Sunday, December 13, 2015

The Best of the Rest: Week Fourteen All-Waiver Wire Team

All Aboard the Blaine Train


The playoffs began Thursday for many of us, and all the work we have put in all season has boiled down to a handful of one-week matchups. During playoff time, the opponent of your player becomes nearly as important as the player himself. I’m not a proponent of benching Julio Jones because he gets Josh Norman twice in the next three weeks. I couldn’t live with myself if he blew up on my bench and a down-the-roster WR I started in his place nets me three points. That’s a bitter way to go into the long, dark offseason. Still, there are instances where we need to get our stream on. Best of the Rest has been here to help you out all season long, and as we go into the playoffs, I still have your back.

QUARTERBACKS
Jameis Winston versus New Orleans (46%)
While Jameis hasn’t done too great recently outside of his five touchdown game against Philadelphia, he has massively cut back on his interceptions, which were his big bugaboo at the beginning of the season. He’s thrown three total since his week four four-interception performance. He takes on a New Orleans squad that is literally the worst against opposing quarterbacks. The last time they yielded only one touchdown was week four against Brandon Weeden. This was also the only time a quarterback only scored one touchdown against them this season. In four of their last five games (including fellow rookie Marcus Mariota), quarterbacks have thrown at least four touchdowns against the woeful Saints defense, and firing Rob Ryan did nothing to fix that.

Ryan Fitzpatrick versus Tennessee (45%)
Over the last four weeks, Fitzpatrick is a top-five quarterback, posting multiple touchdowns in all four games. In fact, he has only not gotten multiple touchdowns in a game he finished once (week four against Miami). Last week he carved up that same Miami defense for four touchdowns. He’s been consistent all season long, and is a top-ten quarterback this season on raw points totals, and that’s with his 3.04 point effort in a week he had to leave due to injury. The Titans have been pretty bad against the quarterback this season, as well. In all non-Thursday Night Football games, they have allowed at least two touchdowns to quarterbacks, and Fitzpatrick will continue that trend Sunday.

Deep Dive:
Blaine Gabbert at Cleveland (4%)
Yo Gabbert Gabbert makes his return to the Deep Dive, and likely for the last time. The part-time 49ers quarterback has posted decent fantasy returns since he took the reins, and has been the #12 quarterback over the last four weeks (a four week stretch that include Arizona and Seattle). He has been consistently 16 fantasy points, which isn’t world-beating, but won’t hurt you. Granted he posted 25 points last week, but needed a 44-yard run and a 71-yard bomb in OT to pull that off. He’s racking up decent yardage numbers with his legs and through the air. He’s a sneaky play to pick up 2-3 points with his legs. If you exclude his 44-yard fluke run last week, he is still averaging 24 rushing yards per game this season, which puts him just 4.4 yards per game behind Colin Kaepernick. His yards per rush are also higher than Kaepernick’s. The Browns, like the Titans and Saints, are dismal against the pass, yielding 16.28 fantasy points to pick-six machine Matt Schaub (!!!). Over their last ten games, only now-benched Nick Foles and now-benched Peyton Manning have dropped fewer than 16 fantasy points on the Brownies, and every single quarterback that has played them since they took on Peyton, then Foles, in weeks six and seven has gotten at least two touchdowns (all but Schaub have three or more).

WIDE RECEIVERS
DeVante Parker versus New York Giants (43%)
Over the last couple of weeks, Parker has absorbed fifteen targets from Ryan Tannehill. Though he dropped from ten in week 12 to five in week 13, those five represent more than 25% of Tannehill’s pass attempts last week (he only threw the ball 19 times). He shared the top-target honor with Jarvis Landry. It’s taken some time for Parker to get going, but now that he is healthy (and Kenny Stills is not), he has become the number two receiver for the Dolphins. He’s gotten 22 targets in his last three healthy games, which means that the Dolphins are looking his way no matter who the offensive coordinator may be. They are taking on a middling Giants defense, who has gotten better recently now that Jason Pierre-Paul has rounded into form. He will get the targets this week, and with two iffy defenses, he will likely be getting targets in a shootout.

