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Indianapolis Colts Team Report

July 22, 2015 By Dave Leave a Comment

After a 10 year run with the San Francisco 49ers and having topped 1,000 rushing yards in eight of the past nine years, Frank Gore was signed in the offseason to lead the Indianapolis Colts rushing attack in 2015.

After a 10 year run with the San Francisco 49ers and having topped 1,000 rushing yards in eight of the past nine years, Frank Gore was signed in the offseason to lead the Indianapolis Colts rushing attack in 2015.

QB Andrew Luck

After a pair of solid if not spectacular seasons, Andrew Luck enjoyed a true coming out party in 2014 as he amassed career highs in completions (380), completion percentage (61.7%) and touchdown passes (40). And he continued to pad his fantasy stats with 273 rushing yards and three touchdowns, giving him 12 TD on the ground in three years. What’s in store for 2015? More of the same. While the Colts once again failed to adequately address the offensive line, Luck figures to be surrounded by even more offensive weaponry given the free agent signings of Andre Johnson and Frank Gore, the selection of speedy wide receiver Phillip Dorsett in the 1st round of this year’s NFL Draft and the return to health of tight end Dwayne Allen. And it is also nice that he gets six games against the Colts weak divisional opponents in the AFC South. It’s a two-man race between Luck and Aaron Rodgers to be the first quarterback taken in this year’s fantasy drafts and while we give Rodgers a slight edge, we wouldn’t criticize any Luck fans for grabbing him ahead of Rodgers.

RB Frank Gore

After a 10 year run with the 49ers and having topped 1,000 rushing yards in eight of the past nine years, Frank Gore was signed in the offseason to lead the Colts rushing attack in 2015. After splitting duties with Carlos Hyde last season, Gore could be in line for a workhorse type role in Indianapolis where he is joined on the depth chart by journeymen Dan Herron and Vick Ballard as well as rookie 6th round pick Josh Robinson. None of that trio have proven themselves as solid receivers out of the backfield, meaning Gore could once again emerge as a solid receiving threat after catching just 72 passes over the past four years with the 49ers. Of course, there are the not so insignificant issues of his advancing age (he turned 32 in May), his career workload (2,786 touches) and the Colts porous offensive line. While Gore’s situation and history of solid production signals RB1 status, we can’t ignore these three key issues. He rates as an upper tier RB2 who could sneak into RB1 territory if he gets enough use in the red zone, a possibility given his expected role as a receiver and Ahmad Bradshaw‘s six touchdown receptions in just 10 games in 2014.

RB Dan Herron

Released by the Bengals after being a 2012 6th round pick and unable to earn significant playing time with the Colts in 2013, Herron’s fantasy prospects entering the 2014 season were pretty much non-existent. However, an injury to Ahmad Bradshaw and Trent Richardson‘s ineffectiveness led to an increased role for Herron at the midpoint of last season and he proved reliable, gaining 351 rushing yards, averaging 4.5 yards per carry and scoring once. He also wasn’t half-bad as a receiver, gaining 173 yards on 21 receptions. And in his last six games, he averaged a respectable 8.4 PPG. If this sounds like a lukewarm endorsement, that’s because it is. The eye doesn’t lie. Herron is a middling talent whose only value comes as the leading candidate to emerge as Frank Gore’s main backup in 2015. However, we won’t be shocked if he loses that role by opening day. Monitor the Colts backup running back situation since whoever emerges as Gore’s backup is definitely worth taking a flyer on.

RB Vick Ballard

After posting 814 rushing yards as a rookie 5th round pick in 2013 despite not getting major touches until Week 7, Ballard missed all but one game of the 2013 season due to a torn ACL and all of 2014 due to a torn Achilles’. Not exactly a speedster or elusive playmaker before the injuries, Ballard will have a tough time cracking the Colts opening day roster. However, if he does, he could have fantasy appeal in 2015. Starting running back Frank Gore is 32, last season’s main backup Dan Herron is a middling talent and rookie 6th round pick Josh Robinson shapes up as a committee back. While Ballard’s injury woes may have zapped him of the talent necessary to compete in the NFL, he was productive as a rookie and he has an opportunity to emerge as the main backup on one of the league’s top offenses. That makes him worthy of keeping an eye on as the preseason progresses.

