Superflex QB Deep Dive Week 4

I decided to stop doing weekly rankings. The focus of this site is helping fantasy managers navigate superflex and 2QB leagues and while rankings are fun, I don’t feel like doing them adds value to the fantasy community. Sites like fantasypros.com already aggregate weekly rankings from tons of experts, and if you are a serious fan I would definitely recommend paying for a season-long subscription to footballguys.com, the best dedicated football fantasy site on the planet.

In place of rankings every week I will be taking a deep dive into QB performance, with a focus on the QBs that have questions. I won’t spend too much time on guys like Kyler Murray, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson, and other obvious every-week starts unless their play deviates to the point that there are legitimate questions about the value they provider to your fantasy team.

Instead this column will focus on QBs with questions, and will serve as a combined sit-start/buy-low-sell-high for those QBs. I’ll do a separate column on non-QB skill players starts for the week.

QB Starts with Few to No Questions

These are in order, but if you are playing superflex you’re starting all these guys unless you play in a 4-team league.

Josh Allen vs Texans: Bad defense, bad team, great QB on the ascension. Don’t expect something equal to last week as they will lean on run in 4th quarter.

Kyler Murray vs Rams: Needs to rely less on talent and more on game plan, but great play.

Tom Brady vs Patriots: What more can be said. Expect Tom’s best game. New England has faced Tua, Zach Wilson, and Jameis, so any defensive stats don’t apply.

Lamar Jackson vs Broncos: Bateman back, will be eased in but Lamar needs another target. Will get a lot done with his legs.

Patrick Mahomes vs Philly: Didn’t stop Dak, won’t stop Patrick.

Rodgers vs Steelers: If Watt plays expect more sacks and dump offs, still QB1.

Stafford vs Cardinals: Stafford is a top-five QB over Rodgers rest of season.

Justin Herbert vs Raiders: No reason to think about this going against a middling pass defense.

Derek Carr vs Chargers: Yardage will come down this game against 7th-ranked pass D but no reason to sit.

Russel Wilson vs 49ers: Low volume passing efficiency – 28th in attempts, 9th in yards.

Dak Prescott vs Panthers: Panthers could spell trouble in pass rush and Chargers shut him down week 2. Even with questions he is starting unless you have two of the above.

Jalen Hurts vs Chiefs: He showed he can overcome adversity and deliver a good fantasy day. No reason to sit him against the Chiefs.

Kirk Cousins vs Browns: Ride the lightning. The TDs are going to come down, likely this week facing Myles Garrett, but no reason to sit him.

QBs with Major Questions

These are not in any particular order, just looking into issues facing QBs and trying to find answers.

Joe Burrow vs Jaguars

The Bengals currently have the second-fewest pass attempts per game in the league through three weeks, behind only the New Orleans Saints. This is extremely troubling for Burrow’s prospects as this is one game away from being a solid trend in the league.

This compares with the Bengals having the 2nd-most pass attempts per game last year with Burrow behind center. The Bengals are currently 2-1. That is the same number of wins they had last year in the ten games where Burrow was averaging 42 attempts per game.

Last week against the Steelers he had a season-low 18 pass attempts and was incredibly efficient with those passes even though he did throw a pick (14-18, 78%, 3-1, 172).

Week 3

Most likely, unless the Jaguars turn into a different team, they will not provide Zac Taylor any reason to turn away from a formula that is working better than last year. We often just see fantasy potential and forget that the only thing that the players and coaches care about is the W/L column. I don’t expect more than 25 pass attempts vs the Jags.

The worst part about this is that Burrow has improved in every possible measurement: he’s gone from 26th to 2nd against the blitz according to PFF. Except for his head-scratching 3-int game against the Bears (in three pass attempts) his grades are above 120. Completed air yards are up as well. He’s showing incredible chemistry with Jamaar Chase.

Burrow is not a solid start this week according to the trend. Jacksonville is a middling rush defense and leaning on Mixon once again should work. If you are looking to offload Burrow, wait until after his game next week against the Packers where the Bengals will have to keep up with the Packers offense.

Trevor Lawrence vs Bengals

When you draft a rookie QB, you expect turnovers. Most leagues only penalize interceptions to the tune of -1 or -2 points. They are absorbable if your QB is getting you massive yardage and touchdowns. See Jameis Winston 2019.