Torrey Smith versus Cleveland (35%)
If you believe in Gabbert, you believe that someone other than Shaun Draughn will be getting targets this week. With only one healthy tight end left, that someone will be Smith.  The Myth of Joe Haden is just that now: a myth, and the Browns have yielded six double-digit point performers in their last four games. Smith, for his part, has scored against both AFC North teams he’s played this season (Cleveland and Pittsburgh) as his reunion/revenge tour continues. He’s definitely a boom/bust, desperation play, but if you’re a big underdog, you don’t want the solid 6 points from a usual WR4 or WR5, you want the ability to end up with 15 or more, which is a prospect that Smith gives you. Cleveland has given up six touchdowns to wide receivers in the last three games.

Deep Dive:
Brian Hartline versus San Francisco (4%)
If Hartline had his last few weeks at the beginning of the season, his ownership would be 20x what it is now, but Hartline sits at a meager 4%. With Travis Benjamin banged up and Hartline sopping up a whopping 42 targets over his last four games played, Hartline makes a great sneaky deep dive target, given that he’s out there in almost all leagues. That 10.5 targets per game, by the way, puts him above target monsters Allen RobinsonJarvis LandryLarry Fitzgerald and Calvin Johnson. Before shutting down the bears receivers last week, the 49ers were getting torched by the Cardinals receivers, and the Seahawks receivers, and every other receiver to play against them. With Johnny Football under center and no real run game to speak of to salt the game away on either side, this one will be a slug fest, with targets abound for Hartline.

RUNNING BACKS:
Tim Hightower at Tampa Bay (34%)
With Mark Ingram suddenly going down for the season with an injury, it is on C.J. Spiller and Tim Hightower to shoulder the load (no pun intended, Ingram owners). While Spiller has been a more useful option in the recent past, he has had issues picking up the playbook and blitzers this season, which means that the Saints are likely to turn towards Hightower over Spiller. Still, one or the other are worst a roster spot to see what happens this weekend. It will be telling, as Tampa Bay is towards the bottom-third in terms of fantasy points allowed to running backs. This is definitely a roster-and-hold situation and not a start Hightower situation.

Isaiah Crowell versus San Francisco (25%)
Unlike Hightower, Crowell finds himself in a plus matchup this weekend, as the 49ers are the worst in the league at stopping the running back (a far cry from the last few years when run defense was their hallmark). Excepting week one’s strange outburst of competency, every single starting running back has gotten at least nine fantasy points against the San Francisco run defense, including 17+ fantasy points to every single running back they’ve faced on the road. Crowell has gotten some carries recently, to mixed results, but if you’re this deep in the running back ranks, you’re desperate as it is.

Juwan Thompson versus Oakland (6%)
A much better option given the situation in front of him is Thompson. C.J. Anderson and Ronnie Hillman are both banged up and neither is a lock to play Sunday. If one of them is out, the timesplit that has developed in Denver will go partially towards Thompson. As Anderson and Hillman shuffle in and out with injuries, Thompson may be able to get a hold on the situation. This is definitely a one-week desperation option, but still an option.

TIGHT ENDS
Vernon Davis versus Oakland (46%) / Owen Daniels versus Oakland (31%)
While Daniels dropped a goose egg in their earlier matchup, we can’t really hold this Broncos offense to the same standard we did the Manning-led Broncos that broke all rules for how terrible and inefficient an offense could possibly perform and still win games. The Raiders are still among the worst against tight ends, but not the absolute worst (New Orleans took that spot). With the Broncos suddenly moving it up and down the field under the guidance of Brock Osweiler, whichever tight end is starting for Denver is a great fantasy option for you this weekend.

Deep Dive
Will Tye 
at Miami (4%)
Over the last couple of weeks, the Giants have eschewed passes to non-Odell Beckham wide receivers in lieu of targeting Tye. He’s gotten 12 targets over the last couple of weeks, turning in solid returns of 7.4 and 7 fantasy points in both games, entirely on the ground. Miami is middle-of-the-road against tight ends this season, but haven’t done anything to stop tight ends that actually receive targets. They’ve played five tight ends that received seven or more targets, and three of them have scored touchdowns and they are all averaging 6.6 receptions and 85 receiving yards per game. Tye is a decent fill-in for Rob Gronkowski owners who missed out on Scott Chandler.

