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NFL Confidence Pool Picks & Strategy 2024 - Week 18
NFL Confidence Pool Picks & Strategy 2024 - Week 17
David Biggs's Week 17 Rankings
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NFL Confidence Pool Picks & Strategy 2024 - Week 16
The Rookie Report: Week 16 Starts & Sits
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David Biggs's Week 15 Rankings
The Rookie Report: Week 15 Starts & Sits
The Rookie Report: Week 14 Starts & Sits
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NFL Confidence Pool Picks & Strategy 2024 - Week 14
The Rookie Report: Week 13 Starts & Sits
NFL Confidence Pool Picks & Strategy 2024 - Week 13
David Biggs's Week 13 Rankings
The Rookie Report: Week 12 Starts & Sits
Week 2: Fantasy Fool's Gold
16
September

Week 2: Fantasy Fool's Gold

Published in Fantasy Football / NFL

Not all that glitters is gold. We're all familiar with the adage, but often as fantasy football team managers it's all too easy to get caught up in the momentum of a player and/or his circumstances without looking forward into how things will progress throughout the season. For these specific examples below, fantasy points may well follow for a couple more weeks but all are headed to a place closer to a benchwarmer on your roster than a starter. Why not take the advantageous route of offering these overperforming players to other managers in your league and getting some more consistent, higher-floor players back in return? That's my plan. Either way, good luck out there!

 

  • Sammy Watkins - Here we go again with Sammy. Drafted this year as WR 89, the ‘Week 1 Wonder’ put up 11.6 fantasy points as WR37. He led the team in targets (8) and yards (96), and looks very much to be the Ravens #1 WR going forward. This may be a hit or miss kind of situation based on how much of a shootout the Ravens are involved in from week-to-week, but this is a player that - when healthy and featured - will have fantasy value throughout the season as a flex start. That said, I think those situations will be few and far between so I’m not buying into Watkins this year.

 

  • Melvin Gordon - Gordon finished as the RB6 in Week 1, with 19.3 points. But take away the 70-yard TD run that he had in the fourth quarter and that number drops to only 6.3 points. In fact, Gordon actually had less carries during the game than rookie RB Javonte Williams. Those team managers that didn’t pay attention to the specific stats of this game may be clamoring to start Gordon but I think we’ll see his usage wane as the season progresses.

 

  • Ty’Son Williams - Williams rushed 9 times for 65 yards and 1 TD on Monday Night Football making him the RB9 in Week 1. He also caught 3 passes for 29 yards and a total of 16.9 points. I don’t want to take a single thing away from his performance because he looked great, showcasing good speed and breaking a few tackles - but this is not likely the usage that he’ll continue to see over the course of the season. Newly signed veteran RB Latavius Murray took the majority of the carries in the second half (in fact, Williams only had two), and Williams missed a blitz pickup in overtime that led directly to Lamar Jackson’s fumble and the Ravens’ subsequent loss. No doubt Williams is talented, but those kinds of mistakes on top of Murray’s already split usage and Le’Veon Bell likely headed to the active roster to assist in 3rd down pass protection situations will result in much less fantasy production going forward than many are expecting.

 

  • Deebo Samuel - An impressive outing from Samuel, he finished as WR3 with 27.4 points. That’s 9/12 for 189 yards and 1 TD. Yeesh. Clearly Samuel is not a ‘flash in the pan’ player as he totaled more than 800 yards receiving in his rookie year with the 49ers, but there are a few things to note here: 1) Brandon Aiyuk (hamstring injury) will be eased into this offense and take some targets away from Samuel as the season progresses and 2) The Eagles defense that he will face in Week 2 profiles as much better than the Lions - Calvin Ridley only chalked up 51 yards on 5 catches. Samuel and Gronk (who I’ll get to next) are clearly the best of tonight’s fantasy fool’s gold segment, but I think it’s important to understand that they have likely played their best games of the season already and we should expect regression. I expect 5-6 catches for 50-80 yards this week, which aligns more closely with the WR2/3 numbers we should anticipate on a weekly basis from Samuel. Consider week 1 a lucky spin.

