Fantasy Insights Off-Season Report – April 2008
The Fantasy Insights Off-Season Report is published the
beginning of each month from February through August. Each month the
information will be a little different depending on what is going on around the
league and how much information about a specific topic is available.
For instance, the May report will have much more coverage of
the draft than any other edition, and since all Head Coaching and Offensive
Coordinator positions have been filled throughout the league, the details on
those changes, including their coaching styles / philosophies and what it means
to your fantasy players have already been covered.
For Free Agency, only a list of eligible “important”
free-agents (offense only) are included.
Naturally any interesting news, from rumors to off-the-field
issues will be included as well.
Player News
Patriots TE Ben Watson had ankle surgery to repair cartilage
damage and scar tissue, and while he will be hampered during training camp and
maybe pre-season he is expected to be fine for the regular season.
Denver’s new #1 WR, Brandon Marshall, supposedly slipped on
a fast food bag causing him to fall and put his arm through an entertainment
center, sustaining lacerations to one artery, one vein, one nerve, two tendons
and three muscles in his right forearm. The forearm and elbow will be
immobilized for six weeks, at which time rehabilitation will begin. Full
recovery is expected to take three to four months. I’m sure this is really
what happened…I mean what else could it have possibly been? A domestic
dispute? A club altercation? Nah, not in the NFL.
Pittsburgh admirably cut punk WR Cedrick Wilson due to his
legal trouble, which consisted of punching his girlfriend at a restaurant.
Another “real” man. Maybe he can kill time by golfing with O.J. while he waits
for another team to sign him.
Arizona has signed WR Larry Fitzgerald to a 4-year extension
worth $40M, which includes $33M during the first three years.
QB “god” Brett Favre has finally retired, after 17 historic
years in the NFL and numerous passing records. Aaron Rodgers finally gets his
chance to be a starting NFL QB.
WR Deion Branch is expected to miss all of training camp and
pre-season, and not be ready to play until early-to-mid regular season due to
his recovery from a torn ACL. He will likely start the season on the PUP list,
which means he cannot play before week eight.
Bust RB Cedric Benson had surgery to insert a small metal
plate into his ankle to help heal his broken leg and hold the bone together.
This could be a blessing in disguise for the Bears – his injury forcing the
Bears to take one of the stud RBs coming out in this year’s draft.
Bucs QB Chris Simms chose not to participate in Tampa Bay's
“voluntary” off-season workouts, and he skipped the team’s QB orientation last
week. I guess we can expect Simms to be cut or traded before the season
begins.
PK Matt Prater, who is 1 for 4 in FGs in his short career is
currently the lone kicker on Denver’s roster right now. Expect Denver to draft
or sign at least one other kicker to compete with Prater.
Trade rumors, albeit with no specifics or apparent “meat”,
continue to spread regarding troubled Detroit WR Roy Williams.
The Pittsburgh Steelers extended QB Ben Roethlisberger’s
contract for 8 years, locking him up for basically the rest of his career.
The Chicago Bears traded backup – starting – backup – starting … QB Brian
Griese to Tampa Bay for a 2009 draft pick. Even more reason to expect the
departure of Chris Simms sooner rather than later. Chicago fans can only hope
this doesn’t mean Rex Grossman is entrenched as the starter. Expect Chicago to
take a QB high in this year’s draft.
Draft News
The NFL Combine was held the end of February and as always
was by invitation only. The invited players who attended were asked to perform
a variety of timed/measured drills, most physical but some mental. Not all
players participated in every drill, some for injury reasons and some for fear
of hurting their draft projection due to poor performance. A summary of the
player’s performances is provided.
QBs
Joe Flacco, Delaware (6’7), Erik Ainge, Tennessee (6’6),
Matt Ryan, Boston College (6’5) and Kevin O’Connell, SD State (6’5) were the
only QBs 6’5 and above, aiming their height a bonus to them. Adam Trafalis,
San Jose State (6’1), Paul Smith, Tulsa (6’1), Alex Brink, Washington State
(6’2), and Matt Flynn, LSU (6’2) were the only QBs 6’2 and under, making their
height a concern.
Dennis Dixon, Oregon (195) was the only QB under 200 pounds,
and Colt Brennan, Hawaii (207), Paul Smith (208), Alex Brink (211), Josh
Johnson, San Diego (213), John David Booty, USC (218), and Kyle Wright, Miami
(218), were the only QBs under 220 pounds, making their frames/builds a
concern. Sam Keller, Nebraska (241) was the heaviest QB.
