Who else does my boy Woody remind y'all of
Jo'Quavious “Woody” Marks rushed 17 times for 69 yards and a touchdown in Houston’s Week 4 win against the Titans, adding four catches for 50 yards and another touchdown on five targets.
Don’t expect this level of success from Marks every week — he’s on the Texans — but he’s clearly the best back in the Houston backfield at this point. Marks outsnapped Nick Chubb 40-30 while watching the snap count grow larger in his favor in the second half. His best highlight was probably a pancake block of a blitzing Titans defender, but he also had a great cut on his touchdown run and generally looked as explosive as you’d hope. He doesn’t have enough volume to make us comfortable saying he’s a sure RB2 in Week 5 against the Ravens, but he’s certainly closer than he was before Week 4.
- Rotoworld
Doesn’t have enough volume? He had 21 touches lolJo'Quavious “Woody” Marks rushed 17 times for 69 yards and a touchdown in Houston’s Week 4 win against the Titans, adding four catches for 50 yards and another touchdown on five targets.
Don’t expect this level of success from Marks every week — he’s on the Texans — but he’s clearly the best back in the Houston backfield at this point. Marks outsnapped Nick Chubb 40-30 while watching the snap count grow larger in his favor in the second half. His best highlight was probably a pancake block of a blitzing Titans defender, but he also had a great cut on his touchdown run and generally looked as explosive as you’d hope. He doesn’t have enough volume to make us comfortable saying he’s a sure RB2 in Week 5 against the Ravens, but he’s certainly closer than he was before Week 4.
- Rotoworld
Yep, I will ear crow on this one. I don't know what his future is but he has already done more than I expected.Congratulations to all the believers and owners. I was not one of them. You lose some and you lose some I suppose.
... are you saying he has Bucky Irving-level talent/offensive ecosystem around him?@ponchsox it's the snap count on his touches, very unsustainable. He only played 40-71 snaps (56%). That kind of volume/success on such a low snap count isn't realistic.
Sure it is. Bucky did it just last year
A fellow shifty sophomore RB in Tampa.Who else does my boy Woody remind y'all of
Sure beats a broken Chubb.It's always a great thing to have a good Woody
Sure beats a broken Chubb.It's always a great thing to have a good Woody
Humor isn’t allowed here. But as a huge Marks holder in almost all my redraft leagues, I have a good 1-2 hours before I have to call the doctor.Sure beats a broken Chubb.It's always a great thing to have a good Woody
As long as Woody remains upright, he can be explosive![]()
Look at us being real mature, we shouldn't be laughing about the Texans' Woody
He’s the captain now!It's his backfield now
Most of your posts about yesterday's games have been about snap counts. It's clearly a thing for you this week for whatever reason.@ponchsox it's the snap count on his touches, very unsustainable. He only played 40-71 snaps (56%). That kind of volume/success on such a low snap count isn't realistic.
I’ve got Barkley, Henry, Achane, and Warren and I’m going all in on Woody for a strong weekly flex player.So … what’s the FAAB dump here? 70-80%
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Non-dynasty. Roster is “set” just need another back to keep CMC stocks “ok”
I could reference usage rate but it didn't stand out a ton. For the record, I went back spedwatched the game... he and Chubb alternated a lot of drives. It could have simply been a fact that Marks' success made those drive last longer than Chubb, which is why you hope his volume picks up, but that's not guaranteed.
As for me referencing snaps only... you have to be on the field somewhat consistently as a RB to better accumulate touches. It's not like WR where you could get all the snaps but be running cardio out there (need targets/Target Share %/etc.). For example, go check the Omarion Hampton thread and see the usage he got yesterday. Hell, go check the Jacory Croskey-Merritt thread for why snaps are important. As for the blurb comment that "you would like to see more volume"... everyone would like that, how is that even inflammatory?![]()
is available in 0 of my redraft leagues. n=21So … what’s the FAAB dump here? 70-80%
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Non-dynasty. Roster is “set” just need another back to keep CMC stocks “ok”
Jo'Quavious “Woody” Marks rushed seven times for 24 yards in Houston’s Week 5 win against the Ravens.
He did outsnap Nick Chubb 27-24 before the starters gave way to Dameon Pierce, and a holding penalty ran back a run that would have ended inside the Baltimore 5. But it’s hard to not call it disappointing after waiver runs to go scoreless with 24 yards in a game where the Texans scored 44 points. Marks is best-approached as a high-end FLEX after his Week 6 bye.
- Rotoworld
RB Snap Rates ImageNick Chubb continues to start for Houston: Woody Marks had the more impressive week last week, but Chubb impressed more this week.
Marks slowly but surely worked his way up the depth chart during the first half of the season. He was ahead of Dameon Pierce as the backup on early downs in Week 2, and Dare Ogunbowale stopped being used in most passing situations in Week 3. The last player for him to overtake was Chubb. Last week, Marks ran 17 times for 69 yards and a touchdown while catching four passes for 50 yards and another touchdown, while Chubb ran 13 times for 47 yards. The two were used interchangeably, as both running backs played some snaps on nearly every drive.
The rotation didn’t change this week, as Chubb started the game, and the two continued to share every drive. Marks tended to play in passing situations, leading to Chubb being on the field more in running situations. Chubb was the one making big plays this week, including a 27-yard touchdown run. Marks ran seven times for 24 yards. One problem is that the Texans gained too big a lead too early, leading them to use backups at the end of the game. Marks was too high up the depth chart at this point to be used in garbage time.
Marks will likely remain the better fantasy option of the two running backs, as he’s more likely to make the big plays going forward. However, we have not reached a point where he is a must-start fantasy option. He should at least remain on fantasy rosters, even if he’s not in your starting lineup.
Yeah, not sure why they didn't let the rook get some more in-game experience unless they are really comfortable with him and didn't want to risk injury. Still encouraging that he outsnapped Chubb. Those two should dominate touches in competitive games. Marks had, think 58% snap share last week, so if he is 60/40 lead back most weeks, including passing down work, I'll take it.Oooff. That didn’t go liked I hoped. Not even garbage time.
ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler reports that the Texans “still view” RB Woody Marks as “predominantly a passing-game back and one who had a bit of an injury history in college.”
Unfortunately, this confirms what we saw last week. In games where the Texans are “up big and running the ball,” veteran RB Nick Chubb “still has the playing time edge.” Marks had seemingly made a strong case for the Texans’ lead running back role in Week 4, but the coaches view things differently than much of the fantasy community. We must now reset expectations. Marks can still return high-end FLEX value, particularly in PPR leagues, operating as a receiving back with part-time rushing duties, but treating him as a potential RB2 now appears to be unreasonable.
- Source - ESPN's Jeremy Fowler
Yeah, not sure why they didn't let the rook get some more in-game experience unless they are really comfortable with him and didn't want to risk injury. Still encouraging that he outsnapped Chubb. Those two should dominate touches in competitive games. Marks had, think 58% snap share last week, so if he is 60/40 lead back most weeks, including passing down work, I'll take it.Oooff. That didn’t go liked I hoped. Not even garbage time.