WR T.Y. Hilton

Mea culpa. Our read on Hilton last year was that he would struggle to reach the 138 targets he had in 2013 with both Reggie Wayne and Dwayne Allen back from injury and Hakeem Nicks having been added to the Colts receiving corps. Well, Wayne proved to be washed up, Allen couldn’t stay healthy and Nicks was a non-factor but Hilton still only managed 131 targets. However, he made them count, matching his 82 receptions from 2013 but increasing his receiving yards from 1,083 to 1,345 and his touchdowns from five to seven. Although Andre Johnson was signed in the offseason, Hilton is the Colts undisputed number one wide receiver whose target count should increase making him an even more consistent option than in 2014 when he reached double digit fantasy points in eight games. We like him as a low end WR1 whose only risk comes from his slender 5’10”, 185 pound frame.

WR Andre Johnson

After 12 years in Houston with the Texans, the 34-year old Johnson joins the Colts in 2015. Signed to a three-year, $21-million contract, he gets the opportunity to play with Andrew Luck, a far superior talent than the quarterbacks he played with in Houston. But will it add it up to a solid fantasy season? With a mid-July ADP as the 18th highest rated wide receiver being taken in the middle of the 4th round, fantasy owners seem to think so. We’re not so sure. Johnson caught just 58.2% of his targets last season while averaging a lowly 11.0 yards per reception, both figures his lowest since suffering through a 2-14 season with David Carr at quarterback back in 2005. The truth is that Johnson is little more than a possession receiver and red zone option at this point in his career making his fantasy value touchdown dependent since his upside is likely 900 yards receiving. And while Colts offense will outscore any of the Texans offenses that Johnson has played with in recent seasons, why exactly are we predicting a touchdown explosion for a player that has caught 14 touchdowns over the last four years? With a pair of solid pass catching tight ends and a wide receiver depth chart that runs six deep with legitimate NFL talent, Johnson rates as an upper tier WR3.

WR Donte Moncrief

Last year, we summed up Moncrief’s fantasy prospects as “right place, wrong time”. And that axiom holds true once again in 2015. Given precious little playing time as a rookie 3rd round pick, Moncrief put his outstanding physical prowess on display when given an opportunity, catching 32 of his 49 targets for 444 yards and three touchdowns. With solid size at 6’2″ and 226 pounds to go along with 4.4-40 speed and some run after the catch ability, Moncrief figured to be on a pile of 2015 breakout lists as this rookie season came to a close. Then the Colts signed Andre Johnson in free agency and used a 1st round pick on Phillip Dorsett. That pretty much ended any potential breakout opportunity for Moncrief. We love his potential in dynasty leagues but he has little value in redraft formats.

WR Phillip Dorsett

Ah, the rich get richer. Seemingly well stocked at the wide receiver position but facing a potentially tough contract negotiation with T.Y. Hilton as he enters the final year of his rookie contract, the Colts shocked the league by selecting Miami-Florida wide receiver Phillip Dorsett in the 1st round of this year’s NFL Draft. Possessing blazing speed (4.33 40 time), the 5’10”, 185 pound Dorsett is a replica of Hilton and figures to earn regular playing time as a slot receiver at some point during his rookie season. While we like Dorsett’s dynasty prospects, especially if the Colts fail to come to an agreement with Hilton, his fantasy appeal in redraft formats is low given the presence of Hilton and Andre Johnson in the starting lineup, as well as the team’s reliance on two tight end formations (although we expect more there wide receiver sets in 2015). That spells inconsistent usage making Dorsett little more than a late round flyer.

WR Duron Carter

After a pair of solid seasons in the CFL, Duron Carter will get a look in the NFL with the Indianapolis Colts in 2015. Pursued by several teams, the talented 6’5″, 204 pound CFL refugee appeared to have a chance to start as an NFL rookie with Reggie Wayne’s expected departure. However, the Colts added Andre Johnson and Vincent Brown in free agency before using their 1st round pick on Miami-Florida speedster Phillip Dorsett. To earn regular playing time, Carter will need to beat out impressive 2nd year player Donte Moncrief, Dorsett and Brown to emerge as the Colts main backup. His most likely role is as an occasional red zone threat which renders him not fantasy worthy in 2015. He has some value in dynasty formats.