Only Bernard Morris, Marshall (18) and Anthony Morelli, Penn
State (16) completed the 225-lb bench press drill. Josh Johnson (4.55) was the
fastest QB in the 40-yd dash, and Anthony Morelli (5.07) was the slowest.
There were 19 QBs that participated at the NFL Combine this
year. As expected, there were no schools with more than 1 QB invited or
attending. Matt Ryan decided not to do any throwing, choosing to wait until
his Pro Day workout, and Andre’ Woodson, Kentucky, didn’t participate due to a
hamstring injury suffered a couple weeks ago. Chad Henne, Michigan, had an
impressive throwing workout to help himself, as did Colt Brennan, who not only
completed all 18 of his passes, helping to ease concerns about his unorthodox
sidearm throwing style, but impressed all with his accuracy, velocity and
footwork. Brian Brohm, Louisville, didn’t do anything to impress anyone, but
probably didn’t lose any ground either with his so-so performance, while Josh
Johnson’s overall athletic talent opened some eyes – unfortunately for him,
those opened eyes are probably wondering how to convert this athlete from QB to
WR. Dennis Dixon, still recovering from season-ending knee surgery did not
participate in any drills, and Joe Flacco, the man with the golden arm,
impressed all with his big arm, but did struggle to consistently hit WRs on out
and corner routes, with the ball sailing high much too frequently. Alex Brink
and John David Booty have the smallest hands of all QBs, which raises concerns
about fumbles.
RBs
Matt Forte’, Tulane (6’2), Darren McFadden, Arkansas (6’1),
Kevin Smith, Central Florida (6’1), Allen Patrick, Oklahoma (6’1), Cory Boyd,
South Carolina (6’1), Marcus Thomas, UTEP (6’0), and Jalen Parmele, Toledo
(6’0) were the only RBs 6’0 and above. Ray Rice, Rutgers (5’8), Justin
Forsett, California (5’8), Dantrell Savage, Oklahoma State (5’8), Steve Slaton,
WVU (5’9), Mike Hart, Michigan (5’9), Thomas Brown, Georgia (5’9), Kalvin
McRae, Ohio (5’9), Yvenson Bernard, Oregon State (5’9), and Chad Simpson,
Morgan State (5’9) were the only RBs under 5’10, making their height a concern
for teams.
Dantrell Savage (187) was the only RB under 190 pounds, all
but eliminating him from any position other than returner. Justin Forsett
(194), Steve Slaton (197), Chris Johnson, East Carolina (197), Allen Patrick
(198), and Ray Rice (199) were the only RBs under 200 pounds, making their
weights a possible concern. Jonathan Stewart (235) and Rashard Mendenhall,
Illinois (225) were the only RBs at 225 pounds or above, but their weights are
not considered a concern.
Jonathan Stewart (28) led the RBs in 225-lb bench press
reps. Rashard Mendenhall (26), Justin Forsett (26) and Cory Boyd (25) were the
only other RBs to register 25 or more reps. Dantrell Savage (13), Steve Slaton
(19), and Jalen Parmele (19) were the only RBs with less than 20 reps.
However, Darren McFadden, Jamaal Charles (Texas), Felix Jones (Arkansas), Chris
Johnson, Kevin Smith, Allen Patrick, Kalvin McRae, Yvenson Bernard, and Chad
Simpson all chose not to participate in this drill. Jonathan Stewart proved to
be the strongest and Dantrell Savage proved to be the weakest.
Chris Johnson (4.24) was the fastest player RB timed in the
40-yd dash, and was the fastest player at the draft (nobody else even ran below
4.33). Darren McFadden (4.33) and Jamaal Charles (4.38) joined Johnson as the
only RBs to run a sub-4.4. Chad Simpson (4.42), Rashard Mendenhall (4.45),
Allen Patrick (4.45), Matt Forte’ (4.46), Jalen Parmele (4.47), Ray Rice
(4.47), Felix Jones (4.47), Jonathan Stewart (4.48), and Steve Slaton (4.49)
were the only RBs to run a sub-4.5 in the 40-yd dash. Tashard Choice, Georgia
Tech (5.0), Cory Boyd (4.52), Dantrell Savage (4.53), Justin Forsett (4.54),
Kevin Smith (4.58), and Thomas Brown (4.58) all ran in the 4.5s, while
BenJarvus Green-Ellis, Mississippi (4.62), Marcus Thomas (4.62), Kalvin McRae
(4.69), and Mike Hart (4.69) all disappointed by running in the 4.6s, and
jeopardizing draft positioning. And last – and least - Yvenson Bernard (4.83)
was the slowest RB at the combine, raising serious concerns about his speed, or
lack thereof, and really hurting his chances at being drafted.
