Monday, August 2, 2010

WRs – 32 Teams Rankings



KEY: Pos Rank – Player Name – (2009 Pos Rank – 2009 Fantasy Pts) 2010 Projection – ADP by round

1. WR1 Andre Johnson (1-213) 194.20 – 1st round

WR47 Jacoby Jones (56-81) 88.80 – 14-15th round **value**

WR63 Kevin Walter (63-75) 77.70 – 13th round

HOUSTON – You’re probably going to have to be in the top 7 or 8 picks to get Andre Johnson, and he’s worth it. He’s been durable, a steady producer on a weekly basis averaging 10 targets and 97 receiving yards a game over the past three seasons. The only things that would scare me off are the schedule (fantasy playoffs: BAL, @TEN, @DEN) and injury history of Schaub. But will any of that matter with Andre Johnson catching the ball? Kevin Walter has seen his touches drop the past two seasons, and had 53 receptions for 611 yards and two touchdowns. He was also hampered by injuries last year, and now finds himself in a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE with speedster Jacoby Jones for the starting job opposite Andre Johnson. Jacoby Jones finished the season with only 27 catches but averaged 16.2 yards per reception and scored 6 receiving touchdowns. Andre Davis and David Anderson are the backups, although Davis has filled in admirably before.

2. WR2 Larry Fitzgerald (5-187) 184.20 – 1st round

WR27 Steve Breaston (45-91) 112.50 – 7-8th round

WR67 Early Doucet (103-27) 73.10 – 15-16th round

ARIZONA – You shouldn’t worry about Fitzgerald’s totals with whomever is throwing the football. While his ceiling will be lower, he’ll still be good for 1000 yds and 10 TDs. Anquan Boldin is gone, leaving the door open for Steve Breaston to be the full time #2. I expect him to top 60 catches and approach 900 yds, although I’d approach him with caution. Early Doucet looked very good with Leinart in the playoffs last year and had two strong games – he’s the #3 but could push for #2 in camp. If Breaston were to go down with injury, then rookie Andre Roberts would be a hot waiver wire pick up. Watch him in the preseason to see if he’s deep sleeper material – he’ll be the #4 WR and KR/PR.

3. WR3 Randy Moss (2-204) 176.80 – 1st round

WR51 Wes Welker (12-161) 86.10 – 6-7th round

WR75 Brandon Tate (150-1) 68.10 - 20th round

WR88 Julian Edelman (90-41) 51.80 – 21st round/waiver

NEW ENGLAND – Watch if Torry Holt (66-70) has anything left – the Pats swung and missed with Joey Galloway last season, maybe Torry’s got something left and he and Randy Moss can cook it up ala Jerry Rice & Tim Brown. There are always some rumblings with Randy Moss about some issue or another (this year he’s in the last year of his contract and he wants a new one), but he’s up there with the greatest to ever play. He’s a top five fantasy WR 8 times in his career and had his 6th 200+ point fantasy season (joining Jerry Rice, Marvin Harrison and Terrell Owens in that elite group). He’s never missed a game since joining the Patriots. There are conflicting reports about Wes Welker – some say he will be ready for training camp and others say that he’ll start the year on the PUP list. I think that he won’t be ready or effective if he comes out early in the season. He’ll still cost you a 6th or 7th rounder, but that’s a high price to pay for a guy who won’t factor in until your fantasy playoffs…maybe. Still, though, it’s hard to pass him up in a draft because he’s had 3 consecutive years catching 110 or more passes. Not this year - he tore his ACL and MCL in the Week 17 game at Houston and is not expected to be fully back until mid- to late-November. I’d avoid or wait for him to drop to you in the 12th round when everyone else is scared away. Julian Edelman is who will probably wind up doing the job replacing Welker. He even looked a lot like Welker last season. It may be that the Pats will employ more of a combination of **Brandon Tate** (deep sleeper) and Edelman. Tate was hurt last season and played very little, but they drafted him because he is explosive, when healthy. It’s a second to last round flyer on a guy who may blow up in the preseason and become over valued, but I’d pay attention to him and see if he earns a role in the offense. It’s like they’re looking for the new and improved Troy Brown, the way I remember the media talking up this pick in the 2009 draft.

4. WR4 Miles Austin (3-198) 171.60 – 1st round

WR36 Dez Bryant 104.10 – 6-8th round – better in PPR format

WR77 Roy Williams (38-99) 63.60 – 15-16th round

DALLAS – Miles Austin is a stud WR, he’s Romo’s main guy, and should finish in the top 5 WRs this season. A good, late first or second round pick will land you a solid guy on your roster. Roy Williams is the #2 WR on the team, but my money is on rookie Dez Bryant making a charge and becoming the better WR, regardless of designation on the team. It’s a high price to pay to get him in the 6th or 7th round, but would be worth it in a dynasty or keeper league. I’d value him higher than Hakeem Nicks last season and I would expect that he’ll be the first rookie WR off the board in most drafts – 100 fantasy pts this year. Patrick Crayton (43-92) is the slot guy, but he was asking to be released so he can be with a team with greater opportunity. The Cowboys won’t release him, making him an insurance policy with the team, should something happen to the starting 3. Truthfully, I like him better than Roy Williams, but his attitude to the situation makes me shy away from him. The coaches may limit his opportunities – let’s see how this plays out. Sam Hurd and Kevin Ogletree round out the group, with Ogletree being more the dynasty prospect. 11 FORMATION: 1 TE 1 RB 3 WR – Cowboys ran 36% of their offensive plays out of this formation. If you line up Witten, Felix Jones, Austin, Dez Bryant, and Crayton out of this formation – it creates mismatches for the opposing defenses. They will be running more plays out of this formation in 2010 – bet on it.

5. WR5 Sidney Rice (8-177) 163.20 – 1st round

WR17 Percy Harvin (24-128) 136.60 – 3rd round

WR62 Bernard Berrian (50-85) 78.40 – 15-16th round

MINNESOTA – 80 catches, 1100 yards seem pretty likely for Sidney Rice this year if Favre comes back, and we all believe that he is, don’t we? Rice went from the #90 fantasy WR to #8 last season – was he a one hit wonder? I don’t think so. Bernard Berrian is listed as the 2nd WR on the roster, but his touches declined with Percy Harvin in the mix. He’s now a “possession receiver”, and unless he benefits from an injury to one of the starting two, he’s going to be starving for targets. So much was expected of him last season in fantasy, but he was dinged up in the beginning of the year, never really seemed to gain the trust of Favre, and so it was Rice who had the big year. Percy Harvin has become the playmaker and deep pass catcher for the Vikings. A strong rookie season (129 fantasy pts – 135 rush, 790rec, 6tds) and his play on special teams leads us to believe he can do it again. He’s put on 10 lbs of muscle in the offseason, which is good. The thing that can be maddening are these recurring migraine headaches that seem to plague him and his fantasy owners. Other guys on the roster: Greg Lewis is the 4th WR, Jaymar Johnson (will see time if starters are injured) and Joe Webb (ex-QB they’re bringing along slowly).

6. WR6 Greg Jennings (20-140) 162.70 – 2-3rd round

WR34 Donald Driver (19-141) 106.20 – 5-6th round

WR71 James Jones (64-74) 68.90 – 17th round

WR95 Jordy Nelson (89-42) 42.70 - waiver

GREEN BAY – Greg Jennings had his TD totals drop for the 3rd consecutive year, from 12 in 2007, 8 in 2008 to only 4 in 2009. However, I’m going to believe the reports that I’m reading that the O-line is improved, that Aaron Rodgers can come close to his totals last season, and I predict that Jennings’ total TDs come back to the norm around 8 and he goes for 1200 yards, which would make him a nice WR1 on your roster. Last year started with concussion issues for him, then a litany of injuries (wrist, hip, knee, ankle) throughout the year held him back. Rodgers does a good job of spreading things around, which also limited him last year. Donald Driver is entering his 12th season and he’s undervalued in drafts every year, although this year may be the one that breaks his streak of six 1000-yard seasons that he and his fantasy owners have enjoyed. He had offseason surgery on both knees, but he’s healthy and says he feels better than he has in years. He’s missed one game over the past six seasons, btw. If he falls to the 7-8th round to you and you are looking for a solid WR3 to score you 100 fantasy pts or more, grab him. The bigger reason for Driver’s streak coming to an end is the emergence of James Jones (**sleeper**) and TE Jermichael Finley as big play options for the Packers. Jones has set a goal for 1000 yds and double digit TDs for the season. And while those goals are lofty for a guy who caught only 30 balls last year, he did score 4 TDs and looked like he had a nice rapport with Rodgers. We’ll see if the coaching staff gives him the targets – I’ll say 500 yds and 6 TDs are possible for him. 3rd year WR Jordy Nelson (**deep sleeper**) is the 4th WR and plays the slot for the Pack and works on special teams – he’s got potential, but he’ll only be a major factor if there’s an injury ahead of him on the depth chart. This could be a possibility with Jones’ injury history in his young career and the age/offseason surgery for Driver.

7. WR7 Roddy White (7-181) 162.20 – 2nd round

WR60 Michael Jenkins (67-69) 79.10 – 21-22nd round/waiver

WR100 Harry Douglas (inj) 39.80 - waiver

ATLANTA – Roddy White may be one of the safest plays you could make in the second round, if you look at his opportunity, talent, and supporting cast. He’s clearly the best WR on the roster, and no other WR is challenging him for targets (see Tony Gonzalez for that). He actually increased his targets by 20 last year finishing as the #7WR in fantasy. He’s also played all 16 games the past two seasons. Michael Jenkins catches 50 passes per season and shows up in some games. You got me if you can figure out when those games would be – but there will be a few. The guy who is interesting as a sleeper is Harry Douglas, who’s the ideal slot receiver – small tough and fast. Keep an eye on him in this preseason. IF healthy, he could be that extra weapon they need to make the offense more explosive and harder to defend. Last preseason he was lost for the year with a torn ACL, so let’s see if he’s mentally and physically ready to make catches in traffic again. Brian Finneran is still with the team as well.

