NFL Barometer

By Dalton Del Don

RISERS

Percy Harvin, WR, MIN – Harvin, who led all wide receivers in broken tackles last season despite being a rookie and recording a modest 60 receptions, is a special talent with the skills to develop into one of the best wideouts in football. He should only get better entering his sophomore campaign, and the return of Brett Favre is great news as well. His perpetual “day-to-day” status while dealing with serious migraine headaches that can seemingly pop up at any time is not without concern, but Harvin claims doctors recently have figured out how to treat them. Harvin looked good while returning to action this week, and if his claim is true (or even if they can at least get the issue under more control), it’s huge news for his long-term value. As for the short-term, news of Sidney Rice missing at least half the season after undergoing hip surgery gives Harvin a big upgrade, as it wouldn’t surprise to see his targets double this year compared to last. He’s a borderline top-15 fantasy WR.

Tom Brady, QB, N.E. – Brady completed 18-of-22 passes for 273 yards (12.4 YPA) with three scores and zero picks Thursday. The strong performance came at home against a suspect Rams defense, but it was quite impressive nevertheless. Brady is another year removed from knee surgery and is fully recovered from last year’s broken ribs – an underreported injury that likely hampered his final numbers. Randy Moss has looked terrific in the preseason entering a contract-year, Wes Welker (knee) has returned quicker than expected, and rookies Aaron Hernandez and especially Rob Gronkowski also look ready to contribute right away. New England’s playoff schedule is concerning (@Chi, G.B., @Buf) – not so much the opponents but all three games could be played in wintry conditions. According to Football Outsiders, Brady faced one of the 15 most difficult schedules against pass defenses in NFL history last year, and while the Patriots’ division should field strong secondaries (although if Darrelle Revis holds out, that would help), there’s no way his matchups won’t prove much easier in 2010. With major question marks regarding New England’s defense, the team may have to win in shootouts. Brady should reach (and top) 30 TD passes for the second time in his career this season.

Jahvid Best, RB, DET – Best had trouble loosening up during Saturday’s game, which resulted in him leaving after just one carry, enhancing the concerns about his durability. Still, he gained 51 yards on that lone rushing attempt and has totaled 158 yards over 19 touches during three preseason games. Best is unlikely to be a 20-carry back per game, but he can still approach 300 touches while being active as a receiver, and Detroit is going to give him all the opportunities he can handle. With Matthew Stafford poised to improve and a healthy Calvin Johnson joined by Nate Burleson, Brandon Pettigrew and Tony Scheffler, the Lions’ offense looks poised to breakout.

Sam Bradford, QB, STL – Bradford completed 15-of-22 passes (68.2%) for 189 yards (8.6 YPA) with two touchdowns and zero interceptions during the Rams’ win over the Patriots on Thursday. It’s only one game and in the preseason, but it’s become clear he’s already St. Louis’ best option at quarterback. Bradford is still fighting an uphill battle dealing with a poor offensive line and unproven receivers, but early returns on the No. 1 overall pick have been highly encouraging.

Pierre Garcon, WR, IND
– Garcon returned to action Thursday after missing the first two preseason games with an undisclosed injury and promptly hauled in an 18-yard touchdown. While Anthony Gonzalez and Austin Collie fight for the slot position, Garcon is locked in as the Colts’ No. 2 WR, and he’s already the team’s best deep threat, as aging Reggie Wayne has seen his yards-per-catch drop in each of the past three seasons. Admittedly, when you also factor in Dallas Clark, there are numerous targets Garcon will have to share with in Indy, but other factors (entering his third year in the league, playing in a dome, having Peyton Manning at QB) point to quite a bit of upside.

Leon Washington, RB, SEA – Washington became the third Seattle RB to start a preseason game during the team’s loss to Minnesota on Saturday, and thanks to a faster than expected recovery from his broken leg, he’s starting to become something more than only a late round flier in fantasy leagues. Justin Forsett remains the Seahawks back with the most upside, and in all likelihood it will be a committee situation regardless who starts, but Washington might be the better buy right now, considering he’s still so cheap.