Trouble is, for the past two games, Lawrence’s yardage and TD output have taken a massive hit, making him a fantasy dud to the point you would be better in most leagues starting a decent WR3, RB3, or TE2 over him in your superflex spot. After hitting for 332-3-3 in week 1 he’s gone 118-1-2 and 219-1-2.

Furthermore, he’s on an 0-3 team about to be 0-4. Meyer has absolutely no business coaching in the NFL. But there are reasons for hope. Just probably not this week.

The attempts, deep throws, and deep completion rate are all there, meaning after this game Trevor could be a good buy low. Cincinnati is 8th against the the run and 14th against the pass, mostly because they gave up 351 to Cousins week 1 in an overtime game and basically allowed Ben to dink and dunk his way to 318 in a game the controlled all the way. Trevor is a sit this week if you have decent options.

Taylor Heinicke vs Falcons

Heinicke was flat out bad against the Bills. A completion rate below 60% and 212-2-2 in a game that was never close. No one should have expected that he would duplicate his Thursday night effort against the Giants, but even to realistic owners this was a poor passing effort. He saved his day with a rushing TD leading to a decent QB9 finish.

Week 3

Without the rushing TD he would have finished around QB20 in a down week for QB scoring. The Falcons managed to limit Daniel Jones’s rushing so be aware of that, but I think he makes for a good start against a limited Falcons defense.

Matt Ryan vs Redskins

If you want an in-depth look at what’s going on with Ryan just check out my article on the ATL passing game. For this game I expect the Washington pass rush to have a pride game and fluster Ryan, causing a lot of sacks and dump off passes. Pitts should have a decent game if Smith ever decides to feature his first-round investment. 10 targets should be a minimum. Ryan is a potential sit for skill players.

Sam Darnold vs Cowboys

Just because the Cowboys are 31st against the pass this year doesn’t mean Darnold is automatically in for a big game. Dallas is second in the league with 2 interceptions per game, and tied for 6th in fumbles recovered per game. The 3-0 Panthers have yet to face a dominant defense (the Saints were without multiple defenders in their week 2 game) so it’s fair to say Darnold hasn’t really been tested yet.

Week 3
Week 2

Darnold is getting a lot of his points with his legs, a trend I expect to disappear when CMC gets back. It just doesn’t feel sustainable. He’s a sell high candidate for someone who might be getting worried about Hurts. Might be best to do it before this weekend as Dallas largely held Hurts in check before he got himself into a rhythm with his legs. Darnold can’t do that.

Daniel Jones vs New Orleans

Jones has the third most rushing yards by a QB behind only Jackson and Hurts. We all talk about how a safe rushing floor is what we want in fantasy. Why is Jones only 34% rostered when he has the most passing yards out of the 3 and only 1 fewer passing TD than Lamar?

Well, probably because anyone playing in a superflex or 2qb league has been burned by Jones at least once in the past three years. And he’s a turnover machine right? Not so far. 1 lost fumble and zero interceptions through three weeks. Well he’s going in the wrong direction right? Wrong again: completion percentage is improving, interception % is going down, yards/completion are up, air yards per completion are up. And looking back to that amazing chart from JJ above, who has the 4th highest completion percentage on deep passes, after Herbert, Murray, and Brady? Daniel Jones.

So what the hell? He played Denver in week 1. Granted Denver hasn’t played anyone, but every QB who has played Denver has sucked. He had a 68-yard TD called back on a penalty in week 2 against Washington, had a deep TD bounce off Slayton’s hands, and even so he finished as QB4 in fantasy. Last week Atlanta limited his rushing, and he lost his top two receivers in game.

Passing Week 2
Rushing Week 2

Now, is New Orleans at full strength the right defense for a breakout game after a disappointing showing against the Falcons? No. But if you are sitting on Ben Roethlisberger, Zach Wilson, or even Justin Fields and he’s sitting there on the wire, what exactly do you need to see?

Jimmy Garoppolo vs Seahawks

The question here just continues to be when. When does Jimmy get the hook? He almost led his team to a win over the Niners and a perfect 3-0 record. He’s playing well enough to where no one should really consider benching him, not even for a potential rookie phenom.