TE Dwayne Allen

Despite missing three full games last year and not being targeted in three others, Allen still managed to produce 87.5 fantasy points (14th amongst tight ends) and average 7.3 PPG (9th best). While those numbers are impressive, there are three big risks with Allen. One is that he misses time (18 missed games over the past two years). The second is that he is occasionally left out of the Colts offensive game plan (in 28 career games he has had three or fewer targets 14 times). The third is that he is heavily reliant on touchdowns for his fantasy points (48 of his 87.5 points last year came from touchdowns). Nonetheless, Allen produces as a lower tier TE1 when healthy and in three years has been a touchdown magnet with 12 scores in 118 career targets. The other issue is the presence of Coby Fleener, a better receiver but much poorer blocker. Since we expect Allen to get the majority of playing time at tight end and given his red zone pedigree, we rate Allen as a bottom end TE1 who possesses some breakout potential.

TE Coby Fleener

Since being taken early in the 2nd round of the 2012 NFL Draft, Fleener has improved his target count, receptions, yards and touchdowns in three straight seasons, finishing last season as the 6th ranked fantasy tight end with 51 receptions for 774 yards and eight touchdowns. Playing in a Colts high powered offense led by Andrew Luck, what’s not to like, right? Well, let’s get on the brakes pretty hard. First off, of Fleener’s 125.4 fantasy points from a year ago, 59.5 (or 47.5%) came in the four games that Dwayne Allen missed or barely played. Second, with the additions of Andre Johnson, 1st round pick Phillip Dorsett and 6’5″ CFL refugee Duron Carter, Fleener’s place in the Colts receiving pecking order figures to take a big hit this season. Finally, with Allen healthy coupled with the plethora of receiving options, the Colts could very well decide that it makes more sense to have Allen, a far superior blocker, on the field than Fleener. While Fleener is an above average receiver, we expect his role to be reduced and his three year run of increasing productivity to come to a halt in 2015. He is worth taking a flyer on as a lower tier TE2.

Also see: Indianapolis Colts IDP Team Report · Houston Texans Team Report

Filed Under: Fantasy Football

Initial 2015 Fantasy Football Projections Commentary, AFC South

June 5, 2015 By Draft Buddy Leave a Comment

Can Jacksonville Jaguars QB Blake Bortles take a big step forward in Year 2 of his NFL career? The Jags appear to be putting the right pieces in place to help him succeed.

Can Jacksonville Jaguars QB Blake Bortles take a big step forward in Year 2 of his NFL career? The Jags appear to be putting the right pieces in place to help him succeed.

Our initial 2015 fantasy football projections were released June 1. Even better, Draft Buddy is now available!

To accompany the initial projections, as we continue to review, research, analyze the projections, and create cheatsheet rankings, we provide the following commentary by division to give some insight into why we have players projected the way we do at this time.

Houston Texans

  • Don’t you hate projecting quarterback performance when you are virtually certain the expected starting QB for Week 1 is not going to be the same starting QB for Week 17? (Or if he is there will still be 2-3 switches in between.) The Texans are particularly bad this year. And I like Brian Hoyer as a player. Appeared to be a great leader and teammate with the Cleveland Browns. Hard to imagine Ryan Mallett not getting a chance to show his stuff at some point.
  • Dave pointed out in his early rankings series that Foster had the second most fantasy points per game last season. That is great, and worthy of a high draft pick, but two ways to look at his career in deciding to draft him this season. One, he’s missed time 3 of the past 4 seasons. Two, he’s played 13 or more games 3 of the past 4 seasons. This is one where I’d rank him a little lower than his projections, but don’t discount him too much.
  • Andre Johnson is gone to the Colts, leaving DeAndre Hopkins the heir apparent. He can fill those shoes. Looking at a 90-1,275-6 season on 144 targets, good for Top 12 in PPR. Uncertain QB situation is still okay here given they are veterans, and Cecil Shorts and a rookie won’t command nearly the targets of Hopkins.
  • Positive reports for C.J. Fiedorowicz recently, but the Texans just didn’t pass to their TE position very much at all last season. It would have to be a pretty deep league to draft any of these guys.