8. WR8 Reggie Wayne (6-184) 162.20 – 1-2nd round

WR53 Pierre Garcon (36-101) 84.20 - 5-7th round

WR55 Anthony Gonzalez (inj) 82.50 – 13-15th round

WR66 Austin Collie (30-109) 73.20 – 10-11th round

INDIANAPOLIS – The guy who was on everyone’s sleeper list last year was WR Anthony Gonzalez. You could’ve gotten him in the 6th or 7th round and he was going to produce for your team every week in a steady way. Then in Game 1 vs. Jacksonville, his season ended with a serious knee injury. No fantasy points, no catches, nada, zip zilch! It’s just bad luck when something like that happens. On the bright side of the spectrum for the Colts: Reggie Wayne has been a steady Eddie of excellence. Hasn’t missed a game in 8 seasons, and hasn’t finished out of the top 25 WRs since 2002, with 4 top 10 finishes the last 6 years. I expect him to approach 130-140 targets with 80-90 catches for 1200-1300 yards and 8-10 TDs. There will be a TRAINING CAMP COMPETION between Gonzalez and Pierre Garcon for the #2 position. Garcon really stepped up in Gonzalez’ absence last year, and I expect he will beat out Gonzalez. Austin Collie will work out of the slot, but will also split wide as the Colts play matchups vs. the defense. Two more players to watch in training camp because Peyton throws the football to everybody: Sam Giguiere and Michigan St. rookie Blair White.

9. WR9 DeSean Jackson (4-187) 161.10 – 2-3rd round

WR24 Jeremy Maclin (37-100) 119.00 – 7-8th round

WR83 Jason Avant (59-78) 54.40 – 19-20th round

PHILADELPHIA – If you feel that he can duplicate his finish as the #4 fantasy WR without McNabb, then DeSean Jackson would be appropriate value at the end of the 2nd / early 3rd round. He’s due for a monster contract extension and the two sides haven’t come to an agreement yet. He’s had 8 TDs that went for over 50 yards in the first two years of his career. It’s difficult to predict TDs, but he went over 100 yds. in both Kevin Kolb starts. Jeremy Maclin showed good route running skills last year (55 catches for 762 yards and 4 TDs as a rookie) and could top 1000 yds in Philly’s pass happy offense, if he stays healthy. A strong WR2 in the 8th round with good upside, anyone? Buehller? Buehller? Jason Avant is a useful WR3 should one of these guys get banged up. He did well in that role last season, and can produce when called upon, particularly in a PPR league. The Eagles gave him a new 5-year, $18mm contract, to be their main backup. Hank Baskett and rookie Riley Cooper round out the roster. I still hate their fantasy playoff schedule @DAL, @NYG, MINN, though, as much as I like this group of WRs.

10. WR10 Marques Colston (13-157) 159.50 – 2-3rd round

WR33 Robert Meachem (21-132) 106.60 – 7-8th round

WR74 Devery Henderson (40-93) 68.10 – 14-15th round

WR78 Lance Moore (104-27) 59.90 – 20th round

NEW ORLEANS – Three of these guys will be worthy of drafting and will be solid fantasy players for you – which ones? Marques Colston may miss a few games due to an injury here and there, but he’s the most talented WR on the roster and should be good for 1000+ yds. and 8-10 TDs. He’s a guy you can steadily plug into your lineup each week and not worry about him (save for health issues). Devery Henderson is listed as the #2 WR on the team, but he had offseason sports hernia surgery (abdomen). He should be ready for camp, and is tremendous value in the 14-15th round. Robert Meachem finally put it together last season, but then fell apart during the playoffs. He’s been injury prone his entire career as a pro, and is recovering from toe surgery, then missed OTAs, but they say he’ll be ready for training camp. Lance Moore (**deep sleeper**) might as well have been in the witness protection plan last season, mainly due to a hamstring injury and a high ankle sprain. He really fell out of favor as Robert Meachem took his job. However, Moore signed his tender offer a few weeks ago, is healthy, and he’ll be ready to go for training camp. He went from a top 15 WR in 2008 to 104th WR with only 27 fantasy points in 2009. This guy was on everyone’s sleeper list last year. That’s bad. Why do I have the feeling that this year, with Shockey’s health in question and Meachem’s injury history, Moore might be the guy to fill in and put up stats again?

11. WR11 Calvin Johnson (22-131) 157.10 – 1-2nd round

WR56 Nate Burleson (39-95) 82.10 – 11-12th round

DETROIT – It was clear after watching Calvin Johnson drop from the third overall fantasy WR to 21st, something besides a knee injury was bothering him last season. Is it all the losing the Lions have done since he joined the team wearing him down? Consider the fact that with nearly 140 passes thrown to him, Johnson finished the season with only 67 receptions for less than 1,000 yards. Maybe it was all the double teams he saw last year? No matter what the reason, it was clear that the Lions had to get Megatron some help in the offseason. Bryant Johnson (70-60) wasn’t the answer as the 2nd WR – he started all 16 games for the Lions and only had 35 receptions for 417 yards and 3 TDs and only had one game all year with more than 50 receiving yards. These are not good numbers, and Johnson will be the #3 or #4 WR on the team in 2010 with the signing of Nate Burleson and Tony Scheffler. Burleson is a possession-type receiver with sure hands, which will be a welcome change for Matt Stafford. He would be a better WR in a PPR format as he’s there to move the chains and set up Megatron and the other WRs for big plays. 700 yards and 5 TDs are not out of the question for Burleson, if healthy. Scheffler was signed from Denver and while listed as a TE, what I’m gathering is that he’ll be used more as a WR and may be the #3 option in the passing game - Stay tuned. This could put the Bryant Johnson and Dennis Northcutt in danger of not making the team – both players had a hard time dropping the football last season.

12. WR12 Chad Ochocinco (14-157) 150.60 – 3-4th round

WR40 Antonio Bryant (51-84) 96.70 – 8-9th round

WR85 Matt Jones (drugs) 53.30 – 20th round

CINCINATTI – Andre Caldwell (71-59)

13. WR13 Steve Smith (18-144) 148.40 – 3-4th round

WR82 Brandon LaFell 55.20 – 22nd round

CAROLINA -

14. WR14 Brandon Marshall (9-175) 145.50 – 2nd round

WR68 Brian Hartline (62-76) 72.20 – 17th round

WR86 Davone Bess (53-82) 52.30 – 13-14th round

MIAMI – The Dolphins have not had a WR with the statistical capabilities of Brandon Marshall since Duper & Clayton, and rightfully, this has Miami fans excited. Off-season hip surgery and his history of off-the-field issues may scare some owners off, but all reports out of Dolphin-land are positive about his attitude and recovery from surgery. A top ten finish with 80 catches, 1000 yards and 10 TDs are not out of the question for him this season. There will be a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE between Brian Hartline, Davone Bess and Greg Camarillo (76-55) for the #2WR spot. Hartline really came on late last season and is the favorite to win the job – he runs nice routes and had good chemistry with Chad Henne. Bess seems very suited to the slot but could surprise with good stats this year. Camarillo will be there for touches should injury befall one of the others but his overall numbers should go down with Brandon Marshall around. As far as other backups go, the team has hopes for Patrick Turner, a 2nd year guy from USC who has nice size but never seized the opportunity last season. Taurus Johnson out of USF, is an interesting prospect – keep an eye on him in camp as very deep sleeper. He made plays in an offense where the QB was looking to run first and throw second.

15. WR15 Hakeem Nicks (27-115) 139.60 – 4-5th round

WR16 Steve Smith (11-164) 138.70 - 2-3rd round

WR49 Mario Manningham (29-110) 86.50 – 12-13th round

NEW YORK GIANTS – Hakeem Nicks is the sexy pick to break the top ten fantasy WRs this year. He played last season on a broken toe, missed time early in the season, wasn’t the starter until week 14, and still put up 790 yards and six TDs on only 74 targets. He finished as the #27 fantasy WR – many people feel he could be even better this year, IF the Giants don’t revert back to their running ways on offense. The “other” Steve Smith had a breakout season last year, finishing as the #11 fantasy WR. He’s really valuable moving the chains for Big Blue and caught 107 receptions (2nd in the NFL) for over 1200 yards, and earned himself a trip to the Pro Bowl. He should approach those numbers again, but with a few yards and TDs distributed to others – think 140 fantasy points instead of 165. Not too bad for a guy you can probably get late in the 2nd or early 3rd round. Mario Manningham showed flashes last season, both as a starter early and then playing from the slot later in the year. Now, he’ll probably only have real value if Smith or Nicks goes down with injury, but he’s a nice insurance policy who has started some games before. The team is also very high on Ramses Barden (6’6” with a monster wingspan and vertical leap), but maybe he’s just a red zone threat this year and a more viable fantasy option next year. They’d like to see more consistency out of him.

16. WR18 Hines Ward (16-150) 136.00 – 5th round

WR19 Mike Wallace (28-113) 131.40 – 6-7th round

WR84 Antwaan Randle El (82-49) 53.40 – 22nd round

PITTSBURGH – Hines Ward is a ten-year veteran showing no signs of slowing down. There is no reason to not pencil him in for 1000 yds. and 6 TDs in 2010. There have been rumblings about him retiring after the season, and the team drafted two rookie WRs just in case Ward makes the move to broadcasting – we’ll see how this plays out – in the meantime, he’ll cost you a fifth rounder on your fantasy team. Gone is Santonio Holmes to New York, and replacing him as the Steelers #2 WR is second year man Mike Wallace. He’s got the speed to beat the defense, and as a rookie, he really gained the trust of Roethlisberger and finished as the 28th fantasy WR on 78 targets. He’ll be seeing better coverage personnel now that he’s a starter, and the question becomes can he handle his new role or was he a one-hit wonder? This guy is a sexy sleeper pick by many experts out there and may be overvalued. I like him but I’d like to see how he looks early in games this preseason to answer some of the reasons to question his success. Does he have any chemistry with Leftwich? Can the O-line hold long enough for him to get open deep? Are they targeting him less because of the focus on the running game? This last question is an alarming reason (besides Big Ben) to de-value all the Steeler WRs. Antwaan Randle El has been brought back as the slot WR, although they drafted **Emmanuel Sanders** (sleeper – this year’s Mike Wallace??) and Antonio Brown, and either one of them could turn into a fine slot receiver. Arnaz Battle (who has the best website of all NFL players, btw – visit the “battle zone” at arnazbattle.com) was signed, which gives Pittsburgh a quality backup – he’ll play on special teams as well. Limas Sweed has been put on the IR with an Achilles’ injury and will miss the entire 2010 season.