But his chart shows one thing pretty clearly: he’s not going to lose the game for his team, but he limits their offense. No completions over 15 yards. Two attempts over 20, one incomplete, one intercepted. Plus a fumble lost on a backwards pass he never should have made.

Week 3

Jimmy has not played badly enough to lose the job. And he should perform well against a Seahawks that is allowing a 71% completion rate and has three sacks this year. So the answer to when Jimmy loses his job to Lance is not this week. He’s a decent QB2 start.

Mac Jones vs Patriots

This is the game I have had circled on the calendar for Mac’s breakout game all year. While New England has the 10th highest percentage of passing plays, they are 26th in yards per pass attempt. Whether McDaniels is calling a conservative game plan, or Mac is going away from deep reads, I don’t think either will be an option this week.

Week 3

From this chart, it doesn’t look like Mac is afraid to throw it deep, but he isn’t connecting for whatever reason. I count 7 total attempts beyond the 30. If he connects on just one of those he goes for over 300 in this game. Also, I just watched each of his interceptions. The first one was absolutely his fault. The second should have been a catch by Jonnu Smith. The third came at the end of the game when the outcome wasn’t in doubt and they were just tossing it into the end zone. So this line could have easily looked like 300-1-2 instead.

The Bucs are first in the NFL in sacks and I think they absolutely pin their ears back and go after Jones. His time in the pocket is 2.4 secs, just .1 second longer than Brady, and he’s 19th in the NFL in times being sacked at 6.

In other words, I still think this could be his coming out party. The Pats finally took the training wheels off against the Saints and while the results weren’t great, they were not disastrous either. I’d fire up Mac as a QB2 with confidence this week and grab him off the WW for lesser options if available.

Ben Roethlisberger vs Packers

Matt LeFleur doesn’t strike me as stupid, which means he is seeing the same things on film the rest of the fantasy community is seeing: Ben is completely cooked and shouldn’t finish the season. In case you need video evidence there is plenty on twitter:

Despite the obvious decline, Ben is third in the league in pass attempts and delivered a solid fantasy day on Sunday. I expect LaFleur to put everyone up at the line and try and take away the short and intermediate passes and dare Ben to throw deep. And I expect the Steelers offense to totally unravel when he does. If you can turn Ben into an asset with potential based on his week 3 numbers do so immediately. The wheels are about to fall off the bus.

Teddy Bridgewater vs Ravens

The Broncos have absolutely feasted on three of the worst teams in the NFL. Bridge didn’t have to do much against the Jets to win, which makes him a potential buy from an owner not paying that much attention. 235-0 is a terrible fantasy day so now would be the time to offer. You can remind them that Teddy has always been average and you don’t have to share that his air yards per completed pass and attempt are way up this year.

I expect a much more inspired performance against the Ravens and attempts back in the mid-thirties which could push him back above 300. His completion percentage has been mid-70s and he has three games with ratings north of 100. Denver is 22nd in pass attempts after tilts against inferior teams. Their schedule gets considerably tougher from here.

Baltimore remains a bottom-three pass defense so he’s a solid start this week and likely this is the last opportunity to buy low.

Ryan Tannehill vs Jets

Tannehill had a very Burrow-eqsue game last week, throwing for 3 touchdowns on only 197 yards and also coughing up 2 picks. He did have a great rushing day, rushing 5-56. AJ Brown is out for this game and Julio could be as well, but thus far Tannehill has been able to generate yards without much help from Brown. Losing both starting wide receivers would be bad for him, Derrick Henry, and the entire offense. I’m not liking his week 3 chart or his prospects against a Jets team that seems completely lost.

Week 3

It would be hard to trade Tannehill to anyone who pays attention to injury reports but I wouldn’t be shy in throwing out offers on name recognition for guys like Daniel Jones and Bridgewater. Both Julio and Brown have extensive injury histories and both are already hurt, and the cupboard is bare after them at receiver. Plus all Tannehill’s measurables are down from last year: completion %, TD %, adjusted yards per attempt, and QB rating.

Baker Mayfield vs Vikings

Baker isn’t so much a question as he is a tease. This team is just not built around the pass and never has been. If he gets you yards he doesn’t get you a touchdown. If he gets a TD he doesn’t get yards. Minnesota isn’t particularly good at anything defensively. So don’t expect anything more than a low-end QB2 performance against them as the Browns once again lean on their league-best rushing attack.