Every RB participated in the 40-yd dash. Only Arkansas had
more than one RB at the combine (Darren McFadden and Felix Jones). They had
three total if you include their FB Peyton Hillis. Jalen Parmele and Chad
Simpson were two big surprise performers at the combine and really helped their
chances of being drafted. Dantrell Savage on the other hand hurt his draft
chances, mainly due to his small size and lack of speed.
WRs
James Hardy, Indiana (6’6), Mario Urrutia, Louisville (6’6),
Todd Blythe, Iowa State (6’5), Malcolm Kelly, Oklahoma (6’4), Limas Sweed,
Texas (6’4), Marcus Henry, Kansas (6’4), Marcus Monk, Arkansas (6’4), Jordy
Nelson, Kansas State (6’3), Paul Hubbard, Wisconsin (6’3), Adarius Bowman,
Oklahoma State (6’3), Adrian Arrington, Michigan (6’3), and Maurice Purify,
Nebraska (6’3) were the WRs 6’3 and taller, considered the “prototypical”
height right now. Early Doucet, LSU (6’0), Mario Manningham, Michigan (6’0),
Andre Caldwell, Florida (6’0), Earl Bennett, Vanderbilt (6’0), Kevin Robinson,
Utah State (6’0), Josh Morgan, Virginia Tech (6’0), Pierre Garcon, Mount Union
(6’0), Donnie Avery, Houston (5’11), Lavelle Hawkins, California (5’11), Harry
Douglas, Louisville (5’11), Danny Amendola, Texas Tech (5’11), Jaymar Johnson,
Jackson State (5’11), and Kenneth Moore, Wake Forest (5’11) were the WRs in the
“borderline” height category, which could affect their draft status. DeSean
Jackson, California (5’10), Eddie Royal, Virginia Tech (5’10), Dexter Jackson,
Appalachian State (5’10), Dorien Bryant, Purdue (5’10), Davone Bess, Hawaii
(5’10), and Ryan Grice-Mullen, Hawaii (5’10) are all considered “hampered” by
their height. Darius Reynaud, WVU (5’9), Anthony Alridge, Houston (5’9), and
Darnell Jenkins, Miami (5’9) are likely relegated to return work due to their
lack of size.
Mario Urrutia (232) was the heaviest WR at the combine.
Maurice Purify (224), Malcolm Kelly (224), Adarius Bowman (223), Marcus Monk,
Arkansas (222), and Marcus Smith, New Mexico (221) were the only WRs over 220
pounds. DeSean Jackson (169) was the lightest WR at the combine, and Anthony
Alridge, Dorien Bryant (174), Harry Douglas (176), and Jaymar Johnson (177),
were the only WRs under 180 pounds, pretty much limiting them to return
duties. Mario Manningham (181), Eddie Royal (184), Lavelle Hawkins (187),
Dexter Jackson (182), Ryan Grice-Mullen (187), Danny Amendola (183), Darnell
Jenkins (187), Taj Smith, Syracuse (187), Donnie Avery (192), Jerome Simpson,
Coastal Carolina (199), D.J. Hall, Alabama (193), Davone Bess (194), Kenneth
Moore, Wake Forest (195), and Arman Shields, Richmond (194) were the WRs under
200 pounds, making their weights questionable and affecting their rankings.
DeSean Jackson (4.35) was the fastest WR, and second fastest
player at the draft. Anthony Alridge (4.36), Andre Caldwell (4.37), Dexter
Jackson (4.37), Will Franklin, Missouri (4.37), and Eddie Royal (4.39) were the
only WRs to post sub-4.4s in the 40-yard dash. Devin Thomas, Michigan State
(4.40), Arman Shields (4.44), Josh Morgan (4.47), Jerome Simpson (4.47), Pierre
Garcon (4.48), Earl Bennett (4.48), James Hardy (4.49), Donnie Avery (4.49),
Paul Hubbard (4.49), Keenan Burton, Kentucky (4.49), and Dorien Bryant (4.49)
were the WRs in the 4.4s. Mario Manningham (4.60), Shaheer McBride, Delaware
State (4.61), Mario Urrutia (4.62), Jason Rivers (4.62), Marcus Monk (4.63),
Davone Bess (4.64), Todd Blythe (4.65), Darnell Jenkins (4.67), Mark Bradford,
Stanford (4.69), and Kevin Robinson (4.69), were the slow WRs clocked at 4.60
and above, with Adarius Bowman (4.74) and Danny Amendola (4.70) the only two WRs
to crawl into the 4.7+ range.