17. WR20 Anquan Boldin (23-129) 131.00 – 3-4th round

WR28 Derrick Mason (27-144) 112.20 – 9-10th round

WR91 Donte Stallworth (susp.) 47.00 – 19-20th round

BALTIMORE – The Ravens traded 2 draft picks for Anquan Boldin, then signed him to a five year deal to lock him up to the team for what may be the rest of his career. He should have similar numbers to his time in Arizona, with 130-140 targets and at least 1000 yards not out of the realm of possibility – a good value late in the third round. Derrick Mason will have value as well, but there are fears that with less targets that he won’t be able to help your team as much. Mark Clayton (69-60), Kelley Washington (79-55), Demetrius Williams, and Utah rookie David Reed who will work on special teams, round out the roster. This is the best group of receivers certainly Joe Flacco has ever had to work with, if not ever, for the Ravens. I like their fantasy playoffs too: @HOU, NO, @CLE

18. WR21 Malcom Floyd (52-83) 129.00 – 4-5th round

WR79 Vincent Jackson (10-171) 57.90 – 6-7th round

WR92 Legedu Naanee (96-36) 75.90 – 13-14th round

WR99 Craig Davis (141-5) 40.10 – waiver wire

SAN DIEGO – Vincent Jackson’s stock is dropping like a rock – he’s suspended the first 3 games because of a second DUI offense, he did not sign his 2.5 million dollar tender offer, wants a new contract, and has threatened to sit out until Week 10 should he not get a new contract. The Chargers and Jackson are far apart right now in terms of expectations and negotiations – this one could get ugly before your draft. VJack’s going in the 5-6th round right now, I’ve bumped him to 6-7th round for dynasty players ONLY. If he’s sitting there in the 9th round or later, take a chance on this working out. Anything higher for a guy making too many poor decisions is too high a price for me. Who benefits from this holdout?? Say hello to Malcom Floyd, Philip Rivers’ new #1 WR and likely sleeper candidate sure to jump up everyone’s draft board. Originally, Floyd would go somewhere in the 9-10th round, but by the time we get into the third week of camp, why do I have the feeling he’ll cost you at least a 4-5th rounder the longer Vincent Jackson holds out? He’s the unquestioned starter at the #2 spot if VJack signs a deal, and if that happens (a big if), then bump him down your list. Legedu Naanee is a name I saw on some deep sleeper lists last year, but now it seems that now is the time to have this guy on your radar. Again, this guy is a 19th round pick if you’re in a league that carries a larger roster, but I’ve bumped him up to the 13-14th round. I really don’t think the Chargers will think twice about moving forward with who is on the field practicing and playing in preseason games. Naanee has excellent size at 6'3" and 230 pounds. He's got terrific hands, good speed, and is absolutely fearless when going over the middle to make the tough catch in traffic. This is the guy who made Chris Chambers expendable last year, and he’ll be starting the first three games AT LEAST in 2010. Veterans Craig Davis, Josh Reed, and rookie Jeremy Williams will be in a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE for the slot receiver position in training camp. I like the rookie there, but Josh Reed could surprise and earn the job.

19. WR22 Michael Crabtree (65-72) 128.00 – 4th round

WR65 Josh Morgan (61-76) 76.30 - 17th round

WR96 Ted Ginn Jr. (77-55) 41.50 – waiver wire

SAN FRANCISCO – Michael Crabtree dropped in most drafts last year due to his holdout, but once he signed, he’s been a model citizen and player for the 49ers. He led all 49ers wide receivers in yardage despite missing the first five games of the season, and caught at least 3 balls in every game he played. Barring unforeseen injury to him or QB Alex Smith, he should put up good numbers as a WR2 on your fantasy team. 900 yds and 6-7 TDs are the floor for my expectations for him, but he could do even more than that given the schedule and the soft secondaries in the NFC West. Teams won’t be able to focus on stopping just him, with Gore and Vernon Davis occupying attention on offense. Now that Isaac Bruce has been traded to St Louis so he can retire, Josh Morgan is the clear #2 WR on the roster, although he’s really the 4th receiving option on the team. He blocks well and that endears him to the Singletary and the coaching staff, he’s also in his third year (which is when most WRs finally put it all together). He’s responsible for making the most of his limited opportunities in order to keep the heat off the big three. Ted Ginn Jr. may be the slot receiver & has the opportunity to burn defenses with his speed, but will focus primarily on special teams – too many drops and 0,1,2 reception games (11 of those last season) proved to be his demise in Miami – maybe the change of scenery does him good. Other WRs on the roster include: Jason Hill, Brandon Jones, rookie Kyle Williams, and Dominique Ziegler – all of whom will struggle for playing time. In terms of fantasy, the third & fourth WRs aren’t really a factor on this team with so many options ahead of them.

20. WR23 Mike Sims-Walker (25-126) 125.60 – 4-5th round

WR50 Mike Thomas (72-57) 86.40 – 15-16th round

WR93 Jarett Dillard (130-10) 44.80 – waiver wire

JACKSONVILLE – Mike Sims-Walker stayed healthy in 2009 and showed that he could be a starting WR in the NFL. Now can he be a #1 WR on your fantasy team? Maybe not, but a WR3 with WR2 upside is fine. He’s in a contract year and has plenty to prove, along with his coach and QB. 900 yds & 6-7 TDs for around 125 fantasy points are good projections for him. The question is who will be the #2 WR that will line up opposite Sims-Walker? Torry Holt is gone and there is youth all around Jaguars country. All signs point toward the versatile Mike Thomas to be the guy. He’s only 5’8” & may be better suited for the slot, but he’s strong, has elite speed and is the all-time Pac-10 leading receiver with 259 receptions. He also runs the football as well as returns kicks. He will be in a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE for the job with Jarett Dillard, Kassim Osgood, the preseason wonder Troy Williamson, **Tiquan Underwood** (sleeper alert) and Nate Hughes. The Jags are looking for a playmaker to emerge. Dillard, Williamson (if he can put it together) and Underwood are the frontrunners to challenge Thomas for the job. I believe that Troy Williamson could be the guy, but he’s never shown he can produce when the opposing defenses play for real. Dillard has the strength and nose for the endzone to be productive. He was making progress last season until a leg injury sidelined him. A report from the OTAs have Tiquan Underwood as a guy to watch. "We really need a speed receiver to emerge, someone who doesn't just stretch a defense, but someone who can be a playmaker down the field. He's shown in these OTAs he can. (Monday), he made a tremendous adjustment on a deep ball." Stay tuned.

21. WR25 Lee Evans (35-103) 118.20 – 10 – 11th round

WR81 Steve Johnson (152-2) 56.30 – 21-22nd round

WR94 James Hardy (151-2) 43.60 – waiver wire

BUFFALO – It’s tough to get excited about Lee Evans this year, as there is a void at the 2nd WR after they sent T.O. packing. This may draw more double coverage his way. There will be a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE between the other WRs for that spot: Steve Johnson has the talent and is rumored to be the #2 WR once the season begins – he’s gotten the most reps at that spot so far this offseason. James Hardy has been plagued by injury and inconsistency, but maybe rookie Marcus Easley will jump up and surprise everyone by earning the starting job in camp. Roscoe Parrish seems to be the third WR, if you believe what you see in mini-camp practices. Josh Reed has departed to San Diego, as Vincent Jackson insurance, presumably.

22. WR26 Jabar Gaffney (48-85) 115.50 – 13-14th round **value**

WR43 Eddie Royal (99-34) 92.90 – 10-11th round

WR69 Demaryius Thomas 71.10 – 11-12th round

DENVER – Eddie Royal was the worst starting fantasy WR last season – 34 fantasy pts – 0TDs – and he dropped from #20WR in 2008 to #100WR in 2009. His head was spinning, learning all the WR positions. Hopefully he has all that down by now and can just go out and play. Josh McDaniels is saying that he sees Royal as more of a slot receiver. The departure of Brandon Marshall opens the door for Jabar Gaffney to be a starter and #1 option on the Broncos. I have to say that I like where you can draft Gaffney in terms of value and his upside. He knows the offense, the schedule favors him, and he’ll only cost you a 12th or 13th round pick. All eyes in camp will be on GA Tech rookie and first round pick Demaryius Thomas – When given the opportunity to take Dez Bryant with a clear need at WR, the Broncos went with Thomas instead – why? They didn’t want another WR with off the field issues. Scouts have compared him with Calvin Johnson, and he’s had the benefit of Rod Smith working with him in mini camp and OTAs. As we saw with Royal last year, is this offense too tough to digest quickly? He also had offseason foot surgery, but is back and ready to go. We’ll see what role Thomas will take on in the preseason. Other guys on the roster, battling for spots: Brandon Stokley (75-66) could be camp casualty, rookie Eric Decker could develop into an Austin Collie type in a year or two, Kenny McKinley is very fast but injuries have been a concern, Brandon Lloyd worked hard to make the team last season but didn’t do much with his opportunities. There are 4 other guys on the roster who were invited to camp. They’re clearly looking to find some gems in Bronco country.

23. WR29 Dwayne Bowe (54-82) 111.90 – 4-5th round

WR52 Dexter McCluster 85.10 – 13-14th round

WR57 Chris Chambers (34-103) 81.60 – 12-13th round

KANSAS CITY – Dwayne Bowe had a tough 2009 – he was in the doghouse early in the season, then was suspended (four games -- substance abuse) toward the end of the season. The biggest problem, though, was that he was dropping too many passes. For a guy who was costing owners a 3rd or 4th round pick last season, he was bad news on fantasy rosters – you never knew what you would get by starting him. Chris Chambers came over from San Diego midseason and the change of scenery did him good, finishing 20 spots better than Bowe among all fantasy WRs last season. This season, the guy who everyone is excited about in Chiefs country is Dexter McCluster – he will probably be the second or third rookie WR taken in fantasy drafts this fall. The Chiefs plan to get him the ball in a variety of ways -- as a receiver, as a runner, and possibly as a Wildcat QB. McCluster had 1,700 yards from scrimmage last season at Ole Miss, and should operate primarily out of the slot for the Chiefs as a rookie -- perhaps similar to the way the Vikings used Percy Harvin last season. He’s got a high ceiling and if he looks good in the preseason, he could cost you more than the 13th or 14th rounder I am predicting right now. Jerhame Urban (former Seahawk, Cowboy & Cardinal) and Lance Long will also compete for reps out of the slot. Both are steady, team first guys who would get consideration should injury befall the starters.