Low-volume, low touchdowns, low ability. Not what you want for fantasy.

Jameis Winston vs Giants:

Speaking of teases, Sean Payton is keeping the Saints to a league-low 21.3 passing attempts per game. That’s 4 fewer than Cincinnati. Given Jameis’s horrible showing against the Panthers and his TD prayer last week, I think this is a case of trust. We know Payton likes to have a dynamic passing offense. Looks like he doesn’t think he has the personnel for it.

I will eat some crow here. I hyped Winston all offseason. The pieces all appeared to be there for a monster season that you could get for a minimal 10th round investment, even in 2QB and Superflex leagues. This is what happens when you try and outsmart the system – you make yourself believe things that could be there, but certainly aren’t, at least not yet. And sometimes those things never materialize.

Week 3

Even on few attempts, Winston has proved wildly inaccurate the past two weeks. His longer TD to Callaway should have been an interception, but as Winston told Payton, God intervened. I can’t imagine this response inspired more trust from Payton.

With Burrow, you can start him knowing that even on low volume you get quality. Winston is a horrible combo of low-quantity and low-quality. Just watch the practice reports for Taysom Hill appearances with the first team at this point. I would sit Winston for good options at other positions like Zack Moss.

Abandon All Hope Ye Who Start These Guys

The order here is meaningless as starting these guys is fantasy suicide.

Carson Wentz vs Dolphins: Even with two good ankles he’s not good. With two bad ankles I’d rather start almost anyone.

Jacoby Brissett vs Colts: Just not a good QB.

Zach Wilson vs Titans: Capable of the occasional good throw but clearly not NFL ready. They really should have traded for Foles…not too late.

Davis Mills vs Buffalo: Looked better than expected last week but not an NFL QB yet.

Jared Goff vs Bears: He will have decent weeks. This week won’t be one of them.

Dalton/Fields vs Lions: Dalton returned to a limited practice Wednesday and I believe Nagy when he says Dalton is his starter when healthy. I think Fields heads back to the bench and Dalton barely beats the Lions and unfortunately saves Nagy’s job.

Superflex QB2 Sunday Sit/Start Advice

Sit/Start columns telling you to start Derek Henry and sit Tevin Coleman aren’t much use. I’ll try to avoid the obvious and focus on quarterbacks where most owners are on the fence whether to start them or not. Obvious is a subjective term, but feel free to @ me on twitter if you disagree.

Quarterback Starts

Matt Ryan

The Giants just made Taylor Heinicke look like an all-star, allowing a 330+ yard game to him with a single interception, and a 100+ yard game to his number one receiver Terry Mclaulin. Ryan is obviously on the back end of his career, but I am feeling a breakout game for him, Ridley, and Pitts. The loss of Gage shouldn’t hurt much, and Patterson has emerged as a viable weapon in the pass game. The Giants are ranked 25th against the pass, and the Falcons are 18th, meaning this should be a high scoring game.

Joe Burrow

The loss of Higgins hurts, but Pittsburgh’s pass defense is atrocious and TJ Watt has already been declared out. Burrow was openly calling for more deep shots to his receivers this week, and less pressure in the pocket should give him time to do it. Boyd should have a big game and I think we could see more passing to Mixon and Samaje Perine as well. Plus through two weeks Cincinnati is ranked 26th in pass attempts. Burrow had 97 pass attempts in his first two games as a rookie. He has 57 through the first two games of 2021. Expect some regression to the mean.

Trevor Lawrence

Regardless of how bad Urban Meyer is as a coach, and I don’t even know if there are ways to quantify that, Trevor is a good quarterback. He will figure this out, even if he has to do it on his own. I like his chances to rack up a lot of garbage time points as the Cardinals will shred the Jaguars and probably jump to a 21-0 lead in the first quarter.

Daniel Jones

If you grabbed Jones off the WW this week or have had him on your bench, start him today against the Falcons. There will be little to no defense in this one on either side of the ball, and even if the Falcons scheme to take away his running ability, they will end up leaving someone open. I think 280 passing and 50 rushing with a score of each.

