Superflex TE Rankings Week 1

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The NFL season is upon us, and it’s time to get to ranking the position I neglect the most, tight ends. Why do I neglect this position? Essentially because it’s top heavy, which causes the top 3 (possibly 4) players who actually make a difference to have unreasonably high ADPs, and the rest just seem to bunch together.

Anyway, here are my superflex TE rankings for week 1.

Tight Ends

RankNameOpponent
1Travis KelceBrowns
2Darren WallerRavens
3George KittleLions
4Kyle PittsEagles
5TJ Hockenson49ers
6Tyler HigbeeBears
7Mark AndrewsRaiders
8Mike GesickiPatriots
9Logan ThomasChargers
10Jonnu SmithDolphins
11Robert TonyanSaints
12Noah FantGiants
13Cole KmetRams
14Blake JarwinBuccaneers
15Rob GronkowskiCowboys
16Hunter HenryDolphins
17Chris HerndonBengals
18Adam TrautmanPackers
19Dallas GoedertFalcons
20Zach ErtzFalcons
21Jared CookWFT
22Austin HooperChiefs
23Pat FreiermuthBills
24Dawson KnoxSteelers

I don’t know that there is much to say about the top three here. It would take some sort of cataclysmic event to not rank Travis Kelce number 1 against anyone, and Darren Waller and George Kittle will follow him immediately against almost any opponents. I could see Kittle leaned on more in the run game as I think San Francisco will stick to the ground in an easy win.

It gets more interesting at the 4-12 spots. I do think Kyle Pitts is going to beat expectations all year. Everyone said he was being drafted at his ceiling while going in rounds 4-5, while not blinking at Kelce and Waller going in the first and Kittle in the 2nd and 3rd. Pitts can be as good as Waller and Kittle this year, and I think it starts in a big way this Sunday. I like TJ Hockenson’s role as the only game in town against the 49ers and possibly all year. I expect the Niners pass rush to be back up to snuff and thus the safety valve being all important for Goff. I like Tyler Higbee for the same reason against the Bears. Their front four will get to Stafford plenty. Mark Andrews is the only real trusted receiver that Lamar Jackson has, and I think a big game against the Raiders is not out of the question, but I’m seeing something more along the lines of 65 yards and a touch.

Gesicki, Logan Thomas, Jonnu Smith, and Robert Tonyan should all be reliable back-end starters in a 12-team league. Not thrilling but probably safe 60+ yardage floors and a decent shot at a touchdown.

Noah Fant has been dealing with an injury but if healthy he should be a good option against a bad Giants defense. I think Cole Kmet is a good play this week as Dalton’s safety valve against the Rams pass rush, but without any real past production he’s risky. The only other guy I wold feel comfortable starting in a 12-team league in the bottom 24 is Adam Trautman. He’s healthy for week 1 and if Jaire Alexander effectively takes away Marquez Callaway from Winston, I expect Trautman to see at least 8 targets, possibly as high as 12.

Superflex WR Rankings Week 1

Superflex QB Rankings | Superflex RB Rankings | Superflex TE Rankings

Wide receiver rankings are always the hardest given the volatility of the position and the sheer number of fantasy contributors. Here are my Superflex wide receiver rankings for NFL week 1.

Wide Receivers

RankNameOpponent
1Davante AdamsSaints
2Justin JeffersonBengals
3Tyreek HillBrowns
4Calvin RidleyEagles
5DeAndre HopkinsTitans
6Stefon DiggsSteelers
7DK MetcalfColts
8AJ BrownCardinals
9CeeDee LambBuccaneers
10Mike EvansCowboys
11Terry McLaurinChargers
12Robert WoodsBears
13Tee HigginsVikings
14Tyler LocketColts
15Chris GodwinCowboys
16Adam ThielenBengals
17Dionte JohnsonBills
18Keenan AllenWFT
19Jerry JeudyGiants
20Julio JonesCardinals
21Antonio BrownCowboys
22Brandon AiyukLions
23DJ MooreJets
24Corey DavisPanthers
25Cooper KuppBears
26Allen RobinsonRams
27Amari CooperBuccaneers
28Chase ClaypoolBills
29Odell Beckham Jr.Chiefs
30Marquez CallawayPackers
31Devonta SmithFalcons
32Laviska Shenault Jr.Texans
33Brandin CooksJaguars
34Tyler BoydVikings
35Jakobi MeyersDolphins
36Jaylen WaddlePatriots
37Mike WilliamsWFT
38Robby AndersonJets
39Sammy WatkinsRaiders
40Henry Ruggs IIIRavens
41Micheal PittmanSeahawks
42JuJu Smith-SchusterBills
43Jarvis LandryChiefs
44DJ CharkTexans
45Elijah MoorePanthers

