Archive for September, 2009

Fantazzle 2009 Fantasy Football Defense Special Teams Rankings

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

Fantazzle Fantasy Football Games - 2009 Defense/Special Teams Rankings

Fantasy Football Ranking Credibility
In 2008, Fantazzle Fantasy Sports Games, was the #1 preseason fantasy football ranking site by the FSTA and Fantasy Football Librarian besting over 20 fantasy sites, including household names and leaders in sports and fantasy football.

Fantasy Football Defense/Special Teams – Overall
I’m actually one of those guys who think that Defense/Special Teams (ST) should not be overlooked. It all depends on your league’s point system. If you have a pretty standard point system, then its not as important, but if you use a point system where points allowed are a big factor, then I usually focus on them in the early teens. This year is a little different because I feel there are a lot of defenses out there that drafters are sleeping on and you can get really late. So I have basically been drafting Def/STs like most fantasy football players given the depth.

I recommend that you either get an elite Def/ST (Tier 1 or T1) or you get two Tier 2/3 if you have enough bench spots to do so. I’d usually rather have two Def/ST than two TEs given the trash you usually end up with for that second tight end and how big matchups can be for Def/ST. Its easier to play matchups for Def/ST than any other position out there especially if you are a casual player. Are you going to spend time figuring out how the Panthers defend against a #2 WR playing in a west coast offense? If so, thats great and you may not want two Def/ST. But what about if you have the NYJ who are playing NE and GB who plays Detroit. I think its an obvious situation there that you can exploit having two choices.

Fantasy Football Defense/Special Teams Scoring
Standard. 6pts TD; 1pt sack; 2pts INT; 2pts Fumble Recovery; 2pts Safety;

10pts Shutout; 7pts 2-6 pts allowed; 4pts 7 to-13 pts allowed; 1pt 14-17 pts allowed; 0pts 18-21 pts allowed; -3pts 22-27 pts allowed; -5pts over 28 pts allowed

TIER 1 Fantasy Football Defense/Special Teams
1 Baltimore Ravens - Full disclosure: I’m a Ravens fan. I still love their playmaking abilities.
2 Pittsburgh Steelers
3 Minnesota Vikings - Great Def/ST for leagues that have a focus on points allowed.
4 San Diego Chargers – Sleeper pick. They were so bad last year, drafters are forgetting that injuries were the reason.

TIER 2 Fantasy Football Defense/Special Teams
5 New York Giants – Another good Def/ST for points allowed leagues.
6 Tennessee Titans – Going to be much worse w/out Haynesworth.
7 Washington Redskins – Going to be much better w/ Haynesworth.
8 Philadelphia Eagles – Dawkins will be missed.

TIER 3 Fantasy Football Defense/Special Teams
9 Green Bay Packers – Raji’s injury scares me, but they should be much better this year against the run.
10 New York Jets – I see a lot of low scoring games for the Jets under Rex Ryan.
11 Chicago Bears – Overrated especially w/out Devin Hester returning kicks. Ridiculous…

TIER 4 Fantasy Football Defense/Special Teams
12 Dallas Cowboys – Very disappointing last year and not sure they did much to improve.
13 Tampa Bay Buccaneers – TB has always been a top 10 defense…so I could be off on this projection.
14 Miami Dolphins
15 Arizona Cardinals
16 Atlanta Falcons – They got a great D, but they are too vanilla for fantasy football.
17 Carolina Panthers – See Atlanta.
18 Indianapolis Colts – If Bob Sanders is healthy all year, this ranking will be wrong.
19 Jacksonville Jaguars – Getting old plus they are a bad defense in fantasy football.
20 New England Patriots

Fantasy Football Defense/Special Teams – Conclusion
I think I have San Diego in every league I’m in this year. Its crazy how much they have dropped. Last year they were ~20th. 2007, they were #1 and 2006 they were #4. They should be back at those levels. I think Albert Haynesworth is such a huge difference maker that Tennessee backers will be disappointed and Washington backers will be pleasantly surprised. The Redskins are a great sleeper pick along with Green Bay who will be much improved against the run (which was their only weakness last year).

Take care,

Fantazzle Fantasy Football Games

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Fantazzle 2009 Fantasy Football Wide Receiver Rankings

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Fantazzle Fantasy Football Games2009 Wide Receiver Rankings

Fantasy Football Ranking Credibility
In 2008, Fantazzle Fantasy Sports Games, was the #1 preseason fantasy football ranking site by the FSTA and Fantasy Football Librarian besting over 20 fantasy sites, including household names and leaders in sports and fantasy football.

