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Fantasy Football Drafts and Finding Key Undervalued Picks

Fantasy Football Drafts and Finding Key Undervalued Picks

Millions of fantasy football team managers will be picking their players this coming weekend and early next week as the NFL gets set to begin. The Detroit Lions will be visiting the Kansas City Chiefs on the 7th of September which will kick off the season. Real football is great, fantasy football, however, is enticing for many because it allows us as fans to ‘participate’ and show what we know, and sometimes unfortunately don’t know. And like day trading it can also cost money or make profits depending on the ability to select assets and use risk management wisely.

Fantasy Football Drafts are Coming

Whether you are playing in a fantasy league that has ‘free’ drafts or need to price players per an allowable budget while selecting your team, you need to consider your options carefully. Many fantasy football leagues mandate rosters that include 15 picks. Over the past few years a growing emphasis has evolved around wide receivers as they have outscored running backs by a wide margin.

Top Tier Wide Receivers Compared to Other Positions

Finding solid wide receivers in the first two rounds of the draft is a tactic many players have started to use, then this is followed by choosing a running back or two to fill in these positions which are needed per your active weekly roster. Nowadays you want a running back who also can catch the ball, yards matter and a lot of them come after a pass has been caught.

Quarterbacks, as worthy as they are in the NFL and fantasy football, have become a commodity that many team managers wait on until the late fourth or fifth round to select. Fantasy football team managers need to remember the game is quantified via points on paper and is completely different than the game being played on the field. Your bias against a certain NFL team and the fact that you have a team you root for can often cause a lot of discomfort if you make your selections with these sentiments clouding your judgement.

Selecting positions and the round they are taken also depends on the amount of players in your league. The above is written with the notion that leagues are 10 teams. If you are participating in a league with 12 teams, then you can count on quarterbacks starting to disappear who are considered tier 1 players in the third round. Yes, you will also find fantasy managers who gamble and take a quarterback earlier. However, seldom do you see a qb taken in the first round.

Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts are causing plenty of early selections and looks this year via mock drafts. But fantasy managers need to be careful and make sure they do not overpay by drafting the quarterbacks too high, and lose out on other key positions in which points are accumulated and can prove costly if you miss out on talent which provides needed active roster value.

A key spot on fantasy football rosters includes the ‘flex’ which allows for wide receivers, running backs or tight ends to be used in this ‘extra active’ position. Yes, some leagues allow for two quarterbacks to play at once also. Not to mention leagues that include defensive players, not including defensive teams. The point being that the flex position and the importance wide receivers have taken on often means wide receivers go fast and hard in fantasy football drafts because of their ability to accumulate value better than most running backs and tight ends.

Finishing Well Based on Undervalued Selections that Over Perform

Your decision in the later rounds are often more important than early selections. This is where you can begin to develop a team that finishes high among your friends and competitors. Deciding on your top tier players within positions is important but it is also crucial to decide on who you think is overvalued and who is undervalued. For instance, it has been noticed in mock drafts that the wide receiver Calvin Ridley is being taken suspiciously high by fantasy managers counting on Trevor Lawrence potentially making him a top receiver this season. Folks are counting on outlooks of what could be, instead of what has happened the past couple of years and this could prove dangerous. Lawrence will try to get the ball to him, but will Ridley be ready.

George Pickens of the Pittsburgh Steelers stands out. He is a second year wide receiver who has incredible talent and via many mock drafts seems to be lasting until the 7th round and sometimes even the 8th. The fact that Pickens plays with a second year quarterback who is not getting a lot of attention early either in Kenny Pickett is intriguing. Pickett in ten team mock drafts appears to be lasting until the last round in many cases, allowing for a potentially solid player to backup your tier 1 or 2 quarterback and to be replaced if your starter gets injured or have a bye week.

Does anyone want to go into what DeShaun Watson did last year after missing extensive playing time the past couple of years before? Real game speed takes a while to get used to even by veteran NFL players if they have been standing on the sidelines too long. Counting on players such as Calvin Ridley to immediately perform like a tier 2 wide receiver may prove to be wishful thinking. Yes, he is playing with a quarterback in Lawrence who has all-world talent, but Ridley will have to prove he is ready for prime-time. By the way, DeShaun Watson may prove to be undervalued as a quarterback, if he regains his form which seemingly vanished upon his return from a suspension last season as he struggled.

So what do you do in theory? Staying away from Calvin Ridley who seems to be a gamble in the 4th round and waiting on another wide receiver you believe will perform solidly, but can draft a little lower may be the route to go with more than a handful of players. Passing on tier 2 players and taking a player at another position who you believe will perform better is an option.

Fantasy football results are largely about fulfilling expectations among top players selected and finding hidden gems others have not considered in later rounds. Team managers also have to weigh positions via their point production expectations, and decide if it is better to overload on wide receivers for instance who are in the top 3 tiers, and then wait and gamble on questionable other positions consisting of second or third tier production which may be around later to select.

The same process needs to be used for drafting defenses and kickers. There are only a few difference makers on defense and among kickers who can be counted on to perform and deliver above average results and make them worth taking in higher rounds than normal. San Francisco, Dallas, Philadelphia and the New York Jets are considered top defensive selections by many. However, San Francisco may be gambled on earlier than expected, because their estimated point production may be above the remaining top tier 3 defense’s listed. Kickers work the same way via worthiness, only a few can reasonable be expected to outperform average results. Many kickers are taken in the last round for this reason.

Finding solid undervalued position players in the later rounds after your first five picks can change the outcome of fantasy football leagues. Production from the top selections is always important, but it is your skill level while drafting later that will likely determine your team’s overall performance.

