8/17/07
Each year, the road to a fantasy championship begins with a draft
that has each team believing they will be THE team and ends with
one team that made enough good draft picks along with several savvy
free agent/waiver wire pickups and a number of teams that did not.
As many draftniks have stated about the real draft, I wholeheartedly
agree that while a team does not win a league with their first-round
selection, they sure can lose their league if they blow it. Similarly,
I believe that teams – real and fantasy – win with what
they do in the later rounds. It is with that in mind that we present
a position-by-position overview at some of the “value”
that exists in the fantasy marketplace as we kick off the preseason.
This article is going to list three overvalued and undervalued
TEs based off of their average draft position (ADP) data from
Antsports. The ADP’s in this piece are based off drafts
conducted in 12-team leagues.
Overvalued
Tony Gonzalez,
Kansas City
Average Draft Position: 5:06
It’s common to pick on the star player who is seeing a
change at QB and say that his numbers will drop as a result. One
might argue that in the case of one Tony G., Damon Huard found
him just fine last season when Trent Green had to miss half the
season. This is not so much about the change of QBs near as much
as it is about the jaw-dropping drop in offensive talent the Chiefs
have experienced over the past two seasons. Not having adequate
depth to replace an aging OT in Willie Roaf last season was one
thing, but to not have much behind G Will Shields is yet another.
(And while John Welbourn can fill the position, he cannot fill
the void Shields leaves behind. Also, if Welbourn moves inside,
who plays RT, Chris Terry?) Lastly, Damion McIntosh was brought
in to play LT and sprained his knee. He is out for the preseason,
meaning he will be behind the curve for at least the first month
of the regular season. His backup? Will Svitek. So what’s
the point of discussing the o-line in a fantasy article about
the overvaluing of Gonzo? I seem to remember how much Gonzalez
struggled fantasy-wise two years ago when Roaf had to miss games
due to injury. Gonzalez was asked to block more often to make
up the difference – and that was with a offensive line that
was pretty solid at the time. Add in the holdout of Larry Johnson
and things are getting messy very quickly.
Gonzo is still one of the best TEs in the game, no doubt about
it. But gone are the days that he could carry a passing game all
by himself. Asking him to be fantasy’s #2 TE with a new
QB, a conservative scheme, a rapidly eroding offensive line and
without Larry Johnson to take some of the focus off of him is
just asking too much. Give me Todd Heap a round later, Vernon
Davis two rounds later or Chris Cooley three rounds after Gonzo.
Kellen
Winslow, Cleveland
Average Draft Position: 7:08
Three
overrated TEs, three TEs with issues at QB…maybe there is
something to this whole notion that a receiver needs a quality
QB throwing him the ball. However, the difference between Winslow
and the first two players on this list is not his supporting cast
or his offensive line, but more that he is a perpetual injury
risk. The offensive line should be vastly improved, allowing Winslow
to run pass patterns almost at will. And Jamal Lewis represents
an upgrade over Reuben Droughns in the backfield. Lastly, whether
it was Derek Anderson or Charlie Frye under center last season,
Winslow was pretty consistent from a yardage standpoint, especially
for those owners who grabbed him in the 9-10 round area. So, much
like Donovan McNabb in my previous article, this pick may look
really bad at the end of the season if the recovery from each
of their injuries goes quicker than usual.
That said, players coming back from any kind of major surgery
(like Winslow’s microfracture surgery) do not represent
great “value” to me unless he slips a round or two
past the rest of the players he is currently slotted with, which
apparently is not happening. I also do not like that he will be
at best the #2 option in the Browns offense behind Braylon Edwards
and tied with Joe Jurevicius, who will be healthy from the start
of the season this year – something he was not last season.
This is where the QB issue comes into play. All three of Cleveland’s
QB may see significant action this season, which does nothing
for continuity. (It may mean just as many targets and completions,
but continuity generally leads to a better offense, which usually
means a higher-scoring offense.) And none of the QBs can be considered
all that accurate by NFL standards at this point. Right now, he
is coming off the board before a healthy Chris Cooley as well
as the three players listed in the “undervalued” section
below. Don’t get me wrong, I had him on half of my teams
last year and enjoyed his contributions considering I drafted
him as a high-upside backup in most of my leagues. But there is
something about being placed on the PUP (Physically Unable to
Perform) list to start the preseason that makes me want to go
in a different direction for my starting TE this season.
Alge Crumpler,
Atlanta
Average Draft Position: 8:07
For all the barbs that fantasy owners throw at Michael Vick,
there is one other thing he could do most every week – besides
run all day – and that is find Crumpler. I think most would
agree that Joey Harrington is a more accurate QB than Vick, but
he hasn’t actually shown a penchant for finding his TE in
the red zone all that often even though he has had some decent
to very good options to work with over his five-year career. Stephen
Alexander and Mikhael Ricks were at the very least average receiving
options in Detroit and Randy McMichael a pretty good option in
Miami – if not better than Crumpler. Either way, expecting
a repeat of Crumpler’s 8-TD year from last season would
seem a bit foolish if defenses can sit back knowing they don’t
have to respect a game-changer like Vick in the pocket. Include
a below average pass-blocking offensive line and the Falcons offense
this year will be tough to watch at times.
