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RB Derrius Guice, Free Agent (1 Viewer)

I think come August all value will be lost here in redraft. He will get drafted high and probably should.  Peterson will be lucky to get 5-7 carries a game if guice is full go.

 
Returning NFL players that could have a big impact in 2019 BY BEN COOPER • APR 5, 2019

The most successful NFL teams know when to let players walk and sign big contracts elsewhere, but teams also know when they have a valuable piece that’s worth bringing back. Re-signings are often overlooked in free agency as some of the league’s biggest playmakers swap teams, and players who lost their previous campaign to injury are often forgotten about in the grand scheme of things. Here are the best returning players — whether it be from injury or due to a re-signing — who could have a significant impact in 2019. 

RB Derrius Guice, Washington Redskins

2018 grade: N/A

Perhaps the biggest surprise on the list is Guice, who has yet to officially record a carry as an NFL running back, but his college production speaks for itself, where he never earned a season grade below 85.0 and frequently ranked among the best in yards after contact and first down runs. Those kinds of attributes should translate well to the pro game, and Guice will get some opportunities alongside Adrian Peterson to prove it.

 
Speaking Saturday, Redskins coach Jay Gruden said Derrius Guice (knee) could be ready before training camp.

Gruden's words come the same day ESPN's Adam Schefter reported that Guice is "coming along a little slower" than expected. We will believe the reporter over the coach, but we suppose it is encouraging Gruden did not have to outright admit to Schefter's report. Perhaps he will be ready after all. We will consider him firmly questionable.

SOURCE: John Keim on Twitter

Apr 27, 2019, 4:59 PM
 
Schefter's report made no sense. Guice's injury came before Love's. So to say they drafted Love in case Guice isn't ready ? Guice will be ready well before Love. Love's injury was a big enough concern that many teams had him completely off their draft boards.

 
I honestly think they feel Love was a great value and I see AP out of there after this year.  They actually proactively drafted a player with the future in mind.

 
Chris Thompson turns 29 this year and is in the last year of his contract as well. Love is the guy they’re hoping will replace Thompson’s playmaking COP ability a year from now IMO.

 
I love all the negative takes on Guice. I've been trying to buy him in the few dynasty leagues I don't already own him with zero success. Maybe his owners will release their hold on him now 

 
Loved him last year. Want to trade for him but the owner has a death grip. If his price is fair in redraft, I'd love to scoop up WRs early and take him as a RB2 later on.

 
Loved him last year. Want to trade for him but the owner has a death grip. If his price is fair in redraft, I'd love to scoop up WRs early and take him as a RB2 later on.
Expanding on this thought. I had him in the Nick Chubb territory as far as talent goes. Guice was never a burner from my estimation. I think he gives us 10 touchdowns this year, barring injury. Washington is going to give him every chance to be "the guy". We will find out if he has the physical makeup to be "the guy". Risk reward.

 
11 second-year NFL players poised for a breakout season

11 second-year NFL players poised for a breakout season

2. Derrius Guice, RB, Washington Redskins

Guice had his rookie season end before it began due to a torn ACL, but he is expected to return in time for training camp, which will serve as a tremendous boost for the Redskins. And although the team re-signed Adrian Peterson, Guice is clearly their running back of the future and a player they are relying upon. In 2019, so long as Guice doesn’t suffer a setback, he’ll likely begin the season splitting carries with AP before taking over as the team’s No. 1 down the stretch.

 
Guice seems priced about right...I agree with the sentiment that he's more of a second half back in 2019...kind of like how Henry came on for the Titans.  Just know that it's a timeshare for the first half.

 
Guice seems priced about right...I agree with the sentiment that he's more of a second half back in 2019...kind of like how Henry came on for the Titans.  Just know that it's a timeshare for the first half.
That's the rub. I like him enough, but I expect to see more Byrce Love in the second half (seeing if he can replace Thompson), making this a three headed monster potentially.  

Potentially, this is new Orleans light. But with two Kamaras.

 
That's the rub. I like him enough, but I expect to see more Byrce Love in the second half (seeing if he can replace Thompson), making this a three headed monster potentially.  

Potentially, this is new Orleans light. But with two Kamaras.
I wouldn't expect Love to eat into Guice's opportunities.  I see AP as the bigger threat in 2019.  Love has a long road back.

 
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There's a good chance we red-shirt Love on IR.  AP and Thompson for however long he stays healthy are the bigger concerns.  Not to mention the first half of the schedule is absolutely brutal.

Guice should become a better fantasy option as the season goes along.  He's a hold in dynasty for me.  Mid season target in redraft if he's too expensive on draft day.