Indianapolis Colts

  • Andrew Luck or Aaron Rodgers as first QB off the board this season? We’ve got Rodgers slightly ahead, but Luck’s got a strong argument in his favour since we’ve projected him for 50 more pass attempts. They run about the same, too. Rodgers is more efficient but wouldn’t argue with you taking Luck.
  • Welcome to the Colts, Frank Gore. There are a lot of bullish opinions on Gore from fantasy players since the signing. Respect where respect is due, but lets not get too crazy over a 32 year old RB who shouldn’t be that far north of 200 carries. We’ve got him sub-1,000 yards, and if anything, I think our 8 TD projection is a little high. Never really a big TD guy, Gore has hit 8 TD five times, only once with under 258 carries. That said, there isn’t much behind him on the depth chart.
  • Is it still T.Y. Hilton’s show or Andre Johnson’s to take over? Luck and Hilton have a great rapport. Don’t see that changing. Johnson is a better receiver than he’s probably given credit for having played with some terrible quarterbacks in his career. If Luck can tap into that early, our AJ projections might be conservative at 77-925-7. Don’t automatically assume Donte Moncrief beats out rookie Phillip Dorsett as WR3.
  • Dwayne Allen is the preferred TE on the Colts, but will never excel as long as Coby Fleener is healthy, and even then it is tough with the receiver depth.
  • Overall, this is an offense you want a piece of on your fantasy team – even edging out Denver at this point – but many mouths to feed.

Jacksonville Jaguars

  • Are we looking at something like a second season Ryan Tannehill or a second season … dare I say? … Blaine Gabbert, from Blake Bortles in 2015? The former. The Jaguars appear to be doing the right things putting talented skill players around Bortles, this offseason signing Julius Thomas and drafting T.J. Yeldon. Still modest projections, nothing that is going to help fantasy teams cruise to the playoffs this season, but one to watch for his progress.
  • It’s a pretty full depth chart at RB to keep track of, but signs indicate Yeldon will be the main ball carrier and someone else like hot prospect Bernard Pierce will be out of a job. Denard Robinson is a dynamic player who should catch a fair number of passes.
  • The wide receiver depth chart is perhaps worse than the running backs in terms or no one really stands out. Justin Blackmon would be but he is out of the picture. Allen Robinson, Marqise Lee
    , Allen Hurns – we’ve got Robinson the top dog but still projected 40th at WR.

  • Thomas takes a big hit in value losing Peyton Manning. His double-digit TD seasons are over but he could keep the receptions and yards up with a lot of targets in a 16-game season (something he’s never done, by the way).

Tennessee Titans

  • Not a lot to say about rookie QB Marcus Mariota. The projections are for redraft. He isn’t a draft consideration in all but the deepest leagues and ones that start two quarterbacks.
  • The Bishop Sankey experiment didn’t last long, as fantasy owners are ready to forget him and anoint rookie David Cobb, “the guy”. A player’s rookie season to second season can make a world of difference. Maybe Sankey falls in that category. We’ve got him projected ahead of Cobb, but its going to be tough for any RB to have sustained success on the Titans, because…
  • … the passing game looks potentially terrible. Rookie QB and young, questionable receivers. Not expecting any receiver to top 900 yards.

Initial 2015 Projections Release and Commentary Series

Projections | AFC East | AFC North | AFC South | AFC West
NFC East | NFC North | NFC South | NFC West

Filed Under: Fantasy Football

Pre-NFL Draft 2015 Fantasy Football Wide Receiver Rankings—Demaryius and Dez Elite Red Zone Options

May 1, 2015 By Dave Leave a Comment

Whether you have number 88 for the Denver Broncos or the Dallas Cowboys - Demaryius Thomas or Dez Bryant - you are setting your fantasy football team up for success. No question they are elite wide receivers.

Whether you have number 88 for the Denver Broncos or the Dallas Cowboys – Demaryius Thomas or Dez Bryant – you are setting your fantasy football team up for success. No question they are elite wide receivers.

With the NFL having morphed into a passing league over the past several seasons, the league is now littered with pass catchers capable of reaching the 1,000 yard plateau.

While that may sound like the beginning of an argument to hold off on drafting the position early in your fantasy draft, that isn’t the case. Not all 1,000 yard receivers are created equal, with the most important distinction being those that are solid red zone options for their teams together with the quality of the offense they play in.

For instance, Dez Bryant led the league in receiving touchdowns last year with 16 as the Cowboys main threat in the red zone while Julian Edelman found the end zone just four times despite catching 92 balls for 972 yards.

This year, there are between eight and 10 players that should be considered elite fantasy options at wide receiver, and it would behoove owners to do what they can to ensure they have at least one of them on their rosters.

