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Ezekiel Elliott and Dalvin Cook are employed again
GREAT injury update for a long-time stud TE
Fantasy draft strategy from the 1.02 slot
Ianās āMy Guysā: Darren Waller and more.
Itās 8/15. Take it away, Ian Hartitzā¦
Two of the biggest names remaining in all of free agency finally found new homes on Monday:
Longtime Cowboys RB Ezekiel Elliott has officially taken his talents to the Patriots on a one-year contract worth up to $6 million with incentives that include $4 million guaranteed (per ESPNās Adam Schefter).
Ex-Vikings RB Dalvin Cook inked a one-year deal with the Jets that is reportedly worth up to $8.6 million.
Letās start with Zeke, who is coming off his worst season as a professional in pretty much any efficiency metric you want to look at ā¦ except short-yardage efficiency.
Much like how the last attribute to leave boxers is their power, Zekeās physicality on the goal line might be his last remaining elite trait that counts for fantasy points (shoutout to his pass-blocking though).
Donāt get it twisted: Stevenson remains the No. 1 RB in New England and is worthy of top-four-round consideration.
Stevenson's RB9, pick 28.3 ADP seems likely to fall quite a bit, although I would refrain from moving him past Packers RB Aaron Jones (RB16, 51.7) given the difference in age and the former RBās superior potential to take over a larger share of his backfieldās targets.
Meanwhile, Zeke (RB55, 175.4) will rise up the ranks quite a bit with a rather ideal early-down and short-yardage role suddenly on his plate.
Slightly reduced TD-dependent RB4-level treatment to the aforementioned Harris (RB42, 126.1) and fellow veteran vulture Jamaal Williams (RB41, 125.8) feels warranted.
Back to Mr. Cook, who averaged the 12th-most yards after contact per carry (3.18) with the 16th-best rate of explosive rushes (11.3%) among 42 qualified RBs in 2022.
Also, yes, Cook (28 in August) doesnāt appear to be completely washed if some of his home runs from 2022 are any indication.
This sort of money wasnāt thrown around for no reason: Cook figures to be heavily involved in this offense ā especially during the earlier stages of the season when Breece Hall (ACL) could still be operating at less than 100%.
And yet, Hall is far too talented to not receive plenty of touches once back to full health:
No RB averaged more yards per carry (5.8) or had a better Elusive Rating (100) than the Jetsā rising second-year RB among 55 qualified backs.
Hallās CMC-esque 2.0 yards per route run ranked second among 47 qualified RBs. Only Derrick Henry (12.1) averaged more yards per reception (11.5) than Hall.
Hall (currently RB11, pick 33.4) does deserve to tumble down the ranks a bit due to the reality that Cook will be far more involved than either Michael Carter or Zonovan Knight would have been as the offenseās complementary RBs.
But, like Stevenson, I'd refrain from moving him past someone like Aaron Jones (RB16, 51.7), who profiles as a similarly efficient pass-down back without a true every-down role, but in a worse offense.
Ultimately, Cook feels appropriately priced as the RB31 (pick 99.2) that he was before the news, as he's going alongside fellow early-down grinders with questionable pass-down upside like AJ Dillon, Isiah Pacheco and Rashaad Penny already.
You have to love the NFLās ability to turn a regular August Monday into an absolute spectacle. THIS LEAGUE.
Drafters seldom get the exact draft slot they desire in fantasy football land. But fear not 1.02 crowd: Jonathan has you covered with a multi-round strategy to set your roster up for success from the second pick of the draft.
Iām a big proponent of thinking ahead in drafts and letting future pockets of value help determine selections in the early rounds. In the 2023 draft landscape, I am pretty confident I will be able to get a stud RB that I like around the 2-3 round turn.
That makes it easy to grab the most exciting player on the board with the 1.02.
š No Justin Jefferson? No problem. Draft JaāMarr Chase
You can make a case for players like Christian McCaffrey, Travis Kelce, or Cooper Kupp here, but Chase is the only player in this group who is still ascending in his career.