 
The prevailing thought is we drafted Love to be Guice's backup next year.  Thompson is a 29 year old free agent.  AP is what, 34?  Fighting father time.

I think it was a wasted pick personally.

 
The prevailing thought is we drafted Love to be Guice's backup next year.  Thompson is a 29 year old free agent.  AP is what, 34?  Fighting father time.

I think it was a wasted pick personally.
If they'd spent a 2nd-rounder I'd agree, but a mid-4th? 90% of 4th-rounders will be out of the league before their rookie deals are up anyway ... you might as well take the chance that a guy with 1st-round talent can beat the injury odds. It worked out pretty well for the Niners with Frank Gore.

Personally it's exactly the kind of strategy more teams should be employing with their mid-rounders IMO.

In redraft, I agree that I wouldn't bother with him unless your league has multiple dedicated IR spots. The odds are good he'll start the season on PUP and most owners will be too impatient to hold him on the bench for a half-season or more.

 
If they'd spent a 2nd-rounder I'd agree, but a mid-4th? 90% of 4th-rounders will be out of the league before their rookie deals are up anyway ... you might as well take the chance that a guy with 1st-round talent can beat the injury odds. It worked out pretty well for the Niners with Frank Gore.

Personally it's exactly the kind of strategy more teams should be employing with their mid-rounders IMO.

In redraft, I agree that I wouldn't bother with him unless your league has multiple dedicated IR spots. The odds are good he'll start the season on PUP and most owners will be too impatient to hold him on the bench for a half-season or more.
Wasted pick has more to do with my opinion of the player than strategy of spending mid rounders on backups.  Would have much rather seen a lineman or corner there instead of that particular player.

 
well Love was seen as one of the best backs in the college football before the injury...so there is value there assuming he recovers...

 
well Love was seen as one of the best backs in the college football before the injury...so there is value there assuming he recovers...
Never liked him.  Straight line speed guy that seems to be a minus in the passing game.  A lot like Ronald Jones imo.  The injury and unavailability only make it worse.

 
well Love was seen as one of the best backs in the college football before the injury...so there is value there assuming he recovers...
Don't like Love at all. I don't see him as a threat to Guice one bit. Maybe as a COP type guy but all he has is straight line speed. That's it. And it was exposed in 2018

Even if he didn't tear his ACL, I'm not sure he goes much higher than he did in the draft. Maybe round 3

 
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Oh I wouldn't draft him in the first 2 rounds of a rookie draft for sure, but just saying I can see how the Redskins might have thought they were getting a good back (pre-injury) to fill in for Thompson/AP after they are gone in 2020. 

 
If they'd spent a 2nd-rounder I'd agree, but a mid-4th? 90% of 4th-rounders will be out of the league before their rookie deals are up anyway ... you might as well take the chance that a guy with 1st-round talent can beat the injury odds. It worked out pretty well for the Niners with Frank Gore. 

Personally it's exactly the kind of strategy more teams should be employing with their mid-rounders IMO.

In redraft, I agree that I wouldn't bother with him unless your league has multiple dedicated IR spots. The odds are good he'll start the season on PUP and most owners will be too impatient to hold him on the bench for a half-season or more.
Source please.

 
90% "out of the league" is a bit high but usually you're not missing out on much.  

2015: https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/2015/draft.htm

It would be generous to say there are 7 relevant players taken in the 4th. A few good players.
Mike Davis and Buck Allen are good examples of the most realistic upside one should expect from a 4th rounder: part time contributor with some degree of fantasy relevance if enough injuries occur. 

That being said, if a guy from a small school goes in the 4th, I perk up a bit more, but that does not describe Bryce Love. 

I went through a few years looking at 4th round to 7th round... only a few names stood out:

2016: out of 16 RBs - Jordan Howard (good rookie year, two meh years, all but forgotten by his 4th year), Alex Collins (half a good year)
2015: out of 10 RBs - Jay Ajayi (one good year)
2014: out of 12 RBs - Devonta Freeman (first real gem yet), James White (one trick RBBC pony in the perfect system)
2013: out of 19 RBs - Chris Thompson (part time RBBC guy), Latavius Murray (replacement level/backup talent), Rex Burkhead (RBBC guy, zero fantasy notable seasons), Spencer Ware (replacement level/backup talent), Theo Riddick (part time RBBC guy)
2012: out of 14 RBs - Lamar Miller (quite a few RB2 seasons on a ppg basis), Robert Turbin (just kidding!), Alfred Morris (same skill set and trajectory as Jordan Howard)

So out of this pool of 71 players, the only two guys that might challenge Guice for meaningful playing time would be Freeman (4.03) and Miller (4.02). The other guys that were mildly fantasy relevant either flamed out quickly or were RBBC receiving specialists - something Love is not, at least not right now.

 
skinfanjon said:
  Straight line speed guy that seems to be a minus in the passing game.  A lot like Ronald Jones imo.  The injury and unavailability only make it worse.
About how I see him.