Fantasy Football Wide Receivers – Overall
I saved the best for last. I feel the strongest with my fantasy football quarterback and tight end rankings, but I also feel they are relatively easy and straight forward. Running backs are easily the hardest this year due to the continuing trend of playing time splits. Wide Receivers are not an easy bunch to rank, but I feel I got a solid understanding of how to approach them. Its simply this: if you don’t have one of the first ~five picks, go for two WRs and then stock up on RBs. I like the Tier 1 (T1) and T2 guys to produce at a top level and give you little risk (barring injuries that you cannot predict). I would also recommend going WR, QB and WR. I know this is dangerous in the running back category, but think about it like this – if you go that route, you are taken care of every week at those positions (you can find a 3rd WR if you start 3 later in the draft or even on the waiver wire). Besides the first ~5 RBs, you are taking a risk with anyone you pick. Steven Jackson, Clinton Portis, Brandon Jacobs, Pierre Thomas, the list goes on. How confident do you feel that you have a 100% sure thing? At WR, your looking at Larry Fitzgerald, Calvin Johnson, Reggie Wayne types as your #1. You feel pretty confident about them right? Do you foresee any of these guys going down with an injury like Portis, Westbrook, or Jacbos? And what about the second round? Greg Jennings, Steve Smith, Roddy White types. Do you foresee any of them stinking it up like Pierre Thomas or Steve Slaton could? I don’t. I think your risk is reduced significantly going this route. Of course, your RBs are now weak, BUT the way to make up for it is to draft ~4 guys in rounds 4 thru 7. And a backup or two and/or major upside guys later in the draft. Here’s who you may get: Derrick Ward, Julius Jones, Kevin Smith (maybe), Ray Rice, Beanie Wells, Thomas Jones, etc. You gotta believe that you can play matchups for the first two weeks and then have a better picture of which two of the crew are going to pan out. I’m not saying this is w/out risk and its painful to actually do during draft day (believe me, I know from experience), but it makes a lot of sense.

It really all boils down to reducing your risk with your first 2 to 3 picks and finding your DeAngelo Williams, Michael Turner’s in the later rounds. By picking 4 to 5 RBs then, you are looking for 2 or more to work out while your WRs dominate.

Fantasy Football Wide Receiver Scoring
Standard. 6pts TD; 1pt every 10 yards; -2pts fumble (no points for receptions)

TIER 1 Fantasy Football Wide Receivers
1 Randy Moss – Clear #1 given his upside. You can knock him down to ~#5, but I’ll take potential.
2 Larry Fitzgerald – Wow, is he on a lot of magazine covers.

TIER 2 Fantasy Football Wide Receivers
3 Calvin Johnson
4 Andre Johnson
5 Marques Colston – He’ll come back strong.
6 Greg Jennings
7 Roddy White – Back to back big years cements him as a major fantasy force.
8 Dwayne Bowe – See Roddy White.
9 Steve Smith
10 Reggie Wayne – I worry a little about Indy’s #2 holding Wayne back a bit.

TIER 3 Fantasy Football Wide Receivers
11 Anquan Boldin – Tier 3 due to current injury concern.
12 Wes Welker – Back to ’07 levels. He’s the #1 Tier 2 in PPR leagues.
13 Chad Ochocinco – He’s a bit risky due to Carson Palmer. I’d try to avoid unless he falls too far.
14 Terrell Owens – Wait until next year to drop lower due to tantrums.
15 Roy Williams – He’ll return to ’06-’07 stats.
16 Vincent Jackson – Hasn’t quite proven he’s the MAN. He’s close though and could be a bargain at #16
17 TJ Houshmandzadeh – #2 WR? I dunno…that’s seems like a trendy statement. Lots of upside.
18 Eddie Royal – Could be a steal. Too risky for me.
19 Santonio Holmes

TIER 4 Fantasy Football Wide Receivers
20 Brandon Marshall – Heh..what can I say? Anything would be a complete guess.
21 Braylon Edwards – No way he is worse than last year.
22 DeSean Jackson – He’s gone too early in most drafts. The Eagles will spread the ball too much.
23 Bernard Berrian – Lots of 20pt games. Lots of 2pt games.
24 Anthony Gonzalez – He’ll have the opportunity, but not sure he has the talent.
25 Lance Moore – Major upside. He’s been a steal in nearly all drafts.
26 Donald Driver
27 Lee Evans

TIER 5 Fantasy Football Wide Receivers

28 Laveranues Coles – TJ Housh did pretty well as the #2….
29 Devin Hester
30 Kevin Walter
31 Santana Moss
32 Nate Burleson – I like Nate a lot. He’s got the talent and a healthy Hasselback.
33 Percy Harvin
34 Derrick Mason
35 Torry Holt – Playing on grass scares me more than him losing a step.
36 Chris Chambers – There’s an outside chance that Chambers is the #1 WR in San Diego.
37 Steve Smith – Who knows…. This could easily be Domenik Hixon here.
38 Donnie Avery – He’s got skillz, but his team is really really really bad.