I didn’t bother looking up who the Saints have at corner because there isn’t one in the league that can cover Davante Adams. Justin Jefferson gets a magnificent matchup against the Bengals D (start all players vs Bengals until further notice), and should go off. Tyreek Hill gets Denzel Ward in coverage which is the only reason he isn’t number 2. Philly is middle of the road which should allow Ridley to tee off, and Hopkins gets a plus matchup vs the Titans. Diggs is just too good to be any lower.

The only reason I have A.J. Brown 1 spot below D.K. Metcalf is because he is riding the bike Wednesday at practice, which is a little worrisome after an offseason of missing practices and recovery. If you can name a cornerback on the Cardinals roster I’m impressed – cue a big game for Metcalf and Tyler Locket. While I expect the Bucs defense to give the Cowboys fits, I also expect Dallas to have to pass a ton to keep up, thus CeeDee Lamb checks in at WR9 for the week. I like all the Bucs receivers this week against the most likely still-putrid Cowboys defense, but I like Mike Evans the best among the three at WR10. Chris Godwin checks in at WR15 and Antonio “Whole Lotta Money” Brown at WR21.

Terry McLaurin, Robert Woods, Tee Higgins, and Tyler Lockett are all good plays this week. The Chargers are not impressive against the pass, and neither are the Bears or the Colts. Higgins should benefit from the offense playing catchup after the Bengals D gets rolled on by Cook, Jefferson, and of course Adam Thielen. I’m thinking Washington’s pressure means more targets for Ekeler than Keenan Allen, but Allen’s crisp route running should mean he gets open for lots of underneath routes. Safety valve #2.

I don’t like Aiyuk for a huge day just because I think the 49ers won’t need to pass too much to win the game, and I don’t think Allen Robinson will be able to do much with Andy Dalton running for his life. Expect a lot of timing throws on short routes, unless Nagy is actually trying to get Dalton injured so he can scrap his Alex Smith-Mahomes plan. Cooper should probably be higher, but I’m worried about rust for him and Dak after they both missed a lot of camp and the preseason.

I like Odell Beckham to outperform ADP against the Chiefs as the Browns will have to throw some when the Chiefs offense inevitably pulls ahead. I’m worried about Marquez Callaway given that he will likely be shadowed by Green Bay’s #1-rated corner Jaire Alexander. But the Saints will need him to stay in the game. I like Devonta Smith against Atlanta, but need to see improvement from his QB before ranking him much higher. I think he will be better in real life than fantasy this week, and possibly going forward.

One guy I would not be surprised to see massively outperform expectations is Jaylen Waddle as Gilmore is on PUP, but for a rookie with a completely unproven QB, I’m keeping him where he is for this week. I do think Xavien Howard can keep Jakobi Meyers under wrap, but I don’t know if he’s going to be his full-time assignment. I like Robby Anderson, Henry Ruggs III, and Elijah Moore as flex dart throws to do big things, or next to nothing.

Superflex RB Rankings Week 1

Superflex QB rankings | Superflex WR Rankings | Superflex TE Rankings

All the hard work is either about to pay off or blow up in our faces. Draft position officially stops mattering in 24 hours, so we are taking a hard look at matchups and potential usage for week 1. Here are my superflex RB rankings.

UPDATED: Removed Gus Edwards following injury Thursday.