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Best of the Rest: Week Thirteen All-Waiver Wire Team

Jay Cutler says "Start me. Or don't. Like I care."


The Bye weeks are over and we are on the precipice of the playoffs. As such, your rosters should be solidified by now. If they aren't, this week's Best of the Rest has your back! There is a mix of one-week and rest of season options below, so please enjoy.

QUARTERBACKS
Jay Cutler versus San Francisco (46%)
I don’t do ranks, but if I did, Smokin’ Jay would be top three this week behind a suddenly furious Tom Brady-led Patriots team and Cam Newton taking on eleven guys the Saints scraped off Bourbon Street masquerading as a defense. He takes on a 49ers team that has been absolutely dreadful on the road this year, a team that is set to break all records for defensive ineptitude away from Levi’s Stadium. I won’t go into deep depths with Jay Cutler, but here are some sobering facts about the 49ers defense (I say this as a 49ers fan).
Quarterbacks in 49ers road games:
314.4 yards, 2.4 touchdowns, 0.4 interceptions for 23.74 fantasy points per game.
In the “not Nick Foles” category
All QBs have totaled at least 290 yards rushing and passing
All QBs have thrown multiple touchdowns
The 49ers are averaging one interception every other game on the road.
Since Cutler was injured in Seattle, he has played decently: no game under 200 passing yards and 1.5 touchdowns a game. Nothing spectacular, but solid. He’s still a good quarterback, and he will feast on the 49ers’ secondary Sunday

Alex Smith at Oakland (30%)
Smith has played extremely well at Oakland in his tenure as a Chief, passing for over 260 yards per game in his two games there and tossing seven touchdowns in those two games. He’s played solidly recently, and remains a middling option who won’t hurt your team. He’ll provide steady fantasy points. With the running back situation a mess, Smith will frequently turn to Travis Kelce Sunday, and the Raiders are absolutely terrible at defending the Tight End. Nothing flashy, nothing spectacular, but Smith is unlikely to hurt your fantasy squad.

Deep Dive:
Blaine Gabbert at Chicago (2%)
This one is rough because there are only two quarterbacks under 10% ownership that are actually starting, Gabbert and Matt Schaub. So, we aren’t exactly working with a ton of options here. This play is based on the fact that the Bears are likely to end up going up big and playing prevent defense. This works into the hands of the 49ers’ dink-and-dunk offense. Expect a lot of yardage and underneath plays to the running backs and tight ends. Gabbert hasn’t lit the world on fire but he has been competent. This is a complete desperation play but Schaub can’t stop throwing interceptions, so…

WIDE RECEIVERS
DeVante Parker versus Baltimore (26%)
Parker has been in and out of the lineup this season, but in the games he played a decent amount of snaps, he’s averaging 8.5 targets a game. With Kenny Stills out and the Dolphins going up the legendarily awful Ravens secondary, he should get peppered with targets again. He hasn’t gotten empty targets like Jordan Matthews, either, he’s converted seven of them for 120 yards and a touchdown. The Ravens have given up 20 games of over 7 fantasy points to wide receivers so far this season, which means that number two receivers have been feasting against them. Parker may start heating up, so he’s a great speculative add as well as a one-week option.

Eddie Royal versus San Francisco (19%)
This is with the caveat that he actually plays Sunday. He is officially listed as questionable on the injury report, but Martellus Bennett is falling out of favor and Marquess Wilson is out for the game. Royal will be the number two receiver against a 49ers defense that has gotten destroyed by wide receivers on the road this season. For Royal’s part, he’s been a solid option when he plays and the receiving corps is depleted, which may be the case Sunday.