24. WR30 Santana Moss (32-106) 111.20 – 6-7th round

WR41 Devin Thomas (81-50) 93.90 – 12-13th round

WR73 Malcolm Kelly (98-34) 68.20 – 19-20th round

WASHINGTON – Santana Moss is 31 years old and showed signs of slowing down last year and his YPC are down in each of the last 5 seasons. How much of that was coaching, the QB, the lack of a supporting cast, or was it the beginning of the decline for Moss? He’s also been involved in an HGH scandal, and while there’s no suspension for Moss, a second offense would result in suspension of some type. There is upside here, though, for Santana. He’s got a better QB now, a hall of fame offensive mind as a head coach, and one can hope that McNabb’s presence can turn one of the other WRs around. Heck, Greg Lewis and Hank Baskett have had moments of fantasy relevance because of Donovan throwing the football in Philly. Can Devin Thomas be the recipient of his tutelage this year? He was supposed to break out last season, and the year before, but has never emerged. He caught only 25 balls last season, and he was a starter for 10 games – ouch! Early reports out of OTAs say that he’s having trouble mastering the playbook and playing mistake free – not the way to stick on a Mike Shanahan team. Maybe it’s Malcolm Kelly then– he too was supposed to break out last year, and the year before, he has only caught 29 balls in his career. If he can stay healthy, though, he could surprise. If these two don’t work out, here are the guys who would be in line for the opportunity: Joey Galloway (he’s 39), Bobby Wade (trying to make it on his 5th team), Mike Furrey and rookie Terrence Austin. Maybe the most interesting of this bunch are Mike Furrey and Terrence Austin, although the rookie seems to be the return man more than a starting WR.

25. WR31 T.J. Houshmandzadeh (31-107)109.60 – 7-8th round

WR58 Golden Tate 80.10 – 13-14th round

WR90 Deon Butler (120-17) 48.00 – 22nd round/waiver wire

SEATTLE – The only WR we can write in pen as a starter on the Seahawks depth chart is TJ Houshmandzadeh. He’s coming off sports hernia surgery in April, but should be ready for camp. He came over from Cincinnati last year, yet because there was no viable #2 WR, he had a hard time getting open. Add to that the difficulties along the OL in protecting Hasselbeck, he also couldn’t get the ball deep. Both of these factors led to a disappointing first year in the Northwest. Seattle is obviously looking for a #2 WR. There will be a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE between Deion Branch (78-55), rookie Golden Tate, and Deon Butler for that #2 spot. (and possibly Mike Williams). Rumors surrounding signing Terrell Owens have been squashed recently, which leads me to favor the youth movement in Seattle and say that Golden Tate will win this job in camp. He has good Run After the Catch (RAC) abilities and has looked good in the offseason, picking up the offense. Deion Branch is coming off arthroscopic knee surgery in the offseason (surprise). At this point, he may be more suited for the slot rather than a starting job. This coaching staff owes him nothing and open competition has been Pete Carroll’s theme all along. I don’t see him staying healthy enough to emerge as the starter. Deon Butler has drawn praise from Carroll as the most improved player thus far in the offseason. If he can get off the line of scrimmage against starting DBs in the preseason, he stands a good chance to compete for the starting job. He needs to make plays, though – something he didn’t do much of last year. A real wildcard in this WR group is USC grad and former first round pick **Mike X. Williams** (sleeper), who has been working on his comeback after faltering earlier in his career. He’s been making the most of his opportunity with the Seahawks, impressing coaches and the GM in minicamps – Pete Carroll says that physically, it’s the best he’s seen him since sophomore year. Let’s watch and see if he makes a push to be the starting WR or if this is just lip service to build his confidence.

26. WR32 Devin Hester (44-91) 106.70 – 7-8th round

WR39 Johnny Knox (60-78) 99.70 – 9-11th round

WR59 Devin Aromashodu (80-53) 79.90 – 8-9th round

WR97 Earl Bennett (49-85) 40.80 – waiver wire

CHICAGO – With Mike Martz as offensive coordinator in Chicago, everyone is high on the Bears’ WRs all of a sudden – I don’t know if I am totally sold just yet. Even though they will rotate 4 guys at the position, Devin Hester is projected as the #1 WR. He’s been working with former Martz protégé Isaac Bruce to improve his route running and understanding of the offense. The fact remains, however, that Hester doesn’t return kicks/punts anymore, only catches 3 TDs per season, and has never finished higher than the #44 WR in fantasy. He will cost you at least a 7th or 8th round pick, which is decent value for a guy who will probably get you 100 fantasy points. However, I think there are other, more explosive options to consider here. I sense that Johnny Knox and Devin Aromashodu are the better guys to have on this offense. Knox burst onto the scene (he was on a few deep sleeper lists last year as an undrafted rookie FA, btw) and showed he had the speed and hands to thrive in the NFL before missing the last three games of the year due to injury. Now, he made his share of rookie mistakes, but his ability to make plays will only be enhanced in Martz’ offense, if he can absorb the offense. If he shows in the preseason that he can’t, I’d be more cautious in approaching Johnny Knox this fall. He is entrenched as a starter on this team, mainly due to his excellent showing in the offseason workout program. Devin Aromashodu showed strong chemistry with Cutler at the end of last season when Hester and Knox were out with injuries, which is a big deal, given his inflated ADP right now. He’s listed as a backup WR, but could easily ascend the depth chart with an injury or poor play by the starters to be a viable fantasy option as well. Remember Torry Holt, Isaac Bruce and Az-Zahir Hakim? Well, Aromashodu is better than Hakim. He’s at least going to cut into any production that Greg Olsen may have, but I see more happening for him this season. He may be overvalued to be drafting him in the 8th round, and he’s on a lot of sleeper lists. The whole offense may start slow, we must remember, as there will likely be an adjustment period because the offense is new to many of the players. Let’s keep an eye on things and see how they develop. Other WRs on the roster: **Juaquin Iglesias ** (sleeper alert) – last year’s 3rd round pick didn’t catch a pass during his rookie season, but has impressed the coaches with his showing in OTAs and mini-camp. Earl Bennett was supposed to have chemistry with Cutler from day one last year, but that didn’t seem to happen the way it was advertised. Having said that, he finished only 6 points behind Hester last season. Rashied Davis rounds out the position, but I wouldn’t count on him fantasy-wise at all.

27. WR35 Jerricho Cotchery (33-106) 105.90 – 9-10th round

WR38 Braylon Edwards (42-92) 100.30 – 8-9th round

WR42 Santonio Holmes (15-152) 93.30 – 8-9th round

NEW YORK JETS – Jerricho Cotchery is one of the most durable options for Gang Green, and perhaps the most consistent. He runs good routes, has very good hands, and is terrific after the catch. Count on him for 100 fantasy points, 800 yards and 5 TDs. Braylon Edwards and Santonio Holmes may have more talent than Cotchery, but each has his warts. Edwards can make one of the most remarkable catches you'll ever see, and on the next possession he'll let a 40-yard pass bounce off his facemask. If he were simply able to cut his drops in half, he'd be an automatic top-10 receiver. That said, he opens up holes for the running game by being a viable receiving threat deep. He is also in a contract year. The Jets brought in Santonio Holmes, but he’s going to be suspended for the first 4 games for violating the league’s substance abuse policy. In addition to his marijuana misdemeanor, there’s an accusation that he assaulted a female bar patron, and an incident on an airplane where he refused to turn his cellphone off during a flight to NYC after he was traded to the Jets. He is likely to be overvalued on draft day, but would be a better pick in a dynasty league if you feel that a year with Rex Ryan in NY will straighten him out. My opinion is that Manhattan can be an alluring playground for a guy with authority issues, so I will be avoiding this potential train wreck and hope last season’s 15th ranked fantasy WR doesn’t appear in a lineup against me and cost me a game. 700 yards and 5 TDs are the numbers I see for him in the Jets’ run heavy offense. Other guys on the roster: David Clowney was injured most of his rookie season when he was on many deep sleeper lists when Brett Favre was a Jet. He was expected to do a bit better last year and that’s exactly what he did, a bit better. Brad Smith has seen his targets decline each of the last 3 seasons, and now he’s more of a gadget player than anyone you can think of having a positive impact on your fantasy team.

28. WR44 Kenny Britt (47-86) 91.20 – 8-9th round

WR70 Nate Washington (41-93) 89 – 15-17th round

TENNESSEE – There are two sides of the story concerning Kenny Britt. He didn’t start until week 10 in 2009, yet he still managed to have 42 catches for 701 yards and 3 TDs (16.7 yards per catch) on an offense that was driven by the running game. He also earned the trust of Vince Young as a playmaker he can count on in crunch time. That’s the good news. The bad news is that he was arrested in the off-season for unpaid parking tickets, showed up to OTAs overweight & out of shape, and only had 6 catches in the last 3 games last season. Nonetheless, he may be the most talented WR on the roster – talent normally finds its way onto the field, but if his conditioning doesn’t improve, Coach Fisher will have a hard time calling his number on Sundays. Nate Washington was brought in from Pittsburgh last year, and most of his stats came with Kerry Collins under center. The emergence of Kenny Britt and his inconsistency (catches only 50% of his targets) from game to game have tempered expectations for him this season, but if you don’t trust Britt, then Washington will benefit. Justin Gage (74-56) will be in a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE with rookie Damian Williams (USC – 3rd round) for the slot receiver position. Williams is a tough, mid-sized WR who is not afraid to go over the middle and make big catches in heavy coverage. He has the tools and work ethic to be a good possession WR and could be a contributor on offense from day one. Gage lost time to a back injury last season and has missed 16 games over the past 4 years due to injury. The drafting of Williams is further evidence that Gage’s hope of being the #1 WR are being overshadowed by a youth movement at the position. All of that being said, the Titans are a run-first offense – the ceiling for all of these WRs is limited, unless of course Chris Johnson’s contract holdout bleeds into the regular season.

29. WR45 Mohamed Massaquoi (58-78) 91.20 – 12-13th round

WR48 Josh Cribbs (73-57) 87.50 – 14th round

WR89 Brian Robiskie (129-10) 49.50 – 19th round

CLEVELAND – The one WR that you can probably count on as a bye week replacement or a flex option is Mohamed Massaquoi – he’s the most accomplished receiver on the Browns' current roster, although some will point to his inconsistency with drops and horrifically low target/reception rate (only 34 grabs in 95 targets). Could it be that he was a rookie or was it poor QB play? I say both. No matter, given the low Average Draft Position of the Cleveland WRs as a whole, there is value to be mined here – low risk, medium reward. There is a TRAINING CAMP BATTLE for the #2 spot between Chansi Stuckey (acquired in the Braylon Edwards trade), 2nd year guy Brian Robiskie, and I’ll throw newly added veteran Bobby Engram into that mix as well. You would think that Stuckey would have the edge because of his experience, but Robiskie seems to have a solid hold on the position at this point. One Browns coach said: "He started strong, and then got better. He never let up. He's made a huge jump." The Browns say Robiskie now "runs" the pass routes, rather than going through them "robotically," as he did his rookie season. He earned the respect of veteran QB Jake Delhomme, who told the coaches how Robiskie is "exactly where he should be at exactly the right time." Engram can push for the #2 spot, but has been better suited to the slot through the best part of his career. It may be that he’s there to push Josh Cribbs, who is not the most polished WR, but has the ability to make plays in space. Cribbs has been paired with QB Seneca Wallace in running the Browns’ version of the Wildcat. The Browns drafted Carlton Mitchell in the 6th round this past April, and he could make an immediate impact, given the lack of overall talent on the roster, Jake Allen was claimed off waivers from the Packers last year, but has yet to make an impact.

