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Denver Broncos Team Report

August 19, 2015 By Dave Leave a Comment

Certainly not the consensus choice, but our pick for top wide receiver in fantasy football this upcoming season, Denver Broncos Demaryius Thomas.

Certainly not the consensus choice, but our pick for top wide receiver in fantasy football this upcoming season, Denver Broncos Demaryius Thomas.

QB Peyton Manning

At age 36 coming off multiple neck surgeries, Manning threw for 4,659 yards with 37 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. As an even healthier 37 year-old, he reached career highs and set NFL records with 5,477 passing yards and 55 touchdowns passes while reducing his interception count to 10. At 38, forced to play a full quarter of the season (for the mathematically challenged that translates into four games) with a quad injury that severely limited his throwing motion, Manning threw for 4,727 yards with 39 touchdown passes and 15 interceptions.

In 2015, the question for fantasy owners is whether Manning is closer to the quarterback that averaged 26.7 PPG over his first 12 games last season or the one who averaged just 13.7 PPG over his final four games? Let’s look outside the numbers for a minute. Offensive coordinator Adam Gase is replaced by head coach Gary Kubiak, who will handle play calling duties. That should translate into a more balanced run-pass ratio. Julius Thomas and Wes Welker are gone in exchange for Owen Daniels and Cody Latimer. That’s a downgrade, although not as significant as it first seems since the Broncos will be utilizing more two tight end sets, meaning Latimer won’t be relied upon as much as Welker was. And, hey, Welker was a shell of his former self last season (there’s a reason that he is currently without a team). And left tackle Ryan Clady will miss the entire season with a torn ACL.

Although Manning’s supporting cast is not as stellar as it was during his superlative 2013 season, it seems foolhardy to bet against his impressive string of solid performances as his career begins to wind down. And with an ADP in the middle of the 4th round, he rates as a solid bargain with fantasy owners perhaps too focused on his injury-induced poor performance to end 2014.

RB C.J. Anderson

Buried on the depth chart behind Montee Ball and Ronnie Hillman and in a battle with Juwan Thompson to win the 3rd running back role entering training camp last season, Anderson was a surprise fantasy superstar in 2014, gaining 849 rushing yards, 324 receiving yards and scoring 10 total touchdowns. Better yet, he was an absolute beast from Week 10 until the end of the season, hitting double digit fantasy points in eight of nine games (including the playoffs), and scoring 9.6 points in the game he failed to hit double digits. While new head coach Gary Kubiak brings a different offensive system to the Broncos in 2015, the question is how Anderson will acclimate to the new system, not what his role will be in it. There is little doubt that he will open the season as a starter and Kubiak has a history of using a workhorse running back to handle rushing duties. And with Anderson having piled up 1,166 total yards and 10 touchdowns in his final nine games last season, we have little doubt that he can handle such a role. Anderson rates as a mid-tier RB1 in 2015 as a player who could emerge as a top-three fantasy option, but one who also carries some risk given his short history of solid productivity.

RB Montee Ball

Since being taken in the 2nd round of the 2013 NFL Draft, the Broncos have clearly done everything in their power to afford Montee Ball the opportunity emerge as an elite running back. To no avail. Shortly after Ball’s selection in the draft, Denver parted ways with incumbent starter Willis McGahee, only to watch Knowshon Moreno take over as the team’s starter and post the best year of his career. That performance wasn’t good enough to earn a new contract so Moreno left for Miami leaving Ball once again atop the depth chart. This time, he struggled out of the gate, gaining just 172 rushing yards on 55 carries in four games (to be fair, two of those games were against the Seahawks and Cardinals) before suffering a groin injury that kept him out until Week 11 at which point he was placed on season ending injured reserve. Heading into 2015, the Broncos are no longer willing to simply hand the starting job over to Ball. He will open the season behind C.J. Anderson, who enjoyed a stellar campaign in 2014, and there are no indications that Ball rates as anything more than a backup. Since new head coach Gary Kubiak generally employs a workhorse back, Ball rates as no more than an Anderson handcuff provided he wins that role over Ronnie Hillman.

RB Ronnie Hillman

After two largely disappointing seasons after being taken in the 3rd round of the 2012 draft, Hillman was enjoying the finest year of his career before suffering a foot injury that caused him to miss six games from Week 11 to Week 16. Subbing in for an injured Montee Ball, Hillman amassed 347 rushing yards, 74 receiving yards and two touchdowns during a four week stretch from Week 5 to Week 9. Entering 2015, Hillman will compete with Ball and Juwan Thompson for the backup role behind C.J. Anderson. Despite his solid production last season, we expect Ball to emerge as the winner of that competition, leaving Hillman fighting for table scraps as a change of pace, occasional receiving threat. All that being said, he remains worthy of a late round flyer given Ball’s struggles thus far in his career and the fact that Anderson, although hugely productive last season, lacks a lengthy proven record as a starter.

WR Demaryius Thomas

Over the past three years, Thomas has topped 1,400 receiving yards with double-digit touchdowns and he enjoyed the finest season of his six-year career in 2014, reaching career highs in receptions with 111 and yards with 1,619 while scoring 11 touchdowns. With 470 targets, 297 receptions, 4,483 yards and 35 touchdowns over the past three seasons, you might think he would be the consensus top fantasy wide receiver entering 2015. However, Antonio Brown, Dez Bryant and Julio Jones are all going ahead of him based on current ADP. While Peyton Manning is another year older and carries additional risk with each passing year, Thomas should be in line for a major number of targets in 2015 due to the departures of Julius Thomas and Wes Welker. In addition, while the touchdown production of some players fluctuates, that isn’t the case with Thomas, who seems like a sure fire bet for double-digit touchdowns for the fourth consecutive year. And with all of the targets, we see another 1,600-yard season on tap as well. You see where this is headed, right? Thomas rates as our top ranked fantasy wide receiver in 2015.

WR Emmanuel Sanders

Signed by the Broncos prior to last season after four largely disappointing seasons in Pittsburgh, Sanders enjoyed a breakout season during his first year in Denver, reaching career highs across the board with 141 targets, 101 receptions, 1,404 yards and nine touchdowns. The question for 2015 is – can he repeat that performance in a new offensive system designed by head coach Gary Kubiak? We think not. While Sanders’ solid production last season wasn’t a huge surprise given his increased role due to injuries to Wes Welker and Julius Thomas (both since departed) and talent level, he isn’t expected to approach his targets count of 141 from a year ago with the Broncos employing a more conservative, run based approach. And even if the Broncos had retained their coaching staff from a year ago, we still would have been predicting a decline in his touchdown production. Consider Sanders a mid-tier WR2 with upside.

WR Cody Latimer

Taken in the 2nd round of last year’s draft, Latimer’s 2014 season was basically a redshirt year as he rarely saw the field and caught just two passes for 23 yards. The 6’2″, 215 pound Indiana product wasn’t expected to contribute much playing behind Demaryius Thomas, Emmanuel Sanders and Wes Welker but by all accounts, his rookie season was a major disappointment with Latimer failing to learn the team’s playbook, a major faux pas when playing with a perfectionist such as Peyton Manning. In 2015, Latimer figures to take Welker’s spot in the receiver rotation but that doesn’t necessarily translate into a big leap in his fantasy appeal. With new head coach Gary Kubiak, the Broncos are expected to lean more heavily on their rushing attack and to go heavy on two tight end formations. That doesn’t bode well for Latimer’s playing time as he enters his second season in the league. Barring injury to Thomas or Sanders, Latimer has little appeal in redraft formats. He rates as a lower end prospect in dynasty formats despite his considerable skills since Manning may not be around by the time Latimer earns significant playing time.

TE Owen Daniels

Signed off the scrap prior to last season after a disappointing, injury-plagued final season in 2013 with the Texans, Daniels resurrected his career in Baltimore, catching 48 passes for 527 yards and four touchdowns as he subbed in for an injured Dennis Pitta. After following his former head coach Gary Kubiak from Houston to Baltimore, Daniels followed Kubiak once again for the 2015 season, this time to Denver. On the surface, that sounds like a scenario to upgrade the fantasy prospects of the 32-year old tight end but Denver features one of the league’s top red zone threats in Demaryius Thomas and Daniels is likely to share the tight end duties with Virgil Green. He rates as a mid-tier TE2 and a player who will likely boom or bust from week to week.

Also see: Denver Broncos IDP Team Report · Kansas City Chiefs Team Report

Filed Under: Fantasy Football

Initial 2015 Fantasy Football Projections Commentary, AFC West

June 2, 2015 By Draft Buddy Leave a Comment

Are the Denver Broncos going more conservative on us? More rushing? Fewer offensive plays? This is one fantasy owners are going to debate and question all summer.

Are the Denver Broncos going more conservative on us? More rushing? Fewer offensive plays? This is one fantasy owners are going to debate and question all summer.

Our initial 2015 fantasy football projections were released June 1 (Draft Buddy coming soon!). 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.

Denver Broncos

  • Since we put together our initial projections, two potentially key news items out of Denver. One, LT Ryan Clady tore his ACL and is out for the season. Two, Emmanuel Sanders claims, “my goal is really to try to get a 1,000 yards,” describing the new, more balanced offense under HC Gary Kubiak. Both indicate we should temper our expectations with Denver, starting with Peyton Manning. We have a 20% decline in touchdowns from his 3-year average, but perhaps not enough in the yardage, current projections 410-600-4,900.
  • C.J. Anderson vs. Montee Ball, who do you like? We think Anderson did more than enough (and Ball has done little) to give him the benefit of the doubt he will lead the team in carries, even under a new coaching staff. That said, he has the lowest projected carries at 225 (tied with Frank Gore) of our Top 15 running backs. It is the receptions that push him up the rankings, at 45 on almost 60 targets, which makes some sense with the departure of and lack of decent replacement for Julius Thomas. Recognizing Ball can carve out a good role for himself, he is projected for 155 carries.
  • Regardless of Sanders’ comment above, with such a big gap between Demaryius Thomas and Sanders relative to the rest of the receivers, it is difficult to not project them each with similar targets, receptions and yards as last season. Keep in mind the Broncos did reel it in somewhat the second half of 2014 to compensate for Manning’s at the time unknown torn quad muscle injury.
  • On one hand, sure, lets lower expectations and adjust these projections down, either increasing the run to pass mix, reducing the total number of offensive plays, or both. On the other hand, wouldn’t you still rank Manning and company fairly high based on talent and their ability to put up points when they need to relative to other teams? We’re going to leave the projections as-is for now, but schedule further analysis and discussion soon.

Kansas City Chiefs

  • Holy conservative offense Batman. While the wide receivers were beyond awful last season, Alex Smith is still going to gravitate to keeping a high pass completion percentage and minimizing turnovers. This no-risk style makes him even a sketchy start in a great matchup. We don’t see the addition of Jeremy Maclin radically altering the expected output from Smith.
  • How amazing is Jamaal Charles to keep a 5.0+ yards per carry given the limitations of the passing game? That YPC on 250 carries, plus 50 receptions project him the top RB for fantasy football in 2015.
  • Maclin had an amazing year in 2014 coming off a completely missed 2013 season. He’s a good receiver, but is never going to feel like a WR1 on a team at only 6’0”, 198 lb. We’ve pegged him at closer to an 80-1,000-6 receiver in this offense than the near 1,400 yards, 10 TD he scored last season.
  • Seriously, Jason Avant is the Chiefs’ WR2? Not impressed.
  • If someone is going to challenge to be in the same top TE tier as Rob Gronkowski, Jimmy Graham’s name will come up first, but why not Travis Kelce? Why didn’t the Chiefs use him more last season? We have 7-10% gains in targets, receptions and yardage, and there is potential there for more.

Oakland Raiders

  • We weren’t the only ones impressed with Derek Carr’s under the radar rookie season, were we? Thought he looked pretty good, especially considering what he was working with, and it’s the Raiders. Now they’ve added Michael Crabtree and rookie Amari Cooper. That’s got to help. Still a sub-4,000 yard passer but a lot of attempts gets him close plus 24 TD.
  • Having jettisoned Darren McFadden and failed reclamation project Maurice Jones-Drew, maybe the Raiders found a RB they can count on in Latavius Murray. It feels like we might be too bullish out of the gate here on Murray at over 1,100 yards, but one things the Raiders have done well in recent years is run the ball, and the depth chart isn’t nearly as crowded. Backup Roy Helu will primarily catch passes, making him a decent late round pick in PPR leagues.
  • Historically Dave has been pro-Crabtree and I’ve been anti-Crabtree. Things might be changing. Dave projected declines across the board for Crabs while I wonder if the change of scenery allows him to finally showcase some skills stifled under the 49ers conservative offense and sporadic play of Colin Kaepernick. Projecting rookies is never easy, even for a bona fide Day 1 starter like Cooper. How Cooper performs will be a major influence on Crabtree’s results.

San Diego Chargers

  • Philip Rivers is pretty darn consistent. Consistently good at that, and it doesn’t seem to matter too much what specific players are doing around him. If one guy falls off, then he utilizes someone else. Think Antonio Gates in 2013 only scoring 4 TD, and Malcom Floyd out most of the year… here comes Keenan Allen and Danny Woodhead. Last season Allen slumped and the running game fell on hard times… Floyd returned and use Gates more in the red zone. Not expecting a drop-off based on age just yet, so pencil in another Rivers year with 30 TD.
  • Melvin Gordon. He’s the clear starter who should garner most of the rushing carries on the season, making him worthy of a relatively high draft pick even with the rookie risk factored in. Still, we don’t want to hand out 1,000 yard rushing seasons willy-nilly. How about 900 on 200 carries, 6 TD? Woodhead had a career year in 2013 so lets not target that. More like half.
  • Which Keenan Allen can we expect in 2015? The impressive 2013 rookie, or the middle of the road 2014 sophomore? We are thinking closer to 2013. A sophomore slump is very common. Allen’s catch rate dropped 5% in 2014 from 2013, but bump that up and he’s back at an 80-1,000-6 season with potential for more if the targets go up. Gates has indicated he shouldn’t be utilized between the 20s as much, and the other receivers – Floyd, Stevie Johnson – are not a threat to steal targets from Allen. If anything, they are on the downsides of their respective careers.
  • Gates may want less work to help him stay healthy, but will the Chargers coaching staff comply? It depends on Ladarius Green; it depends on the circumstances at the time. I’d feel more comfortable drafting Gates based on projections of about 80 targets, instead of closer to the 100 he’s averaged the last three years.

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

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