Deep Dive:
Brian Hartline versus Cincinnati (1%)
Last week’s deep dive makes another return. He’s quietly become the number two receiver in Cleveland over the last few weeks, totaling 31 targets in the last three games he’s played. He’s turned this into over 70 yards twice and two touchdowns another time. He’s hauled in 14 targets in the last two games combined, so he is especially intriguing in PPR. The Bengals are middle of the road against wide receivers, but have had bad showings recently, giving up 9 or more fantasy points to receivers six times in their last four games. At 1% owned and no Bye weeks, he’s an extreme desperation play, but also an intriguing DFS option.

RUNNING BACKS
Antonio Andrews versus Jacksonville (48%)
Andrews has taken the majority lead in Jacksonville, and performed decently on Thursday Night Football against Jacksonville a few weeks ago. He’s averaged 4.2 yards per carry the last couple of weeks after his disastrous eight attempts for one yard debacle, so he’s running well. Jacksonville has given up over nine fantasy points to running backs eight times this year. He’s freely available, and is a lead back, so if you’re in a pinch, you could do worse.

Charles Sims versus Atlanta (28%)
One of the running backs that got double-digits against Jacksonville was Sims. He’s had his carries scaled back, and was disastrous in his four touches last week, but he is still at 4.4 yards per carry on the seasons and he’s worth as good a shot as any. Sub-50% owned running backs are a bleak landscape, so banking on the Falcons’ terrible running back defense and Sims busting one long is your best bet if your on-roster RBs aren’t doing the trick.

Terrance West at Miami (2%)
In his first game with Baltimore, he got seven carries and pulled off 37 yards with those totes. That is a good yards per carry, but West isn’t the type of back that will break out for any sort of longish run. If sub-50% running backs are bleak, imagine how bad it is to be scraping under 10%? It’s rough. This is banking on West and Javorius Allen splitting reps and West making maximum use of his. He’s not a great play, but the best of the sub-10% running backs.

TIGHT ENDS
Jacob Tamme at Tampa Bay (35%)
The Falcons put Leonard Hankerson on injured reserve this week, so there are 6-8 targets per game up for grabs in Atlanta. Tamme is already averaging over 7 targets per game over his last four games, and with extra looks to sop up, his production will see a boost. Tampa Bay doesn’t give up a ton of points to the tight end position, but Tamme torched them in week eight to the tune of 10 catches for 103 yards and a touchdown. He’s available in just about 2/3 of leagues, so Rob Gronkowski and Jimmy Graham owners who whiffed on a replacement can easily look towards Tamme this week to fill in.

Austin Seferian-Jenkins versus New Orleans (28%)
The Legend of ASJ grows, as he has been cleared for contact, and he was dominant in the one game he’s played so far this year. He isn’t a strong bet to play this weekend, but is definitely worth a stash for the playoff run. Do it before anyone else does, and if he plays this weekend, temper your expectations. He went for 110 yards and two touchdowns in week one, but was hurt early in week two and hasn’t played since. He’ll need to shake off the rust, but could win seasons down the stretch for you.

Deep Dive:
Will Tye versus Jets (1%)
The Jets have been dominant against the tight end this season, but they haven’t really shut down any great TEs. Only Charles Clay and Rob Gronkowski got more than five targets this season, and Gronk smashed to the tune of 108 and a touchdown (Clay had over 10 yards a catch on his five catches). Tye has gotten 21 targets over the past three weeks, and with the beleaguered Jets secondary doing everything they can to stop Odell Beckham, Jr without Darrelle Revis, things should open up for Tye underneath.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

San Francisco Giants Free Agency Primer

Pictured Above: Every Dodger Fan's Worst Nightmare

Major League Baseball’s free agency period started, and the Giants are expecting to be pretty big players in the market this hot stove period. They’ll definitely have some holes to fill. Let’s take a look, position by position.

Position                Catcher
Free Agents       Bleak
Team Status       Set
Free Agency       Highly Unlikely

The Giants’ most popular (and dreamiest) player is their catcher, which is exceedingly rare. Buster Posey isn’t set to become a free agent for another two presidential campaign cycles. He’ll be locked up until 2023, and for 2016, he’ll take the lions’ share of catching duty. He won’t work there full-time, since his backup, Andrew Susac is showing extreme competence on Posey’s DH or 1B days. Susac isn’t going to be a free agent until 2021, so unless he gets traded (unlikely), he and Posey will be sharing backstop duties for the next few years. Hector Sanchez is a perfectly serviceable catcher to stash in AAA in case of injury. He isn’t spectacular, but his usage is ideally rare.

