Analysis of the first-annual 5th Down Fantasy staff draft, including the full draft board and takes from our experts on the picks they loved and hated.
The 5th Down Fantasy staff finally found a draft day and time that worked for all and conducted the first-ever in-house league draft on Sunday (Sept. 1).
It was a 12-team, PPR snake draft with the following starting positions: QB, RB, RB, WR, WR, RB/WR/TE, K, DST. Keep reading for all the picks, as well as post-draft analysis from the participants.
Click on the draft-board images below to view larger versions.
Round 1
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Alvin Kamara (NO – RB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Saquon Barkley (NYG – RB)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Ezekiel Elliott (Dal – RB)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Christian McCaffrey (Car – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): DeAndre Hopkins (Hou – WR)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Davante Adams (GB – WR)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): David Johnson (Ari – RB)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Nick Chubb (Cle – RB)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Michael Thomas (NO – WR)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): JuJu Smith-Schuster (Pit – WR)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Le’Veon Bell (NYJ – RB)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): James Conner (Pit – RB)
Saquon Barkley (1.2) and Joe Mixon (2.11)
Mutters: Upon seeing that I had the second pick, I was set to take Christian McCaffrey thinking Barkley would inevitably be drafted first overall. Alvin Kamara came off the board first leaving Barkley available. I felt obligated to pull the trigger and take him with the second overall pick.
The top wide receivers were all drafted by the time my pick came back around so I opted to use my second-round pick on another running back, Joe Mixon. I am happy to have two solid running backs as my starters, but I do have mixed feelings about these two. On one hand, they will be heavily used as the centerpieces of their respective offenses, but on the other hand, they are both on bad teams that will be trailing in most games.
James Conner (1.12) and Dalvin Cook (2.1)
McCauley: I really like how my first five rounds played out in this draft. Given how the board fell in the first round there wasn’t a ton of PPR worthy WR talent on the board when it came to picks 12 and 13. I opted to go double RB and take Conner and Cook. While this was somewhat of a risk given the format, I really liked what I saw out of Cook in the preseason, and I believe Conner’s production from last year is sustainable behind Pittsburgh’s offensive line.
The thing I loved most about this start was that it solidified the RB position for me right out of the gate and allowed me to home in on WR and TE in the next three rounds. The fact I was able to end up with three PPR studs like Robert Woods/Amari Cooper and Jarvis Landry in those rounds was a nice cherry on top.
Round 2
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Dalvin Cook (Min – RB)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Travis Kelce (KC – TE)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Julio Jones (Atl – WR)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): George Kittle (SF – TE)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Mike Evans (TB – WR)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Odell Beckham Jr. (Cle – WR)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Todd Gurley II (LAR – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Tyreek Hill (KC – WR)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Keenan Allen (LAC – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Aaron Jones (GB – RB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Joe Mixon (Cin – RB)
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Kerryon Johnson (Det – WR)
JuJu Smith-Schuster (1.10) and Julio Jones (2.3)
Kremer: I really love my WR picks. Going with the zero-RB approach, I picked up Jones, JuJu, and Edelman for the first three rounds. With Julio back in a high scoring offensive scheme, JuJu the number one receiver under Roethlisberger, and Julien the only tried and true receiver for Brady, I have two top three receivers and potentially a top 10 receiver (Edelman). Tough to beat that in a PPR league.
George Kittle (2.4)
Davis: This may have been a slight reach for Kittle here, but I absolutely love getting one of the top three TEs in every draft I’m in. Not having to stream TE is a huge advantage throughout the year. Kittle should give me an advantage at TE in almost every matchup.
Kremer: I’m from Iowa and I love watching Kittle, but taking him in the second was reaching. Last year he was amazing, but there is no way he comes close to the same output. He’s no longer unknown, defenses will key in on him, making him adjust. That will take some time to adjust. He also had a couple of huge 50+ yard touchdowns (85 yards vs. Broncos). That will not happen again. And with the offense having a lot of new weapons, he won’t see the same opportunities. I do believe he’ll be a top-five TE, and I love him, but not in the second/third.