Eddie Royal (24), Darius Reynaud (20), Marcus Smith (20),
and Pierre Garcon (20) were the only WRs to register 20 or more reps on the
225-lb bench press. Marcus Monk (9) and Keenan Burton (10) were the weakest
WRs to participate, but 27 of the 46 WRs who attended did not even attempt this
drill.
Keenan Burton (38.5), Jerome Simpson (37.5), Arman Shields
(37.5), Mark Bradford (36.5), Pierre Garcon (36.5), Eddie Royal (36), Limas
Sweed (35), and Taj Smith (35) were the only WRs with 35” or greater vertical
leaps. Paul Hubbard (29.5), D.J. Hall (29.5), Dexter Jackson (29.5), Shaheer
McBride (29), Maurice Purify (28.5), Kenneth Moore (28), Devin Thomas (28),
Kevin Robinson (27.5), Ryan Grice-Mullen (27.5), Danny Amendola (27.5), Darnell
Jenkins (26.5), Marcus Smith (26.5), and Earl Bennett (26) were the WRs with a
vertical jump of less than 30”. However, nine other WRs did not participate in
this drill, including DeSean Jackson, Malcolm Kelly and Early Doucet.
DeSean Jackson is listed as the #1 WR on most expert’s
lists, but his lack of size just won’t allow him to be successful as a WR in
the NFL (even Steve Smith has 15-20 pounds on this guy). James Hardy, Eddie
Royal, Limas Sweed and Devin Thomas probably impressed teams the most, and
although Mario Manningham had a very good performance in pass catching drills,
there was some concern over his slow 4.59 40 time. Arman Shields likely helped
himself showing great athleticism as the top performer in the 20-yard and
60-yard shuttle drills. Donnie Avery was expected to run a 4.2-4.3 40, but
only produced a 4.49. Keenan Burton had a solid combine, helping to keep him
in the early-to-mid draft rounds. Marcus Monk also had a solid combine, but
teams still need to get past his knee injury history. Jerome Simpson needs to
hope his speed and jumping ability are enough to offset the dropped balls
throughout the combine.
TEs
Brad Cottam, Tennessee (6’8) and Joey Haynos, Maryland (6’8)
were the tallest TEs, while Dustin Keller, Purdue (6’2) was the shortest. Kolo
Kapanui, West Texas A&M (271) was the heaviest TE, while Evan Moore,
Stanford (233) was the lightest. Dustin Keller (4.55) was the fastest TE in
the 40-yard drill, while Kolo Kapanui (5.06) was the slowest. Craig Stevens,
California (27) had the most 225-lb bench press reps, while Tom Santi, Virginia
(14) had the least reps, although Fred Davis, USC and Martin Rucker, Missouri
didn’t even participate. Dustin Keller (38) and Tom Santi (36) were the only
TEs with a vertical leap over 35”. In fact, only one WR had a higher vertical
leap than Dustin Keller. Darrell Strong, Pittsburgh (25), Kolo Kapanui (26.5),
Adam Bishop, Nevada (27), Evan Moore (27), Craig Stevens (27.5), Jermichael
Finley, Texas (27.5), Kellen Davis, Michigan State (28), and Derek Fine, Kansas
(29) were the TEs with under a 30” vertical. Once again, Fred Davis and Martin
Rucker did not participate in this drill.
Dustin Keller easily had the best
showing of TEs with his strength, speed, smooth routes, and pass catching.
John Carlson, Notre Dame, probably had the worst combine of all TEs, struggling
to catch the ball consistently, and coming off slow and weak. Fred Davis chose
not to run and also struggled with pass catching drills, and his #1 TE ranking
could be in jeopardy. Brad Cottam, plagued by
injuries throughout his career, including missing almost all of last year with
a broken wrist, had an impressive performance, proving to be one of the most
athletic TEs in the draft with his size and speed combination. Still, perhaps
the most impressive, or maybe improved is a better term, TE was JerMichael
Finley who excelled in the pass catching drills and showed off his stellar body
control to adjust to passes and quickly accelerate after the catch. Jacob
Tamme also showed good hands in the receiving drills.