Running Backs

RankNameOpponent
1Dalvin CookBengals
2Derrick HenryCardinals
3Christian McCaffreyJets
4Nick ChubbChiefs
5Austin EkelerWashington
6Alvin KamaraPackers
7James RobinsonTexans
8Ezekial ElliotBuccaneers
9Najee HarrisBills
10Antonio GibsonChargers
11Jonathan TaylorSeahawks
12Joe MixonVikings
13Aaron JonesBuccaneers
14Clyde Edwards HelaireBrowns
15Darrell HendersonBears
16Myles GaskinPatriots
17Raheem MostertLions
18Mike DavisEagles
19Chris CarsonColts
20Josh JacobsRavens
21Kareem HuntChiefs
22Damien HarrisDolphins
23Chase EdmondsTitans
24Ty’Son WilliamsRaiders
25Trey SermonLions
26Ronald Jones IICowboys
27Miles SandersFalcons
28Zack MossSteelers
29DeAndre Swift49ers
30Melvin GordonGiants
31Saquon BarkleyBroncos
32David MontgomeryRams
33Ty JohnsonPanthers
34Phillip LindsayJaguars
35Devin SingletarySteelers
36James WhiteDolphins
37Giovanni BernardCowboys
38Tony Jones Jr.Packers
39Kenyan DrakeRavens
40Boston ScottFalcons
41Mark Ingram Jaguars
42Nyhiem HinesSeahawks
43Devontae BookerBroncos
44Javonte WilliamsGiants
45Jamaal Williams49ers

Dalvin Cook going against the Bengals defense is just unfair to anyone who has to play against him week 1. He is going to absolutely feast on the Bengals 29th ranked 2020 run defense. Derrick Henry has a similarly juicy matchup against an Arizona squad that probably isn’t as good as it was last year when it finished 21st against the run. Christian McCaffrey gets dinged just a bit as the Jets have been clogging the middle for years, and I doubt having Robert Saleh as head coach has made them worse in that department. I’m really feeling Nick Chubb this week against the Chiefs as they finished 19th against the run last year and I see him being the key to keeping Mahomes off the field for Cleveland.

Surprisingly, WFT gave up a lot of yards on the ground last year, and I see Austin Ekeler as being a much needed safety valve for a rusty Herbert as he looks to escape the ferocious pass rush of Washington. I see a lot of dump offs and lots of receiving yards for Ekeler in this one. Right on his heels will be Alvin Kamara who should see plenty of usage regardless of whether the Packers jump out to a big lead or not. Hint, they will.

James Robinson has the Jacksonville backfield all to himself and will eat the Texans’ last placed run defense alive. I really don’t like Zeke this week, as Dak will have some rust and Tampa Bay was just brutal against the run last year. I could see a sub-4.0 ypc day with no touchdowns. But he is Zeke so I could also see a much higher range, so I can’t rank him lower than ninth.

10 is high for a rookie back with a suspect o-line, but I believe in Najee Harris and also believe Buffalo has not improved much as a run defense. Both Mixon and Gibson have favorable matchups, while Aaron Jones and Jonathan Taylor do not. I think CEH could start on his comeback campaign early, while I expect Darrell Henderson to see tons of run as the Rams absolutely humiliate the Bears and run out the clock for most of the second half.

I expect Gaskin and Mostert to take advantage of favorable matchups, and Chris Carson and Josh Jacobs to disappoint against much tougher opponents. I probably have Damien Harris too low given news that Stevenson will likely not play, meaning it’s all Harris and James White taking the pressure off rookie QB Mac Jones. If the Chiefs get off to a big lead, Kareem Hunt should benefit, and I have no problem having both Browns running backs ranked in the top 20. Ty’Son Williams is next man up for the Ravens, hopefully he makes it through the game.

Saquon Barkley news just has not been positive at all this week, and I don’t expect much usage at all. I think Montgomery and the entire Bears offense is going to suffer greatly from a declining o-line and subpar QB play.

I like Tony Jones Jr, James White, Gio Bernard, and Boston Scott to all outperform expectations this weekend.

Superflex QB Rankings Week 1

Superflex RB Rankings | Superflex WR Rankings | Superflex TE Rankings

We are just 24 hours away from actual, real football. Below are my rankings for week 1, assuming standard PPR scoring. 6 pt rushing/receiving TDs, 4 pt passing TDs, you know the rest. Here are my Superflex QB Rankings for Week 1.