This is good, as the free agent crop of catchers is pretty bad. The most appealing free agent, Matt Wieters, is going to be a 1B/DH hybrid in a few years and is fresh off Tommy John Surgery. Catchers age extremely poorly, so it’s difficult to find a great one in free agency. The Giants are set with Posey/Susac/Sanchez for the forseeable future.

Position                First Base
Free Agents       Top-Heavy
Team Status       Shallow
Free Agency       Middle-Tier Depth

Technically, the Giants have one first baseman on the roster, and that is oft-injured Brandon Belt (I was very careful to word it that way and not “injury prone”), but Posey plays a fair amount of first base (42 games in 2015). Kevin Frandsen, Nick Noonan and Joaquin Arias all saw multiple games at first in 2015. The Giants have a glut of decent infielders, and they plug them in at first base in a pinch. Behind Belt and Posey, it’s more of a committee. This seems to be by design, as the Giants will have a logjam in a few years when they need to start preserving Posey’s knees by moving him to first more and more. Belt is a free agent in 2018, and that’s likely the last season that you see Posey behind the plate and Belt in a Giants uniform. For now, the Giants will likely re-sign Kevin Frandsen and stash him in AAA, to backup both first and third in case of injury.

The free agency market is top-heavy, with masher Chris Davis leading the way and aging Justin Morneau, Steven Pearce and Mike Napoli following him up. If the Giants don’t go after Frandsen, a familiar face (Travis Ishikawa) could make his way back onto the roster as a backup. Kyle Blanks as a OF/1B platoon option is also on the table. The available players don’t match the Giants’ roster needs, especially since it’s one player teams would actively want and a bunch of retreads.

Position                Second Base
Free Agents       Decent-to-okay
Team Status       Deep
Free Agency       2B-only unlikely
Second base this year is highlighted by a handful of top names and a bunch of okay guys that are definitely top-30 at the position but not ideal.  The top free agents at the position, Howie Kendrick and Ben Zobrist, will probably re-sign with their current teams on shorter deals. In a perfect world, the Giants will get Chase Utley to complete my Chase Utley and Hunter Pence on the Giants fan fiction from 2006, but I doubt it will happen.

The Giants have a glut of young talent coming into their own at second base, with Buster Clone Joe Panik leading the way. Kelby Tomlinson likely played his way into a 25-man spot last season given his versatility, and Nick Noonan is also in tow. Barring injury, however, Panik is the only player the Giants will need manning second for the near future. The Giants will probably pick off a middle-tier multi-position guy like Kelly Johnson or Sean Rodriguez as a bench bat out of this group.

Position                Shortstop
Free Agents       Likely to be overpaid
Team Status       Gold Glove!
Free Agency       Don’t need it
Shortstop free agents are a lot of “named” talent that has struggled recently. It’s headlined by Ian Desmond, and rounded out with Jimmy Rollins, Alexei Ramirez and Steven Drew. These guys all have one thing in common: they’re old. Desmond is the youngest of those four and he’s 30. The list thins out quickly, as former Giant Joaquin Arias is a top-ten free agent option at the position.

Brandon Crawford is one of many home-grown talents on this team, and he had been a glove-first bat until this year. He finally broke out with the bat and he, ironically, finally hit well enough to get a Gold Glove nod. Behind him are a couple of super-platoon guys with Ehire Adrianza and Matt Duffy. Duffy will be playing third, but Adrianza is likely to be Crawford’s true backup. The Giants are basically set at short stop and they probably won’t be ponying up any cash to the available options, except maybe Joaquin Arias. The Giants can’t quit him.

