There is the real world we live in, and there is this fantasy world
which we immerse ourselves in, sometimes to avoid the other one.
We should never confuse the two.
The real world has great moments, bad moments and everything
in between. It’s for those bad moments and many boring in
between moments which we find ourselves jumping to the fantasy
world for enjoyment.
Over the past week, ESPN published a top-10
list of quarterbacks based on the opinion of some GMs, coaches
and scouts. As a fan of a team, this is an interesting exercise
as to where your quarterback is rated. The box at the bottom of
the page shows their top-10 and their three honorable mentions.
But remember, the people who were asked the question, were looking
at quarterbacks based on their point of view – winning football
games. When quarterbacks win games, GMs, coaches and scouts get
to keep their jobs.
Notice that the results from management personnel were quite
conservative. Only one quarterback has played less than 50 games.
They hate the unknown. Only two of the 13 quarterbacks mentioned
have career losing records – Matthew Stafford and Justin Herbert. Stafford played on some really, really bad Detroit Lions
teams and he’s 41-41 in three years with the Los Angeles
Rams. Herbert is every GM’s “Golden Boy.” However,
he has yet to prove he can lead a team to becoming top tier.
Of course, wins and losses are more of a team category than an
individual player category. It’s similar to wins and losses
for MLB pitchers. You can shut down the other team, but if your
offense doesn’t score a run, you can’t win the game.
In 2010, “King” Felix Hernandez won the AL Cy Young
award with a 2.27 ERA, 1.057 WHIP and allowed just 63 runs in
34 starts. His won/loss record was barely over .500 (13-12) because
of lack of support by the Seattle offense.
In the NFL you can put up 30 points a game, but if your defense
doesn’t show up, winning is going to be difficult. In 2019
Jameis Winston led the league in passing yards (5,109) and passing
touchdowns (33 and INTs with 30), but his team finished 7-9 and
allowed 28.1 PPG which ranked 29th of 32 teams.
In 1997, Jeff George led the league in passing yards (3,917),
threw 29 touchdown passes to just nine interceptions… and
his Oakland Raiders went 4-12. The Raiders defense gave up 419
points and ranked 28th of 30 teams.
But we aren’t here for the “real” world. And
we don’t really care whether our fantasy quarterback wins
the game or loses the game, only that he puts up fantasy points.
Look at the column on the far right. Its FFToday.com projections.
Four of the quarterbacks the GMs picked as a top-10 player, didn’t
make our projected top-10. In fact, three were ranked 19th or
lower. Meanwhile, the three honorable mention quarterbacks were
all top-12.
In our projections, half of the top-12 fantasy quarterbacks didn’t
make the GM’s list. Let’s look at those six and see
if we can find out why management doesn’t trust them despite
them being top options for fantasy owners.
Which Hurts is the real one? In 2022 he was elite and last season
he was barely above average. He averaged 28.5 FPts/G in 2022 and
25.6 last season and was ranked second at the position only because
of 15 rushing touchdowns. He won’t have future Hall of Fame
center Jason Kelce. But Hurts was dealing with a knee injury for
most of last season. He still has his three elite pass catchers
in A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith and Dallas Goedert and they added
running back Saquon Barkley to the lineup who has averaged 4.5
receptions for his career. We think Hurts returns to elite fantasy
production.
Richardson has three and a quarter career games under his belt.
No GM is going to put him in the top-10. He accounted for seven
touchdowns in three-plus games, rushing for four scores and throwing
for three more. He’ll have Jonathan
Taylor to distract defenses this time (he was injured at the
start of last season). Michael
Pittman Jr. has become a sure bet and the team added rookie
Adonai Mitchell
to Josh Downs
and Alec Pierce.
He has a lot of potential. Of course, potential gets GMs fired
if they don’t pan out. If he doesn’t pan out for your fantasy
team you get to come back next season to try again. We have him
ranked eighth with the third-most rushing yards and second-most
rushing touchdowns.
Strike one… he’s only started 21 games. GM’s
don’t trust young, inexperienced players. They like long
track records. Strike two… The receiving corps appears to
be in flux. Is their 2023 leading receiver, Brandon Aiyuk (1,150
yards and 7 TDs), staying or going? Might Deebo Samuel be traded?
What impact will rookie Ricky Pearsall have, particularly if one
of last year’s starters is traded? George Kittle posted
a career high in yards-per-catch, but saw his touchdown production
cut almost in half. We aren’t scared of these factors as
this offense is still a juggernaut and will be until they have
to give Purdy a monster contract. Plus Christian McCaffrey is
always a huge plus in the passing game.
The question for the Cardinals and fantasy owners is how well
will the receiving corps play? The assumption is that Marvin Harrison Jr. will be as good as his dad. But most rookie receivers get
off to a slow start adapting to the speed of the game and strength
of opposing cornerbacks. He isn’t playing Illinois and Rutgers
anymore. Also, can Trey McBride repeat last season (81-825-3)?
Who among Zay Jones, Greg Dortch and Michael Wilson will step
up to be a satisfactory No.2 wideout? Murray has averaged just
21.4 FPts/G over the past two seasons after producing 28.2 and
25.5 the previous two seasons. He’s understandably running
less after his torn ACL and he may not make it all the way back.
Beware here.
Unless something changes, you can expect 4,000 passing yards,
23 touchdowns and 11 interceptions for Lawrence. He’s been
pretty consistent on those totals the past two seasons. The team
lost wideout Calvin Ridley, but added Gabe Davis and spent a first-round
pick on Brian Thomas Jr.Evan Engram has been a solid tight end
receiving option the past two season. We keep waiting for him
to explode, but maybe this is just his production level.
Although it’s his third year on the Packers roster, he’s
only started 18 games. And he only played well from November through
January. He wasn’t good early on last season going 2-5 with
11 TDs and 8 INTs and 213 passing yards-per-game. His receivers
are young and mostly unproven. However, I like his receivers and
believe the confidence from the second half and playoffs will
help in get off to a quicker start in 2024, particularly against
Philadelphia and Indianapolis who had defenses ranked 30th and
28th, respectively. He’s a bottom end of the QB1 list.