Round 3
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Antonio Brown (Oak – WR)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Adam Thielen (Min – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Chris Godwin (TB – WR)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Zach Ertz (Phi – TE)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Damien Williams (KC – RB)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Stefon Diggs (Min – WR)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Leonard Fournette (Jax – RB)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Devonta Freeman (Atl – RB)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Patrick Mahomes (KC – QB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Julian Edelman (NE – WR)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Brandin Cooks (LAR – WR)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Robert Woods (LAR – WR)
Chris Godwin (3.3)
Buttgereit: I like Godwin this year. I don’t necessarily love Godwin this year. There is a lot of hype surrounding this offense with Bruce Arians returning to the NFL to be the head coach in Tampa. I think Mike Evans will be a top-7 wide receiver, and I think O.J. Howard will be a top-4 tight end. There’s only so many guys that can be fantasy dominant in any given offense.
He was the 11th wide receiver taken, ahead of guys like Kenny Golladay, Stefon Diggs, and all three Rams’ receivers. I, personally, have him slotted as the WR23 heading into this season. Barring an injury to either Evans or Howard, I don’t see him returning third-round value.
Damien Williams (3.5)
Jason Sablich: The fantasy outlook on Williams has seemingly soured overnight now that LeSean McCoy has been reunited with Andy Reid in Kansas City. Many fantasy experts and beat writers foresee Shady returning to prominence and solidifying a major role in the Kansas City offense. This optimistic viewpoint comes despite the fact that McCoy averaged a pedestrian 3.2 YPC during his tenth NFL season with Buffalo last year.
Maybe I’m forced to take a more optimistic viewpoint on Williams now that I am officially a Damien owner, but how many running backs can you name who have actually had productive seasons at age 30, let alone age 31, which is what Shady just turned in July. The reality is there are very few running backs that have cracked the 30-year-old ceiling, and only a dozen or so have managed to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season after their 30th birthday.
Perhaps Shady defies father time at age 31 and bounces back to lead the KC backfield in touches. The odds are rather stacked against him, however. He certainly looked like a running back who hit the age 30 wall last season having managed to eclipse 100 yards just once in 14 games while crossing the goal line a mere 3 times.
Meanwhile, Williams was last seen turning a wheel route into a 62 yard TD in week three preseason action and has done nothing during the offseason to even suggest he deserves to lose RB1 status to his elder of 4 years. Some are assuming Shady is guaranteed a major role since the Chiefs ponied up 4 million dollars to acquire him. I’m not so sure this means a whole lot, considering the Giants gave Eli Manning a 5 million dollar signing bonus in March; a quarterback who is clearly washed up and all but certain to hand over the reins to Daniel Jones in 2019.
While all of this could be wishful thinking on my part now that I’m a Williams owner, the belief that the former star running back of 31 years has at least one more good season in him can just as easily be wishful thinking as well. I’m still expecting Williams to flirt with RB1 status despite McCoy’s arrival in Kansas City.
McCauley: Williams was already in a well known RB committee in Kansas City prior to the news of LeSean McCoy joining the team. With that many mouths to feed (not even mentioning the pass-catching options) I find it hard to justify taking Williams in the middle of the third round with confidence.
Leonard Fournette (3.7)
Kremer: I really like Fournette this year at his ADP. He went off our boards as the 15th RB, but I think he’ll end up as a top-six RB. He’s got a great line, good QB, awesome defense, and the right mindset. He acknowledged the issues he had over the previous seasons and spent the summer making adjustments. If he doesn’t get hurt, it’s a home run pick.
Devonta Freeman (3.8) and Josh Jacobs (4.5)
Patterson: I was thrilled to grab Freeman in Rd. 3 and Jacobs in Rd. 4. While this strategy left my WRs a little weak, the potential to have three top-15 RBs was too tempting to pass on. Both guys have 300-touch upside and should command both passing duties and goal-line work for their respective teams.
Round 4
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Amari Cooper (Dal – WR)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Mark Ingram II (Bal – RB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): David Montgomery (Chi – RB)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Marlon Mack (Ind – RB)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Josh Jacobs (Oak – RB)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Chris Carson (Sea – RB)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Sony Michel (NE – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Deshaun Watson (Hou – QB)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Tyler Boyd (Cin – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Tyler Lockett (Sea – WR)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Kenny Golladay (Det – WR)
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Derrick Henry (Ten – RB)
Amari Cooper (4.1)
McCauley: Even though I just sang his PPR praises, I’d be lying if I said I was in love with my Amari Cooper pick. While I think it’s entirely possible for him to reproduce his hot start in Dallas from last year, I also know he can be a frustratingly inconsistent fantasy option historically. Add on top of that a nagging foot injury that’s affected his ability to cut in the preseason, and you can see where I have room for second thoughts. Ultimately, I took Cooper because he represented the best value on the board at a position I felt I needed to double down on. If he balls out Week 1, I’ll be vindicated, but if he misses time or struggles out of the gate, this pick will stick with me.