30. WR46 Donnie Avery (46-87) 89.80 – 11-12th round

WR64 Laurent Robinson (111-22) 76.50 – 17th round

WR98 Brandon Gibson (92-38) 40.30 -

ST. LOUIS – Donnie Avery was on many sleeper lists last year. He showed promise as a rookie, the Rams let Torry Holt go and made Avery the #1 WR only to have his sophomore season completely derail with various injuries. He had a stress fracture in the preseason, but played in Week one. Then he injured his ribs, hamstring, hip, shoulder and thigh. And finally, he ended his season with a concussion in Week 17. He STILL played in 15 games. He’s now 100% healthy, in his third season (a breakout time, traditionally, for wideouts), and has reassumed the #1 role – he has the talent, but can he stay healthy? Laurent Robinson won the #2 WR spot last year, but then HE went down with a broken leg and a sprained ankle in Week 3, effectively ending his season. IF he can stay healthy, he is expected to win the TRAINING CAMP BATTLE for the #2 job over Brandon Gibson, who looked good in relief of the injured Robinson last year. Gibson has enough quickness to create openings, but lacks top line speed and that may affect the team’s decision. The loser of this battle will be the #4 WR to make room for the rookie, 4th round pick out of Cincinnatti, Mardy Gilyard, who appears to be a lock for the slot position. He’s an explosive, dynamic player who works well in the open field. The backups Keenan Burton and special teams standout Danny Amendola also saw time last season and filled in very well when called upon to do so, which should only aid the development of the receiving group as a whole.

31. WR54 Arrelious Benn 82.70 - 14-15th round

WR72 Mike Williams 68.70 – 15-16th round

WR87 Sammie Stroughter (91-39) 52.30 – 22nd round/waiver wire

TAMPA BAY – There is a youth movement going on in Tampa Bay, and it’s clearest by looking at the WR position. In 2009, the Bucs found Sammie Stroughter in the draft and he paid off immediately as a dependable and effective slot receiver and return specialist before breaking his foot in Week 15. He’ll be back this year and the coaching staff loves his versatility and talent. In the offseason, the team let veteran Antonio Bryant get away as a free agent without making him a contract offer. Instead, they drafted Arrelious Benn in the 2nd round & Mike Williams (different from the guy in Seattle) in the 4th. Both are big, fast WRs worthy of fantasy consideration as both are expected to start Week 1. Early reports from mini camps and OTAs have Williams making big strides, looking like he’s right on track and ready to be a starter in the NFL. He has first round talent, but fell to the 4th round due to character issues. If he can keep his head screwed on straight, he would be a steal in the 15th round of your draft. Other WRs on the roster: Maurice Stovall, Reggie Brown, Michael Clayton, and Mark Bradley. Stovall has battled injuries and inconsistency, Brown was brought in as insurance should the rookies not work out, Clayton is around only because he makes too much money to be cut, and Bradley showed some flash in KC and will be battling for a roster spot.

32. WR61 Darrius Heyward-Bey (115-19) 78.80 – 19th round

WR70 Chaz Schilens (84-48) 69.70 – 12-13TH round

WR76 Louis Murphy (57-79) 65.30 – 16th round

OAKLAND -

FREE AGENTS:

WR80 Terrell Owens (26-123) 57.90

As I write this, it seems that the Bengals are concerned with Antonio Bryant’s knee injury that they are serious about signing T.O. It could be as early as today or tomorrow that we’ll know if Owens will line up opposite Ochocinco. There were rumors swirling about the Rams having a serious interest in signing Terrell Owens, which on one hand could’ve been good for the development of Sam Bradford, but on the other hand, looking at any team that signs him, the development AND fantasy value of all the other WRs on the roster could be diminished (see Lee Evans last season). He doesn’t play on special teams and I don’t know that if he isn’t one of the starting WRs on opening day that he won’t completely implode and become a locker room problem. Let’s keep an eye on this and see what develops. In the meantime, let’s rate who they have on the roster without the services of T.O. Yes, he's signed with the Bengals.


Danario Alexander - an undrafted free agent out of Missouri is working out for NFL teams. He’s a first round talent, but went undrafted after injuring himself in the Senior Bowl – he’s had durability issues throughout his career. STL and CHI seem most interested in Danario, should he be healed from his latest setback. Let’s hear how he does, but he’s a guy you should know as every year an UFA steps up to fantasy relevance (Johnny Knox last year).

Laveraneus Coles (55-82) signed with the Jets for the time that Santonio Holmes is suspended. We'll see what happens with him after Holmes comes back.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

32 Teams Correspondents

32 Teams is looking for hardcore fans who follow NFL teams...

Do you read everything you can find about your favorite NFL team? Do you scoff at the television on Sunday morning when Chris Mortensen is giving injury information about your team that you knew the answer to on Friday? Then, we want you to be a team correspondent for 32 Teams!

What teams are available?


So far, we've got 8 teams covered out of the 32: Dolphins, Jets, Cowboys, Eagles, Redskins, Texans, Browns, and Panthers.

What do I need to do as a correspondent?

First off, you need to join the facebook page and the blog. Then, when an issue comes up with your team that is fantasy relevant, we will call on you to help us out with the real answer. Another thing we ask is that we get your favorite fan pages, blogs and websites involved - send us links to where you go to on the web so we can contact them and in the interest of cross-promotion, ask them if they want to link with our sites.

Other than that, you can participate as much or as little as you want/can. If you want to come on the show and preview the TE position or the Defense/ST in August, that would be fine. If you want to simply send a blurb to my email, the blog or facebook page whenever you have an update or a juicy bit of knowledge that people could use, that is also fine. You could also just call me on the phone every now and then and I'll ask you stuff about your team. OR vice versa, like we began with - we can call on you when we need to know something. Really, the level of your involvement is up to you and how the season progresses. We want it to be fun - regular guys talking fantasy football - something you do anyway!

How can I become a correspondent?

Write up a preview of the TE position or Defense/Special Teams for your team, post it to the blog and/or facebook page, we will read it and then contact you to set up a phone meeting.

What are the benefits of being a correspondent?

We can't pay you (or ourselves) at this point, but we're working on it. We do, however, get free stuff from time to time, and we will share these free things with our correspondents. I know there is Buffalo Wild Wings schwag in the works, which is pretty cool. As the show grows, so do the opportunities of everyone associated with 32 Teams. We hope you can be a part of the fun!

Thursday, July 1, 2010

RBs - "32" Rankings

I've done these rankings a little differently to show roster depth and keep some value in perspective for the reader. Here are the "32" Rankings, where the top 32 players are listed along with their teammates at the RB position. This is what's on the clipboard - the notes I've taken about how I see it happening now, in June. It's going to change as the weeks roll on, as all of you already know.

Many times we are faced with injury concerns during the fantasy season. Getting a leg up on who the backups are now and whether or not they're a part of the team's plan to be utilized when starters go down can be critical to your success.

By backing up your RB studs with value picks at the end of your draft (ie Last year, Laurence Maroney and Cadillac Williams could've been had for a 16th round pick or later), you can find yourself vying for a championship. Look for opportunity for the backup player to turn starter and then look at ability to run the football and be successful in the NFL on and off the field - and oh yes, can he block? If he can't, then his opportunity to turn starter will never blossom into what you want it to be. Find all three in a player, you have your sleeper to take late in the draft.

RBs – 32 Teams Rankings - Thursday, July 1, 2010

What the numbers mean: "32" Rank- 2010 Projected Position Rank - Player Name - (2009 rank-total fantasy pts) - 2010 Projected Total Fantasy Points - ADP avg. draft position by round - 2009 stats rush, rec

ALL RANKINGS ARE BASED ON A 12 TEAM REDRAFT LEAGUE, STANDARD SCORING FORMAT

1. 1RB Chris Johnson (1-342) 301.8 – 1st rnd – 358-2006rsh 14td, 50-503rec 2td

TENNESSEE – Chris Johnson was a beast last year, and if he was on your team you were probably vying for a championship. He finished with twelve 100+ yard games and became the sixth player in NFL history to rush for 2,000 yards in a season. He was also the leading receiver for the Titans, as he caught 50 balls for 503 yds – that’s over 2500 yards of offense and over 400 touches, folks. Out of the last eight RBs to have 350+ carries in a season, only two of them had similar seasons the following year, Adrian Peterson in 2009 and Tiki Barber in 2006. Now, CJ’s holding out for a new deal & asking for 30-40 million in guaranteed money. I don’t see Tennessee giving into this expectation, but I do see a fair deal being worked out and he’s back for 2 weeks in the preseason. Chris has a new RB coach (Kennedy Pola) and they’ve yet to have a day of practice together. Johnson will cost you a number one or two overall pick, unless he sustains an injury of some type in camp or the preseason. As far as backups go, gone are LenDale White and Chris Henry. However, Javon Ringer will compete with rookies LeGarrette Blount (yeah, the guy who punched Boise State defensive end Byron Hout in the face after Hout touched Blount on the shoulder.) and Stefon Johnson (practice squad) for the backup job. If Chris Johnson were to miss time, Ringer and Blount would split the load, I would think, with Blount as more of the between the tackles, goal line back. The fantasy playoffs look decent for the Titans: IND, HOU, @KC – none of those run defenses scare me.

2. 2RB Adrian Peterson (2-227)297.9 – 1st rnd – 315-1389rsh 18td, 43-436rec – 6fum
53RB Toby Gerhart (proj -83) 79 - 14th rnd – 95-375rush 5td, 22-154rec

MINNESOTA – If you have a top pick in your draft, ADP will be one of the top 2 or 3 players taken and he should be. He doubled his reception totals last season, making Chester Taylor expendable, he’s the clear starter and he’s finished as a top five fantasy back the past two seasons. His fumbling problem is a concern, but his TD totals more than make up for that.
Toby Gerhart will be used like Chester Taylor was, but has better abilities running the football –the guy just blows people up. His draft stock could rise in the preseason, if he’s able to bring his physical running style to the next level. Too bad he’s in a clear backup role, I was excited about him going to a team where he could compete for a starting job. Albert Young is the other backup and is very good, but doesn’t have the skills of Gerhart. Both backups would have value should Adrian Peterson go down with injury, with Gerhart as a handcuff and Young off the waiver wire.