I have a ton of respect for the offensive mind of new HC Bobby
Petrino, but he took over this team with the idea he would be
working with Vick. The offensive line will struggle and the receiving
options outside of Crumpler are not good enough to scare defenses
out of the bracket coverage they will give the seven-year veteran
as they dare Harrington to beat them deep with an aging Joe Horn
and an inconsistent Roddy White. After defenses have had a chance
to familiarize themselves with Petrino once again (three years
with the Jaguars, one of which was as an OC in 2001), it is likely
that the only players that will benefit this season on Atlanta’s
offense will be the running backs, who will get their fair share
of dump-off passes, and Michael Jenkins. In short, for Crumpler
to be going ahead of each of the players I have on my underrated
list is criminal. While he will still be a #1 TE option, he won’t
finish #2 overall again this season.
Undervalued
Jason Witten,
Dallas
Average Draft Position: 8:12
I think all of us felt a little burned by Witten last season.
After all, former HC Bill Parcells whipped out the inevitable
comparisons to Mark Bavaro. The fact of the matter was he basically
had the same year he did in 2005 minus the touchdowns (five fewer).
So why did that happen? No doubt Terrell Owens was responsible
for stealing some of Witten’s red zone thunder as he scored
six of his 13 TDs from inside the 10. However, the biggest culprit
may have been Marion Barber III, who scored 15 of his 16 TDs from
inside 10 yards. Don’t expect the latter to happen again
and as such, expect Witten to reclaim his rightful spot amongst
the second tier of TEs and not as a low #1 option like he was
last season.
Dallas had a pretty good offense last year, but the only player
who was a consistent yardage AND scoring threat on the team was
Owens. New OC Jason Garrett has worked with some of the league’s
best offensive minds throughout his playing/coaching career, a
list that includes Norv Turner and Jon Gruden. As such, expect
a heavy emphasis on the running game and a short passing game
that moves the chains (Turner) along with using personnel and
a lot of motion to dictate mismatches (Gruden), something that
suits Witten well as he is a mismatch that Garrett has already
stated he wants to use all over the field. His current ADP has
him going at the end of the eighth or beginning of the ninth round.
Even if he just repeats 2005 (66 catches, 757 yards, 6 TDs), he
will more than match up with the owners who are grabbing Tony
Gonzalez 3-4 rounds earlier. He is only an Owens blow-up or a
Terry Glenn injury (both are 50-50 propositions) away from becoming
a real bargain pick.
Ben Watson,
New England
Average Draft Position: 10:03
I can understand Witten’s slippage in drafts so far, but
Watson’s confuses me. Give one of the best QBs in football
two excellent vertical threats to open up the middle of the field
and it should mean more open space for a very athletic TE. In
my opinion, it wouldn’t matter if the Patriots signed Moss
and James Lofton in their prime, they would still go with a controlled,
spread-the-wealth passing game. About the only crime Watson committed
last year was that he was injured in Week 14 and missed the next
three games. Even with three fewer games than most of his fellow
TEs, Watson finished 10th in targets (91), eighth in yards (645)
and 12th in fantasy points (80.5). Even with some new toys on
offense, Watson is – in all likelihood – Brady’s
most trusted receiver until further notice.
One should figure Randy Moss and Donte Stallworth will have safeties
fearful enough of the big play that Watson should be able to operate
pretty freely in the middle of the field. With secondary help
unlikely most of the time, this will leave Watson matched up with
a linebacker repeatedly and only a handful of the NFL’s
linebackers can stay with Watson. In all likelihood, if Watson
stays healthy this season, he will set career highs across the
board. Also count on more than 54% (49 catches, 91 targets) of
Brady’s passes to Watson will be caught by the TE this season.
I don’t think he’ll outperform Witten at season’s
end, but I think he has a fair shot of knocking off Crumpler and
maybe even Gonzalez.
Randy McMichael,
St. Louis
Average Draft Position: 11:03
A signing that really went more under the radar than it should
have was McMichael going to St. Louis. In Miami, he experienced
almost yearly – if not monthly – turnover at QB. And
more than the turnover at the sole position responsible for getting
the TE the ball, the play-calling did not help either. However,
that is now in the past. In St. Louis, the wonderfully-gifted
McMichael goes from somewhat of a fantasy black hole to fantasy
nirvana. If you read my previous series “Offseason Movement”,
I mentioned in the WR section there were three guidelines –
among others – that I use to figure whether or not a player
transitioning teams can excel on his new team. First, is he moving
from a running offense to a passing offense? Second, does the
team spread it around? Finally, is his new supporting cast better
and, in particular, is his QB more accurate? McMichael gets checks
on all three and here’s another one: HC Scott Linehan spurred
McMichael to a near-career year in the lone season Linehan was
calling plays for Miami before he accepted the Rams head job in
2006. Lastly, the former Georgia standout is 28, meaning he should
be right in the middle of his athletic prime this year and next.
Critics will say that the 2007 Rams offense has TOO many weapons
and that McMichael will suffer as a result. I grant you that St.
Louis did not dole out close to $4 million/year to make sure the
6-3, 255-pound TE stayed in to block or serve as a decoy. In Miami,
McMichael sometimes served as the main option in the passing game
depending on which QB was playing that week and how well they
could hit Chris Chambers down the field. As a Ram, McMichael should
never see double coverage. In fact, there will be three other
players on the roster from last season who caught more balls than
he did as a Dolphin last season. Everybody will steal touches
from everybody else on this offense (for instance, Steven Jackson
will likely catch 50-60 balls – not 90 – and Isaac
Bruce will probably catch 60 balls – not 74. Those 40-50
catches will go somewhere – and while rookie RB Brian Leonard
will get some of them – I look for at least a 30-reception
increase from the TE position in St. Louis, meaning McMichael
could come close to matching or exceeding his 60-catch, five-score
year with Linehan in 2005. Considering he is going in the 11th
round, that is a steal!
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