Quarterback Dynasty Fantasy Football Rankings

philip rivers

My dynasty fantasy football goal this year was to put together dynasty ranks that I can keep updated constantly. Whenever I’m overthinking a trade, I can go back and look at where I have players ranked, then assuage my fears. To make these rankings, I used the method ProFootballFocus’ Scott Spratt wrote about here. I used point projections from the RotoViz Similarity Score apps, although it does come with one caveat: the app doesn’t know that Shonn Greene isn’t a starting running back anymore; it has no idea that LeSean McCoy has a new coach who ran the ball over 600 times last year. I manually adjusted for situation, and with a case like Shonn Greene, I used projections from ProFootballFocus to get an accurate value.

The end result was a spreadsheet of auction values, weighted towards the short term. I adjusted as I saw fit, trying not to deviate too far from what the numbers were telling me. I found that it made it much easier to rank players; everyone has a monetary value attached to their name. It helped remove my bias towards or against certain players. Instead of focusing on the names, I looked at production, years left, and situation. You can see the quarterback rankings below, but first I’ll talk about some player whom I’m much higher and lower on than the experts over at FantasyPros. ECR stands for Expert Consensus Ranking, the average of all the experts for that player.

Geno Smith, QB17. +9 vs ECR

Would people really rather have Eli Manning over Geno Smith? Sure, Smith is in a bad short term situation, but I have faith that John Idzik can turn that franchise around. Smith is a good quarterback to pair with veteran guys like Roethlisberger and Vick. They can hold your team together while Smith develops, and he can probably spot start for you should they go down. Don’t forget, Mark Sanchez was a top 12 quarterback in 2011. I’m in a $250 salary cap league where my quarterbacks are Ben Roethlisberger, Joe Flacco, and Geno Smith. For a combined $6, there’s a good chance one of my three players will produce a top 12 performance each week.

Michael Vick, QB16. +8 vs ECR

After a disastrous season when the Eagles were decimated by injuries, the experts have abandoned Vick, barely ranking him as a QB2. I see the QB16 in points per game last year entering a creative offense with a better offensive line. Vick is the 20th quarterback going off the board, and represents a great value that late. I don’t see any other quarterback with top 5 upside in that range. If Chip Kelly wants to run what he ran at Oregon, Vick is the only option on the roster capable of that. There is a chance that he’s not going to do that, but we really don’t know. In a deeper league, you can handicap your chances of having the Eagles starter by grabbing Nick Foles as well.

Alex Smith, QB22, +6 vs ECR

The case for Alex Smith is very simple: he’s a quarterback in his prime who’s been remarkably efficient the last two seasons. Andy Reid has a reputation as a quarterback whisperer, and perhaps he do the same thing to Alex Smith that Jim Harbaugh did. Quarterbacks who have looked good in stints with Andy Reid include guys like Mike Kafka, Kevin Kolb, and A.J. Feeley. Can Alex Smith be any worse than they were? Additionally, Smith has legit skill position weapons in KC with Jamaal Charles and Dwayne Bowe.

Tom Brady, QB5. +4 vs ECR

There is a ton of discussion on Twitter regarding how New England’s receiver situation will impact Brady in 2013. It’s likely overblown. Age is a concern; the Patriots signal caller will be 36 when the season starts. If you think 37 year old Peyton Manning can play 2 more years, why can’t Brady play for 3? Most film scouts will agree that Manning’s arm has lost velocity following his neck surgery; Brady doesn’t have that issue and he’s younger.

Ben Roethlisberger, QB11. +3 vs ECR

Roethlisberger is going to be on all of my teams last year. Todd Haley’s short passing offense rejuvenated Big Ben’s career, and he ranked as the QB10 in points per game last year. Ben still likes to hang in the pocket too long and get himself beat up, but you’re investing so little draft capital that it doesn’t matter. Grab an upside play like Joe Flacco or Sam Bradford to pair with Big Ben and stream yourself to fantasy glory. Shawn Siegele wrote an excellent article on Roethlisberger’s star potential here.