3. 3RB Maurice Jones-Drew (3-270) 297.8 – 1st rnd – 312-1391rush 15tds, 53-374rec 1td

JACKSONVILLE – MJD is a true RB1. In every game last season, Jones-Drew scored a touchdown, had five receptions, or rushed for at least 60 yards. It's reasons like these that make MJD a top-three pick in every fantasy league this year. Now that he’s proved he can handle double the workload that he’s had prior to last year – can he do it again? Yes, would be a smart bet. If he gets injured, there are guys there who can do some things: Rashad Jennings is a bigger back, did a nice job last year averaging over 5 yds/carry with his 39 touches and has NFL pedigree. He’s the main backup, although the Jaguars drafted Deji Karim (**deep sleeper**) from Southern Illinois as a third down back/kick returner, and has a similar skill set to Jones-Drew, though not as dynamic. So, there could be competition in camp for the backup role.

4. 4RB Ray Rice (4-245) 287.8 1rnd – 254-1339rush 7td, 78-702rec 1td
47RB Willis McGahee (25-144) 114.9 10-11rnd - 109-544rush 12td, 15-85rec 2td

BALTIMORE – A favorable fantasy playoff schedule (@HOU, NO, @CLE) and the Ravens history of running the football has me very high on Rice and Willis McGahee, who has one year left on his deal. Yes, he vultured TDs from Rice last season (will that happen again?) and Ray may get less touches in the passing game with better WR options but Cam Cameron likes to keep the backs involved in his offenses, there shouldn’t be too much of a dropoff. Jalen Parmele is another back to watch, a special teamer and former Miami Dolphin under Cam Cameron.

5. 5RB Frank Gore (6-226) 248.3 1rnd – 229-1120rsh 10td, 52-406rec 3td

SAN FRANCISCO – Frank Gore is the main man here and should be again. He’s never had 10tds in a season before last year, and he did add 10 catches to his reception totals from the year before. He’s had injury troubles every year he’s been in the league, and that may scare most owners off given that he’s a high to mid-first round pick, going as early as #5 in drafts. He’s the clear #1 back, though, without a question he’ll get his touches. Glen Coffee is the back up, but when given the opportunity last season, he averaged 2.7 YPC. That’s just not going to cut it in the NFL. So, the Niners have Miss St rookie **Anthony Dixon** (handcuff sleeper) fall into their laps in the 6th round because of off the field issues. Dixon has a DUI against his name when in July 2009 an intoxicated Dixon and two empty champagne bottles were found in his car. He showed up out of shape several times in college and there are concerns about whether he is fast enough to succeed at this level. That being said, he has talent, is a good dynasty prospect as a future replacement for Gore down the line when Gore starts wearing down and those in redraft leagues will need to consider Dixon if he overtakes Coffee for the #2 RB position in training camp.

6. 6RB Michael Turner (22-146) 204.3 2 rnd – 178-871rush 10td, 5-35rec
62RB Jason Snelling (38-114) 71.8 16-17rnd – 142-613rush 4td, 30-259rec

ATLANTA – Turner followed up his #2RB season of 2008 with a #22 finish in 2009 with an ankle injury marring the latter part of his season- he was pronounced completely healthy this past March, but the team wants to “monitor” his touches so he can play all season. I like his fantasy playoff schedule (@CAR, @SEA, NO) but he doesn’t catch many balls, which lowers his value in PPR leagues. A sore hip flexor killed Jerious Norwood’s 2009, but he wasn’t effective before the injury. The team signed him to a RFA one year tender, but Snelling’s stint as a backup last season could put Norwood on the bubble – stay tuned. Jason Snelling did a good job and even caught 30 balls – handcuff him to Turner in your draft. Another back to watch is undrafted FA rookie Dmitri Nance out of Arizona State.

7. 7RB Steven Jackson (10-193) 246.5 1-2rnd – 325-1424rush 4td, 50-314rec

ST LOUIS - In 2006 - the last time Jackson played for a decent team - he had 2,334 yards from scrimmage, the sixth most in NFL history. Unfortunately for him, he hasn't played for a good team since. Everyone knows that he’s the best player on the team, so he has a target on his back. Yes, the same back he had surgery to repair a herniated disk. He says he’s recovered from the surgery and expects big things this season. What does the rest of the team look like is my question? He can’t be an elite RB scoring only 4TDs on 375 touches. His value is that there is no one else on the roster that can challenge him for carries unless he’s injured. They drafted Chris Ogbonnaya last year, and they’re hoping he can stay healthy and be a change of pace back to Jackson. Ken Darby is the guy who would get carries if Jackson goes down with injury. He’s faster than Ogbonnaya and would be worth starting if given the opportunity –though, not as good as Steven Jackson. The Rams have @NO, KC, SF for the fantasy playoffs, which doesn’t look good for St. Louis – they’re not expected to do well this year.

8. 8RB DeAngelo Williams (14-174) 207.3 1-2rnd – 216-1117rush 7td, 29-252rec
11RB Jonathan Stewart (11-188) 193.3 1-2rnd – 221-1133rush 10td, 18-139rec 1td

CAROLINA – Both Williams and Stewart can be top 15 fantasy backs as the Panthers ran it 525 times last season (2nd most in the NFL). DeAngelo is the better PPR back (#8 in RB rec in 2009). He missed 3 games with ankle trouble but got that cleaned up and will be ready for camp. Stewart had offseason surgery to repair a bone spur that was affecting his Achilles tendon and ankle all last season. He finished as the 11th best RB when injured. What can he do when healthy this year? Draft him and find out. Tyrell Sutton and Mike Goodson are the backups, more special teams guys, but Sutton would be the guy if one of the big 2 goes down.

9. 9RB Rashard Mendenhall (13-178) 220 – 1rnd -242-1108rush 7td, 25-261rec 1td, 3fum

PITTSBURGH – Everyone is expecting the Steelers to be a run first football team this year, with Roethlisberger missing at least the first 4 weeks. This may be true. There is news of using a FB as a lead blocker in Steeler land, and the coaches’ expectations made public that they expect more from Mendenhall – welcome back, Steeler Football. There seems to be an “open competition” between Mewelde Moore and Ga Tech rookie **Jonathan Dwyer** (sleeper alert) for the backup job, although I believe that Dwyer will become the goal line back and Moore keeps his job for this year. Dwyer reminds me a little of Michael Turner, the way he runs people over is a concern for injuries, though. He’s worth picking up late in your drafts as a guy to stash away. Moore is either your handcuff or a waiver wire pick, depending on the health of Mendenhall. The Steelers are home for the fantasy playoffs: CIN, NYJ, CAR. Keep an eye on who they get to replace Colon on the O-line - that's a big ? for this running game today.

10. 10RB Ryan Grant (8-208) 206.7 – 1-2rnd – 282-1253rush 11td, 25-197rec

GREEN BAY – Ryan Grant could be the 5th back taken off the board and possibly be worth it. As teams look to stop the Packers passing attack, the O-Line did improve as the year went on, Ryan Grant could be the guy to move up into the top 10 RBs. I don’t think he repeats the slow start he had last season. Brandon Jackson is the backup, and he is a serviceable replacement should injury befall Grant. The Packers have Kregg Lumpkin and are also very high on rookie James Starks (**deep sleeper**), who could compete with Jackson for the backup job. He has an injured hamstring, but should be ready for training camp.

11. 12RB Ryan Mathews (proj 17-190) 191.7 – 3-4rnd -
39RB Darren Sproles (35-123) 147.6 – 8-9rnd – 93-343rus 3td, 45-497rec 4td

SAN DIEGO – Ryan Mathews was the leading rusher in the NCAA last season (Shonn Greene was the year before, btw), and he brings his skill set to SD to replace Tomlinson. He should be one of the first two rookie RBs taken simply because of the opportunity he has in front of him in an excellent offense to succeed and score TDs. He’s good at everything, but nothing stands out and WOWs you as a special skill that he has – he’s master of being good at everything. He will get every opportunity to succeed and if healthy should rush for at least 1000 yards and double digit TDs in this offense. Sproles does have speed that wows you and if he’s going well, the coaches won’t feel compelled to take him out of the game because the other back is a future Hall of Famer. He returns punts and is on the kickoff team as well. If you get points for special teams play, he is more valuable. Chargers have KC, SF, @CIN for the fantasy playoffs, which isn’t bad – Mathews has a high ceiling and I like the value of Sproles this year, as his touches could go up. We need to look at that O-line, though. Jacob Hester is a backup to know on this team – he’s been used sparingly and has hung around on Special Teams. If something goes wrong with Mathews, you’ll learn his name when someone else is picking him up off the waiver wire. Two other guys are rookie Shawnbrey McNeal and Marcus Mason - aka the future Sproles replacement and the former Redskin backup RB.

12. 13RB Chris Wells (30-131) 208.2 2-3 rnd – 176-793rush 8td, 12-123rec
45RB Tim Hightower(26-141) 142.4 8-9 round – 143-598rush 7td, 63-428rec

ARIZONA – Retirement of Kurt Warner and signing of Alan Faneca has everyone believing that they will lean on the run more in Arizona. Both lead backs have good per carry avg. (4.2 for Hightower and 4.5 for Wells). Wells finished strong last season and has injury history, but Hightower will continue to catch screens and is a great RB4 later in your draft. Jason Wright and LeRod Stephens-Howling are the backups, with Howling more of a special teams guy, although they are interested in giving him a look on 3rd downs.

13. 14RB Pierre Thomas (20-155) 207.5 – 3-4rnd,147-793rush 6td, 39-302rec 2td
29RB Reggie Bush (54-116) 185.4 – 5-7rnd, 70-390rush 5td, 47-335rec 3td

NEW ORLEANS – Thomas does a lot with a little. He played in 14 games last year, started only 6 of them, yet ran for almost 800 yds, with a 5.4 YPC avg., caught 39 balls for over 300 yds and scored 8 times. He signed his FA tender offer but wants a long-term deal. They may sign him to a fair deal, as he is valuable and kept Mendenhall on the bench when in college. He’s never played a full season and is in a clear 3 headed RB situation, with Reggie Bush and 2nd year guy **Lynell Hamilton**, who will get his shot to replace Mike Bell. He did a fair job in the playoffs in that role, scoring vs. the Cardinals. He has value as a goal line back and injury replacement for Thomas &/or Reggie Bush. Reggie Bush finished last season just behind Steve Slaton as a RB54 – he’s better in a PPR format, going as early as the end of the 5th round. I’d also count on Saints RBs in the middle of the season rather than at the beginning/end based on the schedule.