Here are our initial 2015 fantasy football wide receiver rankings for redraft leagues, before the NFL Draft.

1. Demaryius Thomas, Broncos

Over the last three years, Thomas has averaged 1,494 yards and 11.7 touchdowns per season. The unproven Cody Latimer takes over for Wes Welker and the team’s other threat in the red zone, tight end Julius Thomas, is no longer in Denver. Expect more opportunities in the red zone for Thomas in 2015.

2. Dez Bryant, Cowboys

The Cowboys superstar has averaged 1,312 yards and 13.7 touchdowns over the past three years. With DeMarco Murray having left town and Jason Witten another year older, Bryant has to see his target count of 136 from a year ago increase.

3. Antonio Brown, Steelers

Brown isn’t the biggest or the fastest receiver in the league but he just might be the most productive. At least he has been over the last two years, accumulating 239 receptions for 3,197 yards and 21 touchdowns over that span. With the development of Martavis Bryant, his target total could take a bit of a hit next season but that’s a minor red flag.

4. A.J. Green, Bengals

Some nagging injuries and a concussion caused Green to put up career worst numbers in 2014 but a bounce back season seems in order for the smooth striding 26-year old Georgia product. Look for another 1,300 yard, double digit touchdown season, and over 160 targets given the massive talent difference between Green and the next talented receiver on the team.

5. Julio Jones, Falcons

Jones is clearly a wonderful talent coming off a monster season with career highs in receptions (104) and yards (1,593), plus six touchdowns. However, it’s hard to move him any higher considering he has found the end zone just eight times in his last 20 games.

6. Calvin Johnson, Lions

Seriously? Calvin at number six? C’mon, man! Let’s face it. People get old, folks. Johnson didn’t look as explosive last season as he did in previous years. Golden Tate deserves some touches, Eric Ebron should add something at tight end. Add it up and this is where Calvin landed. Sorry.

7. Jordy Nelson, Packers

While Nelson had the finest year of his career last season with 98 receptions for 1,519 yards and 13 touchdowns, it seems likely that the Packers spread the wealth around a little more in the passing game in 2015 with second-year player Davante Adams getting a bigger piece of the pie.

8. Odell Beckham Jr., Giants

The catch, 1,305 yards and 12 touchdowns in 12 games, the charisma, the swagger. What more can you say? This guy has perennial Pro Bowler written all over him.

9. Alshon Jeffery, Bears

High floor, high ceiling. With Brandon Marshall having been shipped to the Jets, Jeffery is all but guaranteed to reach a new career high in targets in 2015 as the focal point of the Bears passing attack. If quarterback Jay Cutler doesn’t implode, Jeffery should approach 1,300 receiving yards and double digit touchdowns.

10. Randall Cobb, Packers

Buyer beware. I am always more down on Randall Cobb than just about everyone else. And 2015 won’t be any different. From here, the perspective is of a player that probably can’t repeat his 12 touchdown count from a year ago and one unlikely to play 16 games with heavy usage.

11. T.Y. Hilton, Colts

While Hilton is a Smurf, he is also a speed merchant who just might improve upon his 82 reception, 1,345 yard, seven touchdown stat line in the coming season playing opposite Andre Johnson. Johnson’s presence should open things up for Hilton, if only slightly, and a double digit touchdown season could be in order in the Colts high powered offense.

12. Mike Evans, Buccaneers

This dude is the real deal. Despite shoddy quarterback play, he posted 68 receptions for 1,051 yards and 12 touchdowns as a rookie. Evans was clearly the Bucs top pass catching threat and he would be a half dozen spots higher if he were catching passes from a top 10 quarterback.

13. Emmanuel Sanders, Broncos

His production from a year ago (101 receptions, 1,404 yards and nine touchdowns) says that he should be ranked much higher than we have him. But who do you move him ahead of? This dude has fantasy bargain written all over him in 2015.

14. Kelvin Benjamin, Panthers

Speaking frankly, there has to be some concern as to Benjamin’s upside. He caught a woeful 50.3% of his targets last season although he did top 1,000 receiving yards with nine touchdowns. And it’s those touchdowns that get him to this spot in the rankings. He is a candidate to move down depending on how the draft unfolds.

15. DeAndre Hopkins, Texans

Andre Johnson is gone so Hopkins takes over as the Texans leading wide receiver. Oh wait, that happened last season when he produced 1,210 yards and six touchdowns on just 127 targets. We’d have him higher if not for the quarterback issues we expect him to face in 2015.