Marlon Mack (4.4)
Davis: Bit of a reach here, but I hadn’t taken an RB yet and I was worried I’d be dangerously thin if I didn’t go with someone here. I’m hoping Mack’s emergence last year wasn’t an anomaly, but if he ends up being a one year wonder I’ll be in trouble.
Chris Carson (4.6)
Buttgereit: To put it simply, I am very high on Carson this year. I’m rostering him as much as I possibly can, and I’d be willing to use a late third-round selection on him. Based on the way this draft was unfolding, I felt I could wait until the fourth round. It was a sweat for those last few picks, but it paid off!
He was the 20th running back selected in this draft. Last season, he finished as RB14 in standard leagues, and RB15 in half PPR (contrary to popular belief that he is unproductive in PPR formats). On top of that, Pete Carroll said Carson will be much more involved in the passing game this year. Take that for what it’s worth, but I am a heavy believer in Carson. He is my RB13 this season.
Patton: The draft pick that caused me significant personal turmoil was Carson at 4.06. I was sitting on the button to take him with the next pick before being forced to settle for Sony Michel. Carson has steadily risen up my draft board since returning from an offseason knee procedure. He continues to outperform Rashaad Penny in the Seattle backfield, and with Mike Davis moving on in free agency, there are enough touches to go around for both of them. Chris Carson is one of my must-have players this season and I narrowly missed out on him in this draft.
Round 5
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Mike Williams (LAC – WR)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): T.Y. Hilton (Ind – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): D.J. Moore (Car – WR)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Duke Johnson Jr. (Hou – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Devin Singletary (Buf – RB)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): O.J. Howard (TB – TE)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Evan Engram (NYG – TE)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Cooper Kupp (LAR – WR)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Miles Sanders (Phi – RB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Aaron Rodgers (GB – QB)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Calvin Ridley (Atl – WR)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Jarvis Landry (Cle – WR)
Duke Johnson Jr. (5.4)
Justin Sablich: This was a teachable moment: Make sure you’re up on the latest NFL news before your fantasy draft. I was not aware of the Carlos Hyde deal before pulling the trigger. Or maybe I did see the headline but it didn’t process fully. The fact that this is a PPR league makes this pick not as useless as it might in standard scoring, but it was still too early given this development.
Devin Singletary (5.5)
Justin Sablich: My Duke Johnson blunder stung even more after I saw Singletary go with the next pick. Another transaction that same day sent McCoy packing, opening the door for this rookie to have a potential break-out season. He had 50 touchdowns and over 3,000 yards over the past two years in college. Yes, it’s college, but damn that’s still an insane stat. Yes, Frank Gore is technically the Bills’ starter, but he’s 36 years old and all old, zombie-like plodders (i.e. Fred Jackson) eventually run out of brains to eat.
Patterson: I was very surprised to see Sullivan’s Smashers take Singletary in the 5th round. With McCoy gone, Singletary has a ton of upside, but he’ll still have to share the load with Gore and T.J. Yeldon. Until he can seize a workhorse role, I don’t see Singletary returning 5th round value in Buffalo’s low-volume offense.
O.J. Howard (5.6)
Patton: One player I’m targeting in the fifth round of all my drafts is Howard. I’d rather start the run on mid-tier tight ends than miss out on Howard, Engram, and Henry. There’s value to be found late in the draft (Austin Hooper at 11.05 comes to mind), but Howard has much more upside. He averaged 12.1 PPR points/game last year before foot and ankle injuries ended his season in week 11. Now he’s working exclusively with Jameis Winston, who’s been friendly to the position, and he should see a consistent target share with DeSean Jackson and Adam Humphries removed from the offense.
Round 6
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Hunter Henry (LAC – TE)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Austin Ekeler (LAC – RB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Melvin Gordon III (LAC – RB)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Alshon Jeffery (Phi – WR)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Allen Robinson II (Chi – WR)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Christian Kirk (Ari – WR)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Baker Mayfield (Cle – QB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Josh Gordon (NE – WR)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Dede Westbrook (Jax – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Tevin Coleman (SF – RB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Derrius Guice (Was – RB)
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Curtis Samuel (Car – WR)
Austin Ekeler (6.2)
Melvin Gordon (6.3)
Kremer: Pretty obvious I’m not going to love my RB situation, but I wouldn’t say hate, especially if Gordon comes back. Snatching him in the 6th/7th round was risky, but he is a top 10 back. With my strong WR core, I believe the risk was worth it. If he doesn’t play, I still have David Montgomery and Matt Breida, both who could have solid years. Bottom line, if Gordon plays this season, I’ll have a championship team.
