Have
you started obsessing over your first-round pick yet? Will it be Bell or Brown?
Jordy or Jordan? A.J. or Ajayi?
That’s fine, but that
decision pales in comparison to the handful of choices you’ll make several
rounds later. After all, as happy as you may be to land Melvin Gordon,
Michael Thomas or Matt Ryan now, they won’t be the bargains they were last year
for the savvy players that stole them in the middle rounds (or later) and rode
them into the postseason.
Fantasy veterans know
the secret to great drafting is not simply choosing the best players available,
but doing so no earlier than necessary. You may share my belief that Jamison
Crowder is on the verge of a breakout season, but you’re hurting yourself –
and, worse yet, begging for ridicule from your opponents – if you pull the
trigger too early.
So who are this year’s
hidden gems ... the ones poised to significantly out-perform their average draft positions? Let’s take a
look at my Sleeper Picks of 2017, broken down by position.
Deshaun Watson, QB, Texans. Honestly, I don’t have a true QB sleeper this
year. I won’t jump on the Carson Wentz bandwagon, because he’s working with a
whole new receiving corps and his 16:14 TD-to-INT ratio in 2016 was pathetic.
But if anyone is positioned to significantly out-perform his average draft
position, it’s Watson. Like Dak Prescott, Watson has the “it” factor, and he
can compensate for any weaknesses in his passing game by scoring regularly as a
rusher.
C.J. Anderson, RB, Broncos. Denver will be a run-centric offense, and
Anderson will be its centerpiece* (*yes, there’s always that injury bug thing).
Jamaal Charles is literally on his last legs and Devontae Booker is still
nursing a wrist injury. Anderson’s draft position has been sliding, increasing
his value every step of the way.
Danny Woodhead, RB, Ravens. In PPR leagues, Woodhead very easily could finish
the season as the most valuable back in Baltimore, as he was in San Diego two
short years ago. Woodhead will be a perfect outlet option for Joe Flacco and I
wouldn’t be shocked to see him seizing a large share of the rushing workload as
well.
Frank Gore,
RB, Colts. When will we learn? Gore is as unexciting as rushers get, but he’s
still locked in as the starter on a good offense and his biggest competition is
his age. He’s coming off yet another 1,000-yard season, and he hasn’t missed a
game since 2010! Selecting Gore may elicit yawns, but he’ll be a reliable RB3.
Jamison Crowder, WR, Redskins. With the departure of both
DeSean Jackson and Pierre Garcon, Crowder is Kirk Cousins’ most familiar, and
reliable, target left. I named him “Most Likely to Succeed” in my end-of-season
awards in January, and the addition of Terrelle Pryor doesn’t change that. Crowder
should be a high-frequency receiver.
Tyrell Williams, WR, Chargers. The clock is already
ticking on Keenan Allen’s next injury, rookie Mike Williams may not hit the
field until October and Travis Benjamin is little more than a deep-ball threat.
That leaves all kinds of room for Williams to reprise his 1,000-yard campaign
of 2016. He’s a steal in the 100-pick range.
Cole Beasley, WR, Cowboys. Easily overlooked among Dallas’
higher-profile players, Beasley is the secret sauce that keeps the chains
moving. Prescott loves him and opposing defenses underestimate him, just like
your fantasy competitors. He may not even be drafted in some leagues, so grab
him late and enjoy.
Taylor
Gabriel, WR,
Falcons. Nobody has squandered the freedom that comes with playing opposite a
star more than Mohamed Sanu. Gabriel, by contrast, managed to prosper in Julio
Jones’ shadow in his first season in Atlanta. Look for him to take another step
forward as a speedy, sure-handed option for Matt Ryan.
Adam Thielen, WR, Vikings. You won’t ever see me
gush over the Vikings’ passing offense, but Thielen managed to make chicken
salad out of chicken scratch last season. Both he and Stefon Diggs were
inconsistent, thanks in large part to their QB issues, but Diggs is being
drafted several rounds earlier than his counterpart. Thielen represents much
better value.
Larry Fitzgerald, WR, Cardinals. Three words to remember
while watching the future Hall of Famer slide in your draft: Never
underestimate Fitz.
Austin Hooper, TE, Falcons. Every fantasy team should have a stake in the
Atlanta passing game, and Hooper is a value option. He showed flashes as a
rookie, and now that Jacob Tamme has moved on, Hooper has the starting role all
to himself.
Coming next Monday: My oft-imitated, never
replicated, magically delicious Perfect Draft.
Drafting Sunday. Any way you can post your perfect draft before Monday? Saturday night maybe? Or post it as a subscription Saturday then free on Monday? I'd easily pay for it to get it before my draft. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteLadd, What ADP site do you use?
ReplyDeleteDitto on what Jon said. I draft Sunday too...
I'm on vacation this week, so it's not likely. But if I can post it on Sunday, I will.
ReplyDelete