Before you draft your team you should figure out how many wide receivers you want on your roster, a solid number would be to take 5, yes, out of your 15 player roster. This would allow for 3 running backs, two tight ends, two quarterbacks, 1 defensive team and 1 kicker, and then 1 streaming position which can be used to drop and add for players that have bye weeks and injuries that will certainly arise.

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Fantasy Football Dark Horse Tight End Key to Better Results

Fantasy Football Dark Horse Tight End Key to Better Results

Last year Atlanta Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts likely hurt many rosters in fantasy football leagues. Pitts had received quite a bit of hype before the season started and this made it tempting for many fantasy managers to try and grab him early in their drafts. Leagues in which Pitts was taken in the third round or higher likely caused those teams to suffer all season long. Many managers who took Pitts last year are likely banishing him from their roster considerations for the upcoming NFL season.

Yes, Pitts did have terrible quarterback play hurting his value, but is this year going to be any better? Anyone taking Pitts before the fifth round of draft action is taking a huge gamble. True, Marcus Mariota is gone from Atlanta as the quarterback and is now fighting for the backup job on the Philadelphia Eagles this summer behind Jalen Hurts. The questionable dynamic of potentially bad quarterback play still shadows the Atlanta Falcons.

As much as we blame poor quarterback play for Pitts terrible results last year at tight end, perhaps offensive schemes via the coaching had something to do with the numbers too. Pitts has plenty of athletic talent, but the question is if the Atlanta Falcons can deliver him the football enough.

Desmond Ritter may be the qb starter for the Falcons when the season begins, and his trajectory is unknown. Ritter will not likely go in the first 20 selections of most fantasy drafts, this should give you a perspective regarding his outlook for this season. Do you want to bet on Kyle Pitts results as a tight end as he plays with an unproven quarterback in Ritter, or someone else like Taylor Heinicke?

Kyle Pitts could produce much better than last year, it would be hard not have improved results. However, Pitts production via fantasy points may not carry enough numbers to reasonably take him over an available wide receiver still remaining in the draft who can be used in the ‘flex’ as point producer within the choice for a WR/ Running Back/TE that is available on many fantasy platforms. If Kyle Pitts is available in a ten team league format in the fifth round of a draft he may be worth the risk, but there are other options. You definitely need a tight end or two on your roster, but it is a question of overall value delivered via points ultimately, and your ‘streaming’ capabilities as the season progresses.

The Value Case: Cole Kmet of the Chicago Bears as a Viable Tight End

The potential of waiting out the first ten rounds before taking a tight end may seem crazy, but the ability of grabbing better producing players from solid wide receivers is tempting. Starting to look for a tight end in rounds nine and ten from the remaining group could deliver solid comparable value, this after Travis Kelce goes in the first or second round, Mark Andrews is taken perhaps in the third round, and perhaps George Kittle is grabbed. The handful of remaining tight ends in the middle rounds may not deliver enough value per their overall draft position for your squad.

Some folks will be uncomfortable with the following notion, but Cole Kmet who plays for the Bears could be a sneaky late pick in most fantasy leagues. Yes, his quarterback Justin Fields is getting plenty of publicity this summer, but Kmet remains somewhat in the shadows as a dark horse candidate as a tight end starter. His numbers however in the last half of the 2022 season improved significantly, this after his initial start was rather slow which make his numbers when averaged look mediocre to many considering tight end values.

Fantasy managers should note in the last handful of games the Bears played in 2022, Kmet produced among the top ten tight ends and higher in most fantasy leagues. As of now on many draft boards, Cole Kmet is finding an overall average number within the 120 range as a potential selection. Kmet finished strong last season and this is a solid indication his numbers could improve in 2023.

Grabbing Kmet in the 10th round of a draft may be viable an option if someone else doesn’t beat you to the pick. If Kmet stays healthy and the Bears offense gets better as expected, because of Justin Fields being more experienced and having better weapons at wide receiver it would not be a surprise to see Cole Kmet deliver much higher value as a tight end. This upcoming coming season should see the field open up for Kmet as defenses have to focus on other dangers the Bears now possess offensively.

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Underrated QBs and Opportunities in Fantasy Football Draft

Underrated QBs and Opportunities in Fantasy Football Draft

Here is an intro list of some potential undervalued players going into the fantasy football draft. Most drafts are still a month and half away, but folks now trying to get up to speed for the coming season may want to start preparing. One way to do this is to take part in mock drafts which many fantasy football leagues via platforms allow as the NFL season grows closer. Today we will look at the quarterback position and give you two candidates to target later in the draft.

QBs – While folks can debate who to take as their main quarterback, drafting a back up remains crucial because health issues are always a concern over a long season. Last year Trevor Lawrence proved to be a steal as a solid backup. As the season moved on and Lawrence put the memories of his nightmarish rookie season behind him, his stats grew better and he became a top 10 qb in most fantasy football leagues.

On that premise, a look at Kenny Pickett who is entering his second season with the Pittsburgh Steelers might be a good selection. He is likely not going to go among the top ten or 12 selections in most drafts. However, if he is lingering in a draft and you need a backup with the potential to create better value than most anticipate, Pickett may be your best bet. He is in a good organization and will be well coached. Pickett will certainly be better this year compared to last season.

Another good undervalued quarterback going into the season may be the Cleveland Browns Deshaun Watson. Having returned last year after a long time away from the game because of legal problems off the field, he didn’t do well. However, with a full spring and summer camp about to be completed, if Watson stays healthy he may provide a good value for folks who want to grab a qb with superior potential, who had a poor season statistically last year. The speed of the game will be familiar to Deshaun Watson once again, and having trained with the Browns and understanding his teammates abilities may create a lot of upside.

There is a chance others will be thinking in the same way about Watson, and he may not escape the top ten qb selections. If he is left and you need a back up he could provide solid depth and turn into a steal – and potential starting qb – via fantasy football leagues.