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Dynasty & Redraft: WR Paul Richardson (1 Viewer)

Waldman had a lot of good things to say about him in the RSP. He also had him considerably higher than everyone else.
Waldman lost me last year. And with Brandon Lloyd.
It's just a tool, like Bloom and Bremel. That being said, I don't watch thousands of hours of film and I do actually trust that those guys do watch at least enough to make some pretty good educated guesses. Couple that with teams I trust (Giants, Steelers, Packers, Seahawks, 9ers, etc.) vs. teams I don't (Jacksonville, Buffalo, Dallas, ect.) that will kind of give a rough scale of how I view value. It's not that I will stick to those teams specifically and disregard the others but it does have some weight to look at teams that have had long term drafting success. Almost the entirety of Green Bay's roster is comprised of homegrown talent. That's huge.

 
Brandon Lloyd really. To be honest I just got sick of the audible. Maybe it was unfair to say that Waldman lost me but the whole audible lost me. I get so sick of Cecil talking about Denver this and that. And name dropping all the time.

 
I think the reasons pre-draft buzz was particularly low on Richardson include the SEA offense, but start with him playing for a horrible team (COL) rarely seen by anyone, his size (amidst the loud debate about big receivers vs. little focusing on Watkins/Evans and following Tavon's lackluster first year as highly picked little guy) and the large number of very talented WRs with a lot more exposure/size/apparent situation. I think a guy averaging 40 ypc for his 21 college TDs with blazing speed, great hands and a fighting 'my ball' attitude would have had a very different place in rookie drafts had he played his college ball at USC or Georgia.
This.

In short, The kid has some real passion to his game. Nice routes, great speed. While a bit slight, I love how he has a "my ball" mentality. Could take a year or two to come on, but as Wilson develops so should he. High upside dynasty play with limited risk (since his price is still relatively low).

 
cloppbeast said:
Sabertooth said:
Why do supporter think his ADP is so low in comparison to his draft slot? He wasn't even drafted in one league I am in and was the 53rd pick in another. Not saying he has no value, but why has the fantasy football community as a whole shunned him?
We completely missed this kid pre-draft. When the Seahawks took him in the second, I for one hadn't even heard of him. This thread didn't get started until after the draft. Fantasy guys tend fall in love with their players before the draft takes place; maybe they haven't even given Richardson a fair shot. Or they place too much emphasis on his low weight.

His situation in a low pass attempt offense has less to do with it, imo. If Richardson had been drafted by the Eagles, and Matthews by the Seahawks, I doubt the former would have as high as a mid 1st ADP, or the latter as low as a late 3rd ADP.
Not true. Waldmen was pretty high on him pre-draft. I managed to pick this guy up in all of my rookie drafts for mostly 3rd rounders. Wasn't going to risk waiting any longer for a guy drafted so high in the NFL and highly touted by a reliable source.

 
cloppbeast said:
Sabertooth said:
Why do supporter think his ADP is so low in comparison to his draft slot? He wasn't even drafted in one league I am in and was the 53rd pick in another. Not saying he has no value, but why has the fantasy football community as a whole shunned him?
We completely missed this kid pre-draft. When the Seahawks took him in the second, I for one hadn't even heard of him. This thread didn't get started until after the draft. Fantasy guys tend fall in love with their players before the draft takes place; maybe they haven't even given Richardson a fair shot. Or they place too much emphasis on his low weight.

His situation in a low pass attempt offense has less to do with it, imo. If Richardson had been drafted by the Eagles, and Matthews by the Seahawks, I doubt the former would have as high as a mid 1st ADP, or the latter as low as a late 3rd ADP.
Not true. Waldmen was pretty high on him pre-draft. I managed to pick this guy up in all of my rookie drafts for mostly 3rd rounders. Wasn't going to risk waiting any longer for a guy drafted so high in the NFL and highly touted by a reliable source.
I used some hyperbole to answer the original question: why does Richardson have such a low ADP? Not everybody missed him, but he got very little aggregate attention compared to WRs drafted around him, like Matthews, Lee, Adams, and Latimer. Once the pre-draft hype train gets started for a player, it rarely slows down - only a bad combine can derail it. Most fantasy guys fall in love as quick as a teenage girl - before the NFL draft; they don't seem to change their minds until the NFL games start.

 
Richardson will be like Kenny Stills with less passes thrown his way.
I don't want to dismiss Stills since I do like him but:

- Richardson was by far Colorado's best offensive player - the next best receiver on the team had 55 catches and less than half his yards and TD's. Colorado's leading rusher averaged 3.8 YPC.

