In todayās Fantasy Life Newsletter presented by Webex by Cisco:
Rookie fever, baby!
A starting QB with an alter ego
Fantasy Life CEO vs Fantasy Life CD: Bet.
Letās talk strategy: Drafting from the 1.03
The Punishment Generator
Itās 8/16. Take it away, Cooterdoodleā¦
Sure, the New York Jetsā all-in roster might be the current talk of the town right now, but some shiny new toys are coming out to play. And Iām here for it.
š¶ Rookie QBs Take the Job
WAIT. Three rookie QBs secured a starting job right out of the gate? Jordan Love sat behind Aaron Rodgers for three years walked so they could runā¦
Back in April, we saw three of the top four picks spent on QBs in the 2023 NFL Draft. And now Bryce Young, CJ Stroud, and Anthony Richardson will have a chance to cash in their early draft capital and make waves immediately.
That said, their first games of the preseason shed light on some rather expected growing pains.
Young completed four of his six passes for 21 yards.
Stroud completed two of four for 13 yards (with his most notable pass being an INT thrown on the first possession of his career).
ADPs were shifting. Fans were rejoicing. Early redraft leagues were spiraling.
But while everyone was buzzing with talk of Breece Hall and Rhamondre Stevensonās roles with the new additions, we almost forgot to mention the true winner of their division.
In his preseason debut, Devon Achane rushed 10 times for 25 yards and hauled in 41 yards on four targets. Sure, we canāt forget about Jeff Wilson and Raheem Mostert, but Achaneās pass-catching ability and speed make him an intriguing middle-round pick with some major upside.
Iāve got rookie fever, baby! And the only prescription is more bell cows.
Drafters seldom get the exact draft slot they desire in fantasy football land, but fear not 1.03 crowd: Chris has you covered with a multi-round strategy to set your roster up for success from the second pick of the draft.
Honestly, Iād rather pick from a later spot than the 1.03.
Itās not because I want to pass on one of the truly elite players at either of the core positions, but the first three picks feel scripted. We see the same three guys headline the start of each draft. Afterward, you get to play the waiting game to see who may or may not fall to you in the second round.
But if you get an early slot, donāt worry. Iāll walk you through how Iād approach a draft from the three-spot to construct a contending squad.
š Process Notes
Letās take a step back and look at the draft holistically. Iāll stick to the early rounds here as theyāre the most impactful. And, no, Iām not exaggerating.
Forget the other positions and think about just the QBs drafted by Round 6ābasically, everyone from Jalen Hurts (our QB1) to Trevor Lawrence (QB8). Youāre less likely to find a passer with a similar floor-ceiling combo outside the early rounds, and the same goes for the other positions.
So, we shouldnāt look at players to target just because of their projected point totals. The options we passed over also have to be considered (aka opportunity cost). Iāll use an extreme example.
Letās say youāre a Cleveland Browns fan, drafting with your buddies live at Cedar Point, youāve got the 1.03 and took Nick Chubb.
Homer pick? Sure.
Little early? Definitely.
But skipping over Christian McCaffrey to get your guy will cost 36.8 PPR points per our projections.
Again, itās an extreme example, but our decisions (while exciting at the time) donāt exist in a vacuum. They affect our next pick, what our leaguemates do, and shape the league. So, with the third-overall selection in mind, letās talk through the first round.
ā³ The First Round
As I said, the first round feels scripted. But home leagues can get wild, and one of Justin Jefferson or JaāMarr Chase could fall to you. However, if not, letās look at our options.
You could make a case for all three in PPR or half-PPR scoring. Before his injury, Cooper Kupp was first in target share and fourth in yards per game.
Tyreek Hill was top two in yards and targets per route run despite getting passes from three QBs.
However, Christian McCaffrey has the rushing and receiving workload worth a third-overall pick.
After arriving in San Francisco in Week 7, it took CMC a month to have the second-most targets on the squad, and he still excelled as a route runner and was a nightmare in the open field.
All the while, McCaffrey handled 55.6% of the totes from inside the five-yard line on a team that ranked fourth in EPA per play and 14th in red zone rushing rate.
But taking CMC at three isnāt just about his upside. Again, itās about the players youāre bypassing. Drafting McCaffrey should have you considering a WR in the second round to add strong options to your WR1 slot. Letās look at your options.
Calvin Ridley should assume the WR1 role in Jacksonville. Plus, DeVonta Smith and Tee Higgins are (at worst) 1Bās on their respective squads. So, from this start, youāve got the makings of a strong roster.
Now do the exercise in reverse.
Derrick Henry, Jonathan Taylor, and Rhamondre Stevenson await you. Henry can (and has) proven to be the RB1, but the others walk into uncertain backfields in ā23. Meanwhile, McCaffreyās direct competition remains sidelined making CMC the preferred opening selection from the 1.03.
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Each week, Cooterdoodle will walk us through the internal mind of a fantasy football player. For better or for worse, letās get inside those mushy little brains and engage in some mental warfare. Letās go mental!
š¤ Side Bets & Punishments
Two weeks ago, I called out our very own Fantasy Life CEO, Eliot Crist, in the group chat for his self-proclaimed aversion to drinking sh*tty beer.
And, as any diehard Jets fan would, Eliot agreed. Just like that, the deal was sealed.
So if my home team QB Derek Carr outperforms Aaron Rodgers in Week 1, Eliot chugs something relatively unpleasant. If the opposite happens, wellā¦a Cooterdoodle always pays her debts.
The reason I am sharing this is because side bets and punishments are a crucial part to any good league.
They bring everyone closer together. Initiators, acceptors, and bystanders alike.
But itās not always a simple task convincing someone to agree to a punishment. And it can be even harder to come up with the punishment itself.
First and foremost, the parameters of what needs to occur for either party to claim their victory have to be very specific and set in stone. Any style of bet will do. Season-long, weekly, player-specific, team specificā¦ you name it!
Punishments are a great way to get into someoneās head.
But first, youāve got to agree on what the loser will have to do.
As with my aforementioned bet, you can throw in the consumption of something disgusting. Or, in Eliotās case, something that only one of you finds disgusting. (Iām really not sure why he agreed to this).
šļøāāļø Physical Activity
Look, most of us would much rather be sitting on our couch drafting best ball teams or watching a preseason game. So moving around in any capacity is a punishment in and of itself.
šØ Public Shame
When I think public, I think strangers. Public punishments are GREAT for bystanders. Everyone can get in on the fun and watch as one measly soul is shamed for their loss.
š¤« Private Shame
Sometimes youāre not quite ready to embarrass yourself in front of your whole town. And thatās fine! Start small. Embarrass yourself around those you love most.
Regardless of what type of punishment you and your partner are willing to do, itās all about having fun and being in agreement. Shake hands, get a notary and a witness, whatever you need.
But once a punishment is agreed upon by both parties, thereās no turning back. No cop-outs. Ever.
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