Davis: I really liked Mike taking the swing on Gordon at 63. He actually sniped it one pick before I could jump on him. I don’t think Gordon misses the entire 10-week span he could this year. If he only misses a few games, or miraculously none, this is an absolute steal and possibly a league winner. Mike also managed to grab Breida just before I could at 82. Solid draft.
Round 7
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): James White (NE – RB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Vance McDonald (Pit – TE)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Dante Pettis (SF – WR)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Phillip Lindsay (Den – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Jared Cook (NO – TE)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Latavius Murray (NO – RB)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Lamar Jackson (Bal – QB)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): A.J. Green (Cin – WR)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Will Fuller V (Hou – WR)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Matt Breida (SF – RB)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Sammy Watkins (KC – WR)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Darrell Henderson Jr. (LAR – RB)
James White (7.1)
Sullivan: After the draft, I felt like the best pick I had was White at 7.01 nearly two rounds after his average ADP of 5.02. White finished as the RB8 in PPR leagues last year but had finished around 38th, 25th, 42nd in the three years prior. If he follows up 2018 with similar production he’s got extremely high upside, but if he regresses towards the previous three years he brings flex appeal as an RB4 on my team.
Phillip Lindsay (7.4)
McCauley: Keep Calm & Kerryon (Justin) was able to grab Philip Lindsay early in the 7th round to protect against a possible let down from his earlier Duke Johnson selection. Lindsay represented the last potential three-down back on board and he cashed in at the perfect time. Any later and he would’ve ended up with Christian McCaffrey and an assortment of quality handcuff RB’s on his roster.
Lamar Jackson (7.7)
Buttgereit: This is my Jackson share of the year and my biggest reach of the draft. However, in leagues that only offer four points for passing touchdowns, running quarterbacks are much more valuable. Besides, throwing deficiencies aside, he’s a fun player to watch; and this gives me more a reason to tune into a Ravens game to see if he can improve in year two.
I took him as the 5th quarterback off the board. Considering I have him ranked as the QB14 on the year, it was a reach. But, given 16 healthy games, I can easily see him rushing for 800+ yards, threatening 1,000. That in a four-point passing touchdown league alone could be the difference between winning and losing.
A.J. Green (7.8)
McCauley: Philly Special (Paul) picking Green towards the back of the 8th round was a steal because of the league’s IR slot. It may take a little while, but he’ll be able to wait out Green’s injury timetable and still have his full bench available to make moves. This was a savvy selection.
Round 8
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Marquez Valdes-Scantling (GB – WR)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Matt Ryan (Atl – QB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Mark Andrews (Bal – TE)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Royce Freeman (Den – RB)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Tarik Cohen (Chi – RB)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Corey Davis (Ten – WR)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Kenyan Drake (Mia – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Russell Wilson (Sea – QB)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Robby Anderson (NYJ – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Tony Pollard (Dal – RB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Carson Wentz (Phi – QB)
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Cam Newton (Car – QB)
Tarik Cohen (8.5)
Patterson: Taking Cohen in Rd. 8 felt a little gross because I don’t particularly believe in Cohen. I think his per-play efficiency and TD rate from last season are bound to go down, and even Matt Nagy has discussed lessening Cohen’s load. It was a need pick, and he was the top RB left on my board.
Round 9
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): David Njoku (Cle – TE)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Jordan Howard (Phi – RB)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): LeSean McCoy (KC – RB)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Rashaad Penny (Sea – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Sterling Shepard (NYG – WR)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Marvin Jones Jr. (Det – WR)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Justice Hill (Bal – RB)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Jared Goff (LAR – QB)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Michael Gallup (Dal – WR)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Emmanuel Sanders (Den – WR)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Darwin Thompson (KC – RB)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Drew Brees (NO – QB)
Round 10
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Nyheim Hines (Ind – RB)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Keke Coutee (Hou – WR)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Geronimo Allison (GB – WR)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Anthony Miller (Chi – WR)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Donte Moncrief (Pit – WR)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): James Washington (Pit – WR)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Larry Fitzgerald (Ari – WR)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Golden Tate (NYG – WR)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Jameis Winston (TB – QB)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Kyler Murray (Ari – QB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Jamison Crowder (NYJ – WR)
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Courtland Sutton (Den – WR)
Jameis Winston (10.9)
Justin Sablich: I was pleased with my ultimate quarterback situation, ending up with two high-upside slingers in Winston and Dak Prescott. I like both as sleeper/breakout candidates this year, so I am banking on at least one of them taking a big step forward in 2019. That said, I do fear that letting Kyler Murray pass by may come back to haunt me, which is why I reached a bit to lock up Prescott in the 11th round.