Quarterbacks

RankNameOpponent
1Aaron RodgersSaints
2Tom BradyCowboys
3Josh AllenSteelers
4Patrick MahomesBrowns
5Lamar JacksonRaiders
6Kyler MurrayTitans
7Russel WilsonColts
8Jameis WinstonPackers
9Dak PrescottBuccaneers
10Matt RyanEagles
11Jalen HurtsFalcons
12Justin HerbertWFT
13Ryan TannehillCardinals
14Joe BurrowVikings
15Kirk CousinsBengals
16Ryan FitzpatrickChargers
17Tua TagovailoaPatriots
18Trevor LawrenceTexans
19Matt StaffordBears
20Ben RoethlisbergerBills
21Mac JonesDolphins
22Sam DarnoldJets
23Carson WentzSeahawks
24Baker MayfieldChiefs
25Zach WilsonPanthers
26Derek CarrRaiders
27Jimmy GarroppoloLions
28Jared Goff49ers
29Teddy BridgewaterGiants
30Daniel JonesBroncos
31Tyrod TaylorJaguars
32Andy DaltonRams

It was hard not to put Tom Brady number 1 against the Cowboys’ defense, but Aaron Rodgers is my bet to finish the week #1 against a similarly suspect Saints D he will be able to pick apart at will. Josh Allen gets the #3 spot over Patrick Mahomes only because Mahomes is facing a very good Browns D and a great rushing attack that should be able to dominate time of possession. Lamar Jackson is facing a middling pass rush from the Raiders that recently inquired if they could trade back for Khalil Mack. Kyler Murray is getting an increasingly solid Titans D and could stumble for a series or two. Russel Wilson is a player whose coaches could keep him out of the kitchen, and I don’t think the Colts offense will give them much reason to air it out.

I do think Jameis Winston is going to answer the call against the Packers and keep the game close. I’m hoping he sticks to playing Bruce Wayne instead of Batman as long as the gamescript allows. Dak is going to have some rust and is going against one of the best defenses in the league.

I like both Ryan and Hurts this week as two players who are facing bad defenses and should both get points. Herbert will struggle some against WFT’s pass rush, and not having played at all in the preseason could lead to a slow start. Tannehill could easily outperform him against Arizona’s suspect corners.

Cousins should have a field day against what appears to be a terrible Bengals defense, and I think Burrow will have some late-game heroics trying to catch up in the second half. I probably have Roethlisberger too low, and I’m penalizing Stafford for an opponent that will struggle to score, leading the Rams to lean on the rushing attack in the second half. I do think Mac Jones is ready. I’m just not inclined to bet against Belichik’s judgment after he made a tough move that he feels is right for the team.

Given that these are Superflex rankings, if you have better options at other skill positions and are being forced to start some of the truly lower tier guys like Taylor, Dalton, Goff, Jones, or Bridgewater, I would consider starting some good flex plays like Callaway, Henderson, or Terrace Marshall over them as I don’t expect good things from their outings. It’s worth rolling the dice with Wilson, Carr, Darnold and Mayfield to see what they can do.

Superflex Draft Strategy: When to Take QB

Last week I did a little VBD analysis on the first pick in Superflex, comparing the relative value of taking Mahomes #1 vs McCaffrey #1. While there is no wrong answer because it all depends on how you develop the rest of your roster, it did seem that with even modest projections for McCaffrey, he was the winner in terms of return.

The bigger question is when to take a QB in general when playing Superflex or 2QB leagues in redraft.

As you can see in the image above, QBs went heavy in the first two rounds, with Brady being taken as the 9th QB at 2.10. This is in a casual $35 best ball league.

However, in a recent 12-team expert league, only 4 QBs went in the first two rounds (image below).

In yet another experts league, this one from FootballGuys staff, and a 14-team Superflex, we see a vastly different draft strategy being employed, with 14 QBs going in the first two rounds.

FBG Expert 14-team SF Draft

I’ve come to the conclusion that trying to decipher what is the right way or wrong way to draft in Superflex is a meaningless question. There is no right way, and if you are in the front half of the draft there is really no way of knowing how the draft will go and what will come back to you in the second.

Drafting for Value vs Avoiding Runs

First let’s take a look at the casual bestball league since most people reading this will not be drafting against industry experts, because really this is about reading tendencies and taking advantage of them. I’ll use the guy who took Brady as an example.

Pairing Brady with Murray is really nice, but is it better than pairing Ridley with Cooper? Had this team taken Ridley, he could have still grabbed Gibson as RB1 and then gotten Matt Ryan on the return in the 4th. So the comparison that’s relevant here is Brady vs Ryan and Ridley vs Jeudy as last starter vs last starter.

