Olsen
in the fourth, target Bell and Abdullah as a package deal in the
fifth- and sixth-round range and trade away one of the two elite
receivers for a RB1 somewhere along the line if you don’t want
to wait and take your chances of finding a potential RB1 on the
waiver wire a few weeks into the season. I’m not saying it would
be my preferred way of handling business, but I’m willing to bet
such a team would challenge for a title.
Doug Orth has written for FF
Today since 2006 and been featured in USA Today’s Fantasy
Football Preview magazine since 2010. He hosted USA Today’s
hour-long, pre-kickoff fantasy football internet chat every Sunday
in 2012-13 and appears as a guest analyst on a number of national
sports radio shows, including Sirius XM’s “Fantasy Drive”.
Doug is also a member of the Fantasy Sports Writers Association.