Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift deserve each otherā¦
In todayās Fantasy Life Newsletter presented by Epic Seats:
10 interesting reports from training camp
An update on Kadarius Toney
Breakout WRs: Who to target for 2023
Draft Dilemmas: Whoās the Eaglesā RB1?
Itās 7/27. Take it away, Peter Overzet
The firehose of training camp news has drenched the fantasy community with an oceanās worth of news to sift through.
Luckily for you, Iām here with a life preserver to keep you afloat with the waves of information (Iām sorry for drowning you in this metaphor) as you prepare for drafts.
Here are 10 interesting nuggets from yesterdayās busy dayā¦
Iāve been skeptical of Ridleyās pricey ADP, but his incredible story and current form are making that position look less defensible by the day.
š Is it finally time for Antonio Gibson?
Weāve all screamed for Gibson to get pass-catching work for years and it finally appears to be happening. Gibson feels like this yearās Rhamondre Stevenson to me. Giddy up.
Waller is āgoing to be a problem for defensesā according to Andrew Thomas. As long as Waller stays healthy, heās going to be a smash. You could argue his ADP is still a round or two mispriced relative to the weekly ceiling and target consolidation upside he offers in a wide-open offense:
Pitts did not speak to the media when he arrived at the locker room around 9:15 a.m. He missed the final seven games of the 2022 season because of a torn MCL. Falcons head coach Arthur Smith has said he expects Pitts to be ready for the season opener, but his workload for training camp is unclear at this point.
Thereās no concern for his early-season availability, but we never want to see rookies falling behind schedule in training camp with how important the reps are for building trust with the coaching staff.
š„ Bryce Young gets the starting nod
This is unsurprising, yet still good to hear. A lot of the QBs going around Young in drafts have legitimate risks of not starting and/or getting benched, so this helps solidify Young as a worthwhile selection in Punt QB builds.
While we donāt want to overreact to these camp PUP designations that can be changed quickly, itās a good reminder that Ertz is an oft-injured, 32-year-old veteran and Trey McBride is still free in most draft formats.
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Draft plenty of wide receivers is the way to play it in ā23. But which has the best shot at breaking out and carrying our squads? Dwain tackles how to find them for the upcoming seasonā¦
Identifying breakout performers can drastically increase your chances of winning in fantasy football. Look no further than 2022, where Amon-Ra St. Brown and Christian Kirk drafters enjoyed WR1 returns on WR3 and WR4 price tags in drafts.
The beauty of the WR position is that it is TALENT DRIVEN, which makes it one of the more predictable breakout positions.
At RB, we still have to worry about pesky coaching preferences for rotations and committees. However, starting WRs donāt rotate much, and if they are good, their QBs get them the ball.
I love to watch the film as much as the next analyst, but I assume that NFL QBs understand who the best players on the field are better than me. No matter how bad a QB is, they still have far more experience than me and are getting coaching I have never had.
Plus, they want to be successful, and success comes by targeting players who get open, understand coverages, make the right adjustments, and make plays with the ball in their hands. Targets are earned.
So, letās dive into some breakout wide receivers for 2023.
š„ 2023 Breakout WR Candidates
š„ Tier 1
The WRs in Tier 1 have strong talent profiles plus an opportunity to earn ample volume in their offense.
ā Garrett Wilson | Year 2 | Jets
Wilson was the 21st-ranked overall fantasy WR last season, averaging 12.8 points per game. His 85.9 PFF receiving grade was the fifth-highest by a rookie since 2011. Here are his rookie-season comps:
Odell Beckham Jr. (91.2)
Justin Jefferson (90.5)
Terry McLaurin (86.5)
Michael Thomas (86.3)
His 23% TPRR and 1.85 YPRR were WR2 and WR3-worthy. Wilson is worthy of an early Round 2 pick in fantasy.
ā Chris Olave | Year 2 | Saints
Olave delivered a top-24 finish last season with a 26% TPRR (WR1-worthy), 2.42 YPRR (WR1-worthy) and an 82.9 PFF receiving grade (elite for a rookie). Other WRs to put up similar numbers across those three categories as rookies:
Justin Jefferson
A.J. Brown
JaāMarr Chase
Odell Beckham Jr.
Doug Baldwin
Some are worried that Michael Thomas will hold the young stud back, but donāt count me as one of them.
Olave looks like a heat-seeking missile aimed at WR1 stardom.
š Tee Higgins | Year 4 | Bengals
Higgins has WR3, WR2 and WR2 finishes on his resume heading and plays on a pass-first offense with one of the best QBs in the league. His PFF receiving grades, TPRR and YPRR marks over his career resemble something closer to a WR3.
However, that could be due to Chase playing opposite of him.
Regardless, T.Y. Hilton started his career with a WR3, WR2 and WR2 finish and popped a WR1 campaign in his next full season.
Neublous backfields, ambiguous passing gamesā¦projections, and ADPs wonāt always tell us whoās the best bet in any offense. But Chris Allen dove into the data to find a few dilemmas heās pondering and how to play them given the market.
I need a crystal ball or access to a spy network.
I realize it sounds dramatic, but think about what you could accomplish. Or how many situations you could avoid or diffuse.
Or, in my case, which player to draft so I have a better shot at winning BBM IV.
I've come across a few dilemmas where my squad's playoff potential hinges on making the right choice. But training camp nuggets and vibes are all we have. I'll lay out a few worth monitoring, what we know, and how I'm playing it as we head into draft season.
š Quick Notes on Process
Normally, this is where Iād go through some convoluted (read: super cool) process and post a scatter plot highlighting some trend (again, really cool stuff) to get everyone on the same page.
Luckily, I didnāt need to for this exercise. All I needed to do was scroll through social media.
But thereās a measurable effect of these debates in best ball drafts. Since Jakob brought them up, letās use the Miami backfield as an example:
The rookie has the hype, but drafters canāt decide between the two vets. Even our rankings are too close to call.
It didnāt take me long to find similar ADP clusters. And the Fantasy Life crew will update the projections if any news gives us more insight into how targets and touches will shake out. But, for now, letās see what makes the most sense for a few of these dilemmas.
š¦ Whoās the Eaglesā RB1?
Imagine if you knew which rusher Nick Sirianni wanted to carry the load for Philadelphia this season.
While Hurts was still healthy last year, the Eagles ran the fifth-most plays inside their opponentās red zone (155). Of those 155 attempts, 104 were runs (most in the league). The next closest team was Atlanta at 86.
In short, the Eaglesā rushing game was conducive to fantasy points. Their rushing EPA (0.072) was greater than Kirk Cousinsā passing EPA (0.069). But after a busy offseason, their running game has fantasy gamers taking sides.
Conjecture would suggest Penny was a larger priority, but the open opportunity within the offense offers more than what their contracts say.
After telling people not to draft him, Sanders posted a top-3 mark in EPA per attempt on early downs and was 13th in rush yards over expected (RYOE). He generated the fifth-most first downs of any RB and kept Philadelphiaās offense on schedule.
Theyāll need a repeat performance from one of the two to stay on top of the NFC.
š How Iām Playing It
Iāve been targeting Penny in either pure Zero RB builds or if Iāve already acquired 2-3 solid starters. Before his Week 5 injury, his usage closely aligned with Sanders.
Swift had access to a similar offensive line as Sanders from a blocking standpoint but had average marks in RYOE and only five more explosive runs than Zack Moss. Meanwhile, in the first month of the season, Penny was first in yards after contact per attempt and top 10 in explosive runs.
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