Round 11
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Kalen Ballage (Mia – RB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Chicago (Chi – DEF)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Deebo Samuel (SF – WR)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Dak Prescott (Dal – QB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Austin Hooper (Atl – TE)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Dion Lewis (Ten – RB)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Tyrell Williams (Oak – WR)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Justin Jackson (LAC – RB)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Marquise Goodwin (SF – WR)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Jaylen Samuels (Pit – RB)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Greg Zuerlein (LAR – K)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): DeSean Jackson (Phi – WR)
Justin Jackson (11.8)
Patton: What’s it like drafting Dion Lewis in the eleventh round? Well, when Justin Jackson’s still on the board, it’s a regrettable experience. The Tennessee RB has PPR upside if Derrick Henry reaggravates his calf injury, but Jackson has a path towards significant touches without an injury. Gordon’s holdout looks like it could go the distance and Jackson has proven he can handle an expanded role, toting the rock 1,264 times in college.
Round 12
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Ty Montgomery (NYJ – RB)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Adrian Peterson (Was – RB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Darren Waller (Oak – TE)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Chris Thompson (Was – RB)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Delanie Walker (Ten – TE)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Mitchell Trubisky (Chi – QB)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Damien Harris (NE – RB)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Peyton Barber (TB – RB)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): John Brown (Buf – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Baltimore (Bal – DEF)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Alexander Mattison (Min – RB)
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Kenny Stills (Hou – WR)
Adrian Peterson (12.2)
Mutters: Though Derrius Guice is healthy and Chris Thompson will likely resume his third-down role, Peterson is currently listed at the top of the Redskins depth chart, which makes him an incredible value to be had in the 12th round.
Chris Thompson (12.4)
Davis: People tend to overlook players after an injury year, and Thompson is no exception. He was a PPR flex stud a couple of years ago. I would expect him to regain that status this year as the primary security blanket for Keenum/Haskins.
Round 13
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Josh Allen (Buf – QB)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Ben Roethlisberger (Pit – QB)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Jordan Reed (Was – TE)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Jacksonville (Jax – DEF)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Ronald Jones II (TB – RB)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Cleveland (Cle – DEF)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): DeVante Parker (Mia – WR)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Mohamed Sanu (Atl – WR)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Ito Smith (Atl – RB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Rob Gronkowski (NE – TE)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Jamaal Williams (GB – RB)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Justin Tucker (Bal – K)
Round 14
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Los Angeles (LAC – DEF)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Tom Brady (NE – QB)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Los Angeles (LAR – DEF)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): Buffalo (Buf – DEF)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Philadelphia (Phi – DEF)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Minnesota (Min – DEF)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Harrison Butker (KC – K)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): Stephen Gostkowski (NE – K)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): Wil Lutz (NO – K)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Albert Wilson (Mia – WR)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Ka’imi Fairbairn (Hou – K)
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Houston (Hou – DEF)
Round 15
MIKE S. TEAM (Michael Sullivan): Jake Elliott (Phi – K)
JOSH M’S TEAM (Joshua Mutters): Marquise Brown (Bal – WR)
DILLON JOSEPHSEN (Dillon Josephson): Chris Herndon (NYJ – TE)
KEEP CALM & KERRYON (Justin Sablich): T.J. Hockenson (Det – TE)
SULLIVAN’S SMASHERS (Jason Sablich): New England (NE – DEF)
PHILIP’S TEAM (Philip Patton): Tre’Quan Smith (NO – WR)
BIG BLUE (Joe Buttgereit): Aldrick Rosas (NYG – K)
THE PHILLY SPECIAL (Paul Patterson): Matt Bryant (Atl – K)
SUP MAHOMIES (Nate Davis): DK Metcalf (Sea – WR)
MONT-GO-MORE-Y ARDS (Mike Kremer): Chris Boswell (Pit – K)
BRANDON’S TEAM (Brandon Craig): Dallas (Dal – DEF)
SWEET VICTORY (Derek McCauley): Philip Rivers (LAC – QB)
No Comment! Be the first one.