16. Jordan Matthews, Eagles

While I doubt Matthews will ever be considered an elite receiver, he is the leading receiving option on a solid Eagles offense with (apparently) a new quarterback in Sam Bradford who loves to throw the short and intermediate stuff. Expect 1,000 yards and between seven and nine touchdowns from Matthews in 2015.

17. DeSean Jackson, Redskins

While Djax wasn’t nearly as productive in his first season in Washington as he was in 2013 with the Eagles, he still managed to approach 1,200 receiving yards with six touchdowns despite the Redskins major issues at quarterback. That production is likely his floor in 2015.

18. Sammy Watkins, Bills

It is doubtful that Watkins will ever produce enough to justify the bounty the Bills paid to get him but he did enough last year to warrant mid-tier WR2 status in 2015. And, yes, there is always the chance he busts out despite the woeful quarterback play we expect in Buffalo.

19. Brandin Cooks, New Orleans

Jimmy Graham left town as did Kenny Stills and Marques Colston isn’t too far off from being sent to the scrap heap. Cooks has plenty of playmaking ability and we expect Saints head coach Sean Payton to force feed him the ball in 2015.

20. Brandon Marshall, Bears

This is the point where the question marks start getting pretty plentiful and where Marshall’s slide ends. We expect Ryan Fitzpatrck to start and feed him plenty of targets this season.

21. Keenan Allen, Chargers

While Allen was a bit of a bust last season, we expect him to approach his 1,046 yard, eight touchdown production as a rookie. Antonio Gates is a year older, Eddie Royal is no longer a Charger and hopefully Allen will remain injury free. He should rate as a bargain on draft day.

22. Golden Tate, Lions

Tate was a revelation during his first year in Detroit, reaching career highs in receptions with 99 and yards with 1,331. However, he was aided by injuries to Calvin Johnson and Reggie Bush along with the slow development of tight end Eric Ebron. It’s a rock solid bet that he won’t approach the 143 targets he had last season unless Johnson is injured once again in 2015.

23. Julian Edelman, Patriots

If the last two years are the sample size we’re using, then Edelman should be good for close to 100 receptions and 1,000 yards and four to six touchdowns next season. Far more valuable in PPR, Edelman nonetheless rates as a mid to upper tier WR3 in standard scoring 12 team leagues.

24. Andre Johnson, Colts

Johnson departs the Texans for greener pastures in Indianapolis catching passes from Andrew Luck. Ignoring injury shortened seasons, Johnson last year failed to top 1,000 receiving yards for the first time since his rookie season. He would rank a lot lower if not for his touchdown potential as a Colt. This is a player in decline who will turn 34 years of age before opening day.

25. Jeremy Maclin, Chiefs

It’s hard to put Maclin this low coming off his career year last season with 86 receptions for 1,329 yards and 10 touchdowns (all career highs). Yes, folks, the Alex Smith factor is that strong.

26. Martavis Bryant, Steelers

Despite not seeing the field for the first six games of the season, Bryant still managed to finish his rookie season with 26 receptions for 549 yards and eight touchdowns. This guy is a play making machine and should easily shove Markus Wheaton aside as a starter in 2015. He has big upside but is bound to be an inconsistent fantasy option next season.

27. Victor Cruz, Giants

A torn patellar tendon ended his season early last year and Cruz will return to the Giants as the number two option behind Odell Beckham Jr. He should come as a bargain in this year’s drafts.

28. Mike Wallace, Vikings

With Adrian Peterson setting the table in the play option game, maybe Wallace puts together a big season in 2015. Then again, maybe not.

29. Allen Robinson, Jaguars

Without question Robinson is the type of player teams will never be satisfied with as their leading wide receiver. However, he was still solid as a rookie in a pathetic Jaguars offense last season, catching 48 passes for 548 yards and a pair of scores in 10 games before suffering a season-ending broken foot.

30. Michael Floyd, Cardinals

Floyd’s talent level gets him the final spot in the rankings because his production last year sure wasn’t the reason. If the light comes on, look out.

2015 Early Rankings Series

Top 150 | Quarterbacks | Running Backs | Wide Receivers | Tight Ends
Rookie-Only Mock Draft

Filed Under: Fantasy Football

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