Concept Coop said:
Thank you for the rankings. Yours are one of two that seem to be updated. I respect your rankings and the site is awesome. Don't take my questions as insults. It takes stones to throw all of your rankings out there, and if I did it, I am sure I would catch a lot more flack than you do. That said, I have a few questions about your rankings.
1. Max Hall: How can you have him ranked ahead of Palmer, Tebow, Clausen, Cassel, Garrard, and so on? He has had one NFL start and didn't look great. He doesn't have all the measurables that you look for and there is very little chance he is starting anywhere next season. How can Matt Moore have a value of 4 and Hall have a value of 68? Matt Moore looked just as good in his first pre-season (Cowboys) and has even had flashes in the regular season. What makes you so sure that Hall is anything more than another Matt Moore?
2. Eli Manning at 20?! I don't care that Eli has only put up QB1 numbers twice, he put them up. Not only that, but his weapons are quickly becoming elite, and he is still young. How can he be behind McNabb who is performing worse this year, doesn't know where he will be next year, AND is 4 years older? And there is no way in hell that Kolb should be ahead of Manning. Kolb is not even a starting QB, and we don't if, when, or where he will be. He has had a couple good games, but he had a couple good games last year before looking awful and getting benched. At the very least Manning is much safer, as we know he will be the starting Giants QB for the next 5 years.
3. Ochocinco and Steve Smith (CAR) simply need to drop. They are no longer elite re-draft WRs, let alone dynasty WRs. 85 is not even the #1 option on his team anymore. I don't think anyone values them over guys like Wallace and Maclin.
4. Mario Manningham, Brandon Lloyd, Roy Williams, and Lance Moore are all worth more than guys like Devin Thomas (cut this bum), Antonio Bryant, Donnie Avery and so on. Streaky production is worth much more than no production. Moore and Manningham are both solid WR3; Williams and Lloyd are WR2s this year, at the very least.
5. Tier one is down to two players. MJD and Ray Rice are simply not on the level of AP and CJ, both in talent and FF production.
6. 19 points between Spiller and Best? Best is as close to AP and CJ as he is to Spiller? (opposite directions, obviously)
7. Thomas Jones: One or two years of RB2 production is better than 5-6 years as a handcuff (Snelling, Kuhn, Slaton...)
First off, I welcome all questions, comments, criticisms, and critiques of my rankings. That's why I post a change log. That's why I post my reasoning behind so much of what I do. I'm very process-driven, so I make my processes as transparent as possible and I'm always listening to everyone else's processes to borrow what seems to work.1. I'm not sure Hall is anything other than Matt Moore. I have no idea what he is. That's why he's more valuable than Cassel. I know exactly what Cassel is, and I want nothing to do with it. Matt Cassel has very, very little chance of ever being a starter-caliber fantasy QB. Max Hall might become an epic bust (can a UFA rookie really be a bust?), but his chances of ever again being fantasy relevant are higher than Cassel's. Same also applies to Garrard. As for Hall vs. Clausen and Tebow... Clausen looks epically bad, and Tebow's got a 2 year wait in front of him (at least). Hall wins on "urgency factor". I'm not sure that Hall isn't another Matt Moore... but he might not be, which is more than enough for me to rank him well above Moore.
2. I've argued in this thread that what value Manning has derives entirely from his job security, so you aren't telling me anything I don't already know. He's a quality QB2 if you've already got an established starter, because he gives you the safety and security of knowing you'll have byes and injuries covered for the next 4 years. He gets knocked down the rankings, though, because he's not a guy you'll want to start any time other than during byes and injuries if you can at all avoid it. Running Eli out as your QB1 only means every team in the league has a better QB1 than you. It's hard to win consistently when you're giving up an advantage like that right off the bat. Some people rank players based on their floors, and those guys
love Eli. I rank players based on their ceilings (at least, I do at QB and TE), so I want nothing to do with him at his market price right now. As for Kolb... I've always been one of the first to badmouth Kolb, but he's looked good in his action this season, and I think he'll be starting somewhere next year. Either the Eagles let Vick walk, in which case Kolb starts in Philly... or the Eagles commit to Vick long term, in which case Kolb becomes available to the highest bidder.
Another reason why QB2 production isn't that valuable: supply and demand. The supply exceeds the demand. Guys like Hill and Fitzpatrick have given great production for a mere fraction of a penny this season. Guys like Hasselbeck and Garrard are always available for a nickle, at most. Orton was recently available at rock-bottom prices. A lot of Roethlisberger owners would have given him to you straight up for Eli. Sanchez, Freeman, McNabb, and others can get you a large fraction of the production for a small fraction of the price. Why pay top dollar for a big name like Eli when there are so many cheap alternatives out there for you to explore?
Oh, and speaking of McNabb... pop quiz. How many times has Peyton Manning finished as QB1 in points per game? Answer: 0. How many times has McNabb? Answer: 3. Dude's a stud. He's finished top 10 in PPG in 9 of the past 10 seasons, including 6 straight (and, as I mentioned, #1 overall in 3 of those 10 years). He's currently on pace for 4150 passing yards. He's playing fantastic right now, and he's paired with the best offensive mind in the league. The points will follow. Worst case scenario is that he produces like Eli Manning. Best case scenario is that he produces top 5 numbers the rest of the way.