 

  • Rob Gronkowski - TE1 with 25 points. Is Gronk back to his glory days? In a way, yes. Same relationship with Brady, same kinds of plays and mismatches we’ve seen in the past, etc. But we know that Gronkowski’s gears were already getting rusty and that injuries tend to crop up over the course of a football season that prevent the big guy from playing at 100%. I will admit that it looked like Gronk drank some water from the fountain of youth out there against the Cowboys secondary, recording 8 grabs for 90 yards and 2 TDs but - like plastic bags - that’s simply not sustainable. We will see a major drop-off from Gronk going forward, but we may not see it this week against the Falcons. Their less-than-stellar secondary gave up plenty of fantasy production to the tight end position last week. So trot Gronk out there as a TE1 once more, but that will change starting with the Rams in Week 3. Mark my words!
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NFL Survivor Pool: Week 2
16
September

NFL Survivor Pool: Week 2

Published in Fantasy Football / NFL

Wow! What an opening NFL weekend! Start the week with Tom Brady ripping out Dak's heart and close it with a wild Monday night where the Raiders almost blew a game in the biggest way I've seen since the famous Herm Edwards play that led to the invention of kneeling. Between all of that, we had two Super Bowl favorites in the Bills and Packers getting handled. The Bills alone knocked 111 from the pool and with all the other losers brought the survivors down to 1210 from the starting 1604 entrants. But Alas, I got both of mine through.


This week my top pick goes to a team that couldn't win last week, but who can blame them when you're up against Mahomes. In this case, being close is enough for me to think the Cleveland Browns can handle the Houston Texans at home. They are the biggest favorites of the week at -12.5 and should make for a safe pick. I can't pretend like I actually watched any of the Jags/Texans game but I did watch the whole Chiefs/Browns game and what I saw was that Cleveland will be a playoff team again. The Texans are in rebuild mode and will be finishing at or near the bottom of the worst division in football. 

 

For the second pick, I'm going with the other -12.5 favorite Tampa Bay Buccaneers. As good as Tom Brady looked in Week 1, this pick is all about Atlanta. I quickly remembered how bad they were last season after their performance against the Eagles and they won't be better this year. The Packers should be another popular pick this week, but I'm staying away until Rodgers proves he's not a mole trying to cost the team games.


My strategy early on in these pools is to keep it simple as long as you can and worry about making tough picks when the time comes. Saving teams always seems to bite you, just ask all the people that busted on the Jags in week 1 trying to be clever.

 

Cheers! Drink Five

Entry #1

Entry #2

Rams

  Buccaneers  

  Buccaneers  

Browns

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NFL Week 2 Early Line Betting Tips
17
September

NFL Week 2 Early Line Betting Tips

Published in Fantasy Football / NFL

 

Wow!  What an opening week for the NFL and for contrarian sports bettors! The underdogs showed out with a 12-4 week 1 finish, and 9 of those dogs won outright! The total bets being placed was phenomenal and definitely a sign of the spreading movement of legalization throughout the country. Contrarian bettors will be able to take HUGE advantage of the growing interest in sports betting and week 1 was a great start! We went 3-0 with our drinkfive Week 1 bets, so let’s keep that momentum rolling into week 2.

 

Week 2 is known as “overreaction week”. We have to be careful not to fall into this trap ourselves. A couple of my picks below have one of my favorite signals to follow as a contrarian bettor; reverse line movement. This is when the line moves in the opposite direction of what “makes sense”. It’s a terrific signal that, despite heavy public betting numbers on a team, the pros are on the other side and the books have enough liability with the pro money that the line moves away from the majority bet team.