14. 15RB Cedric Benson (15-172) 194.7 – 2rnd – 301-1251rush 6td, 17-111rec

CINCINNATI – Few RB situations exist in the NFL where there is one back to shoulder the load, but Cincy has one of them. Benson is your starter, and you know this going in. He’s also a guy who couldn’t start his boat without blowing into a breathalyzer, he’s never played a 16 game season, but he’s clearly cleaned up his life with his success last season and strong playoff showing. Now, there are assault charges pending over an incident in TX. Let's see how the facts shake out. Philip says that Benson is a guy who can't handle success. I say innocent until proven guilty. Bernard Scott is the change of pace back, but there are rumblings about getting a veteran backup for Benson (ala Larry Johnson last year)- he came off the practice field with a foot injury this past week. LenDale White is a rumor, Marshawn Lynch could be a possibility here, but the guys who will get first crack at the true back up job in camp will be **Cedric Peerman** and Walter Mendenhall (CUT 6/20). I like Peerman as a **deep sleeper guy and have since last season when drafted by the Ravens.

15. 16RB Shonn Greene (41-60) 191.9 – 2-3rnd, 109-541rush 2td, 0rec, 3fum
38RB LaDainian Tomlinson (19-156)140.2 – 7-8rnd, 223-730rush 12td, 20-154rec, 2fum

NEW YORK JETS – Shonn Greene has parlayed his strong work in the playoffs into the starting RB job for the Jets. He’s completely recovered from the torn rib cartilage suffered in the second half of the AFC Championship game, and should be a weekly contributor with that massive O-line blocking for him. Tomlinson may see some goal line carries as well as a 3rd down role on obvious passing downs. There is talk that they’re going to use these guys in tandem and ride the hot hand. Let’s see what Tomlinson has in the preseason (a first for him). His yards per carry have dropped in each of the last three seasons, from 5.2 to 4.7 to 3.8 to last year's bottoming out at 3.3. He has also seen his receiving yardage drop progressively over that since 2007, and last year's 20 receptions for 154 yards were easily the worst of his career (his previous career lows were 51 and 357). 2009 was also the first time Tomlinson failed to crack the league's top ten fantasy running backs. Rookie Joe McKnight is the third back, drafted out of USC, to replace Leon Washington who was traded to Seattle. He averaged over 6 YPC in college – let’s watch him and see if his game translates to the NFL.

16. 17RB Knowshon Moreno (34-161) 205.1 – 3-4rnd, 247-947rush 7td, 28-213rec 2td 4fum
52RB Correll Buckhalter (42-90) 118.4 – 14-15rnd, 140/642rush 1td, 31/240rec 2fum

DENVER – The Broncos want to run more of a power running game, which begs the question if Knowshon Moreno can handle the load. No runs over 18 yds, no 100 yd games, only 3.8 yds/rush compared to Buckhalter’s 5.3 yd. avg. makes Correll Buckhalter a better value play because you don’t have to spend a 3rd or 4th rounder on him. Still, Moreno will get a majority of the touches this season & should be a decent RB2 on fantasy squads. His reception totals may rise with Brandon Marshall gone as well, which is something to consider in PPR leagues. A decent fantasy playoff schedule is a plus (@ARI, @OAK, HOU) – let’s see how Knowshon looks in preseason games and if he’s more explosive than a 31 year old veteran with a history of knee trouble. JJ Arrington is back in the fold, and says he’s 80-85% healthy. Rumors of Brian Westbrook are being squelched with Arrington’s return…stay tuned. Lance Ball and NC State rookie **Toney Baker** (deep sleeper) are backups looking to make the roster on special teams.

17. 18RB Jamaal Charles (12-185) 191.7 – 3-4rnd – 190-1120rush 7td, 40-297rec 1td
42RB Thomas Jones (5-229) 95.4 - 8-9rnd – 332-1402rush 14td, 10-58rec

KANSAS CITY –Jamaal Charles is the first player in NFL history to have over 1,100 yards rushing on less than 200 carries. He didn’t take over the full-time load until week ten and finished as the #12 RB. He’s exciting to watch, regularly beats defenders to the edge with his speed, and was primed to be a breakout RB1 this season despite a shoulder injury he is rehabbing…then KC signed Thomas Jones. We have to temper our enthusiasm now, as Jones likely becomes the goal line back at LEAST. It also knocks Jones down as a fantasy RB because he doesn’t get to run behind the Jets O-line. You have to look at these players, however, because they have a decent fantasy playoff schedule (@SD, @STL, TEN). The team cut Kolby Smith last week, and Jackie Battle, Javarris Williams, and Kestahn Moore may be fighting for one roster spot between them, given that Dexter McCluster will be given touches out of the backfield as well.

18. 19RB Joseph Addai (9-197) 180.1 – 4rnd - 219-828rush 10td, 51-336rec 3td
40RB Donald Brown (58-62) 118.7 – 7-8rnd - 78-281rush 3td, 11-169rec

INDIANAPOLIS – Most of the value of the Indy RB group comes from scoring TDs at the goal line after the passing game gets into the red zone. Addai is one of those quiet producers at the position, a steady Eddie. He’s also in a contract year. This could mean that the coaching staff limits his touches so they can see if Donald Brown is the future or they could use Addai as usual and he gets to showcase what he can do if Indy doesn’t re-sign him in the offseason. Brown was unimpressive as a rookie, with only 3.8 yds/carry, playing 11 games due to knee injury, and his highest rushing total was 58 yards (45 of them came on one play). If he shows improvement, he could be a steal. Let’s look at him in the preseason. Mike Hart and Devin Moore round out depth at the position.

19. 20RB Felix Jones (40-93) 185.7 – 2-3rnd – 116-685rush 3td, 19-119rec
31RB Marion Barber (12-153) 96.8 - 3-4rnd – 214-932rush 7td, 26-221
53RB Tashard Choice (52-67) 78 - 11-12rnd - 64-349rush 3td, 15-132rec

DALLAS – Jerry Jones is a Razorback. He handpicked Felix Jones in the 2008 draft, and Jerry wants Felix to emerge even though Marion Barber has outperformed him in every facet of the game. Barber was slowed by quadriceps injuries last season, affecting his ability to perform. Jones has had durability issues as well (strained PCL), but he finished strong last year and played very well in the playoffs. Tashard Choice may be the value pick here, though. You can get him late in the draft, he’ll start a couple of weeks for you when the regulars are injured, worth the risk. Fantasy playoff schedule is middling (PHI, WASH, @ARI). The decision to take Felix Jones is risky given where you’ll need to take him, the fact that he had over 10 carries only 4x last season and his injury history.

20. 21RB Jahvid Best (162) 176.7 – 4-5rnd - proj. 200-900rush 6td, 43-300rec 1td

DETROIT – The first or second rookie RB off the board should be Jahvid Best, given the opportunity in front of him to start right away without much resistance. The two concerns about him are his size (5’10” – 199 lbs) and his concussion history. If you saw how his season ended at Cal last year, and watched his eyes roll up into his head, you’ll know why there are concerns – youtube it. He has all the tools of Ray Rice or a Brian Westbrook, however, and is the same size as Rice was when he was a rookie. Kevin Smith will probably be on the PUP list to start the year, as he blew out his knee last season and had a December operation to repair it. If you have space on your roster, you can draft him late as a RB3. For the backup job, Maurice Morris will battle last year’s rookie RB Aaron Brown (**sleeper**), who did well on special teams and carried the ball well when called upon. MoMo may be a camp casualty given his lackluster performance as a starter last season. DeDe Dorsey (via Indy & Cincy) will hold a roster spot until Kevin Smith returns.

21. 22RB LeSean McCoy (52-117) 177.7- 3-4rnd -155-637rush 4td, 40-308rec

PHILADELPHIA – I can see this going two ways: 1- McCoy shows the elusiveness promised when he came out of Pitt last year & he looks like Tony Dorsett, rushes and catches 1500 yards & scores 10 TDs in a high powered offense. 2- Committee Approach – Mike Bell and Leonard Weaver eat into LeSean’s carries and receptions while running a true West Coast offense this season. There are plenty of touches to go around with Bell as the goal line back, Weaver as Tom Rathman and McCoy as Roger Craig circa 1984 (1100 - 1300 yards). I vote for #2 – McCoy never looked the part or took the reins and finished as the 37th fantasy RB last year. They say he’s done a 180 this season& that would be welcome to Eagles fans. The fantasy playoffs don’t do the Eagles ANY favors: @DAL, @NYG, MINN …ouch. Tough to like the Eagles in crunch time this year, although there are players out there who will tell you that big players step up in big games. Is McCoy that big player? Eldra Buckley is the third back, but may give way to rookie Charles Scott, who is listed as fullback, but may line up at tailback to justify the guy being on the roster. It’s further evidence of how they’d like to use Weaver and play matchups in the running game like the Saints do. They won the Super Bowl, by the way, and it’s a copycat league.

22. 23RB Ronnie Brown (32-125) 171.6 – 3-4rnd - 147-648rush 8td, 14-98rec
24RB Ricky Williams(7-212) 161.8 – 5-6rnd - 241-1121rush 11td, 35-264rec 2td

MIAMI – Ronnie Brown had a Lisfranc fracture in his right foot end his season in Week 10, still he was the 32nd RB and was productive before the injury. He’s in the last year of his contract, has not signed his tender offer because he wants a new long-term deal, was rumored in several trades in the offseason, and was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and improper lane use in Atlanta. Still, he will be the Dolphins starting RB and will share carries with Ricky Williams. He had a screw removed from his foot last week and is holding off on running for 2 weeks while the foot heals. Ricky turned back the clock last year, rushed for over 1000 yds and finished as the #7 RB. Clearly his difficulties and motivations about football have been resolved and even after 10 years in the NFL, there is enough in the tank for Dolphin fans to yell RUN RICKY RUN on Sunday afternoons. Lex Hilliard and Patrick Cobbs are the backups to keep an eye on. Hilliard had some action as the #2 last season and Cobbs is back from ACL surgery rather quickly. He’s Mr. Versatility for the Fish, in the backfield, in the wildcat, on special teams, and is an excellent locker room guy. Other guys in camp will be Kory Sheets, who was brought in last year when Cobbs went down. He may not make the roster.