TIER 6 Fantasy Football Wide Receivers
39 Isaac Bruce – He’s not being drafted in most leagues…
40 Kevin Curtis – Two years ago, he had ~1,100 yds and 6 TDs.
41 Antonio Bryant – This is really low, but last year was a fluke.
42 Steve Breaston
43 Domenik Hixon – Switch with #38 if you’d like.
44 Justin Gage
45 Hines Ward
46 Bryant Johnson
47 Robert Meachem-  I like his potential. If you got an extra bench spot, put him on it for a couple of weeks.
48 Jerricho Cotchery
49 Ted Ginn Jr.
50 Nate Washington

Fantasy Football Wide Receivers – Conclusion
If you look at T1/T2, who do you really worry about stinking it up? Roddy White and Dwayne Bowe are possibilities, but I think this year they will prove themselves as top wide receiver options. If Randy Moss bombs, he’ll still be a late T2. Take two of these guys if you dont have a top 5 draft pick. Very little risk that you can’t get with RBs.

Good luck to you all! I’ll do Def/ST and Kickers just for ‘kicks’. They aren’t used in the FSTA accuracy challenge, but I got them done so i’ll get them out. For the next week, I will also summarize some more non-standard rankings. Also, if you have any questions, feel free to send a comment and I’ll look to answer them over the next few days.

Take care,

Fantazzle Fantasy Football Games

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Fantazzle 2009 Fantasy Football Tight End Rankings

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Fantazzle Fantasy Football Games2009 Tight End Rankings

Ranking Credibility
In 2008, Fantazzle Fantasy Sports Games, was the #1 preseason fantasy football ranking site by the FSTA and Fantasy Football Librarian besting over 20 fantasy sites, including household names and leaders in sports and fantasy football.

Fantasy Football Tight Ends – Overall
I’m not a big fan of taking tight ends early, even Tier 1′s (T1). There is definitely a difference between a T1 and a T2, but its not big enough to use a pick on them when I can get a #3 running back or wide receiver. The great thing about tight ends is if you don’t get one of the top 3, then you can wait until mid to late rounds to get your starter because there are a lot of guys in T2/T3/T4 that will not disappoint. All of them have little risk. Tight ends don’t seem to get hurt that often nor do they totally bomb on you. A down year by a TE won’t kill you because A) they usually aren’t far from expectations and B) they aren’t major point contributors to begin with. Save your early to mid round picks stocking up on RBs and WRs and take a TE later in the draft (~10th pick). While there are 5 tiers, the fall off is small and I’d be happy with T1 to T3 and if that fails, I’ll take a T4 and an upside T5.

Fantasy Football Tight End Scoring
Standard. 6pts TD; 1pt every 10 yards; -2pts fumble (no points for receptions)

TIER 1 Fantasy Football Tight Ends
1 Antonio Gates
2 Jason Witten
TIER 2 Tight Ends
3 Greg Olsen – Trendy sleeper pick. Deserves all the attention.
4 Dallas Clark
5 Tony Gonzalez – I’m staying away…he could be #1 again or #10.
TIER 3 Tight Ends
6 Kellen Winslow – Lots of potential. Has been a very good value pick in all drafts.
7 John Carlson – With Hasselback back, he should be even better than last year.
8 Chris Cooley – He’ll have more TDs this year. Last year was an aberration.
TIER 4 Tight Ends
9 Dustin Keller
10 Owen Daniels – Trendy pick. I don’t like him to do much more than last year.
11 Visanthe Shiancoe – Could be a great sleepe with Favre.
TIER 5 Tight Ends
12 Vernon Davis – I like him more this year than ever before…but he’ll probably burn me again.
13 Brent Celek – Philly has a lot of weapons this year. He’ll get 6 TDs, but very little yards.
14 Tony Scheffler – Cutler was his best friend in Denver. He’ll be avg w/out him.
15 Kevin Boss – You can tell this guy is blocker first.
16 Ben Watson – Who knows….he could be a great sleeper.
17 Zach Miller – No TDs will get you this ranking.
18 Jeremy Shockey
19 Donald Lee
20 Todd Heap – I’m a Ravens fan, but I’ll take him over H Miller or Fasano or Scaife. More upside.

Fantasy Football Tight Ends – Conclusion
Roughly 11 decent Tight Ends on the board. There are differences, but the scoring gaps are much smaller for TEs than other positions. Save your pick on a RB or WR and take a Tight End later in your draft. I recommend a T2 or T3. If your drafts are like mine, nearly every team has one TE by round ~8 giving you the luxury of waiting much later to take your TE since most people don’t draft two of them until very late.

Good luck to you all! Wide Receiver rankings tomorrow.

Fantazzle Fantasy Football Games

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