I did draft him yesterday at pick 4.8 in FFPC because I have Guice and think if he can grow in the passing game the idea behind drafting him is for him to take over COP/third down duties from Thompson in 2020. Seemed like a cheap enough cost to me to potentially own the entire backfield heading into 2020.  I figure at least first 6 weeks if not whole season he should only be taking up an IR spot, not a roster spot. But even owning Guice I passed on him at 3.10 and 3.11 meanwhile I'm in other drafts were non-Guice owners are drafting him as soon as late second and usually in the third round, seems a bit high to me.

One drawback I had in drafting him is just wondering if he will ever be active or have an opportunity to show me he is worth keeping when cuts are due next off-season. Hard to know but since James Andrews did his ACL surgery I figure Skins have reason to think he is recovering well enough and tore his ACL on December 1 so he'll have a year out for at least a few weeks.

 
well Love was seen as one of the best backs in the college football before the injury...so there is value there assuming he recovers...
A lot of great college players don't transition well to the NFL. I love (no pun intended) that there are all these Love truthers drafting this guy in the late 2nd and early 3rd. It allows more of my guys to fall to me in the mid-late round 😃

 
I feel like Guice is now being under valued. Some people jumping ship. Chris Harris ranked him #41 for 2019. 

https://www.harrisfootball.com/rbranks-draft

I love Harris and what he does and I think this is more his way of punting the WAS RB situation. But still #41? Maybe I am taking a more long term perspective but I think he’s a good bit low in dynasty.

 
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I feel like Guice is now being under valued. Some people jumping ship. Chris Harris ranked him #41 for 2019. 

https://www.harrisfootball.com/rbranks-draft

I love Harris and what he does and I think this is more his way of punting the WAS RB situation. But still #41? Maybe I am taking a more long term perspective but I think he’s a good bit low in dynasty.
I agree Harris has him too low even for redraft. (I hope that's a redraft ranking.) But his real life value is definitely higher.

 
I agree Harris has him too low even for redraft. (I hope that's a redraft ranking.) But his real life value is definitely higher.
I think this is just his way of saying he wants no part of the Washington running game in 2019. But if we look out a year from now, Guice might be poised to be approaching RB1 territory and he can be had for less than that. 12-18 months from now I think his value is much higher so buy now.

 
I think this is just his way of saying he wants no part of the Washington running game in 2019. But if we look out a year from now, Guice might be poised to be approaching RB1 territory and he can be had for less than that. 12-18 months from now I think his value is much higher so buy now.
The owners of Guice spent high draft capital on him last year and don’t want to move him on the cheap in my situations.  Not even sure what to offer at this point. 

I’m hoping he starts the season off slow, and then is the time to go get him. 

 
Pretty sure everyone knows he'll start slow, probably as AP backup, for the first 5 games or so. However, around week 6/7, look out. 

 
Where would Guice go in this draft, 1.02 maybe?
Had this discussion last week in the trade thread but I think in different drafts he'd range from 1-5 but his ADP would be 1.2. I traded him last week along with a projected late 2020#2 for 1.2/2.2. FWIW I'd have held him for just the 1.2, he would be my #2 player.

 
They are predicting 1100 yards total and 6-8 tds. That is about what I expect as well and don’t think it is a bad thing. Starts slow, finishes strong.
hard to believe those stats dont put him into the top 24

ETA: that very well may not be enough... just glancing at those numbers I feel like I'd be pretty happy with that from my rb2. guess I'm a bit off on what it takes to be top 24

 
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Dr. Dan said:
hard to believe those stats dont put him into the top 24

ETA: that very well may not be enough... just glancing at those numbers I feel like I'd be pretty happy with that from my rb2. guess I'm a bit off on what it takes to be top 24
Agreed. I just think it may be a tale of two halves for him. Similar to Chubb last year.

 
Redskins coach Jay Gruden expects Derrius Guice (knee) to be ready for training camp.

"Derrius is coming along very well," Gruden said Monday. "We’re just trying to make sure that leg — his quad and everything — is full strength before we let him go." ESPN's Adam Schefter reported last month that Guice was coming along "a little slower" than expected, but Gruden has been working overtime since to prove that's not true. Only time will tell. Guice went down early last August.

SOURCE: Profootballtalk on NBCSports.com

May 20, 2019, 2:29 PM ET
 

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