Jermichael Finley, TE, G.B. – Finley is far from a sleeper, and for someone so unproven, his price tag can certainly be considered a big gamble for those risk adverse. However, the upside cannot be understated. Finley is a physical freak who will be consistently utilized in the slot like a receiver, and he’s an absolute nightmare matchup for linebackers. There are also few better targets around the goal line. Over Green Bay’s final six games last season (including the playoffs), Finley recorded 34 receptions for 496 yards and four touchdowns while playing on an injured knee. That’s a season’s pace of 91 catches, 1,323 yards and 11 scores. Of course, taking small samples and extrapolating them like that is silly, but Finley came into the NFL raw, is still just 23 years old and will now be entering his third year in the league, and again, he did that damage last year while hurt, so further improvement should be expected. Finley will certainly garner opposing defenses’ attention, but with one of the best quarterbacks throwing to him in an offense loaded with talent (and possibly a shaky defense that will result in a ton of shootouts), he’s also in an ideal situation. Elite skills combined with perfect circumstances is a scary combination. There’s no way I’d take a different tight end ahead of him.

Arian Foster, RB, HOU – Foster ran for 110 yards on 18 carries with a touchdown and also added four receptions for 16 yards during Houston’s win Saturday against a good Dallas defense. Steve Slaton suffered a turf toe injury during the game as well. I’ve written about Foster enough, so I’ll keep this brief – he should be a second round fantasy pick.

FALLERS

Maurice Jones-Drew, RB, JAC – While it sounds like the rumors of Jones-Drew undergoing knee surgery were false, clearly he’s been dealing with an injury for a while now and won’t see any action over the rest of the preseason. Jones-Drew is expected to be ready for Week 1, and the team says all the time missed is just precautionary, but who knows, and any knee injury always runs the risk of lingering or cropping back up at a later date. Jones-Drew is an absolute workhorse with terrific skills, but his poor setup isn’t that much different than Steven Jackson’s, as Jacksonville projects to be a pretty mediocre to bad team only in a tougher division. The injury concerns are enough to take Frank Gore and Michael Turner ahead of him.

Jerome Harrison, RB, CLE – Harrison has managed just 72 yards on 23 rushing attempts this preseason, good for a 3.1 YPC mark. He’s also lost fumbles in each of the last two games. Obviously, the coaching staff never fully endorsed him, even after last year’s strong finish, as Cleveland traded up to draft Montario Hardesty in the second round. Hardesty, who was injury-prone throughout college, has been sidelined throughout the preseason with another knee injury, but he impressed during minicamp and is expected to be close to 100 percent by Week 1. At this point, Hardesty has more upside, yet Harrison typically costs a much higher draft pick.

Donovan McNabb, QB, WAS
– While McNabb is still expected to be ready for Week 1, his recent ankle injury is apparently serious enough to put his status in some doubt. The loss of practice time as well as preseason action also hurts someone learning a new system. Mike Shanahan loves to run the ball, and Washington’s group of receivers ranks well below average. At this point, grab Matthew Stafford instead.

Donnie Avery, WR, STL
– Avery suffered a season-ending knee injury Thursday and was placed on IR. He worked hard over the offseason in an effort to break his injury-prone label, but to no avail. It’s too bad, as he’s shown some decent skills in the past and was emerging as the team’s clear No. 1 WR with exciting Sam Bradford at the helm. Bump Laurent Robinson up your cheat sheets.

John Carlson, TE, SEA – Maybe his role in this offense won’t be so different than last season. Carlson has totaled just two catches for 12 yards over three preseason games. Again, it’s just exhibition and a small sample, but his lack of involvement has Seattle beat writers worried as well. Guys like Dustin Keller should be taken ahead of Carlson at this point.