QBSeason Point ProjectionPPGWeekly Differential
Tom Brady34121.3+4.2
Matt Ryan27417.1-4.2
As before, using standard PPR and a 16-game season for consistency with last year

Now let’s take a look at the WR comps between Ridley and Jeudy.

WRSeason Point ProjectionPPGWeekly Differential
Calvin Ridley32420.3+6.5
Jerry Jeudy22113.8-6.5

This is assuming that Brady has a 1% improvement over last year (could be too low) and that Ryan declines by 3%. I’m assuming Ridley improves by 15% given the departure of Julio funneling more TD targets his way (could be wrong, Pitts is there) and giving Jeudy a 40% improvement over his rookie season and getting Bridgewater throwing more accurate passes underneath.

The point here is not to dissect the projections but to see if there is a massive difference in QB value and WR value given two starting QB spots among 32-34 starters, and 3-4 WR spots given 66 starters (give or take).

Unless this team believes that Brady will take yet another leap this year, or that Ridley will not benefit substantially from being the #1, VBD says that taking Ridley would make for a better team, and it just so happens there would have been no negative downstream RB impact assuming this team would have still grabbed Edwards when they did (11th round, no reason to think not).

The run here was strong, but not overwhelming, as it did not constitute half of the first two rounds as it did in the FBG expert draft.

Superflex QB Runs and How to Respond

We’ll take a look at the same spot, 1.3 in the FootballGuys 14-team Superflex Draft. First off, I have tremendous respect for this site and it’s writers. so take that bias for what it’s worth.

Dan Hindery did exactly what I would recommend in taking McCaffrey, even in a 14-team format. With only 1 QB taken, there was no real way to know that 10 QBs would come off the board before his next pick. But according to this draft, he did the right thing with his next pick in taking Burrow, because another 3 QBs came off the board before he picked again. And only 1 running back. But let’s look at the numbers.

QBSeason Point ProjectionPPGWeekly Differential
Joe Burrow31319.6+3.1
Tua Tagovailoa26416.5-3.1
As before, using standard PPR and a 16-game season for consistency with last year

Now let’s look at Najee vs Mixon.

RBSeason Point ProjectionPPGWeekly Differential
Najee Harris25916.2+0
Joe Mixon25916.2-0
As before, using standard PPR and a 16-game season for consistency with last year

Hindery did exactly what you should do when faced with a massive run at the QB position in a Superflex: respond. The fact that he likely had both Mixon and Harris ranked higher than Burrow on his cheatsheet no longer mattered. There were 11 QBs taken and a cliff was coming, some would say it had already passed with Herbert going at 2.10.

WR and RB value was getting pushed way downhill with Tier 1 WRs available in rounds 3 and 4, and Tier 2 guys like Harris, Barkley, and Chubb going in round 3.

So What’s the Strategy

In sales, you must always enter into negotiations with a BATNA (Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement). You should approach your Superflex drafts with a similar mindset – you have to know what QBs you think will outperform but have enough risk baked in that they will fall to at least round 3 or 4 if you decide to spend on higher tiers at other positions early on.

If you are drafting in the first half, it is crucial to identify at least two guys that you truly believe will outperform ADP and be prepared to take them before ADP if you pass on QB in the first few rounds. The safest bet for me is to grab Mahomes, Allen or Murray and then pass on QB until about round 4 and shoot for high upside guys like Winston, Lance, Lawrence, Mac Jones, Fields, and Fitz.

If you choose to stack value at RB and WR in the first three (for instance Dan could have taken McCaffrey, Chubb (personal preference), and Ridley, he could have gone Lawrence, Fields (again, personal preference), and Wilson in rounds 4-6 and still been more than ok. Given the value he got in rounds 1-3, I think this tactic would work well.

If you are drafting in the back half, I absolutely advocate stud RB-WR (or TE if that’s your thing) and then taking best available QB. I love what Wilde did here with Hill and Prescott, and I did about the same in my bestball with Adams and Prescott. I think he waited just long enough on QB2, and got an upside guy in Fitz and a safe guy in Teddy.

The Main Point

There is no wrong strategy, you have to respond to the draft. But you can’t stick to your pre-draft strategy in the face of a massive run or you will take guys a round earlier than you could have when QBs are flying off the board and you are losing value at one of if not the most important position in Superflex.

Adapt. React. Win.

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