I love the fact that the majority of fantasy players do little thinking beyond locking onto the previous year's stats. I used to think people would learn, but I've been doing this so many years and still see it so consistently that I now know it will go on til the end of time. And I'm grateful for it, because it means there will always be lots of guys out there who would prefer Colston over Calvin Johnson (as crazy as that is), and rookie Anthony Thomas over LT after the 2001 season, and rookie Michael Clayton over Roy Williams after 2004, and rookie Charlie Frye over Alex Smith after 2005, etc. etc. etc. and on and on forever. I am very thankful it is this way, because I really enjoy winning year after year. Go memorize your 2006 stats fellas, and thank you for all your help.
...and I love the fact that many fantasy players will completely ignore what a player has done in the NFL and jump all over each other to land the hot new rookie. Braylon Edwards, Mike Williams, Troy Williamson, Reggie Willilams, Charles Rogers, David Terrell, Koren Robinson, Peter Warrick, and Plaxico Burress. Those were all top 10 WR picks and many argued that they were "sure fire" studs and that they were "different from the top 10 WR busts from prior years." Even "successful" rookies like Andre Johnson and Roy Williams took several years to hit their stride. Larry Fitzgerald is the only top 10 WR pick in the past few years to make an immediate and consistent impact as a top WR. Calvin Johnson will probably be a pretty good player, but Georgia Tech <> the NFL. Colston has proven that he can do well in the NFL. The "hit rate" of rookie WRs that have even one year as good as Colston is very low. It seems that everyone wants to draw the comparison to Michael Clayton, but what about Boldin? Or Gates? They both came from nowhere and have been consistently good. Colston is a primary target in a passing offense with one of the best QBs in the NFL. He has stability in a very good situation. Calvin Johnson is going to go to a bad team--and probably a bad team with a bad QB. Because he's going to a bad team he'll probably experience a change at HC or OC within the first couple years in the NFL and have to learn a new system. Any argument that you can make about Johnson's production I can make about Colston's production--and he did it in the NFL, not at Georgia Tech. If you are going to diminish Colston's skills, then you haven't seen him play. He has excellent hands and always catches the ball away from his body...and at the highest point. He gets open against top NFL CBs. He gets yards after the catch with deceptive speed. So look at your combine #s and college stats and convince yourself that this time Johnson is truly different than the litany of other top rookie WRs that have preceded him. Convince yourself that the situation that he's going to isn't that bad. I'll do what I've always done and let people like you overpay for my rookie picks with proven veterans.