Every August, it gets more and more difficult for me to remember
what happened the prior season. I remember Kansas City beating San
Francisco in Super Bowl LVIII, but…do I really? I’d
actually forgotten the game went to overtime until I looked it up.
Do I have any idea who else was in the playoffs? Ehhhh, I’ve
got some educated guesses. Don’t even get me started on who
last year’s elite fantasy performers were. If not for my surrogate
brain (the internet) and an obligation to prep for this column,
I’d be going into this season mostly blind. And, as it turns
out, that would be totally OK. Football amnesiacs, rejoice! Almost
nothing you don’t remember from last year will prove useful
this year. I know this because I’ve been writing this series
to remind us all of that fact for almost 15 years now. Sit back
and embrace the fog while we talk about players to be leery of in
2024.
Note: All rankings are based on FFToday’s
Non-PPR league scoring.
Who Missed the Cut in 2020 (6/10): J. Jefferson, D. Adams, S.
Diggs, J. Waddle, A. Cooper, & D. Smith
Just as with the running back position, 2023’s WR dropout
rate was identical to 2022’s. This is right on its historical
average, moreover, going back to 2010, meaning it would almost be
surprising if I weren’t able to guess two or even all three
dropouts right this coming season. It was only two last year (Cooper
and Smith) since I completely whiffed on Lamb, who only turned out
to be the very BEST wide receiver in the entire league. Ha! Win
some, lose some.
Justin Jefferson couldn’t retain that best WR title from
2022 and didn’t even sniff the Top 10 last year thanks to
a balky right hammy, which cost him seven games. His per-game
digits were predictably stellar, though (13.6 FPts/G, good for
third overall), making him a strong bet to reclaim that Top 10
status. Yes, even with Sam Darnold throwing him passes. Davante Adams will have a new battery mate this season too, which would
be great since he dropped from WR2 to WR19 with last year’s
motley crew despite playing in all 17 games. So did Stefon Diggs,
who will also be working with a new signal caller in 2024. There
aren’t many QBs who would be considered an upgrade over
Josh Allen, but C.J. Stroud might be one of them before it’s
all said and done. Can the Texans’ rising star get the once
lethal Diggs back to the promised land?
Jaylen Waddle, Amari Cooper, and DeVonta Smith all missed a game
or three, but managed to stay within shouting distance of the
Top 10. They finished as WR30, WR16, and WR21, respectively, meaning
all six of the 2023 WR dropouts fell no lower than Waddle at WR30.
I don’t have time to fully research that and I doubt you
care enough for me to do it, but I suspect this 2023 class (returnees
and dropouts) ranks as one of the best performing, year-over-year,
since I’ve been authoring this series.
Most Likely Candidates to Fall from the Top 10 This Year:
D.J. Moore,
CHI: Don’t get too excited, though, because 2023 was
likely an anomaly. There always seems to be a Top 10 performer(s)
who falls off the cliff. Though I don’t think that’ll be Moore,
another beneficiary of a QB upgrade, there are some warning signs.
For starters, that QB upgrade is a 22-year old No.1 draft pick
who hasn’t played a down in the NFL. Caleb Williams tantalizes
with rare athleticism, next-level improvisational skills, and
elite arm strength, sure. But it’s a big step up from the defense-optional
Pac-12 (RIP) to the NFL grind and some major growing pains should
be expected. There’s also no guarantee Moore will be Williams’
favorite target because….
The Bears upgraded their wide receiver room too! Could we see
some actual dangerous offense in the Windy City this season? First
came Keenan Allen, the long-time Chargers great, whom Chicago
signed in mid-March. Then came Rome Odunze, Washington Husky great
(literally pains me to write it), acquired in April’s draft.
Of the two, Allen is most likely to eat into Moore’s targets.
Even at 32 years old, he’s coming off a season wherein he
posted a career best 12.8 FPts/G. He also finished as WR11, which
is pretty nuts when you consider he played a good chunk of last
year without Justin Herbert. Odunze, though the clear WR3 of the
bunch, is another big receiver who will outmuscle NFL DBs for
a lot of footballs. Meaning right away. He played four collegiate
seasons and, in any other draft class, would have been the first
WR off the board.
I suspect Moore will be just fine in 2024, but more Top 20 fine
than Top 10 fine. Be careful overrating him come draft day now
that the cavalry has arrived in Chicago.
Deebo
Samuel, SF: This feels risky because
if Deebo Samuels plays 17 games, there’s almost a zero percent
chance he doesn’t return to the Top 10 in 2024. Did I say 17?
I meant 15, which is the most the oft-injured wrecking ball of
a wideout has ever played in five NFL campaigns, though he’s still
managed to be a Top 10 performer twice (WR2 in 2021). Pound-for-pound,
there isn’t a more devastating dual-threat player in the league,
to include the guy huddling up with him who will be almost every
league’s No.1 pick this draft season, Christian McCaffrey.
CMC is actually one of the reasons, aside from that proneness
to injury, I’m concerned about Samuel’s ability to
retain his Top 10 status. Back in 2021, he carried the ball 59
times from scrimmage, an absurd number for a WR. That number dropped
to 42 in 2022 and then again to 37 last year. For those not doing
the math at home, that’s a 37% drop in carries the past
two seasons. This would be fine, of course, if Samuel were making
up for that relative lack of carries with more targets in the
passing game. Nope. His targets have dropped about 26% during
that same two-season stretch, from a career high of 121 in 2021
to a more modest 89 last season. For perspective, that’s
fewer than half the number CeeDee Lamb commanded last year.
It’s also fewer than Brandon Aiyuk, Samuels’ teammate,
commanded. Heck, it’s only six more than McCaffrey himself
received! A healthy Deebo is still an incredible luxury for a
talent-rich championship contender like San Fran. I’d like
to get him on the cheap this Friday when I draft up my 2024 crew.
He won’t come cheap, though, so…I’ll look to
spend my auction dollars elsewhere.
Nico
Collins, HOU: What a difference
a great quarterback makes, huh? Collins has only played three
seasons in Space City, meaning he missed playing with Deshaun
Watson entirely (suspended Collins’ rookie year) and instead
muddled through with a revolving door of Davis Mills, Tyrod Taylor,
Kyle Allen, and Jeff Driskel before catching fire last season
with wunderkind C.J. Stroud under center. The third-year jump
was a very real thing for the former Wolverine as he posted career
numbers across the board (targets, receptions, yards, YPC, touchdowns,
and fantasy points). He also posted a rare three+ yards per route
run mark which, according to his FFToday 2024 Outlook blurb, has
only been accomplished five times in NFL history. Did not know
that.
Here’s what we do know heading into the 2024 season: Collins
has company. Stefon Diggs has arrived from Buffalo and it’s
probably safe to expect an erstwhile WR1 / Top 10 performer to
steal lots of looks from Collins in the Texans’ high-flying
offense. I happen to believe Diggs is declining rapidly, but he’s
still coming off a WR12 season and didn’t play with the
type of WR talent in Buffalo as he will in Houston. Speaking of
WR talent, Stroud also has Tank Dell to play catch with. The former
Houston Cougar and now Houston Texan missed seven games last season,
but still posted a sterling 11.8 FPts/G mark, which put him one
tick below…Nico Collins. Stroud and his dynamic trio will
ruin some opponents this year, but who does the ruining on a week-in
/ week-out basis could be unpredictable.
Here’s my prediction: Collins could end up being the best
of the three but will also be the most costly (ADP WR14). I’d
rather grab Dell on the cheap (ADP WR30). You should do that too..