Position                Third Base
Free Agents       Awful
Team Status       “Third base can never die, only the players who play it. OH YEAH!”
Free Agency       Oh Dear Lord

The Giants like to have a lot of super platoon players. They love it so much, they make career first baseman Brandon Belt a 1B/LF. Their third basemen, in turn, tend to end up at other positions (Duffy played a lot of 2B in the minors, as well). They will likely use some of their free agent cash on a multipositional player to fill this hole. Their ties to Ben Zobrist make sense here. Free agency is a disaster, with the cream of the crop being some mix of David Freese, Mike Aviles and… Juan Uribe?!

Position                Outfield
Free Agents       Plentiful
Team Status       Desperately need
Free Agency       A target

The Giants were racked with injury in the outfield in 2015, but Angel Pagan was actively detrimental to the team when he wasn’t injured. Desperation showed when the Giants made a move for Marlon Byrd towards the end of the year and every time Brandon Belt ended up in left field. It’s odd that the Giants declined Nori Aoki’s option, but all indications are that they intend to re-sign him once his concussion symptoms clear. Hunter Pence should be completely healed from his various injuries, and should return to his iron man ways (2015 was the first time since 2007 that Pence played fewer than 150 games).

The free agent market is plentiful at all levels. There are massive stars available, with Yoenis Cespedes and Jason Heyward testing free agency. There are solid everyday contributors available as well, like Dexter Fowler, Ben Zobrist and Alex Gordon. The Giants have been tied to Zobrist because they are reportedly enamored with his multi-position eligibility. With the lineup shuffling Bruce Bochy has had to do over the last couple of seasons, can you blame them? The Giants could also get a fourth-outfield type, like a Gerardo Parra or a bounce back candidate like Denard Span. There are a ton of options at outfield, and the Giants are expected to dive into the market headfirst.

Position                Starting Pitcher
Free Agents       Oh, so many
Team Status       Oh, so desperately needed
Free Agency       Top priority
The Giants pitching staff in 2015 was a disaster. They were a combination of has-beens and broken down former stars, but they were mostly paying off their debts from rewarding the staff pieces that brought them three titles in five years. Now, however, Mike Leake, Tim Lincecum, Tim Hudson and Ryan Vogelsong are all coming off the books, which clears a whopping $43,000,000 off the books just from the pitching staff alone.

Three “name” free agents have already linked, two of them superstars, lopping the top right off the market. David Price defects from Toronto to Boston and Jordan Zimmermann completes the Zimmermann-Scherzer Swap as he heads to Detroit to fill out their pitching staff. Two of the top free agents still remain: Johnny Cueto and Zack Greinke. Cueto appears to be linked to the DBacks, Dodgers, Red Sox, Giants and Cubs (per Jon Heyman). He’s already rejected an offer from the DBacks at $20 million a year over 6 years. The Red Sox won the Price Sweepstakes, so that leaves the Giants, Dodgers and Cubs.

Greinke is also tied to the Giants and Dodgers, so now that the Price and Zimmermann dominos have fallen and the market has been set, that means that the Giants are in position to get one of the two Tier 1a free agent pitchers on the market. If you figure they throw $25 million a year at one of those two, it should get it done. For my money, I hope it’s Greinke. Greinke is notably cerebral and the idea of him donning the Orange and Black solely to figure out how to pitch to the dimensions of AT&T Park is the magical concept.

The Giants will still need another rotation arm, but a #3 to go with Greinke (hopefully) and Bumgarner. There are quite a few on the market, but they all carry question marks. Whether it’s the iffy arm of Hisashi Iwakuma or the corpulence and age of Bartolo Colon, or the Yovanigallardoness of Yovani Gallardo, they’ll all have the baggage of uncertainty. The Giants feel like a perfect suitor for Gallardo, apropos of nothing. Given their ups and downs of their rotation last year, however, I wouldn’t be surprised for them to pull down a more consistent, if not flashy, arm like John Lackey or Doug Fister (assuming he bounces back).

The Giants are set to be major players in free agency this season, likely making one flashy splash, a moderate signing and a bunch of depth signings. They have a good nucleus of offense, but they need to work on their pitching consistency and depth. Both of these things absolutely murdered the Giants last season. And it’s an even year, so they pretty much have to.