 

Philadelphia +3.5 vs San Francisco:

This might be my favorite bet of the week. The 49ers are traveling across the country again to face the new-look Eagles at home. The look-ahead line opened at 4 and after week 1’s results dropped to 3.5, but what I really like about this game is the reverse line movement we have seen midweek. This number has now dropped to 3 in spite of the Eagles only seeing a third of the bets. Another great signal is the fact that 73% of the money is coming in on the Eagles even with the small bet count. This means heavier pro money is moving the needle and that is the side I want to be on. Try to grab the hook and get the 3.5 if you can to protect against the most common key number in the NFL. Remember, the lines move late on game day as both the public starts looking at the games more during the weekend and the limits rise so the pros can come in with bigger bets.

 

Indianapolis +3.5 vs Los Angeles Rams:

To me, this is a classic overreaction line for week 2. The Colts didn’t look great in their debut against the Seahawks, meanwhile, the Rams were featured on Sunday Night Football and had all eyes on them in prime time for their win. Keeping this simple the Colts lost to a very good team and the Rams beat an unimpressive Bears team at home. Another week for the Colts to prepare, and without uncertainty about Carson Wentz, facing a west coast team traveling east; I am taking the home dog here. The line has been bouncing all week. You may be able to hold out for a 4 or even better as Sunday's game time approaches, but every time the number has bumped to 4 this week it was immediately hit and dropped back down to 3.5 signaling sharp money coming in.



Under 54.5 Tennessee @ Seattle:

The look-ahead total for this game was 49 and Monday the lines shot up to 54. That is a lot of action very quickly, however, since Monday the line has settled in a bit. I think 54.5 is the best number from an overreaction high total. Seattle was impressive against Indianapolis last week and they are headed home to play in front of their home crowd for the first time since the 2019 season. Tennessee looked awful, and while that could be an overreaction itself, I don’t think it is. I feel like the Titans are regressing and they face a very tough matchup in Seattle with the Seahawks and the 12th man. The line movement tells us the under is a heavily sharp play in a pros vs joes betting matchup. 38% of the bets are on the under, while a massive 89% of the money is coming on the under. I think this line was way too inflated, but the public sees a high-powered offense against a bad defense and thinks the over is a no-brainer. Tennessee is going to rely on the run to keep that high-powered offense on the sidelines, and their defense only needs to come up with a couple of key stops to keep this one under the total.

 

While the early week bet counts were lower than week 1 I have still seen some impressive bet counts coming in throughout the week. This high level of interest is good for the contrarians. More public money means stronger signals and heavier betting on favorites and overs. This is giving us A TON of value early on this season and I think that had a lot to do with the record-setting week 1 covering record for the underdogs. We still have to stay consistent and stick to the strategy. Take what the lines show us, even the “hold your nose” plays like Detroit last week. Speaking of Detroit, let's end on a good lesson gleaned from that game. Detroit looked sharp all week and as the weekend approached we saw the number rise (all the way to 9.5). Early week bettors didn’t cover, but if you grabbed them on the weekend you either pushed or got the back-door cover with their comeback. This shows the importance of closing line value (beating the closing number) and sometimes waiting for the weekend line movements when more public betting and higher limits come into the books.

 

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Statistically (in)Significant: Week 2
20
September

Statistically (in)Significant: Week 2

Published in Fantasy Football / NFL

 

statistically insignificant header image

 

Welcome to Statistically (in)Significant, the place to find great stats that probably only matter at the water cooler (or bar). Each week I'll dig through the stats of the week gone by and deliver you some choice conversation starters. All fantasy stats are half PPR scoring unless otherwise noted.

 

 

6 Receptions

 

Sunday in Seattle, Derrick Henry had a career-high 6 receptions, his previous high-water mark was only 4 receptions. He now has 9 catches in two games this year – his career-high in a season are 19 catches in 2020.  Perhaps, however, I am burying the lead, much like Henry buried the Seahawks defense in the second half of the game. Henry finished yesterday’s game with an absolutely gaudy (albeit overtime aided) stat line. 35 carries for 182 rushing yards and 3 touchdowns, 6 receptions on 6 targets for 55 receiving yards. This gave Henry a final fantasy total of 44.7 points, a single-game total that’s nearly 10 points higher than any other player in the NFL this season. Congrats on the win, everybody who has Derrick Henry on their team. Henry holds the lead in fantasy points among all non-QB players, and also leads the league in rushing yards, carries, rushing TDs, and touches. He’s picked right up on the pace he had last season and even has expanded on his receiving game, making it possible for him to be the #1 RB in all of fantasy football this year, even with a healthy Christian McCaffrey around.

