In todayâs Fantasy Life Newsletter presented by BetMGM:
Tee Higgins set to get the tag
A change to the salary cap
2023 Misses: What we can learn from an RB whiffâŚ
Itâs 2/26. Take it away, Peter OverzetâŚ
There are some big names headlining the 2024 free agent WR class, but the marquee receiver might not be hitting the open market.
Per Ian Rapoport, the Bengals have officially applied the franchise tag to Tee Higgins to prevent him from becoming an unrestricted free agent.
The tag results in a one-year, fully-guaranteed contract worth $21.8 million.
With the tag deadline still over a week away, thereâs some interesting subtext to the report:
The Bengals clearly donât want other teams trying to recruit Higgins during Combine weekâa period traditionally rife with tampering
The tag kicks the can down the road for getting a long-term extension done, but Cincinnatiâs tight salary cap and typical contract structure M.O. make it unlikely that they will give Higgins the type of deal he desires
It opens up the possibility of a âtag and tradeâ if a WR-hungry team is willing to pony up a package similar to the previous A.J. Brown and Tyreek Hill deals
The most likely outcome is Higgins plays the 2024 season on the tag and we find ourselves in the exact same spot in 2025.
But if another org with salary cap space views Higgins as a superstar, thereâs a chance we get some surprise trade fireworks.
Stay tunedâŚ
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The only way we can get better is if we avoid our previous mistakes. Today, Chris Allen analyzes some players we got wrong last year and how we can learn from the missâŚ
â Antonio Gibson, RB - WAS
From a structural standpoint, we should be drafting a teamâs RB2 that could become a fringe RB1 in the middle rounds. Rushers with receiver skills are especially worthwhile. Antonio Gibson had a (slim) path to returning value on his ADP, given his skill set. Plus, he had the added boost of a better offense than what the Commanders trotted out in 2022. I made a case for him last June.
âEric Bienemyâs tendencies when helping develop Patrick Mahomes should give us a sense of optimism about Gibsonâs QB, Sam Howell. With a more efficient offense, the value of Gibsonâs touches skyrockets, adding to his viability as a mid-round RB to target.â
So, the former WR from Memphis had three things going for him: a "stranglehold" on carries (both between the 20s and in the green zone), targets, and a better offense. Unfortunately, I missed the mark on all three.
Washingtonâs offense didnât demonstrably change from 2022 to 2023. Even with OC Eric Bienemy boosting their dropback over expectation (DBOE) rate from -11.0% to +5.0%, the overall results were the same.
Howellâs 65 sacks and 23 turnovers negated any positive effect generated by their uptick in passing. And, even worse for Gibson, he had more competition for targets.
Terry McLaurin and Curtis Samuel earned 22.0% and 15.1% of Howellâs targets. But we expected them to be involved. However, Cole Turner having an 18.1% TPRR rate wasnât on my bingo card. I didnât think Byron Pringle and Jamison Crowder would have route rates over 10.0%.
From Logan Thomas getting 4.9 targets per game to Alex Armah getting three all year, none of their ancillary players were fantasy-relevant. But each took a look or two away from Gibson. Accordingly, his healthy 24.4% TPRR from 2022 dropped to 18.6%. And, finally, that brings us to his rushing attempts.
Itâs not that he shouldâve taken over the Washington backfield. Brian Robinsonâs forced missed tackle rate and adjusted yards after carry increased while maintaining his 2022 rushing success rate. Heâs a good player. But Gibsonâs value as a contingent option should Robinson miss time was part of the deal. And Robinson missed two weeks during the fantasy playoffs. However, Gibson couldnât deliver.
Rookie Chris Rodriguez got the majority of the carries and even snatched a target in Robinsonâs absence. In hindsight, with the Commanders out of the playoff race, taking a longer look at the rookie makes sense. But it wasnât in our calculus back over the summer.
Gibsonâs profile makes his next landing spot interesting for fantasy. If he can find a team with a need for a third-down RB, sign me up. But until then, Iâll take a closer look at rushers with similar outlooks heading into 2024.
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