Free Agents
|
Position
|
Player Name
|
Team
|
Type
|
Status
|
|
QB
|
Billy Volek
|
SD
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Brian St. Pierre
|
PIT
|
UFA
|
Signed with ARZ
|
|
QB
|
Byron Leftwich
|
ATL
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Chris Redman
|
ATL
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Chris Weinke
|
SF
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Cleo Lemon
|
MIA
|
UFA
|
Signed with JAX
|
|
QB
|
Craig Nall
|
GB
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Dan Orlovsky
|
DET
|
RFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Daunte Culpepper
|
OAK
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
David Carr
|
CAR
|
CUT
|
Signed with NYG
|
|
QB
|
Derek Anderson
|
CLE
|
RFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Drew Henson
|
MIN
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Gus Frerotte
|
STL
|
CUT
|
|
|
QB
|
J.T. O’Sullivan
|
DET
|
UFA
|
Signed with SF
|
|
QB
|
Jake Plummer
|
TB
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Jamie Martin
|
NO
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Jared Lorenzen
|
NYG
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Jim Sorgi
|
IND
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Joey Harrington
|
ATL
|
CUT
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Josh McCown
|
OAK
|
UFA
|
Signed with MIA
|
|
QB
|
Kelly Holcomb
|
MIN
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Ken Dorsey
|
CLE
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Mark Brunnell
|
WAS
|
UFA
|
Signed with NO
|
|
QB
|
Marques Tuiasosopo
|
NYJ
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Quinn Gray
|
JAX
|
UFA
|
Signed with HOU
|
|
QB
|
Ryan Fitzpatrick
|
CIN
|
RFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Rex Grossman
|
CHI
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Shaun Hill
|
SF
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Tim Rattay
|
ARZ
|
UFA
|
|
|
QB
|
Todd Collins
|
WAS
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
QB
|
Trent Dilfer
|
SF
|
CUT
|
|
|
QB
|
Trent Green
|
MIA
|
CUT
|
Signed with STL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RB
|
Aaron Stecker
|
NO
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
Anthony Thomas
|
BUF
|
CUT
|
|
|
RB
|
Artose Pinner
|
MIN
|
UFA
|
Signed with NO
|
|
RB
|
Aveion Cason
|
DET
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
Cedric Cobbs
|
DEN
|
RFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Chris Brown
|
TEN
|
UFA
|
Signed with HOU
|
|
RB
|
Derrick Ward
|
NYG
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
DeShaun Foster
|
CAR
|
CUT
|
Signed with SF
|
|
RB
|
Earnest Graham
|
TB
|
RFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Fred Taylor
|
JAX
|
UFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Jamal Lewis
|
CLE
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
Jesse Chatman
|
MIA
|
RFA
|
Signed with NYJ
|
|
RB
|
Julius Jones
|
DAL
|
UFA
|
Signed with SEA
|
|
RB
|
Justin Fargas
|
OAK
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
Kevin Jones
|
DET
|
CUT
|
|
|
RB
|
LaBrandon Toefield
|
JAX
|
UFA
|
Signed with CAR
|
|
RB
|
Marion Barber III
|
DAL
|
RFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Maurice Hicks
|
SF
|
UFA
|
Signed with MIN
|
|
RB
|
Mewelde Moore
|
MIN
|
UFA
|
Signed with PIT
|
|
RB
|
Michael Bennett
|
TB
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
Michael Pittman
|
TB
|
UFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Michael Turner
|
SD
|
UFA
|
Signed with ATL
|
|
RB
|
Mike Anderson
|
BAL
|
CUT
|
|
|
RB
|
Musa Smith
|
BAL
|
UFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Patrick Cobbs
|
MIA
|
RFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Reno Mahe
|
PHI
|
UFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Rock Cartwright
|
WAS
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
Ron Dayne
|
HOU
|
UFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Ryan Grant
|
GB
|
ERFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Samkon Gado
|
MIA
|
RFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Shaud Williams
|
BUF
|
UFA
|
|
|
RB
|
T.J. Duckett
|
DET
|
UFA
|
Signed with SEA
|
|
RB
|
Tatum Bell
|
DET
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
RB
|
Vernand Morency
|
GB
|
RFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Verron Haynes
|
PIT
|
UFA
|
|
|
RB
|
Warrick Dunn
|
ATL
|
CUT
|
Signed with TB
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WR
|
Aaron Moorehead
|
IND
|
UFA
|
|
|
WR
|
Andre’ Davis
|
HOU
|
UFA
|
Re-signed
|
|
WR
|
Antonio Bryant
|
n/a
|
UFA
|
Signed with TB
|
|
WR
|
Antonio Chapman
|
CIN
|
UFA
|
|
|
WR
|
Az-Zahir Hakim
|
MIA
|
UFA
|
|
|
WR
|
Bernard Berrian
|
CHI
|
UFA
|
Signed with MIN
|
|
WR
|
Brandon Lloyd
|
WAS
|
CUT
|
Signed with CHI
|
|
WR
|
Brandon Stokley
|
DEN
|
UFA
|
|
|
WR
|
Bryan Gilmore
|
SF
|
UFA
|
|
|
WR
|
Bryant Johnson
|
ARZ
|
UFA
|
|