 

2.01 Christian McCaffreys

 

Or would it be McCafferies? It’s not important. Just geeking out on Henry’s amazing 44.7-point performance, which just more than twice as many points as the second-best RB of the week, Christian McCaffrey. McCaffrey does lead the league in yards from scrimmage with 324 already (170 rushing, 154 receiving) – only one other RB, Kenyan Drake, has over 100 receiving yards through two games. Among other players who scored nearly half as many points as Derrick Henry were Tony Pollard, Cordarrelle Patterson, and J.D. McKissic – none of whom are rostered in our drinkfive.com league. Now, this is mostly me calling out our league, since both Pollard (75% owned) and McKissic (58% owned) should really be rostered. Cordarrelle Patterson was definitely a surprise to fantasy players this week, finishing with 21.4 fantasy points and scoring both on the ground and through the air, the first time he’s done that since his rookie season in 2013.

 

50.84 Fantasy Points

 

Through two weeks, the QB5 on the season is Daniel Jones, and he’s still only owned in 50% of Fleaflicker leagues. Jones is third in rushing yards among QBs, has 2 rushing scores, and perhaps most importantly, has just one fumble and zero interceptions on the season. Jones is taking clear steps forward in improving his game, at least as far as fantasy football goes. I suppose that fans of the actual New York Football Giants might have differing opinions. Elsewhere at the QB position, Derek Carr and Kirk Cousins both find themselves in the top 10 of fantasy points, outscoring guys who were drafted way ahead of them like Josh Allen, Dak Prescott, and Ryan Tannehill. As of the time I’m writing this, Aaron Rodgers hasn’t played in his Week 2 game yet, so it’s not really fair to pile on to his 3.32 point performance to open the season (though to be fair to me, that’s a really small target to try and pile on to).

 

4 Receiving Touchdowns

 

Rob Gronkowski is the early league leader in receiving touchdowns, nabbing two in each of his first two games. He’s also got 12 receptions through those two games, and he’s never finished a season above 5.6 receptions per game. It’s hard to say that this is a renaissance for Gronk, since nearly everyone expects his production to fall off at some point due to all the wear and tear he’s had through the years. I will, however, keep rolling him out at TE until he shows me that he’s going to slow down. Currently, he’s the TE2, but only behind Travis Kelce by 0.1 points, making them essentially both TE1’s on the year. They are way ahead of Darren Waller’s impressive 30.5 points on the year, who is in turn way ahead of the rest of the pack, which is in the low 20’s (pending T.J. Hockenson’s performance tonight).

 

12 Kickers with Double-digit Points

 

I avoided them last week, but you can’t dodge a kicker forever, so let’s see how they’re doing. This week was excellent for kickers, with a cool dozen players scoring 10 points or more, so great news, right? Surely, you started one of those kickers. Well, maybe not. In our drinkfive.com league, only 3 of those 12 kickers were rostered for last weeks’ games. 7 of those kickers were owned in 12% of Fleaflicker leagues or less, proving once again that this is probably the hardest position to predict on a week-to-week basis. Week 2’s leader, Graham Gano, is a name that has been around forever, yet he is on only 12% of teams, while going a perfect 5/5 on FGs and 2/2 on XPs for 23.2 total fantasy points. Remember folks, don’t just go for the guys who have big names, go for the guys who are on teams that cannot score touchdowns! Like Gano or the K3 on the week, Nick Folk of the Patriots. Of course, Folk missed an extra point, so his job is likely in jeopardy with a coach like Belichick.

 

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