The Bengalsā star receiver is just 23 years old, attached to Joe Burrow, and has casually averaged more than 85 yards and 0.7 TDs per game in his young career.
Even more impressive: More than 25% of his regular season games have resulted in a top-five weekly finish in PPR scoring.
That kind of week-winning upside is hard to find and exactly what I want to build my team around at the top of drafts.
And just in case you havenāt been thinking about football all summer long, the great Ian Hartitz has a helpful reminder for you.
ā Anchor RB + Elite TE for the win
With an elite WR already locked down, I generally want to grab at least one anchor RB with my set of picks at the next turn. The dream would be for Tony Pollard to fall to the end of the second round, but most likely heāll be off the board.
Assuming no great ADP value, my favorite option up until the time of writing would have been Rhamondre Stevenson. Iām still really in on Rhamondre despite the Zeke signing, but I want to see how far his ADP falls before recommending him.
If Pollard, Taylor, and Derrick Henry are all gone, Josh Jacobs becomes the most compelling anchor RB option.
I plan to take plenty of WRs but I also know that I want to grab an elite TE and will need to do so within my next few picks.
I have a handful of targets who should be in play when I am on the clock at each of the next three turns in the draft:
Early 3rd: Mark Andrews
Late 4th/Early 5th: T.J. Hockenson or George Kittle
If there is a WR or RB I really like at that spot instead, I know I have multiple shots to get another elite TE when the draft comes back to me at the end of the fourth round.
The key is to remain flexible so that you can take advantage of great ADP values while building toward a cohesive roster.
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Fantasy football is a game built around scoring as many points as possible, so we need to take stands on players at cost in order to fulfill the goal of taking home first place.
What follows are 12 players who Ian has ranked higher than consensus ahead of 2023 and accordingly has made a major habit of drafting all offseason long. All scoring referenced is full point-per-reception (PPR) unless otherwise noted.
As always: Itās a great day to be great.
šŖ Darren Waller, TE - Giants
The ex-Raiders veteran finds himself inside of a passing game in dire need of a true alpha receiver considering their current starting trio is tentatively expected to feature Isaiah Hodgins, Darius Slayton and Parris Campbell.
Maybe Waller wonāt have the same chemistry with Daniel Jones as he did with Derek Carr, but offensive coordinator Mike Kafka certainly learned a thing or two about featuring his TE in the passing game during his time as the Chiefs QB coach and passing game coordinator from 2018 to 2021.
Betting on Waller is betting on the soon-to-be 31-year-old TE keeping on keeping on as one of the positionās single-best producers.
Early Fantasy Life Projections have Waller leading the Giants in targets and itās not particularly close.
I believe Waller is fully deserving to join Mark Andrews, T.J. Hockenson, Kyle Pitts, Dallas Goedert and George Kittle in a big upside TE1 tier after Kelce ā his status as often the cheapest option of the group has him sitting pretty as one of my favorite players to draft of the offseason.
š Diontae Johnson, WR - Steelers
You might have heard Johnson didnāt score a single TD in 2022. His 147 scoreless targets are 38 more than the next-closest tally since the metric began being tracked in 1992.
Attempting to discern whether Johnsonās 2022 was simply terribly unlucky, or more so the result of him simply not being a great football player, is one of the more important questions of the offseason.
A few pieces of evidence that scholars (me) have compiled in an effort to prove that Johnson is in fact good at football:
Johnsonās scoreless 2022 campaign didnāt provide high-end counting stats, but his first read target share and overall WR score (ESPN) put him in the company of guys like Stefon Diggs, Tyler Lockett and Tee Higgins.
The Steelers signed up to pay Johnson $18.355 million per year ā more than all but 13 players at the position.
There are plenty of similar upside WRs in this range who I wouldnāt have a huge problem with others preferring.
Either way: Failure to draft at least four (ideally five) WRs by the end of Round 9 leaves the squad awfully short on upside at a position that requires three starters in plenty of high-stakes formats.
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