Justin Fields

Fields’ rushing ability will give him a safe enough floor to be a solid QB2 start this week. Cleveland is far from a plus matchup, but they did allow 36 yards and a touchdown to Mahomes week 1 and gave up a TD to Taylor in week 2. I think Fields could easily rush for 60+ yards and a score, plus get about 225 yards passing and a TD. Should be good for a QB 10-16 finish making him a solid QB2 start.

Jared Goff

This is a hold-your-nose start, but Baltimore is currently ranked dead last against the pass in the league through two weeks. Granted, they played the Chiefs last week, and the Raiders are looking better than originally advertised at the beginning of the season, but given the amount of QB2s that are looking like poor starts, he could be a better play than most think.

Quarterback Sits

Teddy Bridgewater

The Jets are 10th against the pass, and they have a rookie who can not handle pressure. This will be a Gordon and Javonte Williams show in a low-scoring affair. The Broncos front four and secondary are going to give Zach Wilson fits. Teddy won’t need to do much to win and I expect his streak of great games to end just due to gamescipt.

Jameis Winston

BIll Belichik takes whatever works for you and takes it away. Right now, very little is working for the Saints. Their passing game stayed stuck in neutral against the Panthers, and Winston frankly looked lost against the Panthers pass rush which didn’t seem too much for Texans rookie Davis Mills. Of course, the refs let the Texans get away with holding on most if not all of Mills’ dropbacks. Still, I expect Belichik to show Jameis multiple pass-rush looks and focus on taking away Alvin Kamara. Winston was not recognizing the rush and checking into run plays when he needed to. His receivers were not getting open causing him to hold on to the ball too long and resort to desperation throws. If Winston gets right, it won’t be against Belichik this week. Whether he gets another chance is an open question.

Taylor Heinicke

Don’t chase the points. Even with a small sample size, the Bills are the 2nd best passing offense in the league. I think it will be really hard for Heinicke to pull off another masterful performance today, and garbage time will likely lead to more interceptions than touchdowns. I am rooting for him, but not betting on him.

Jimmy Garroppolo

It feels like Green Bay’s offense sucks, but they’re actually ranked 7th against the pass this year. Jimmy’s weapons are in disarray: he’s got a rookie in Sermon and likely Kerryon Johnson in the backfield, Aiyuk in the doghouse, and I think this could be the game that gets Shanahan to turn the page to Lance. I’m seeing under 225 yards and 1 touchdown, and 2 picks.

Zach Wilson

Wilson should be on your bench until further notice. Until he learns to handle a pass rush he really shouldn’t be on an NFL field, much less in fantasy lineups.

Mac Jones

Mac will be a quality starter this year, but not in this game which I expect to be another dominant defensive performance that will require little from the passing game to win. But he should absolutely be started next week against Brady.

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.

QB Battles: The Final Countdown for Superflex Leagues

If you don’t know who these douchebags are that’s fine, it probably just means you’re under 40 or had exceedingly good taste in the eighties.

QB Battles are wrapping up left and right, time for a quick look back and where I was right and where I was wrong, and the implications for fantasy.

QB Battle #1: Cam Newton vs Mac Jones

One month ago I wrote that Mac Jones, barring showing himself to be a liability with accuracy or against the rush, would allow the Pats to get back to the kind of offense they want to run. I predicted that Belicihik and McDaniels would use Mac to get back to the old way of doing things sooner rather than later.

On August 4th I wrote that it appeared to be more Cam’s job to lose than Mac’s to win, and it was hard to see him not start the first half of the season, barring a meltdown by Cam. Cam’s awful first preseason game and his COVID debacle have definitely opened the door for Mac, but I have the feeling Cam will still get the start. However I don’t see him starting the first half of the season. He may not start the second half of the first game.

Reason being, as Tom Curran so eloquently put it, Mac Jones has made an incredibly solid case, most notably in joint practice with the Giants with Cam out. He has been not only the highest rated rookie passer in the preseason, he is one of the highest rated passers in the NFL this preseason.

This one is still, for some reason, undecided, but it’s not because we don’t know which QB makes the offense better and gives the team a better chance to win. And yes, you should be looking at him as a late-round QB3 in Superflex leagues. And unless you have a bye to cover in week 4, I wouldn’t worry about picking up Cam.