Matt Leinart, QB, ARI – Leinart has completed 82 percent of his passes without committing a turnover this preseason, and he once threw for an NFL rookie-record 405 yards. While the latter may suggest there’s a star inside him somewhere, that was four years ago, and it wasn’t until midway through the third quarter of Arizona’s third preseason game until he produced a single point during a drive. Leinart thrives while facing zone defenses, but his lack of arm strength is a problem, and he’s become too one-dimensional, relying almost single-handedly on check downs. It sure seems like Derek Anderson is going to be under center come Week 1.


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19 responses to “NFL Barometer”

  1. Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor Avatar
    Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor

    Call me crazy, but I think Harvin is in for a rough year. If they use him in the slot, as opposed to Z, I think he will produce. I don’t see him as a polished WR.

  2. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    You’re crazy.

  3. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Harvin could have a rough year due to injuries, either to him or Favre, but I will argue it won’t happen b/c he’s playing the Z instead of the slot. You a big Berrian believer?

  4. The Jewru Avatar
    The Jewru

    Lahey Harvin may have the best speed power ratio of any receiver in the league. Lookup his bench combine from last year. He is fearless over the middle has great hands and oh yeah broke the most tackles of any receiver in football last year. Guy is an animal. Avoid at your own risk.

  5. WorldWideInterTubes Avatar
    WorldWideInterTubes

    when do you take Harvin? What’s his ADP an when do you move to ensure you own?

  6. Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor Avatar
    Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor

    I am not a Berrian believer at all, and I hear all of your points about Harvin.

    @Jewru- Yes, he is an incredible athlete, but last year’s # are last year.
    @ DDD, i know you believe in volume of targets, but I have a hunch that he will be much less effective as a #1 than he was as the 3. If his targets double and he stays healthy, than he will be worth it. Call me skeptical.

    In terms of potential injuries (to himself or Favre), he is too rich for my britches to draft in the top group of WRs. He is a DNP waiting to happen.

    However, y’all seem to like him. Best of luck to you. I hope he proves me wrong.

  7. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    WorldWideInterTubes – Harvin’s current ADP is 75.91 (29th among receivers, which seems crazy to me). I assume that number has risen since Rice got injured though. Targeting him around the 5th round seems about right if you want to be aggressive. Even better if you think you can grab him a bit later in your league, which is possible. Getting him in the 6th or 7th would be ideal.

  8. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Jim Lahey – You bring up an excellent point – be careful overrating third wide receivers who rack up impressive per play numbers, since most of that occurred against opposing defenses #3 or #4 DBs. So in Harvin’s case, he may have to deal with more #1 cornerbacks this year. It’s a very good point.

    But this isn’t a DJ Hackett type taking advantage of that situation – I believe Harvin is a true No. 1. And like I said, a bunch more targets would be huge for him.

  9. Donald Trump Avatar
    Donald Trump

    Brady faced one of the 15 most difficult schedules against pass defenses in NFL history… Very interesting stat.
    I hope you are right with all of this, I have both Brady and Percy.

    Baseball question: Do you prefer Raburn or Kinsler for the rest of the year?

  10. Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor Avatar
    Jim Lahey, Trailer Park Supervisor

    @DDD- I hear ya, Harvin is no Hackett. I’m not knocking his freakish talent. Harvin can be that #1 WR ( a term that’s thrown around waaaay to loosely), but I need to see it first to believe it. I want to see him get open on deep outs, comebacks, zone digs and even some intermediate stuff that Favre likes to sling behind the LBs…I know he can kill on smoke screens, hitch+YAC, pivot routes…I’d like to see him run those slants and zone beating seam routes that are that are so important in the WCO…he’ll still play a lot of slot in 3 WR sets because Camarillo is pretty competent on the outside, so he’s got that goin’ for him…I’m starting to come around on him, but I think this migrane issue won’t go away.

  11. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Donald – Kinsler. And it’s not particularly close.

  12. Donald Trump Avatar
    Donald Trump

    are you going to win YFF?

  13. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Maybe. Hopefully. But probably not. In second place right now.

    I’m even more fired about this league, though:

    http://baseball.wcofs.com/baseball/standings-overall.php?GID=1100&LID=500179&UID=fantasybaseball&TID=-1

  14. Robby Avatar
    Robby

    Raburn is making you EAT YOUR WORDS!!!