23. 26RB Ahmad Bradshaw (29-135) 164.9 – 6-7rnd,163-778rush 7td, 21-207rec
25RB Brandon Jacobs (29-135) 140.5 – 5-6rnd, 224-835rush 5td, 18-184rec 1td

NEW YORK GIANTS – Jacobs was a disappointment last year. After Derrick Ward left, he was supposed to be the battering ram back, physical and scoring TDs – he did not reach 900 yards and only scored 5 times. Now, Jacobs played on a bad knee all year long, an injury many believe would have sidelined other backs. He’ll be ready for training camp. On the other hand, Ahmad Bradshaw looked flat out better than him last year. Then after the Oakland game, Bradshaw had to wear protective boots to heal his ankles and feet on a weekly basis. Bradshaw had screws put in both feet to stabilize fractured bones and a procedure on his ankle, and should be ready for training camp. He’s in a contract year, and I expect him to have a slightly better year than Jacobs because of his involvement in the passing game. The backups Danny Ware and Andre Brown (Achilles injury) haven’t shown much to inspire confidence if Bradshaw & Jacobs go down this season. Gartrell Johnson (2nd year – Univ. of Miami) looked good for San Diego last preseason, and could be a guy to watch this year.

24. 27RB Matt Forte (18-159) 139.1 – 4-6rnd - 258-949rush 4td, 57-471rec
34RB Chester Taylor (43-83) 150.2 – 10rnd – 93-332rush 1td, 44-389rec 1td

CHICAGO – Forte was a big disappointment last season due to injuries (hamstring & knee) and poor blocking by the offensive line. He’s been training in Florida and has pronounced himself completely healthy, faster and stronger. Mike Martz is talking him up as the Marshall Faulk focal point of the offense as he’s an excellent receiver. If he gets hurt or slips up in any way, Chester Taylor will be the man here. They targeted him in free agency for a reason. I don’t like the O-line here and the fantasy playoff schedule is tough (NE, @MIN, NYJ). I like the upside possibilities just where will that put you at the end – can these guys help you win your league? Kahlil Bell showed some flashes last season but not enough to warrant a regular spot, Garrett Wolfe is a change of pace, Eric Bienemy or Eric Metcalfe type back.

25. 28RB Cadillac Williams (26-144) 160.5 – 6-8rnd, 209-816rush 4td, 29-219rec 3td
57RB Derrick Ward (49-74) 88.1 – 15 rnd, 115-414rush 1td, 20-150rec 2td

TAMPA BAY – Cadillac Williams played a 16 game season for the first time in his career and will be the unquestioned #1RB on the Bucs. He’s the first player in the NFL to come back from torn patellar tendons in both knees. Derrick Ward was brought in to be a part of a 2-2-1 committee approach with Cadillac and Earnest Graham, and never really got going. He attributed his poor year to his reaction to losing all the time. He’ll have a better year this season, as he’ll spell Cadillac to keep him fresh. Earnest Graham is listed at FB, but would be the #3 RB on this team and would carry the load with Ward should the Caddy break down again. I LOVE the fantasy playoffs for the Bucs: @WASH, DET, SEA.

26. 30RB Fred Jackson (16-170) 144.4 – 6-7rnd - 238-1062rush 2td, 46-371 2td
35RB C.J. Spiller (141) 129.9 – 5-6rnd – proj. 130-600rush 4td, 40-350 2td

BUFFALO – What a messy situation with Marshawn Lynch. Do they trade him or keep him as a 3rd down back, they’re asking for a 4th round pick. Let’s watch this in camp, perhaps a RB goes down with injury and there you have Lynch’s landing spot. Jackson is the starter here, I feel. He’s the better play this year only, then will give over to Spiller as the lead back in the RBBC

27. 32RB Michael Bush (54-82) 153.7 – 8-9rnd,123-589rush 3td, 17-105rec
43RB Darren McFadden (43-59) 117.6 – 104-356rush 1td, 21-245rec, 3fum

OAKLAND – Justin Fargas is gone and someone is going to have to pick up the slack. My money is on Michael Bush, the better rusher between the tackles. 140 – 700 yds translates to 200 – 1000 yds. With a QB that actually shows up to practice ready to work and Fargas out of the picture, I can see 60 more touches for Bush and 40 more targets for DMC. Michael Bennett and Rock Cartwright are the backups and if there are injuries to the lead backs, both have proven to be valuable waiver wire pickups in the past. I don’t love their fantasy playoff schedule, but their overall schedule is interesting.

28. 33RB Justin Forsett (34-124) 167.8 – 7-8rnd, 147-619rush 4td, 41-350rec 1td
51RB Leon Washington (74-44) 88.6 – 10-11rnd, 71-330rush 0td, 15-131rec
63RB Julius Jones (40-113) 72.4 - 17-18rnd, 177-663rush 2td, 35-232rec 2td

SEATTLE – LenDale White was let go and we later find out that he’s facing a 4 game suspension for marijuana use. He’s out of the picture & looking for a job (Bengals?). Justin Forsett was the best RB in Seattle last year, 5.4 Yards Per Carry led the team. 20 of his 114 carries came before his breakout performance in week 10. The numbers say he should be the starter, but concerns about his size (5’8” 194 lbs.) loom as Marshawn Lynch trade rumors persist – stay tuned. Justin is missing mini-camp because of his wedding – congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Forsett. Julius Jones is being given every opportunity to shine with the new Pete Carroll regime. There is “open competition” at every position is the motto in Seattle, another one is “the best players will play”. So far, the coaching staff likes what they see out of Jones. Leon Washington was looking pretty good last season through the first six games – 71 carries for 330 yds – but then broke his right leg in the Oakland game. He continues to rehab and there have been conflicting reports. 2 weeks ago, he was said to start the season on the PUP list, now there’s hope that he’ll be ready for training camp – they also said that they would take it slow with him. If you project last year’s stats out to 16 games, Leon gains 880 yards – I don’t see it working out like that. There’s also talk that FB Quinton Ganther (DUI - check on his status) becoming the goal line back. That would limit the value of all the other backs on the roster. This situation has committee written all over it. Unless Lynch gets to Seattle, I see Forsett earning the #1 RB in camp, Jones as #2, Washington as the third down back (and if Leon's completely healthy, Jones could be cut).

29. 36RB Clinton Portis (54-64) 143.6 – 7-9rnd – 124-494rush 1td, 9-57rec 1td
50RB Larry Johnson (55-62) 80 – 12-13rnd - 178-562rush 0td, 15-80rec 0td

WASHINGTON – Shanahan’s back and this can be a nightmare for fantasy owners, trying to figure out what Mike’s going to do about his RBs for the season, week-to-week, quarter to quarter, or even series to series. Clinton Portis was drafted by Denver when Shanahan was coach and did well there, but then after a pair of 1500+ seasons, Portis was shipped to Washington. Portis is listed as the #1 RB, but with Larry Johnson who looked decent in his games with Cincinnati last year and will compete for the lead back spot alongside Willie Parker and Ryan Torain. I like their playoff schedule: TB, @DAL, @JAX. This has a committee approach feel to it. I’ll be staying away or picking up one of these players late in my draft looking for value.

30. 37RB Jerome Harrison (14-146) 146.1 – 5-6rnd – 194-862rush 5td, 34-220rec 2td
43RB Montario Hardesty (110) 112 - 8-9rnd – proj. 170-717rush 5td, 14-100rec

CLEVELAND – Jamal Lewis is gone, Jerome Harrison spent most of the season on the bench behind him and then exploded for the best three game stretch ever by a fantasy RB. He’s earned the right to compete (again) for the starting job, wants a new contract, and should be a good receiver out of the backfield as the Browns play from behind a lot. The Browns drafted Montario Hardesty out of Tennessee (pro style offense) and he’s been getting the chance to impress in OTAs and has picked up things nicely. Both of these backs should be RB3s, but Harrison will cost you a higher pick than Hardesty. If one of them gets dinged up, there are others waiting in the wings: Peyton Hillis, Chris Jennings and James Davis. Hillis will stick with the team, Jennings and Davis may be in a battle for a roster spot – Davis impressed last preseason only to be injured – **sleeper alert**.

31. 41RB Laurence Maroney (31-130) 131.1 – 194-757rush 9td, 14-99rec – 4FUM
61RB Kevin Faulk (55-86) 88 – 83-376rush 2td, 36-323rec 1td

NEW ENGLAND – Laurence Maroney was good draft value last year. He was drafted 14th round or later and finished the season in between Beanie Wells and Ronnie Brown. That being said, he's never had 200 carries, 850 rushing yards, double digit touchdowns, or finished higher than #25 fantasy RB in a season. He’s also had a penchant for fumbling at the goal line and often finds a way to get in the coach’s doghouse. Fred Taylor and Sammy Morris (both are in a contract year) are both interesting veteran backups to take a chance on late in your drafts, but neither seems to stay healthy – watch them in camp to see how they perform. The guy for the future in terms of a dynasty prospect is **BenJarvis Green-Ellis**, however there are rumblings about him being on the bubble with his roster space being needed for younger talent – he’s in a contract year & has been on the practice squad before. My bet is that one of the veterans may be on the move. Kevin Faulk is a guy to take the round before you get your kicker in larger roster-sized PPR leagues, as a bye week fill-in, but usually he can be found on the waiver wire during the season.

32. 46RB Ben Tate (31-99) 97.5 – 4-5rnd, proj. 130-519rush 4td, 22-169rec 1td
49RB Steve Slaton (53-116) 92.2 – 8-9rnd, 131-437rush 3td, 44-417rec 4td - 6fum
48RB Arian Foster (66-50) 86.3 – 16-17rnd, 54-257rush 3td, 8-93rec

HOUSTON - There is a lot of speculation about what’s going to happen in Houston this year. Steve Slaton could make a comeback, Ben Tate could take over as a rookie lead back, Arian Foster could parlay his super strong finish as starter last season into a featured role, or we’re going to have a Denver Broncos ala Shanahan committee approach. It’s probably the latter. Slaton had surgery to fuse together bones in his neck and spine. His status, availability, and effectiveness as training camp approaches remain a bit of a question mark. Ben Tate started OTAs strong, but then strained his hamstring. Foster was impressing while running with the first team in OTAs. This is an open competition at this point, folks. And incidentally, the fantasy playoff schedule doesn’t do this RB group any favors: (BAL, @TEN, @DEN).