Drew Brees, QB9. -4 vs ECR

The Similarity Score app does not like Drew Brees; it places his floor as the QB12 next year. He’s compiled the raw statistics, but taking a closer look reveals some red flags. From 2009 to 2001, Brees completed 69.97% of his passes; that number fell to 63% in 2012. His touchdown percentage over that period fell from 7% to 6.4%, and his interceptions percentage rose from 2.1% to 2.8%. Granted, Brees’ numbers fell from superhuman to above average, but the decline is still worth noting. I’m willing to be wrong on Brees if it turns out that Sean Payton was the difference between him being superhuman or “just” above average. His ADP is as the QB2 though, which guarantees I’ll never own him.

Ryan Tannehill, QB20. -5 vs ECR

I detailed why I don’t like Tannehill here, but it boils down to this: because of his age and lack of experience, I’m betting that his development is stunted. He’s a player dynasty drafters are taking as a borderline QB1, when in reality his upside is capped as a QB2. He’s a prime sell high candidate, especially if you can get QB13 value for him.

Philip Rivers, QB26. -5 vs ECR

The last two seasons have been two of Rivers’ worst ever as a pro. His 6.8 yards per attempt is the worst since he became a starting quarterback, and his 6.5 adjusted yards per attempt is the 2nd worst of his career. After posting an up and down season that saw him end as the QB9, the bottom fell out, and he plummeted to QB21. It’s possible that Mike McCoy’s short passing offense could rejuvenate Rivers’ fantasy prospects, but the Chargers roster – especially their offensive line – is a dumpster fire. They’ll be challenging Oakland for the worst team in the league next year. I’m not sure I want a piece of that on my fantasy team.

Christian Ponder, QB40. -11 vs ECR

It’s time to give up on Ponder. The 2011 top 15 pick has two mediocre seasons under his belt, where he’s averaged less than 7 yards per attempt. His adjusted net yards per attempt the last two seasons has been under 5, Derek Anderson and Chad Henne level-bad. Ponder reached his ceiling last year, as the QB22. It’s very likely he’s not the quarterback in Minnesota next year, as the Vikings will have given him the cursory three years for a 1st round pick to prove himself. The offense has been upgraded around him, but I doubt he’ll be able to take advantage of it.

Without further ado, my dynasty quarterback rankings:

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Dynasty and Keeper Rankings powered by FantasyPros

About Coleman Kelly

21 year old Network Administration major from Central Connecticut. Football fanatic and New England Patriots fan. Lover of cats.

A Quick Thought on Tom Brady

tom brady
tom bradyCredit: Jack Newton

Recently, I’ve been hearing some concern over the Patriots receivers, and how it will negatively affect Tom Brady’s performance next season. It seemed strange to me, given that the mantra is “great quarterbacks make the wide receiver.” If you have a quarterback like Brady, you can literally trot anyone out on the field, it doesn’t matter. If you have a quarterback like Matt Ryan… you have to mortgage the farm to get another wide receiver and elevate his performance. Can you imagine the Patriots ever trading up for a stud wide receiver? Never, and they would be rightly vilified (I hope). Here’s a table that shows you the top wide receiver on the Patriots that year along with Brady’s finish among the fantasy quarterbacks:

Player

Year

Receptions

Yards

Brady’s Finish

Troy Brown

2001

101

1,099

QB19

Troy Brown

2002

97

890

QB6

Deion Branch

2003

57

803

QB10

David Givens

2004

56

874

QB9

Deion Branch

2005

78

998

QB2

Reche Caldwell

2006

61

760

QB7

The one year Brady did have a 1,000 yard receiver, it was his sophomore year. After that, his receivers were crappy more often than not, but it didn’t matter. Brady turned in a QB7 year with Reche Caldwell as his leading receiver; could Molasses Mike Jenkins really be that much of a detriment? Danny Amendola and Aaron Hernandez will be around to provide some quality targets, Aaron Dobson could do a passable Brandon Lloyd impression, and Julian Edelman and Donald Jones are solid pros. The Patriots also have some nice projects in rookies Josh Boyce and Mark Harrison, although I doubt they make much of an impact year 1. Consider the Patriots 2005 receiving yards leaders:  Deion Branch, David Givens, a 34 year old Troy Brown, Ben Watson, and Tim Dwight. If I had to pick between that group and one consisting of Amendola, Hernandez, Edelman, Dobson, and Jones, the choice is easy. If you’re of the ilk that draft quarterback early, take Brady with no fear.