  15. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    What did I say about Raburn? I forgot.

  16. Donald Trump Avatar
    Donald Trump

    Robby is referring to you saying you would take Kinsler over Raburn for the rest of the tear, and it is not particularly close.
    I know it is a ‘who cares’ topic, but raburn had 16hr in 261 at bats lat year, (.291/.359/.5330 and has 10hr in 155 post all-star at bats this year. Kinsler on the other hand has stunk all year. Yes, I know he is kinsler, but I still feel like he is just clogging up a roster spot now that he is off the DL (and of course I can’t drop him).

    Holy cow! 126 teams! Are you under rotowire or what?

  17. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Donald – Ahh, I’m an idiot. I remembered saying that about Raburn but I thought it was on a different site not my blog. Robby’s just saying that b/c Raburn’s on his fantasy team. I didn’t even realize he was 2B eligible in some formats. But ya, he’s definitely making my statement look foolish.

    Ya that’s me under RW. Actually woke up today in first place in Y F&F for first time all year, although I’m sure it will be short-lived.

  18. Dina Avatar

    TT and I are sittin’ back and chliiln’. In fact I hope he pitched his cell phone into Lake Michigan, and will get one of those new fangled 4G smart phones, maybe in a month from now. Guy, guys, guys you gotta relax! Don’t be so uptight. This team is not going in the tank any time soon, and I can confidently say that. Why? Because the plan is in place for continued maintenance of the salary cap, where it won’t be necessary to gut the roster just to stay under look what’s happening in Baltimore as a prime example. The Ravens are the reigning Super Bowl champions, and I predict they won’t make the playoffs for at least 3 seasons, maybe longer. They finally had to pay out big time for Flacco, and all thsee other guys they extended themselves on have them over the cap, and now the piper wants his cut of the proceeds. The Packers, by comparison, are in great shape, cap-wise and roster-wise. Now I’ve stated it before that I’m not in favor of big money free agency, and I’m going to give you another reason why, and think about this for a moment. What’s the true definition of a free agent that doesn’t get resigned? When you boil it down to its basics, it’s a player that is essentially a castoff for one reason or another, either because he’s too expensive, too old, doesn’t fit into the long term plans, or a combination of those factors. In many cases, all three. Sure, there was a time when I got all hot and bothered like a few of my friends here when FA season rolled around, but no more. And I posed this question a few days ago, and no one responded, and I have a sneaky suspicion why no one can provide an answer! In the last 5 years, name ONE free agent signing brought in from a different team who was the missing piece to bringing a championship. There may very well only be one I can think of, and it was by pure accident Drew Brees. The Saints went into that one completely on blind faith bringing in someone with a ripped up shoulder, crossing their collective fingers and putting him out there. Did any of you see that coming? I seriously doubt anyone did. So out of all the free agents signed in the last five years, ONE hit the jackpot. But at what price? The Saints organization is a mess right now. So I’ll say it a different way I’m not interested in signing someone to big bucks that somebody else didn’t want otherwise, wouldn’t they have resigned him in the first place? So as the smarter-than-average Packer fans that we are, consider this over those same 5 years, which franchise has had the best on-field record? I think you know the answer to that, my friends. Here’s another point the means by which that the Packers achieved that on-field success is being copied by another franchise in this division. And this next statement I’m certain will put a smile on our good friend Cane’s face as Packer fans, we should all be very aware of what’s going on over at Winter Park, because the Vikings are in the process of loading up for the future, big time. They may not be able to replicate the accidental success they had last year in the upcoming ’13 season, but when ’14 and ’15 come around, I guarantee they will be big trouble for the Packers. So now that we’re approaching the end of the first week of FA and the Pack hasn’t done anything, ask yourself this do you REALLY think Reggie Bush is going to put the Lions over the top? REALLY?!? So take it easy for a few weeks, have a few laughs over the idiocy of other team owners picking up other team’s rejects for big $$$, and save your excitement for when it really counts Draft Day, baby! BRING IT ON!!!

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