The NFL deadline for franchise-tagged players to agree to a long-term deal is Monday, July 17 at 4 pm ET.
If a new deal isnât reached by then, Barkley will have only two options available:
Play next season under the franchise tag
Hold out
Weâve seen this scenario play out many times with frustrated players, specifically RBs, who want more money. Unfortunately, they have very little leverage in these situations (just ask Dalvin Cook), and the posturing is mostly done to save face.
The most likely scenario is Barkley sits out during the start of training camp and quietly returns with his tail between his legs at some point in the preseason.
Heâs currently going off the board in the middle of the second round of Underdog drafts, although I have seen him slip to the 2-3 turn recently:
I had been fading him for most of the offseasonâI like the other backs who go after him just as much, if not more (Tony Pollard, Rhamondre Stevenson, Josh Jacobs, Breece Hall, Derrick Henry)âbut I will grab a few shares over the coming weeks if we get a discount.
These situations often amount to nothing and present awesome buying opportunitiesâIâm old enough to remember when Austin Ekeler was a mid-second-round pick because people thought he might get traded.
Take advantage of them.
đ¨ ICYMI: Two Huge Free Agent Signings
Dalvin Cook and DeAndre Hopkins weren't the only coveted FAs on the market...
With years of experience, these two data-oriented betting analysts will be providing Fantasy (BETTING) Life with the same high-powered content you've grown accustomed to, all for FREE, already including:
Our guy Ian Hartitz likes a good deal, which is why today heâs finding traits we like to draft in fantasy football at discounted prices. Take it away, IanâŚ
Donât get it twisted: Iâm not saying NEVER to draft any of the listed expensive picks â stacks and the reality that every draft is different can make every player a value at the right ADP.
Still, in a perfect world, I would rather have the cheaper options listed due to the vast difference in total cost.
đââď¸ Franchise QBs in a talented offense with the ability to provide a decent rushing floor
Maybe this comparison already sounds ridiculous to you, a scholar.
But hear me outâŚ
Take a quick look at the fantasy production from each in 2022:
Smith: 17.9 fantasy points per game (QB9)
Lawrence: 17.4 (QB11)
Herbert: 16.4 (QB15)
The common knock on Smith seems to be the reality that he faded a bit down the stretch.
Of course, that discussion always seems to conveniently leave out the fact that he faced a rather brutal five-game schedule featuring the 49ers (x2), Chiefs (in Arrowhead), Jets (consensus top-tier pass defense) and Rams (worst of the group, but always seem to play the Seahawks tough).
Ultimately, itâs much easier to believe that 2022 was more of a sign of things to come than a fluke when you consider the Seahawks have surrounded themselves with one of the leagueâs best groups of pass-catchers.
This WR trio should be inside anybodyâs top-five, while there are also playmakers at RB and TE â Smith doesnât need to be a hero in order for the leagueâs reigning ninth-ranked scoring offense to boom once again.
Iâd certainly bet more on Herbert and Lawrence out-performing Smith for the next five seasons but for just 2023? Itâs close â and that is not reflected by the four-plus round difference in ADP.
This still seems to be a result of the Seahawks being rumored offseason players in the QB trade and NFL Draft marketâŚbut nothing ever came to fruition!
Seattle can get out of Smithâs three-year, $75 million contract easily enough after this season if they want; just realize for 2023 the reigning top-10 fantasy signal-caller is buried in a tier of far less mobile pocket passers in offenses with fewer high-powered skill-position weapons.
Not bad for a guy usually going off the board after the top-36 RBs, top-54 WRs and top-10 TEs.
Rain or shine, the games must go on. This week, Chris Allen breaks down what we know about windy NFL conditions and what it means for fantasy football. Part 1 was yesterday, here is Part 2âŚ
Letâs do a quick recap with two key takeaways from Part 1:
League averages in passing yards per attempt fall as windspeed increases, but it doesnât mean the same for fantasy output
Metrics that matter for fantasy (like pass rate over expectation and total plays run), hold steady up until 20 mph
đŞ Todayâs Goal:
Explain how wind affects each QB differently and why high winds impact the most accurate and efficient QBs with rushing upside less.
Fantasy managers use multiple sources to draw their conclusions. Weather effects shouldnât be any different. In fact, because of the small sample sizes, a push for more variables to pivot on should be anyoneâs starting point. To better understand if wind causes any impacts, I used PROE, CPOE, and total plays to see which passers become problematic against the wind.
The result was a list of 28 different quarterbacks. From Josh Allen to Jake Luton, each had played at least one game in conditions with 20-mph winds or worse. But instead of trying to tackle the group as a whole, I split the group of 28 QBs into three buckets:
Aided by Weather: PROE, CPOE, and Plays Run were either positive or negligibly off (+/- 3 percentage points) from their baseline
Unaffected by Weather: PROE, CPOE, and Plays Run were slightly off from their baseline
Affected by Weather: PROE, CPOE, and Plays Run were somewhat or significantly down from their baseline
It would break apart an already limited population, but the names and offenses could help determine why each succeeded or failed.
Unsurprisingly, the âAided by Weatherâ category had the fewest games. But the leader of the group made the analysis simple.
Russell Wilsonâs 32-28 dog fight with Cleveland featured a 1-point spread against a Browns offense that was top 10 in neutral passing. As a result, we got classic Wilson with nine rushing attempts. The matchup dictated the outcome and not the weather.
Conversely, Fields's run-in with Bills Mafia, already nursing a separated shoulder, highlighted the need for QBs to have a larger, more efficient passing component. Fields entered Week 16 dead last in EPA per dropback, and Buffaloâs defense was a top-10 unit.
Again, a deep dive into the two teams wouldâve set similar expectations for the game. Letâs look at the second group.
Joe Burrow, Josh Allen, Kyler Murray, and Ben Roethlisberger were the only QBs with a positive PROE as their baseline. So passing alone wasnât the differentiator. It was scrambling.
While unplanned, scrambles are highly efficient as QBs turn a would-be sack into a positive gain. Six of the seven signal-callers who averaged more than 16.0 fantasy points in 20+ mph winds were top 10 in total scrambles during their respective seasons.
Meanwhile, pure pocket passers like Derek Carr, Teddy Bridgewater, and Josh Rosen already had questionable arm talent (as it relates to fantasy) without even a minor rushing role to raise their floor. Their ADP or DFS price would already reflect their ceiling potential, but this archetype of QB doesnât fare well in high winds.
Yes, Chiefs fans, I know. Patrick Mahomes doesnât belong in this group.
He had the seventh-highest fantasy-point average in the group, and heâs sitting next to Taylor Heinicke. But donât blame me. Blame the teams he faced.
And while Rodgers led the group in average points, he did it in true Rodgers fashion. Across his three games with wind speeds over 20 mph, four of his six touchdowns came on passes of seven yards or less. They converted one from the goal line.
Regardless, most of this group (10 of 14) led run-oriented offenses that only leaned further into their strength.
And still, without a scrambling element to their game, the probability of them failing to meet expectations only increased.
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