- Stills caught 82 passes his final year and had two teammates catch 73 (Justin Brown) and 62 (Jalen Saunders). Stills had the lowest YPC of the three (11.7 to 12.0 and 13.4).

**As a disclaimer - Richardson is eerily like A.J. Jenkins who I liked in 2012. However, Jenkins seemed to be a bust from day one while Richardson has been impressing so far.

 
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Richardson will be like Kenny Stills with less passes thrown his way.
His 1st year in the league ... then he'll be DeSean Jackson with a better attitude, work ethic and a few more catches. I can live with that.

[EDIT: and, Richardson will have a far better QB for his entire career, than DeSean has had for the majority (if not all) of his career]

 
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Seems to be some mixed opinions on him. What is his worth in terms of a 2015 pick? 2nd? 3rd?
I gave a 2015 4th for him
Richardson was drafted at 2.12 in my league but my 2015 2nd and 2015 4th offer was rejected
I've had 8 rookie drafts and haven't seen him go higher than 3.11. :shrug: seems to be the last Wr to go, I think the Seattle O scares folks off. I think he starts off providing more value stretching the field and no fantasy value, allowing you to buy him cheap a year from now from frustrated owners. I love th talent but not sure on Seattle
That thought process makes no sense. He's a rookie. Even AJ Green didn't have 1000 yds his rookie season. Nor did CJ. You usually know fairly early what these guys ceilings tend to be or whether they are AJ Jenkins/Jon Baldwins. As someone who has him on a lot of my rosters I don't expect much this year but his value has already grown in my eyes through OTAs and Seattles indication that they like what they have recieved. If he flashes just a little bit or gets any traction in that offense no way you're getting the value you're getting him in drafts now kemosabe.
Simply, I think you can buy him low after this season.

 
Doesn't hurt but that is still a crowded situation with Harvin-Baldwin-Kearse.
Drop-off from a (healthy) Rice to Kearse is quite large imo.
Kearse was better than Rice last season, and it wasn't close. Kearse's metrics last year are arguably better than Rice's were in 2012. If you are saying 2009 Rice was better than Kearse is now, I agree, but the comparison isn't particularly meaningful.

Kearse emerged last season and was surprisingly effective. Kearse's catch rate last season was 59.2% (including postseason), his YPR was 16.6, and he caught 6 TDs in 29 receptions. I expect he will continue to improve and will be better this season. I also expect his targets to go up.

More relevant to this thread, it seems unlikely Richardson will approach those numbers this season, if ever (barring further injuries/retirements ahead of him on the depth chart).

 
Rice may have been more of a long shot to make the roster than assumed due to his name alone. That being said I was high on Richardson before this just confirms it and makes me a little more intrigued in Chris Matthews.

 
Rice may have been more of a long shot to make the roster than assumed due to his name alone. That being said I was high on Richardson before this just confirms it and makes me a little more intrigued in Chris Matthews.
I don't see Mathews making the 53. Primarily because Lockette did a GREAT job with special teams and I don't think Mathews will out play him there.

Harvin, Baldwin, Kearse, Richardson, Norwood, and Lockette.....They may not even keep 6.

 
Carroll's comments on Tuesday:

(On Paul Richardson) He continues to show that he’s really, really fast and he can get up on you and he’s real comfortable catching everything that you throw at him. We’re real excited about Paul and hopefully we’ll just keep learning him and figuring him out and figure out how to best utilize his talents. He got talents; he’s really quick in and out of his breaks. I love his catching range so we’ll try to figure it out but we’re real excited right now.
 
Funny you should mention the Eagles as Josh Huff is an interesting guy. He doesn't have an ideal physical profile at 5'11" and 206 lbs, but he was a fairly high pick as well going in the third round at 86th overall. He was picked right before Moncrief and right after Landry. I don't think I've seen him mentioned at all on these boards.
I thought about starting a thread on Huff just this morning. lol. But then I lost interest; no reason to build hype.

I like Huff a good bit. Given the choice of paying 1.06 for Matthews or 4.04 for Huff - no brainier. The discrepancy amazes me.
Huff is a good value in the 4th but he's really a slower Josh Boyce.
Despite this comment I did take take Huff in the 21st round of a startup. Boyce was actually a possibility here but seems to be having trouble staying healthy.

He compares well to Maclin (just under an inch shorter and stronger) and is Chip Kelly's guy (used pick 3.22). Four years in Kelly's offense at Oregon.

