Interesting WR order there.Pro Football Focus has their first Big Board:
https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2016/02/17/draft-bosa-buckner-top-pffs-first-2016-nfl-draft-board/
I'll add this to the spreadsheet later. For now, it only goes 40 deep, but I think the plan is to expand to 75. This will be interesting to track, as PFF has some very very different names here. I like that they are putting this out there, because anyone that follows these guys on Twitter knows they can be smug little knobs.
Matt Harmon was on Ross Tucker's 'Fantasy Feast' podcast with Evan Silva and he went over WR Corey Coleman and brought up some great points about the Baylor offense and how they are instructed to 'run' their routes.I'm only through 8 sites so far, but Coleman is averaging third across those 8 sites, a hair behind Michael Thomas at 2nd.
This is very interesting, because on of the metrics that PFF and others track involves how often a player is involved for every route run. Yards pre route run, etc.Bracie Smathers said:Matt Harmon was on Ross Tucker's 'Fantasy Feast' podcast with Evan Silva and he went over WR Corey Coleman and brought up some great points about the Baylor offense and how they are instructed to 'run' their routes.
Harmon said that it appears that Coleman doesn't run on routes where he isn't the target or if it is a running play etc., basically it 'appears' that he is lazy. He then noticed that all of the Baylor WRs ran their routes that same way and discovered that is how they are coached. They are coached to save themselves for deep routes.
That made me think of former Baylor WR Josh Gordon who is notorious for 'dogg'n' it where he doesn't run his routes hard in practice. (Que the Allen Iverson meme)
Lots of other great stuff here:
http://www.podcastone.com/pg/jsp/program/episode.jsp?programID=659&pid=1632918
NFL.com WR guru Matt Harmon is this week's guest on the Fantasy Feast podcast.
DraftTek is the toughest one to deal with. They aren't on a single row, and you have to go to two pages for both WRs and RBs, then mix them.Try this:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/16Tg-lSmA7aC9XAocNYSGEQyyQHwODoZ10zaJkxTK4y8/edit?usp=sharing
Also, if anyone is good at converting info on pages to spreadsheet, that would be appreciated. I cannot convert Drafttek to Spreadsheet. Me+Computers=not good.
What if that player is Charles Rogers or something though Tick? Then it might be good to not have them top 5 like everyone else.Okay, here's the list of rankings I'm using. For the most part, I didn't include top 100 lists. I didn't include position rankings that weren't at least 10 deep.
http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/draft/prospectrankings/2016/RB
http://nfldraftgeek.com/runningbackrankings-2016nfldraft.html
http://walterfootball.com/draft2016RB.php
http://optimumscouting.com/rankings/static-rankings/rb-rankings.html
http://www.nfldraft101.com/draft/rankings/2016/rb.jsp
http://gbnreport.com/2015-nfl-draft-player-rankings/top-running-backs/
http://www.draftinsider.net/rankings/2016/RB
http://www.draftcountdown.com/nfl-draft-ranking/running-back-rankings/
http://proplayerinsiders.com/nfl-draft/
http://www.thehuddlereport.com/thr/valueboardpos.shtml
http://www.drafttek.com/2016-NFL-Draft-Prospect-Rankings/Top-College-RBs-2016-Draft.asp
http://www.scout.com/nfl/a.z?s=127&p=9&c=12&yr=2016&nid=83&lnid=124&rc=4&pid=11
http://www.nfl.com/draft/2016/tracker?icampaign=draft-sub_nav_bar-drafteventpage-tracker#dt-tabs:dt-by-position/dt-by-position-input:rb
http://www.ourlads.com/ncaa-football-nfl-prospect-rankings-by-position/rankings/running-backs/3
http://www.draftscouts.com/player-rankings/runningback/
http://thedraftwire.usatoday.com/category/positional-rankings/
http://draftcentric.weebly.com/rb-rankings.html
http://draftbreakdown.com/category/rankings/
http://thereadoptional.com/rankings-by-position/
http://dynastyfootballwarehouse.com/16-rookie-guide/16-rookie-guide-wrs/
http://www.draftnasty.com/football/position_list/?list=RB&year=2016
https://www.profootballfocus.com/college-football/
http://www.rotoworld.com/archives/cfb/325/rankings
http://www.sbnation.com/nfl-mock-draft
http://football.realgm.com/news/analysis/author/161/Jeff-Risdon
http://draftdaddy.com/ranks/top10_RB.htm
http://dynastyleaguefootball.com/2016-rookie-wr-rankings/
For my own summary rankings, I weighted them based on my own stupid criteria, basically how professional the site looks, whether I've heard of the site/draftnik, whether I believe they did their own scouting, whether they've updated since February, how deep the rankings go, and whether they just didn't rank someone who's in everyone else's top 5. That's what I use as my base pre-NFL-draft rankings.
I have a little bit of a cheat, I dunno if the lists are the same, but I think @Tick will love this:DraftTek is the toughest one to deal with. They aren't on a single row, and you have to go to two pages for both WRs and RBs, then mix them.
Thanks, not what I'm after, but the list gave me a new source: http://www.nflmock.com/#!big-board/c559.I have a little bit of a cheat, I dunno if the lists are the same, but I think @Tick will love this:
http://fanspeak.com/ontheclock/
Pick a team, click through, and before you start it, you can sort positions and copy/paste.
Yeah, some of those midlevel guys never get talked about. Every show or even podcasts lists the top 5 and a sleeper from the 4th round, and skips everyone in between.Hey Tick I finally got around to looking at the consensus lists of sources you compiled. Pretty impressive and thanks for sharing.
Biggest surprises to me are Braxton Miller being the 8th overall WR.
I should watch Lawler, Garrett, Johnathan Williams, Paul Perkins and some other guys I haven't yet.
Pure awesome.
I have not. Will do so this week for sure.Tick said:@massraider, have you started on 2017? I just did a quick check of my links to see which sites look dead, but haven't done much else yet.
massraider, have you done one for 2018? I did a first pass today and came up with these sites: