OFFICIAL 2014 FANTASY FOOTBALL THREAD

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Welcome back folks, ESPN, Yahoo and other fantasy football leagues are now open.

Before you know it, it'll be drafting season.

Season kicks off on Sept 4 (my birthday)...lets use this thread for everything...rankings, questions, trades, getting leagues together and all other things.

I'll be sharing rankings, articles and other fun stuff.

First tip - Get Sirius XM and listen to the Fantasy Sports channel nonstop.
 
Matthew Berry's Top 200 for 2014

Rank Player, '13 team Pos. Rank Bye
1 Adrian Peterson, MIN RB1 10
2 Jamaal Charles, KC RB2 6
3 LeSean McCoy, PHI RB3 7
4 Matt Forte, CHI RB4 9
5 Eddie Lacy, GB RB5 9
6 Marshawn Lynch, SEA RB6 4
7 Peyton Manning, DEN QB1 4
8 Jimmy Graham, NO TE1 6
9 Calvin Johnson, DET WR1 9
10 Arian Foster, HOU RB7 10
11 Drew Brees, NO QB2 6
12 Aaron Rodgers, GB QB3 9
13 Montee Ball, DEN RB8 4
14 Demaryius Thomas, DEN WR2 4
15 Dez Bryant, DAL WR3 11
16 A.J. Green, CIN WR4 4
17 Brandon Marshall, CHI WR5 9
18 Doug Martin, TB RB9 7
19 Zac Stacy, STL RB10 4
20 Le'Veon Bell, PIT RB11 12
21 Jordy Nelson, GB WR6 9
22 Giovani Bernard, CIN RB12 4
23 Alshon Jeffery, CHI WR7 9
24 Julio Jones, ATL WR8 9
25 Antonio Brown, PIT WR9 12
26 Julius Thomas, DEN TE2 4
27 Pierre Garcon, WAS WR10 10
28 Randall Cobb, GB WR11 9
29 DeMarco Murray, DAL RB13 11
30 Alfred Morris, WAS RB14 10
31 Andre Ellington, ARI RB15 4
32 Andre Johnson, HOU WR12 10
33 Vincent Jackson, TB WR13 7
34 C.J. Spiller, BUF RB16 9
35 Wes Welker, DEN WR14 4
36 Keenan Allen, SD WR15 10
37 Ray Rice, BAL RB17 11
38 Larry Fitzgerald, ARI WR16 4
39 Victor Cruz, NYG WR17 8
40 Rob Gronkowski, NE TE3 10
41 Frank Gore, SF RB18 8
42 Ben Tate, CLE RB19 4
43 Steven Jackson, ATL RB20 9
44 Roddy White, ATL WR18 9
45 Shane Vereen, NE RB21 10
46 Ryan Mathews, SD RB22 10
47 Torrey Smith, BAL WR19 11
48 DeSean Jackson, WAS WR20 10
49 Cordarrelle Patterson, MIN WR21 10
50 Matthew Stafford, DET QB4 9
51 Bishop Sankey, TEN RB23 9
52 Rashad Jennings, NYG RB24 8
53 T.Y. Hilton, IND WR22 10
54 Michael Crabtree, SF WR23 8
55 Percy Harvin, SEA WR24 4
56 Cam Newton, CAR QB5 12
57 Andrew Luck, IND QB6 10
58 Robert Griffin III, WAS QB7 10
59 Chris Johnson, NYJ RB25 11
60 Joique Bell, DET RB26 9
61 Reggie Bush, DET RB27 9
62 Kendall Wright, TEN WR25 9
63 Toby Gerhart, JAC RB28 11
64 Marques Colston, NO WR26 6
65 Julian Edelman, NE WR27 10
66 Greg Olsen, CAR TE4 12
67 Vernon Davis, SF TE5 8
68 Riley Cooper, PHI WR28 7
69 Stevan Ridley, NE RB29 10
70 Emmanuel Sanders, DEN WR29 4
71 Michael Floyd, ARI WR30 4
72 Mike Wallace, MIA WR31 5
73 Trent Richardson, IND RB30 10
74 Dwayne Bowe, KC WR32 6
75 Eric Decker, NYJ WR33 11
76 Pierre Thomas, NO RB31 6
77 Knowshon Moreno, MIA RB32 5
78 Jason Witten, DAL TE6 11
79 Golden Tate, DET WR34 9
80 Maurice Jones-Drew, OAK RB33 5
81 Terrance Williams, DAL WR35 11
82 Chris Ivory, NYJ RB34 11
83 Sammy Watkins, BUF WR36 9
84 Jeremy Maclin, PHI WR37 7
85 Nick Foles, PHI QB8 7
86 Tom Brady, NE QB9 10
87 Jordan Cameron, CLE TE7 4
88 Dennis Pitta, BAL TE8 11
89 Fred Jackson, BUF RB35 9
90 David Wilson, NYG RB36 8
91 DeAndre Hopkins, HOU WR38 10
92 Mike Evans, TB WR39 7
93 Colin Kaepernick, SF QB10 8
94 Matt Ryan, ATL QB11 9
95 Cecil Shorts, JAC WR40 11
96 Jordan Reed, WAS TE9 10
97 Kyle Rudolph, MIN TE10 10
98 Seattle Seahawks, SEA DEF1 4
99 Khiry Robinson, NO RB37 6
100 Josh Gordon, CLE WR41 4
101 Jarrett Boykin, GB WR42 9
102 Aaron Dobson, NE WR43 10
103 Tony Romo, DAL QB12 11
104 Jay Cutler, CHI QB13 9
105 Russell Wilson, SEA QB14 4
106 Danny Amendola, NE WR44 10
107 Jeremy Hill, CIN RB38 4
108 Danny Woodhead, SD RB39 10
109 Anquan Boldin, SF WR45 8
110 Darren Sproles, PHI RB40 7
111 Shonn Greene, TEN RB41 9
112 Marvin Jones, CIN WR46 4
113 James Jones, OAK WR47 5
114 Reggie Wayne, IND WR48 10
115 Brandin Cooks, NO WR49 6
116 Kenny Stills, NO WR50 6
117 Tavon Austin, STL WR51 4
118 Rueben Randle, NYG WR52 8
119 DeAngelo Williams, CAR RB42 12
120 C.J. Anderson, DEN RB43 4
121 Chris Polk, PHI RB44 7
122 Bernard Pierce, BAL RB45 11
123 Devonta Freeman, ATL RB46 9
124 Tre Mason, STL RB47 4
125 Lamar Miller, MIA RB48 5
126 Philip Rivers, SD QB15 10
127 Darren McFadden, OAK RB49 5
128 Mark Ingram, NO RB50 6
129 Martellus Bennett, CHI TE11 9
130 Andre Brown, HOU RB51 10
131 Lance Dunbar, DAL RB52 11
132 Andrew Hawkins, CLE WR53 4
133 Charles Clay, MIA TE12 5
134 Steve Smith, BAL WR54 11
135 Hakeem Nicks, IND WR55 10
136 LeGarrette Blount, PIT RB53 12
137 Stepfan Taylor, ARI RB54 4
138 Steve Johnson, SF WR56 8
139 Zach Ertz, PHI TE13 7
140 Eric Ebron, DET TE14 9
141 Delanie Walker, TEN TE15 9
142 Jerricho Cotchery, CAR WR57 12
143 Greg Jennings, MIN WR58 10
144 Kelvin Benjamin, CAR WR59 12
145 Terrance West, CLE RB55 4
146 Miles Austin, CLE WR60 4
147 Knile Davis, KC RB56 6
148 Justin Hunter, TEN WR61 9
149 Carlos Hyde, SF RB57 8
150 Jonathan Stewart, CAR RB58 12
151 Antonio Gates, SD TE16 10
152 Ladarius Green, SD TE17 10
153 Markus Wheaton, PIT WR62 12
154 Charles Sims, TB RB59 7
155 Mike Tolbert, CAR RB60 12
156 Doug Baldwin, SEA WR63 4
157 Christine Michael, SEA RB61 4
158 Andre Williams, NYG RB62 8
159 Ahmad Bradshaw, IND RB63 10
160 Vick Ballard, IND RB64 10
161 Brandon Bolden, NE RB65 10
162 Robert Turbin, SEA RB66 4
163 Bryce Brown, BUF RB67 9
164 Donald Brown, SD RB68 10
165 Harry Douglas, ATL WR64 9
166 Mike Williams, BUF WR65 9
167 Marcel Reece, OAK RB69 5
168 Jordan Todman, JAC RB70 11
169 BenJarvus Green-Ellis, CIN RB71 4
170 Robert Woods, BUF WR66 9
171 Roy Helu, WAS RB72 10
172 Dwayne Allen, IND TE18 10
173 James Starks, GB RB73 9
174 Ka'Deem Carey, CHI RB74 9
175 Brian Hartline, MIA WR67 5
176 Jonathan Dwyer, ARI RB75 4
177 Denarius Moore, OAK WR68 5
178 Carolina Panthers, CAR DEF2 12
179 San Francisco 49ers, SF DEF3 8
180 Cincinnati Bengals, CIN DEF4 4
181 New England Patriots, NE DEF5 10
182 Denver Broncos, DEN DEF6 4
183 Arizona Cardinals, ARI DEF7 4
184 Kansas City Chiefs, KC DEF8 6
185 St. Louis Rams, STL DEF9 4
186 Houston Texans, HOU DEF10 10
187 New Orleans Saints, NO DEF11 6
188 Baltimore Ravens, BAL DEF12 11
189 Matt Prater, DEN K1 4
190 Stephen Gostkowski, NE K2 10
191 Justin Tucker, BAL K3 11
192 Adam Vinatieri, IND K4 10
193 Steven Hauschka, SEA K5 4
194 Dan Bailey, DAL K6 11
195 Blair Walsh, MIN K7 10
196 Matt Bryant, ATL K8 9
197 Phil Dawson, SF K9 8
198 Mason Crosby, GB K10 9
199 Nick Novak, SD K11 10
200 Robbie Gould, CHI K12 9
 
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Im Lookin for a League with good competition Put ya money where ya mouth is...tired of playing wit scrubs.. too easy 4X Champ..
 
Fantasy value of 2014 draft picks

By Christopher Harris | ESPN.com

I'm more convinced than ever that this is going to be a crummy year for fantasy rookies. There are some nice skill position prospects, but few guys will have that elusive combination of pro-ready skills and immediate opportunity. In re-draft leagues, you're probably smart if you don't reach for any of the big names you saw drafted this weekend.

Of course, some rookies will have unforeseen positive impacts. In addition, many of us play in dynasty leagues, where we care less about production in 2014 and more about career prospects. That's why reviewing the draft's deeper rounds can be fruitful.

First off, here's my very early take on the top 10 re-draft rookies for 2014:

1. Bishop Sankey, RB, Tennessee Titans: Sankey isn't my favorite talent at running back in this draft, but he's the lucky soul who landed on the only NFL team with a glaring need for a starting rusher. He's a great athlete. He runs fast, he's powerful, and he was productive at Washington. But on tape, I think he has a bit of "Bryce Brown-itis," in that he plays east/west as often as north/south, and he's not so fast that he can outrun an NFL defense. That said, he's an obvious candidate to wrest the starting gig from the oh-so-underwhelming Shonn Greene in Nashville.

2. Mike Evans, WR, Tampa Bay Buccaneers: How can you tell it's a shaky rookie class? I'm about to list three straight wideouts, and rookie WRs rarely deliver fantasy value. I wrote about Evans on Friday; his size should at least translate to some work in the red zone.

3. Sammy Watkins, WR, Buffalo Bills: I also wrote about Watkins. I like the player very much, but given his nontraditional size for a No. 1 wideout and the Bills' questions at QB, he is far from bulletproof in 2014.

4. Kelvin Benjamin, WR, Carolina Panthers: The Panthers are so barren in their receiving corps -- having seen Steve Smith, Brandon LaFell and Ted Ginn depart and only Jerricho Cotchery, Jason Avant and Tiquan Underwood arrive -- that Benjamin has a golden opportunity to start right away as Cam Newton's flanker.

5. Jeremy Hill, RB, Cincinnati Bengals: BenJarvus Green-Ellis, please pick up the white courtesy phone. The Law Firm seems destined to leave Cincy, as Hill slides into a complementary role behind Giovani Bernard. At 233 pounds with some surprising straight-ahead speed, Hill looks like the potential TD-maker in a pretty good offense, one that new coordinator Hue Jackson promises to make more balanced in 2014. I'm not that concerned for Bernard's fantasy value, though; I think Hill is a one-speed, one-direction player who runs upright and will take some thunderous hits in the NFL that might limit his shelf life. But it's fair to dream that Hill could make a fantasy dent this year.

6. Terrance West, RB, Cleveland Browns: I'm a fan of West's size/speed combo. He's a 225-pound player who runs a 4.54 40, and while his small-school competition at Towson wasn't the best, he has some multicut ability that got him loose a whole bunch in college. The likes of Chris Ogbonnaya, Edwin Baker and Dion Lewis should be no threat to West making the squad and potentially serving as Cleveland's No. 2 RB. Given Ben Tate's injury history, that could make West one heck of an intriguing handcuff this summer.

7. Johnny Manziel, QB, Browns. I shared my Manziel thoughts late last week. There's no doubt he's exciting and his rushing ability gives him fantasy upside, but I'm worried he'll get hurt.

8. Odell Beckham, WR, New York Giants: You'll recall that my take on Beckham included concern about his lack of strength. There's no questioning his wheels, and his route running is solid. Will he be able to get off the line as an outside receiver? That's my worry. If he can, Cecil Shorts is a good comparison.

9. Tre Mason, RB, St. Louis Rams: Give the Rams credit for acknowledging that they made a mistake going into last season with Isaiah Pead and Daryl Richardson as their top rushers. Zac Stacy is ensconced as the workhorse in St. Louis, but his backup job is wide open. Benny Cunningham was serviceable in small doses in 2013, but Mason is a quicker-footed player, plus his dad was in De La Soul, and that's awesome. Mason may not have ideal feature back size at 5-foot-8, but his college tape portrays him as unafraid of contact and willing to run with a low pad level to crank out yards. He was my No. 2 RB in this draft. Alas, I simply love Stacy more.

10. Jordan Matthews, WR, Philadelphia Eagles: Matthews got flak during the draft's silly season because (supposedly) too many of his yards came on bubble screens that won't work in the NFL. Whatever. Matthews might not be a "sudden" athlete, but he's got 4.46 buildup speed at 6-3 and 212 pounds and he's known for his discipline, work ethic and smarts. With Avant gone from Philly, Chip Kelly is in the market for someone to run out of the slot, and Matthews has a chance to be that guy. Not only that, but presumptive No. 1 Jeremy Maclin is injury-prone and presumptive No. 2 Riley Cooper isn't anything special. In an offense that wants to go fast, Matthews is a name to watch.

rest of the article

Now let's dig in with a look at every skill player taken in the second and third rounds and the skill-position names we might need to know that were taken thereafter.

36. Derek Carr, QB, Oakland Raiders: My comparison for Carr is lazy, easy and, I think, accurate: David Carr. They both have good foot speed, big arms, occasional shaky accuracy and questions about their abilities under pressure. Derek was hugely productive at Fresno State, but the competition level was subelite and he ran entirely out of the shotgun spread. In his bowl game this winter against USC, he looked bad. In March, the Raiders traded for the rotting husk of Matt Schaub, which means if Carr produces a good camp, he could win this job. But even if that happens, fantasy glory will decidedly not ensue.

[+] EnlargeAustin Seferian-Jenkins
Joe Nicholson/USA TODAY Sports
Given his size, Austin Seferian-Jenkins could be a frequent target in the red zone for Tampa Bay.
38. Austin Seferian-Jenkins, TE, Buccaneers: It's easy to get excited about ASF's pro prospects when you watch his sophomore game tape: He's 6-5 and 262 pounds, and he caught 69 passes that season. Some of the bloom came off him as a junior, perhaps mostly because of poor quarterback play at Washington. What's crazy is the frontcourt the Bucs are assembling: Vincent Jackson, Mike Evans and ASF are all at least 6-5. I don't think Seferian-Jenkins is destined to be a Jimmy Graham or Rob Gronkowski kind of seam-stretcher, because his hips are tight and he doesn't really elude defenders coming out of breaks. But there's reason to believe he can make noise in the red zone as early as this season. He has the potential to be an interesting midseason pickup for fantasy.

39. Marqise Lee and 61. Allen Robinson, WRs, Jacksonville Jaguars: With the news that the Jags aren't counting on suspended Justin Blackmon at all this season, it was certainly expected that they would get multiple wideouts, and they did. Eventually, I think Lee will become a Victor Cruz kind of hybrid who can get open anywhere on the field and make big plays with his underrated in-game explosiveness, and Robinson is already a hyperpolished possession receiver with excellent hands who might follow the career path of Anquan Boldin.

But given that Chad Henne or Blake Bortles will be throwing to them behind an untrustworthy offensive line, it's a long journey to fantasy relevance in 2014. Dynasty-wise, I'm buying Lee. I know he ran a 4.52 40 at the combine, but his functional speed was beyond question during his breakout sophomore year at USC. He's going to be a legitimate all-around threat in coming seasons.

42. Jordan Matthews, WR, Eagles: See above.

45. Paul Richardson, WR, Seattle Seahawks: Richardson is a one-trick pony as a deep threat. At 6-0 and 175 pounds, he runs a 4.4 40 and made his living at Colorado running past people. When teams take a player like this so early in the draft, they are clearly hoping to capture some DeSean Jackson magic. I'm just skeptical Richardson actually has such magic, plus he's a health risk having torn multiple knee ligaments. This year, certainly, he'll learn behind several more experienced Seattle WRs.

49. Jace Amaro, TE, New York Jets: Amaro set a single-season record for most receiving yards by a TE last year, running the majority of his routes out of the slot. While he hasn't been asked to block much in his career, he did 28 bench press reps at the combine, hinting at a possible future as an all-around starter. Certainly, he's now the favorite to begin Week 1 as the Jets' top TE, ahead of Jeff Cumberland and Zach Sudfeld. But because New York is unsettled at QB, you're best served by keeping Amaro in mind as a midseason pickup.

52. Troy Niklas, TE, Arizona Cardinals: Arizona took Niklas this early because it values blocking tight ends as much or more than any squad in the NFL. And blocking is what Niklas does best. He's 6-6 and 270 pounds and is comfortable as an in-line mauler. Given that Rob Housler, a more athletic player, caught just 39 balls last year, Niklas will be way off the fantasy radar in 2014.

53. Davante Adams, WR, Green Bay Packers: Adams was Derek Carr's preferred target in Fresno State's spread attack, which means he will have to adjust to the tighter quarters of the pro game. That said, his career upside is intriguing. He falls shy of elite in all the measurable categories, but on tape you see an instinctive leaper and extremely fluid athlete whose production (leading the NCAA in catches last year) belies his 6-1, 212-pound, 4.54-running frame. He's the favorite to be Aaron Rodgers' No. 4 wideout as a rookie, and if Jordy Nelson, Randall Cobb or Jarrett Boykin get hurt, Adams could be a waiver-wire special.

54. Bishop Sankey, RB, Titans: See above.

55. Jeremy Hill, RB, Bengals: See above.

56. Cody Latimer, WR, Denver Broncos: When Peyton Manning gets a new weapon, people pay attention. And Latimer -- a late-riser in the draft -- could find himself in the eye of the storm in 2014. At 6-3 and 215 pounds, Latimer has deep speed, a big wingspan and plenty of hops. He also had one drop on 119 targets as a senior at Indiana. If the Broncos part company with Andre Caldwell, Latimer becomes their No. 4 WR, and Wes Welker had recurring concussion problems last year. I'm not convinced Latimer steps into an NFL lineup and is instantly able to get open, but if Peyton is Peyton again, the situation is intriguing.

[+] EnlargeFrank Gore
Scott Rovak/USA TODAY Sports
With Frank Gore -- and a legion of others -- also in the mix at RB, Carlos Hyde may be a non-factor as a rookie.
57. Carlos Hyde, RB, San Francisco 49ers: What a bummer! Hyde was many folks' top RB in this draft (though not mine), and as a 230-pound thumper with some fine one-cut ability, many observers believed in the right situation he would have a valuable fantasy season ahead of him. Alas, Hyde joins a backfield mess. Frank Gore is still chugging along, Kendall Hunter is still around, and Marcus Lattimore is still trying to return from injury. (I'm not including LaMichael James, who isn't long for the Bay Area.) Hyde reminds me of Stephen Davis, and in the right situation, he could be a bell cow. But this isn't the right situation. Until and unless he becomes Gore's clear handcuff, I can't imagine carrying him on a 10-team re-draft roster all season.

62. Jimmy Garoppolo, QB, New England Patriots: This pick was just weird. With Tom Brady turning 37 in August, the Pats are in win-now mode. So even if you love Garoppolo (and I'm not sure why you would), isn't there another player available in the second round who could help you immediately? Garoppolo won't play in New England for at least three years -- and maybe never.

63. Jarvis Landry, WR, Miami Dolphins: Landry was supposed to be the less-flashy complement to Beckham this season at LSU and actually wound up outproducing him. But Landry is smaller and slower than Beckham, and as such is considered less of a big-play threat in the NFL. Still, he is an exceedingly smart player and crisp route runner who made many open-field plays in the SEC. I'm betting he beats out Brandon Gibson and Rishard Matthews to become the Dolphins' starting slot receiver in 2014. That won't lead to great fantasy production, but this was still a solid pick.

65. C.J. Fiedorowicz, TE, Houston Texans: As one of the architects of the offense that made the Gronkowski-Aaron Hernandez tandem work in New England, Bill O'Brien figures to throw to his tight ends with the Texans. While he already has Garrett Graham and Ryan Griffin in place, neither of those players has accomplished much in the NFL. That gives Fiedorowicz a chance. Underused at Iowa, Fiedorowicz is strong enough to be a pro-ready blocker, and his combine numbers indicate he may be a better open-field pass-catcher than the Hawkeyes ever allowed him to show. It wouldn't be a shock to see him beat out either of the veterans on this depth chart.

69. Charles Sims, RB, Buccaneers: The arrival of Sims as an early third-round pick spells bad news for last year's momentary favorite Bobby Rainey. Sims doesn't run the ball with as much power as you'd like for a 214-pound back, but he is an elite pass-catcher and was considered the best pass protector of any RB in this draft. In a best-case scenario for Tampa Bay, Doug Martin will stay healthy and dominate all three downs. But if and when he comes off the field in passing situations, Sims is already a candidate to take those snaps. He won't be a fantasy option, but just in case you were tempted to speculate on Rainey this year, don't.

75. Tre Mason, RB, Rams: See above.

86. Josh Huff, WR, Eagles: Huff is really a running back playing wideout. In Oregon's spread attack, he didn't run routes as much as catch the ball in space and try to plow over tacklers. He's 5-11 and 206 pounds, and the man who recruited him, Kelly, probably envisions him as a gadget player. Eventually, it's possible that Huff could be a candidate to fill Avant's old role.

90. Donte Moncrief, WR, Indianapolis Colts: Moncrief was a freak at the combine, running a 4.40 40 at 6-2 and 221 pounds while producing huge broad and vertical jumps. But his Ole Miss game tape is rocky. He didn't get open all that much, and he had bad bouts of dropping the ball. No doubt the Colts view Moncrief as a shot in the dark at a future No. 1 wideout, which is why dynasty leaguers are allowed to keep him in mind. But I'd be surprised if he's even active on game days to begin this year.

91. John Brown, WR, Cardinals: Brown played at Division II Pittsburg State and was explosive there, but he will be taking several major steps up in competition. At 5-10 and 179 pounds, he's officially tiny, and the Cardinals are almost certainly considering him as a special-teams player to begin his career.

94. Terrance West, RB, Browns: See above.

96. Jerick McKinnon, RB, Minnesota Vikings: I'll have an eye on McKinnon this summer, because the Vikings see something in him. With Toby Gerhart gone, they have a vacancy behind Adrian Peterson, and McKinnon figures to get a crack at the job (though momentary fantasy darling Matt Asiata will also be around). My problem with McKinnon is that he has no pass-blocking experience, which is a bad route to rookie contributions. At Georgia Southern, McKinnon actually swapped back and forth between QB and RB.

97. Dri Archer, RB/WR, Pittsburgh Steelers: Archer was the fastest player at February's combine, running a 4.26 40, but at 173 pounds he's simply tiny. The Steelers tried a similar player -- Chris Rainey -- in the fifth round a couple years ago, and he busted hard. Maybe things will go better for Archer, but he'll certainly never be a standard-league fantasy option running reverses. Those in leagues that count return yards will be more interested.

98. Richard Rodgers, TE, Packers: There's an opening at tight end in Green Bay. Andrew Quarless and Brandon Bostick should be considered the favorites in 2014, but the Pack see something they like in Rodgers (no relation to Aaron Rodgers, though he did also attend Cal). He shifted from TE to WR in the 2013 college season and lost a ton of weight, which he subsequently had to put back on for the combine. Most problematic, though, is how injury-prone he was throughout his collegiate career.

99. Crockett Gillmore, TE, Baltimore Ravens: Gillmore was a breakout player at the East/West Shrine Game this year, showing soft hands to go along with a nasty streak as a blocker, which likely comes from being a converted defensive end. This year, though, behind Dennis Pitta and Owen Daniels, he'll simply learn.

103. Devonta Freeman, RB, Atlanta Falcons: Freeman is the player the Falcons wish Jacquizz Rodgers was. Taking him is a tacit admission that the Quizz experiment didn't work, because Rodgers is just too small. Will Freeman ever be a workhorse back? At 5-8 and 206 pounds, I have my doubts. But he's a good, tough player who can catch and block and will be a natural complement to Steven Jackson. Does he qualify as a handcuff for those who want to take one last chance on S-Jax? I'm not there yet, but I'm interested to see how things go in camp.

[+] EnlargeDavid Wilson
AP Photo/Bill Kostroun
If David Wilson gets hurt again, there could be an opportunity for Andre Williams.
113. Andre Williams, RB, Giants: As the leading rusher in the Football Bowl Subdivision last season, Williams got Heisman love this winter, but he was never going to be a high pick. He's a bowling ball at 6-0 and 230 pounds, but he has no wiggle and can't catch the ball. His NFL comparables are Green-Ellis and Greene. Players who fit this profile occasionally find themselves in valuable fantasy roles, but that's usually when they become TD-makers for ultraprolific offenses. I'll grant that if David Wilson's neck prohibits him from playing, the Giants are thin behind Rashad Jennings, but I'm just not that excited about Williams' raw talent.

115. Shaq Evans, WR, Jets: Evans is a good athlete who, at 6-1 and 213 pounds, has the potential to develop into a consistent, handsy NFL flanker. That probably won't happen in 2014. The reason I list him here, however, comes down to opportunity. The Jets don't have much outside WR depth behind Eric Decker, unless you're thrilled by the prospect of David Nelson or Stephen Hill.

117. Ka'Deem Carey, RB, Chicago Bears: I know Carey didn't test well as a straight-ahead runner with a 4.70 40, but I liked his film more than any other back in this draft. I think NFL teams were scared off by Rich Rodriguez's spread attack and Carey's admittedly spotty off-field behavior. I can't speak to the latter, but as to the former: Carey wasn't some water bug slithering through giant holes at Arizona. He invites contact, bruises defensive backs and gives incredible effort on every play. He may not catch quite as well as Bernard, and he definitely doesn't have Gio's pure breakaway ability, but as dynamic runners in the box, I think they're similar. The Bears finally have a legitimate backup for Matt Forte, and while I want to see him in the exhibition season, I think Carey shapes up as a good handcuff if you take Forte early.

118. Martavis Bryant, WR, Steelers: Bryant fits the same mold as Moncrief: a player who could become a No. 1 WR in the NFL or could flame out entirely. A one-year wonder who caught 61 total passes in three seasons at Clemson, Bryant has crazy talent. He is 6-4 and 211 pounds, runs a 4.42 40 and performed a 39-inch vertical jump. But he has maturity issues and seems to have cruised by without learning the finer points of being a receiver. If the Steelers are able to get through to him, Bryant could be a star, which makes him a dynasty league pick. But it'll be a multiyear process.

124. De'Anthony Thomas, RB, Kansas City Chiefs: Much like fellow Oregon RB LaMichael James, Thomas is a small runner who has a reputation for speed but isn't actually fast. Yes, these guys look great in the spread at Oregon, but then you time them and they're nothing special. At 174 pounds, Thomas runs a 4.5 40, which: meh. All that said, the Chiefs lost Dexter McCluster to free agency, and by the end of his tenure in KC, McCluster had developed into a vaguely useful offensive weapon. That's Thomas' best case. He's not a fantasy option.

130. James White, RB, Patriots: White is a shifty runner, but he was perpetually lost in the shuffle at Wisconsin behind Montee Ball and Melvin Gordon and doesn't have enough full-on speed to be a legitimate game-breaker. But White is a smart player and excellent pass protector and comes with a reputation for not fumbling, a quality much in demand in New England. As quickly as Bill Belichick tends to reshuffle a deck that consists of Stevan Ridley, Shane Vereen and Brandon Bolden, you're forgiven for filing away White's name.

138. Lorenzo Taliaferro, RB, Ravens: Ray Rice and Bernard Pierce got through the draft avoiding an immediate threat to their primacy at the top of Baltimore's depth chart, and with Gary Kubiak coordinating the offense, there's hope this running attack can find its mojo. If it can't, remember Taliaferro. A 229-pound beast who dominated at FCS Coastal Carolina and ran an impressive 4.58 40, Taliaferro could develop into a platoon back, though he doesn't have the kind of lateral agility you'd want from a feature runner.

181. Alfred Blue, RB, Texans: A perpetual backup at LSU, Blue never got more than 78 carries in a single season. But he has been teasing for years. He is 6-2 and 228 pounds, runs a 4.63 40 and frankly looks dynamite in the uniform. But he couldn't stay healthy as a collegian and hasn't proved he can catch the ball. This is a case of the Texans taking a swing at a high-ceiling prospect who probably won't work out.

186. Lache Seastrunk, RB, Washington ********: Jay Gruden used Bernard to great effect last season, and now he takes a chance on Seastrunk, who has some of the same measurables as Gio. He is 5-9 and 201 pounds and has legitimately amazing first-step quickness and power for a guy his size. But as a relatively small RB, he has shown no pass-catching ability and was awful in pass protection at Baylor. As such, it's hard to see Seastrunk vaulting over Roy Helu during his rookie year to become Alfred Morris' passing-down mate.

228. Zach Hocker, K, ********. Because, y'know. Kicker.

229. Nate Freese, K, Lions. Because, y'know. Kicker run.
 
Im Lookin for a League with good competition Put ya money where ya mouth is...tired of playing wit scrubs.. too easy 4X Champ..

I have 2 spots open in a auction keeper league that is starting this year with a few NT people in there. $150 buy in. If you're seriously interested PM ME
 
QB:
High on Luck.
Low on Foles.

RB:
High on West and Hill.
Low on Sankey.

WR:
High on Wheaton, Terrance Williams, Moncrief, Brazill.

TE:
High on Reed, Ladarius Green.
 
Jamey Eisenberg CBS Sports 2014 Fantasy Football Rankings

Quarterbacks

1 Peyton Manning DEN
2 Aaron Rodgers GB
3 Drew Brees NO
4 Matthew Stafford DET
5 Colin Kaepernick SF
6 Matt Ryan ATL
7 Andrew Luck IND
8 Tony Romo DAL
9 Tom Brady NE
10 Robert Griffin III WAS
11 Jay Cutler CHI
12 Nick Foles PHI
13 Cam Newton CAR
14 Russell Wilson SEA
15 Ben Roethlisberger PIT
16 Philip Rivers SD
17 Andy Dalton CIN
18 Carson Palmer ARI
19 Alex Smith KC
20 Ryan Tannehill MIA
21 Sam Bradford STL
22 Joe Flacco BAL
23 Eli Manning NYG
24 Josh McCown TB
25 Teddy Bridgewater MIN
26 Jake Locker TEN
27 Michael Vick NYJ
28 Johnny Manziel CLE
29 EJ Manuel BUF
30 Matt Schaub OAK
31 Blake Bortles JAC
32 Ryan Fitzpatrick HOU

the rest...

Running Backs

1 Jamaal Charles KC
2 LeSean McCoy PHI
3 Matt Forte CHI
4 Adrian Peterson MIN
5 Eddie Lacy GB
6 Montee Ball DEN
7 DeMarco Murray DAL
8 Le'Veon Bell PIT
9 Giovani Bernard CIN
10 Arian Foster HOU
11 Doug Martin TB
12 Marshawn Lynch SEA
13 Zac Stacy STL
14 Alfred Morris WAS
15 Andre Ellington ARI
16 Bishop Sankey TEN
17 C.J. Spiller BUF
18 Reggie Bush DET
19 Shane Vereen NE
20 Ryan Mathews SD
21 Stevan Ridley NE
22 Toby Gerhart JAC
23 Joique Bell DET
24 Ray Rice BAL
25 Frank Gore SF
26 Ben Tate CLE
27 Trent Richardson IND
28 Steven Jackson ATL
29 Chris Johnson NYJ
30 Rashad Jennings NYG
31 Knowshon Moreno MIA
32 Maurice Jones-Drew OAK
33 DeAngelo Williams CAR
34 Pierre Thomas NO
35 Fred Jackson BUF
36 Chris Ivory NYJ
37 Devonta Freeman ATL
38 Khiry Robinson NO
39 Darren Sproles PHI
40 Christine Michael SEA
41 Stepfan Taylor ARI
42 Terrance West CLE
43 David Wilson NYG
44 Jeremy Hill CIN
45 Tre Mason STL
46 LeGarrette Blount PIT
47 Andre Williams NYG
48 Darren McFadden OAK
49 Mark Ingram NO
50 Lamar Miller MIA
51 Danny Woodhead SD
52 Ahmad Bradshaw IND
53 Shonn Greene TEN
54 Carlos Hyde SF
55 Donald Brown SD
56 Andre Brown HOU
57 Knile Davis KC
58 Charles Sims TB
59 Roy Helu WAS
60 James Starks GB

Wide Receivers

1 Calvin Johnson DET
2 Demaryius Thomas DEN
3 Brandon Marshall CHI
4 Julio Jones ATL
5 A.J. Green CIN
6 Dez Bryant DAL
7 Jordy Nelson GB
8 Alshon Jeffery CHI
9 Antonio Brown PIT
10 Randall Cobb GB
11 Larry Fitzgerald ARI
12 Pierre Garcon WAS
13 Michael Crabtree SF
14 Vincent Jackson TB
15 Andre Johnson HOU
16 Keenan Allen SD
17 Cordarrelle Patterson MIN
18 Julian Edelman NE
19 Wes Welker DEN
20 Victor Cruz NYG
21 Roddy White ATL
22 Golden Tate DET
23 Michael Floyd ARI
24 Percy Harvin SEA
25 DeSean Jackson WAS
26 Emmanuel Sanders DEN
27 Kendall Wright TEN
28 Mike Wallace MIA
29 Jeremy Maclin PHI
30 Torrey Smith BAL
31 Marques Colston NO
32 Terrance Williams DAL
33 T.Y. Hilton IND
34 Eric Decker NYJ
35 Reggie Wayne IND
36 Dwayne Bowe KC
37 Brandin Cooks NO
38 Josh Gordon CLE
39 Mike Evans TB
40 Sammy Watkins BUF
41 Riley Cooper PHI
42 Tavon Austin STL
43 Marvin Jones CIN
44 Hakeem Nicks IND
45 Jarrett Boykin GB
46 Kelvin Benjamin CAR
47 Kenny Stills NO
48 Odell Beckham NYG
49 Justin Hunter TEN
50 Anquan Boldin SF
51 Brian Hartline MIA
52 Danny Amendola NE
53 Rod Streater OAK
54 Cecil Shorts JAC
55 Steve Smith BAL
56 Markus Wheaton PIT
57 Harry Douglas ATL
58 Rueben Randle NYG
59 Jordan Matthews PHI
60 James Jones OAK

Tight Ends

1 Jimmy Graham NO
2 Julius Thomas DEN
3 Rob Gronkowski NE
4 Vernon Davis SF
5 Dennis Pitta BAL
6 Jason Witten DAL
7 Jordan Reed WAS
8 Greg Olsen CAR
9 Kyle Rudolph MIN
10 Jordan Cameron CLE
11 Zach Ertz PHI
12 Eric Ebron DET
13 Martellus Bennett CHI
14 Heath Miller PIT
15 Ladarius Green SD
16 Delanie Walker TEN
17 Jace Amaro NYJ
18 Antonio Gates SD
19 Charles Clay MIA
20 Dwayne Allen IND
21 Tyler Eifert CIN
22 Coby Fleener IND
23 Garrett Graham HOU
24 Jared Cook STL

Kickers

1 Stephen Gostkowski NE
2 Phil Dawson SF
3 Matt Prater DEN
4 Steven Hauschka SEA
5 Justin Tucker BAL
6 Adam Vinatieri IND
7 Mason Crosby GB
8 Dan Bailey DAL
9 Nick Novak SD
10 Matt Bryant ATL
11 Shayne Graham NO
12 Robbie Gould CHI
13 Alex Henery PHI
14 Caleb Sturgis MIA
15 Ryan Succop KC
16 Graham Gano CAR
17 Greg Zuerlein STL
18 Blair Walsh MIN
19 Sebastian Janikowski OAK
20 Jay Feely ARI
21 Shaun Suisham PIT
22 Dan Carpenter BUF
23 Kai Forbath WAS
24 Nick Folk NYJ

Defensive Special Teams

1 Seahawks SEA
2 49ers SF
3 Broncos DEN
4 Cardinals ARI
5 Rams STL
6 Panthers CAR
7 Bengals CIN
8 Patriots NE
9 Chiefs KC
10 Saints NO
11 Texans HOU
12 Buccaneers TB
13 Browns CLE
14 Steelers PIT
15 Packers GB
16 Bills BUF
17 Ravens BAL
18 Dolphins MIA
19 Falcons ATL
20 Eagles PHI
21 Jaguars JAC
22 Chargers SD
23 Giants NYG
24 Lions DET
 
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If I could get some opionions on this possible trade that would be great. I'm in a keepers league where we keep 4 players. I currently have 5 players Peyton, Cobb, vjax, Gronk and zac Stacy. My buddy offered me ball and the 2 pick in our draft which would be dez for Peyton. As well as McCoy and 2 picks which would be a stafford or romo and Jordan Cameron or wr2 or 3 like wr. What deal would you guys do??
 
If I could get some opionions on this possible trade that would be great. I'm in a keepers league where we keep 4 players. I currently have 5 players Peyton, Cobb, vjax, Gronk and zac Stacy. My buddy offered me ball and the 2 pick in our draft which would be dez for Peyton. As well as McCoy and 2 picks which would be a stafford or romo and Jordan Cameron or wr2 or 3 like wr. What deal would you guys do??

can you re word this and make it clearer, reading it and I have no idea what you mean...break it down by what you're giving up and what you're getting.
 
I keep 4 players going into our draft currently have Peyton, Gronk, vjax, Cobb, and zac Stacy.

I'm trading Peyton for dez and ball or lesean McCoy and 2 picks which would most likely be romo/stafford/rivers and a solid wr ex. Crabtree or Jordan Cameron if I decide to not keep fronk
 
This is the most hyped i am for FF ever.

I'm praying I hit it big with WR's this year man
 
I'm still looking to fill 2 spots in a very serious and competitive auction draft, keeper league
 
If I could get some opionions on this possible trade that would be great. I'm in a keepers league where we keep 4 players. I currently have 5 players Peyton, Cobb, vjax, Gronk and zac Stacy. My buddy offered me ball and the 2 pick in our draft which would be dez for Peyton. As well as McCoy and 2 picks which would be a stafford or romo and Jordan Cameron or wr2 or 3 like wr. What deal would you guys do??
"Shady" and the two highest picks you can get. McCoy may be the best producer in fantasy football going into 2014, depending how you rank Peterson or Charles. Top-3 definitely.

Take Stafford over Romo if you're in the position to choose.

And go for a WR2 in that case. Cameron was my fantasy sweetheart in 2013 but I prefer Reed or Green in 2014.
 
This is the most hyped i am for FF ever.

I'm praying I hit it big with WR's this year man

my WR core last year was so solid :lol

pretty much had alshon and gordon as my WR3&4 on all of my teams.

praying i get the same luck this year.
 
This is the most hyped i am for FF ever.

I'm praying I hit it big with WR's this year man

my WR core last year was so solid :lol

pretty much had alshon and gordon as my WR3&4 on all of my teams.

praying i get the same luck this year.

I had Dez Bryant hold me down but the rest were FA's all year smh. I went through so many WR's as my WR 2/3 smh.
 
I'm in a dynasty leauge, should I do this trade?

I give gronk and rivers

He gives brees
I wouldn't, unless you think Gronk won't stay on the field. Legitimate gripe. Injury aside, he can produce like a top-2 TE, production only Jimmy can match at the position.
 
I was leaning towards no, because along with rivers I have kap, Foles and Brady at QB (yes i know that's 4)
 
I was leaning towards no, because along with rivers I have kap, Foles and Brady at QB (yes i know that's 4)
Wait, must be two-start QB. I'd sell-high on Foles now.

If not, revisit the Brees deal but have the manager throw in another piece for Rivers and Gronk. A TE or WR2/WR3.
 
I think I'm going to try to move Foles and Rivers for other positions. I nearly got Demarco for rivers but I passed up. Stupid. Needed that RB2
 
I think I'm going to try to move Foles and Rivers for other positions. I nearly got Demarco for rivers but I passed up. Stupid. Needed that RB2
That's an easy accepted deal if the manager floats Murray for Rivers again. DeMarco is projected as a RB1 this season.
 
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