Pro Day times used:

Maclin: 6-0 1/8", 198, 4.43 (1.54 10 split), 35.5" vertical, 10'00" broad, 7.06 3 cone, 4.25 SS

Huff: 5-11 2/8", 206, 4.47 (1.54 10 split), 37" vertical, 9'10" broad, 6.96 3 cone, 4.12 SS

 
Despite this comment I did take take Huff in the 21st round of a startup. Boyce was actually a possibility here but seems to be having trouble staying healthy.

He compares well to Maclin (just under an inch shorter and stronger) and is Chip Kelly's guy (used pick 3.22). Four years in Kelly's offense at Oregon.

Pro Day times used:

Maclin: 6-0 1/8", 198, 4.43 (1.54 10 split), 35.5" vertical, 10'00" broad, 7.06 3 cone, 4.25 SS

Huff: 5-11 2/8", 206, 4.47 (1.54 10 split), 37" vertical, 9'10" broad, 6.96 3 cone, 4.12 SS
Besides measurables I think Huff also runs smooth routes. He has pretty good flexibility. Plus, for what it's worth, he's obviously a guy Chip Kelly likes having around. Why doesn't he have his own thread?

Hopefully Huff works out well for you. I also got him in the 4th of my rookie draft, instead of your boy Abbrederis.

 
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Despite this comment I did take take Huff in the 21st round of a startup. Boyce was actually a possibility here but seems to be having trouble staying healthy.

He compares well to Maclin (just under an inch shorter and stronger) and is Chip Kelly's guy (used pick 3.22). Four years in Kelly's offense at Oregon.

Pro Day times used:

Maclin: 6-0 1/8", 198, 4.43 (1.54 10 split), 35.5" vertical, 10'00" broad, 7.06 3 cone, 4.25 SS

Huff: 5-11 2/8", 206, 4.47 (1.54 10 split), 37" vertical, 9'10" broad, 6.96 3 cone, 4.12 SS
Besides measurables I think Huff also runs smooth routes. He has pretty good flexibility. Plus, for what it's worth, he's obviously a guy Chip Kelly likes having around. Why doesn't he have his own thread?

Hopefully Huff works out well for you. I also got him in the 4th of my rookie draft, instead of your boy Abbrederis.
Huff was another guy who was sneaking around late. A lot of players got drafted at the Hollywood positions and it allowed them slip in the draft. Another guy who is completely flying under the radar due to his landing spot is Ryan Grant. He had good reports out of OTA's.
 
Despite this comment I did take take Huff in the 21st round of a startup. Boyce was actually a possibility here but seems to be having trouble staying healthy.

He compares well to Maclin (just under an inch shorter and stronger) and is Chip Kelly's guy (used pick 3.22). Four years in Kelly's offense at Oregon.

Pro Day times used:

Maclin: 6-0 1/8", 198, 4.43 (1.54 10 split), 35.5" vertical, 10'00" broad, 7.06 3 cone, 4.25 SS

Huff: 5-11 2/8", 206, 4.47 (1.54 10 split), 37" vertical, 9'10" broad, 6.96 3 cone, 4.12 SS
Besides measurables I think Huff also runs smooth routes. He has pretty good flexibility. Plus, for what it's worth, he's obviously a guy Chip Kelly likes having around. Why doesn't he have his own thread?

Hopefully Huff works out well for you. I also got him in the 4th of my rookie draft, instead of your boy Abbrederis.
:thumbup:

 
I tried to generate some discussion about him a few weeks ago, but nobody bit. The cool kids would rather on [Trent] Richardson.

As underrated as [Paul] Richardson is in dynasty, I had felt it's more so in redraft. Who better does Seattle have to catch deep balls for this season? But, I've gotten a little disconcerting that he has only ran with the 2nd and 3rd team this pre-season and hasn't dominated the stat line. He's had a solid camp without Brandin Cooks type of hype, but it seems like Seattle thinks he has a ways to go.

Richardson zooms past doubters, everyone else for Seahawks

“That’s big for us,” Seahawks wide receivers coach Kippy Brown, the 21-year veteran NFL assistant, said of Richardson’s supersonic pace. “I’d rather have that than a guy who does everything else well but doesn’t have speed.

He has a long way to go, just learning how to play football, the grind of it. But talent is not his problem. … All young players have to go through a stage of growing. I’ve never seen one, even guys that end up being Pro Bowlers, that came into the league doing all that you want them to do.