Fantasy Implications: Bump Meyers, Harris, White

QB Battle #2: Winston vs Hill

Winston slammed the door shut on any idea of Taysom starting with an eye-popping performance against the Jags first-team D. 9/10 passing, 128 yards, 2 TDs, and amazing pocket awareness on his second touchdown throw to recognize an unblocked defender, move to his right and time his throw to Callaway perfectly.

A month ago I wrote that barring any really negative camp reports or disasters in the preseason, he should win the starting job and was a steal at QB2 as the 28th QB off the board. I will admit after the first preseason game my confidence was shaken after neither QB really distinguished himself and he seemed hesitant in the pocket.

After Monday night’s game I dropped Matt Ryan for him in my Superflex money league (over $3k to first) and I’m happy with that decision still. I would not be surprised to see Jameis finish in the top-7 this year, even with Taysom coming in inside the five.

Fantasy Implications: Bump all Saints skill players, especially Callaway

QB Battle #3: Lock vs Bridgewater

A month ago I wrote that either player would be essentially a warm body at QB.

After the first preseason game I wrote that I thought Lock was the winner, but that I could see him playing his way out of the position and Teddy couldn’t overtake him on his own merits.

Though Lock did essentially sink his own ship in the second preseason game, I’ll say I was wrong here. Steady Teddy makes more sense for a team with a good defense and two good running backs, and Lock’s erratic play would torpedo the defense’s ability to keep them in games.

Fantasy Implications: Bump Jeudy, Fant, downgrade Sutton

QB Battle #4: Fields vs Dalton

“Rex is our quarterback.”

I’m still calling for a vague injury after Dalton gets destroyed behind what is now a suspect offensive line against the Rams week 1. Too bad because Fields could actually give the Bears a chance to win that game. If Nagy keeps Dalton in over Fields beyond that, expect calls for his head to get deafening in Chicago. If he keeps him in beyond week 4and the Bears are losing, Nagy and Pace should both be fired.

Fantasy Implications: Bump Rams Defense, Allen Robinson

QB Battle #5: Lance vs Garroppolo

At some point, probably against the Packers, 49ers fans will see this announcement and collectively lose their shit. However Lance has looked shaky at times during the preseason and might actually benefit from sitting for a game or three. But that’s it.

I originally predicted at the start of camps that we may not see Lance until November. I think he has greatly accelerated that timeline, but Jimmy will start the season and likely pile up a few wins. However, if Rodgers builds to a big lead in week 3, we may see a switch at halftime.

Fantasy Implications: Bump Deebo, Mostert; Downgrade Sherfield

Fake QB Battle: Trevor Lawrence vs Gaslighting

I’m not even going to write about Lawrence or his preseason. Instead I am going to write about what a clueless, inept jackass his coach is.

We have not even finished the preseason and he is already losing the locker room. And he tried really, really hard to do it. Urban Meyer has already proven that he is totally unfit for the NFL, and Shahid Khan is an idiot for bringing him out of retirement.

Meyer could have, at any point, looked at what had not worked for other college coaches making the transition to the pros, and learned from their mistakes. He could have realized that he is now dealing with professionals, not kids (Saban), and that gimmicky crap doesn’t work (Kelly).

Instead, he chose not to learn anything and immediately began repeating their mistakes, essentially gaslighting his number 1 pick and the media with a laughably false QB “competition” and bringing back Tim Tebow.

He has started off by insulting his number 1 pick and the entire NFL community in general, insulting every player on the camp roster by giving a spot to someone who hadn’t played a snap of pro football for years, and oh yeah, hiring a racist on staff.

I hate this for Lawrence, as he is saddled with a coach clearly out of his depth who refuses to learn, and an owner who clearly doesn’t give two shits about his team. He’s a good kid and a huge talent and if Meyer stays in Jacksonville past this season, his career and talent are going to be wasted.

I’m also sorry for anyone in Jacksonville who had hope for this team after wallowing in mediocrity for years. Because if Kahn cared or knew what he was doing, Eric Bienemy would currently be your head coach and you would be looking at a potentially great run with Lawrence under center. Instead you got a clown, hired by a clown, and a really shitty circus.

Fantasy Implications: Trade all Jags, this is going to be a shit-show

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