About Coleman Kelly

21 year old Network Administration major from Central Connecticut. Football fanatic and New England Patriots fan. Lover of cats.

New England Patriots Versus Houston Texans Preview

Shaub and Brady will be battling it out for a first round bye tonight.

Tonight’s matchup between the New England Patriots and Houston Texans is one of the rare games where we get a preview of a potential playoff matchup, two top teams in a conference, multiple fantasy football starters that will swing playoff matchup’s, and a down right intriguing game. The New England Offense is posting historical numbers in efficiency and Belichick’s relentless attack will be tested against Houston’s stout run defense. While Houston has the reputation of an elite defense, it really is their run defense that is elite. With Johnathan Joseph out, or playing with a gimp leg, they have been vulnerable to the big play. Losing star linebacker Brian Cushing has hurt their intermediate passing defense as well. The Texans offense isn’t anything to sneeze at either. The dominant run blocking scheme, as well as having a fluid and patient runner in Arian Foster allows them to have an entire offense built off of play action. While Aqib Talib has played well since being a Patriot, he has historically struggled against protypical number 1 wide receivers, allowing the likes of Hakeem Nicks to physically dominate him for an entire game. With these puzzle piece’s in play, we need to analyze both offense’s thoroughly.

New England Patriots: One piece of the offense allows them to function the way they do: Tom Brady. Without Brady, this offense simply doesn’t run the same way. Belichick has finally found a runner that he is satisfied with however, in Stevan Ridley. Ridley isn’t particularly explosive, but he is durable and has fixed some fumbling issues that were plaguing his young career. Against this tough Texans run defense, it is going to be important for Ridley to take what is blocked and do his best to wear the opposing front 7 out. I have a feeling that Danny Woodhead and Shane Vereen are going to be utilized more in this game in order to spread the Texans out and get the offense into hurry up mode. It is easy to envision a scenario where the Patriots run around 90 offensive plays without breaking a sweat.

Aaron Hernandez could very well be the most valuable offensive piece the Patriots have.

With injuries to Julian Edelman and Rob Gronkowski, the passing game has had to undergo a rapid transformation. With Brandon Lloyd being a relative non-factor and Brady simply not trusting him, the Pats have gone back to their 2011 short and intermediate passing game. Aaron Hernandez and Wes Welker should both have around 10 catches and 15 targets in tonight’s game. It will be interesting to see how Brady adjusts with the loss of Edelman, as we haven’t seen a full gameplan without him and Gronkowski. J.J Watt poses a significant threat to the Patriots offensive line, so don’t be surprised to see lots of 2 tight end sets with Daniel Fells of Visanthe Shiancoe occupying Gronkowski’s previous position.

Foster hopes to get in a groove tonight against New England

Houston Texans: The Patriots secondary is still typically Patriots level terrible, and as a result, this game is going to be on Matt Schaub. Foster will have his part and get his 20 carries as a way to set up the play action game, but the outcome of this game is going to be decided by Matt Schaub. To be an elite quarterback in the NFL, you have to be able to win the shoot outs. Schaub proved capable of doing so against Matt Stafford and even the immortal Chad Henne, both games in overtime. If the game script goes anything like it should, with the play of both teams secondaries, Schaub should be hooking up with Andre Johnson, Owen Daniels, James Casey, Lestar Jean, Kevin Walter and and 9 other white guys that Houston has as pass catchers. Schaub and Gary Kubiak have developed a very intelligent play action system that operates from their famous stretch running play. Forcing New England’s linebackers into mismatched coverages and making their secondary unsure as to weather to bite on the run is going to give the Houston passing game the space they need to operate. Additionally, as previously mentioned, Talib struggles with larger wide outs and Andre Johnson is as strong, as tall and as talented as they come. He could easily have a field day. Further more, with their heavy use of the play action, don’t be surprised to see a deep bomb to the likes of Kevin Walter or James Casey in the third quarter after Schaub and Foster have lulled the New England D asleep. While I like New England’s chances in the game, their defense has it cut out for them.

Andre Johnson should be putting fear in Aqib Talib’s heart.

 

Final Prediction: New England 38, Houston 28

About Davis Mattek

20 Year old student of English at Kansas State University. Writer for Sports Wunderkind, The Fake Football and Hockey, and various other media outlets. Fan of the Cowboys, Thunder, Avalanche and Royals