1. It's insane you offered those guys up for that.
2. I can't believe they didn't snap accept, unless they are in a HUGE rebuild.
1. It's insane you offered those guys up for that.
I have 4/5 1sts in that class, figured I’d go all in idk. But maybe what I have is enough to revamp my rebuild projects.
Yes and no. I feel like every time I gave up multiple firsts for somebody it's backfired. Best case scenario I broke even, worst case scenario I lost. I play mostly superflex though so it makes draft picks a lot more valuable.
How does it make picks a lot more valuable? The draft pool tends to be a bit deeper because good position players get pushed down the board due to QBs going much higher than they do in 1QB formats.Dynasty DeLorean wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 10:54 amYes and no. I feel like every time I gave up multiple firsts for somebody it's backfired. Best case scenario I broke even, worst case scenario I lost. I play mostly superflex though so it makes draft picks a lot more valuable.
I think you kind of answered your own question.bjd5211 wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 2:01 pmHow does it make picks a lot more valuable? The draft pool tends to be a bit deeper because good position players get pushed down the board due to QBs going much higher than they do in 1QB formats.Dynasty DeLorean wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 10:54 amYes and no. I feel like every time I gave up multiple firsts for somebody it's backfired. Best case scenario I broke even, worst case scenario I lost. I play mostly superflex though so it makes draft picks a lot more valuable.
Not really, it's just expanding the pool of draftable players over a 1QB league. If anything they are more valuable in a 1QB league because there is a shorter supply of quality draftable players so there is more of a premium on acquiring a better pick to be able to draft the best players in the class.Hottoddies wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 2:32 pmI think you kind of answered your own question.bjd5211 wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 2:01 pmHow does it make picks a lot more valuable? The draft pool tends to be a bit deeper because good position players get pushed down the board due to QBs going much higher than they do in 1QB formats.Dynasty DeLorean wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 10:54 am
Yes and no. I feel like every time I gave up multiple firsts for somebody it's backfired. Best case scenario I broke even, worst case scenario I lost. I play mostly superflex though so it makes draft picks a lot more valuable.
Well, I guess you could consider any non QB to be somewhat less valuable in a superflex, but they can be had at a later draft pick. It depends how you look at it.bjd5211 wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 2:57 pmNot really, it's just expanding the pool of draftable players over a 1QB league. If anything they are more valuable in a 1QB league because there is a shorter supply of quality draftable players so there is more of a premium on acquiring a better pick to be able to draft the best players in the class.
Exactly.... so a mid-late first is worth way more than in a regular league. Plus if you hit on a rookie QB they are worth probably close to whatever you traded away for the package of picksbjd5211 wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 2:01 pmHow does it make picks a lot more valuable? The draft pool tends to be a bit deeper because good position players get pushed down the board due to QBs going much higher than they do in 1QB formats.Dynasty DeLorean wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 10:54 amYes and no. I feel like every time I gave up multiple firsts for somebody it's backfired. Best case scenario I broke even, worst case scenario I lost. I play mostly superflex though so it makes draft picks a lot more valuable.
For the sake of this argument lets assume that A.J. Brown is worth 4 spots more than Deebo Samuel. So in a superflex A.J. Brown may be available at the 1.12 due to the amount of QBs drafted before that spot. Whereas in a 1QB league you would have to settle for the likes of Deebo Samuel because Brown was already off the board. Now it could be argued that A.J. Brown is slightly more valuable in a 1QB than A.J. Brown in a superflex. I'm not sure you could argue that Deebo Samuel in a 1QB league is more valuable than A.J. Brown in a superflex.bjd5211 wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 2:01 pmHow does it make picks a lot more valuable? The draft pool tends to be a bit deeper because good position players get pushed down the board due to QBs going much higher than they do in 1QB formats.Dynasty DeLorean wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 10:54 amYes and no. I feel like every time I gave up multiple firsts for somebody it's backfired. Best case scenario I broke even, worst case scenario I lost. I play mostly superflex though so it makes draft picks a lot more valuable.
I think he is coming from a scarcity angle.Hottoddies wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 7:58 pmFor the sake of this argument lets assume that A.J. Brown is worth 4 spots more than Deebo Samuel. So in a superflex A.J. Brown may be available at the 1.12 due to the amount of QBs drafted before that spot. Whereas in a 1QB league you would have to settle for the likes of Deebo Samuel because Brown was already off the board. Now it could be argued that A.J. Brown is slightly more valuable in a 1QB than A.J. Brown in a superflex. I'm not sure you could argue that Deebo Samuel in a 1QB league is more valuable than A.J. Brown in a superflex.bjd5211 wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 2:01 pmHow does it make picks a lot more valuable? The draft pool tends to be a bit deeper because good position players get pushed down the board due to QBs going much higher than they do in 1QB formats.Dynasty DeLorean wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 10:54 am
Yes and no. I feel like every time I gave up multiple firsts for somebody it's backfired. Best case scenario I broke even, worst case scenario I lost. I play mostly superflex though so it makes draft picks a lot more valuable.
many draft pundits have agreed, that these last five wide receiver classes have been historically weak — at least compared to the famed 2014 draft class or the running back classes that have followed. This exercise has corroborated that narrative, but also makes a case that the 2020 and 2021 wide receiver classes are special and could buck that trend.
Jerry Jeudy, Ceedee Lamb, Laviska Shenault, Tyler Johnson, Tee Higgins, and Tylan Wallace all made at least one of our three charts, and all six are eligible to come out in 2020. Justyn Ross (who just set the PFF College record in yards per route run) and Rondale Moore, given their grades respective to age, might be truly generational prospects in 2021.
While it’s true that every year dynasty players say that the next year’s class is going to be a lot better than the current year’s class, this is the first year I’m saying it. The 2020 class, as well as Ross and Moore, have the chance to be very special. I’d start trying to acquire and hoard first-round rookie picks from those classes now.
5 of them are eligible for 2020. Ross and Moore will be 2021.
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