“It’s a process, and he’s going through it. He’s on schedule.”
 
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The biggest hurdle for Richardson is beating out (their current #1 WR ;) ) Kearse. That's unlikely to happen this year.

 
I think Seattle has too good thing going on at the moment so there's no hurry of Paul to get involved.

He will be asset and a excellent receiver, but not this year and maybe not even next year either.

Seahawks is just too good at the moment. The difference will be if Percy Harvin gets hurt, that's

when they need the speed of Richardson. Don't know if he can do the same things as Harvin,

but he can stretch the field and be some kind of help if that happens. All I've read is that the camp

has been impressive as hell, so if you wanna get this guy cheap, now is your time.

 
I think Seattle has too good thing going on at the moment so there's no hurry of Paul to get involved.

He will be asset and a excellent receiver, but not this year and maybe not even next year either.

Seahawks is just too good at the moment. The difference will be if Percy Harvin gets hurt, that's

when they need the speed of Richardson. Don't know if he can do the same things as Harvin,

but he can stretch the field and be some kind of help if that happens. All I've read is that the camp

has been impressive as hell, so if you wanna get this guy cheap, now is your time.
Or traded.

 
Rotoworld:

Paul Richardson caught four passes for 33 yards in the Seahawks' Week 7 loss to the Rams.

The rookie receiver saw increased reps following Percy Harvin's departure. He was targeted five times on the day playing in three-wide sets on the outside opposite Jermaine Kearse, with Doug Baldwin in the slot. Richardson is a big-play threat, but won't come into re-draft value in Seattle's run-first offense.

Oct 19 - 5:36 PM
 
I think Seattle has too good thing going on at the moment so there's no hurry of Paul to get involved.

He will be asset and a excellent receiver, but not this year and maybe not even next year either.

Seahawks is just too good at the moment. The difference will be if Percy Harvin gets hurt, that's

when they need the speed of Richardson. Don't know if he can do the same things as Harvin,

but he can stretch the field and be some kind of help if that happens. All I've read is that the camp

has been impressive as hell, so if you wanna get this guy cheap, now is your time.
Or traded.
As seahawks fan, I really did not see this coming. As a fantasy owner of Robinson, I was worried that Percy will get hurt.

Robinson's role will only get bigger as Seahawks need playmakers.

 
ImTheScientist said:
Kool-Aid Larry said:
Paul Richardson played on a season-high 43-of-73 snaps in Sunday's loss at St. Louis.
He looks really good FWIW....I think he's by far and away the most talented WR on the hawks roster. Then again, cmike is the most talented RB and they have buried his ###.
Marshawn Lynch is the most talented RB on that team.

 
Not sure if it'll translate to much fantasy value this year, but put me down for someone who thought he looked pretty solid in the snaps he did play on Sunday in St. Louis. The fast track in the dome probably helped with the eye test for me, but still, a pretty good start in this post-Harvin era for Richardson.

 
A related question is whether Baldwin is good enough to be the go-to guy in the passing game, which seems to be an increasing part of the game plan with the defense not as dominant. Wilson is smart enough to not force the ball to Baldwin if he's not getting open, and if he's not, that could open up target opportunities for a guy like Richardson.

 
Rotoworld:

Paul Richardson did not catch a pass in Sunday's Week 10 win over the Giants.

The first target that came Richardson's way was picked off and the second one was at his feet in the end zone. The speedy yet undersized No. 3 receiver has a total of five catches for 32 yards in the three games since the Percy Harvin trade.

Nov 9 - 8:01 PM
 
Anyone else have observations or further thoughts on him, especially in dynasty?
Too early to tell IMO.

I feel like next season the aim will be to move him into the role they signed Harvin to fill, but with te WR turmoil this season he has had to just full a general, safe role to get him involved and see what his physical talents can do. This offseason is big for him especially; it'll be interesting to see if they try and get him working on a more specialized role to accommodate his skill set.

He can be anything from a capable starter a la Emmanuel Sanders (not in skill set but in production potential) to another flash-in-the-pan Hawks WR.

 
Anyone else have observations or further thoughts on him, especially in dynasty?
He has played well as of late. Shown good hands and has won separation. That said, I don't think its a good idea to plan for any WR in Seattle to be a consistent fantasy option.
More involved the last two weeks against some good defenses. Didn't really expect anything this year anyways. He still hasn't really put his insane speed to use.

I think he is a hold in dynasty, but would feel stronger on it if he can continue to produce this week and in the playoffs.

 

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