3. Been discussed to death. I don't have anything new to bring to the table. I still think Ocho and Smiff are elite talents (although Ocho is on thin ice), and I'm still not sold on Maclin. We've discussed the concept of rankings inertia before (i.e. how much "force" is needed to result in a shift in someone's rankings), and I'm closer to the inert end of the scale. I'm not making wholesale changes to my previous opinions based on a 6-week sample.
4. I've already covered Roy Williams. Manningham's ranking is partly a result of how cool I am on Eli Manning and the Giants passing game as a whole, and also a factor of the fact that unless you're the 2004 Colts or the 2008 Cards, if you're a WR3 with no chance to rise up the depth chart, then you're useless to me. That goes double for Lance Moore, who on any given week might actually be New Orlean's WR5 (behind Colston, Henderson, Meachem, and Bush). I also think you're selling Donnie Avery short. Everyone pretty much agrees that Sam Bradford is a special talent. Well, of all the WRs currently in St. Louis, I think Avery is their best and the most likely to be the #1 for the Rams next season (provided they don't bring in outside help). I do think I'm too down on Lloyd, though- probably deserves to be more in the 30-33 range.
5. Already covered.
6. Liked Best more than Spiller coming in. Best has looked better than Spiller to solidify that. I think Spiller might be a career CoP back who always has someone else vulturing significant carries. I don't have that same concern with Best. Plus, Buffalo is terrible and there's no real light at the end of that tunnel.
7. I agree with your statement. I disagree with your implication that Thomas Jones has 1-2 years of RB2 production left in him. I think he's got more like 0 years of RB2 production left in him. He's barely an RB2 right now, and part of being as high on Charles as I am means thinking Jones will continue losing workload to him.
Dr. Octopus said:
I agree. With all due respect to SSOG, this is just another instance where he starts with a bias and then digs in his heal's and stands pat no matter what changes.
Eli has shown improvement each season and the Giants have entrusted more and more of their offense to him. He is now surrounded by very good young talent at the skill positions and as you said, a lock to hold that job for a long time. He never misses time due to injury either which is plus. At the evry worst he should be at or near the top of the QB2 rankings, since he's so solid.
He isn't the type of fantasy QB that will win you you're league, but there's something to be said for the solid week in and week out production (and year to year production) that Manning offers. He's the starting QB of my 4-2 dynasty team that is also third in the league in scoring.
And despite the Giants "entrusting more and more of their offense to him", and despite Hakeem Nicks playing out of his mind, Eli Manning currently ranks... 9th. Go to PPG and he falls to 12th behind Tom Brady, Mike Vick, and Ryan Fitzpatrick, and in a virtual tie with Jay Cutler. Give Shaun Hill the courtesy of discounting his first game (where he wasn't the starter) and he surges past Manning, too. Carson Palmer, who's been absolutely panned this season for how terrible he looks, is sitting 1.2 points behind Manning if you pro-rate his numbers. In other words... Eli Manning is who I thought he was. And I'm not letting him off the hook.People accuse me of starting with a bias, digging in my heels, and standing pat. Personally, I don't think that's an accurate characterization. I'm more than ready and willing to admit I was wrong about players. Arian Foster. LaDainian Tomlinson. Lesean McCoy. Miles Austin last season. Kyle Orton. Just because I don't change every single player every time somebody questions the ranking doesn't mean I'm digging in my heels, it means not enough has changed to cause me to re-evaluate. In Manning's case, I don't know why I would possibly re-evaluate, seeing as he's playing
exactly like I thought he would.
I would put the odds at less than 25% Max Hall is starting anywhere in the NFL next season.
I'll take those odds in a heartbeat.
You mean to tell me that Arizona cut Matt Leinart becuase an undrafted rookie, with limited physical skills looked better in preseason? I would be shocked if that was the case. I think Anderson looked good in pre-season and they thought he could hold the spot for a year.
But, even if we assume it is, being better than Leinart and Anderson (not that Hall has proven to be) does not mean you are a long term answer at QB for anybody. And it especially does not mean you are a better player than Matt Cassel or Carson Palmer who have done it for seasons, not (pre-season) months.
Even if Hall is the best QB on the AZ roster, what does that say about his long term potential as an NFL starter? Not much, if that is all we have to go by.
Ken Whisenhunt told Peter King that Max Hall was the best-looking QB on the entire roster during camps. It's commonly accepted that the reason Leinart was cut is because Arizona knew they couldn't sneak either Hall or Skelton through waivers and onto the practice squad. The fact that no UFA rookie QB has started this early in a non-strike year suggests that there's more to Hall than just another warm body or camp arm.The difference in our rankings of Hall stems from one fundamental difference in opinion: you think Hall got the Arizona job by default. I think he got it through merit. You think Hall is just like every other QB2 on every other roster, except that he happened to win the sucky-starter-lottery and get the starting nod. I happen to disagree. My rankings are based on my assumptions, and my assumption is that Hall is the starter right now on merit. Did he look great? Nope. How many rookie QBs look great in their debut- not just undrafted ones, but *ANY* rookie QBs? Guys like Bradford, Ryan, or Flacco are the exception, not the rule.