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re: 2024 NFL News & Notes Thread
Posted on 8/7/24 at 12:15 pm to bikerack
Posted on 8/7/24 at 12:15 pm to bikerack
quote:
Colts WR Josh Downs suffered a high ankle sprain during practice today, per source. The outlook right now is that Downs could miss about a month but the Colts are sorting that out.
A key piece to Colts offense goes down.
- Jeremy Fowler
Posted on 8/8/24 at 8:35 am to TigerLunatik
quote:
Falcons WR Rondale Moore was carted off the field yesterday. We are still waiting for an update, but Moore left practice with an inflatable cast on his leg and was rushed to a nearby medical facility. Considering the Falcons canceled the rest of practice, it’s clear this is a very serious injury. Ray-Ray McCloud, who has been getting buzz at camp, is now the next man up behind Drake London and Darnell Mooney.
Posted on 8/8/24 at 1:40 pm to TigerLunatik
quote:
Browns RB D’Onta Foreman back practicing a week after scary neck injury.
- Scott Petrak
Posted on 8/8/24 at 2:26 pm to TigerLunatik
quote:
The Falcons placed wide receiver Rondale Moore on the reserve/injured list. Moore was carted out of practice yesterday. Today, it was confirmed the issue is his knee.
In turn, they signed punter Ryan Sanborn.
- Terrin Waack
Posted on 8/9/24 at 9:01 am to TigerLunatik
Peter Overzet with FantasyPros....
quote:
Here are “my guys” for 2024 fantasy drafts…
1. NYG WR Malik Nabers. The third-best WR prospect to enter the league since 2018. No WR cohort breaks out at a higher rate than 21-year-old rookies. Don’t get caught overthinking the situation—he’s going to transform the entire offense. His price in home leagues is egregious.
2. ARI TE Trey McBride. In his eight games with Kyler Murray last year he averaged 8+ targets, 6+ receptions, and 67+ yards per game. He finished behind only George Kittle and Travis Kelce in yards per route run. We’ll be drafting McGronk in Round 1 next year. Don’t be late to the party.
3. RB Chase Brown. Let the record show that I was on Brown before he became a camp darling. He’s a home-run hitter in one of the most explosive offenses in football. Draft Brown and enjoy the spoils of 2024’s De’Von Achane.
4. QB Jayden Daniels. Since 2016, no college QB tallied more yards per game off of scrambles than Daniels. Every other QB with significant rushing traits is an early-round pick in drafts, yet Daniels is routinely available after pick 100 on basically every site. The floor is high, but the ceiling is even higher.
Posted on 8/9/24 at 10:02 am to TigerLunatik
I don't know who Peter is but I have 2 of the 4 on the only team I've drafted so far a few weeks ago so he's probably a pretty sharp guy
Posted on 8/9/24 at 10:06 am to BilJ
I'm pretty sure he most be a Corey Davis fan.
Posted on 8/9/24 at 10:42 am to TigerLunatik
no need to bring him into this sir
Posted on 8/9/24 at 11:22 am to TigerLunatik
quote:
The return: #Colts HC Shane Steichen said Anthony Richardson will play a "series or two" in Sunday's preseason opener against the Denver Broncos. It will be Richardson's first game action in over 300 days.
- Ari Meirov

Posted on 8/9/24 at 12:54 pm to TigerLunatik
I’ll take the “throws an interception” prop for +125
Posted on 8/9/24 at 1:14 pm to LSUcam7
quote:
Source: The #Patriots are releasing WR JuJu Smith-Schuster.
- Ian Rapoport
Posted on 8/9/24 at 1:15 pm to LSUcam7
quote:
I’ll take the “throws an interception” prop for +125
I made SOOOO much money betting the over on his rushing yard props last year.
Posted on 8/9/24 at 3:40 pm to TigerLunatik
quote:
Sources: #49ers star WR Brandon Aiyuk recently had a sit-down meeting with Kyle Shanahan and others in the organization where “some open and candid thoughts were expressed.” The two sides have since restarted negotiations on a long-term deal and there is some optimism that Aiyuk could remain in SF.
Situation remains “very fluid” but a sudden development.
- Jordan Schultz
Posted on 8/9/24 at 8:13 pm to TigerLunatik
I’m feeling pretty good about picking up Cade Stover as an UDFA in dynasty
Posted on 8/10/24 at 10:40 pm to TheWalrus
Chris HC Andy Reid said WR Hollywood Brown has been hospitalized due to a sternoclavicular joint dislocation. Brown’s availability for the start of the regular season is in question.
Posted on 8/11/24 at 11:54 am to bleeng
quote:
Hearing Giants are hopeful that Malik Nabers is OK and appears to have avoided serious injury to his left foot, per sources. Will likely undergo tests to further determine severity and confirm. But as of now, concern level seems low - high because of who the player is, but low in terms of what it is believed to be.
- Art Stapleton
Posted on 8/12/24 at 9:04 am to WicKed WayZ
quote:
Coach Daboll said Malik Nabers is sore today. They’ll back him off today and take it day to day. “I think he’s OK.” Coach Daboll says he doesn’t think it’s a fracture.
- New York Giants
Posted on 8/12/24 at 9:52 am to TigerLunatik
quote:
Must-Have Wide Receivers (2024 Fantasy Football)
ADP via FantasyPros
Early-Round Targets
Amon-Ra St. Brown (WR – DET): ADP 7.3 | WR5
Why am I not panicking if I miss out on one of the consensus top-four wide receivers this year? Because the absolute elite floor and ceiling for Amon-Ra St. Brown provide an anchor around which our fantasy teams can be built. Not only did St. Brown finish third overall in fantasy points among wide receivers and fourth in points per game, but he was incredibly consistent. St. Brown missed one game all season and only had two games below 10 points in half-PPR formats.
More under the hood, St. Brown was and is elite in terms of opportunity and efficiency. He had the fourth-most red zone targets among all wide receivers (24), the second-most yards after the catch (668) and the fifth-highest target share in the league (30.5%). His 2.7 yards per route run (YPRR) was seventh among all wide receivers, despite a 7.9-yard average depth of target (aDOT) that ranked 85th at the position. He excels after the catch and is a magnet for the ball in the red zone.
Amon-Ra St. Brown can go as high as fourth overall in any kind of point per reception format, and there is clear justification for it.
Jaylen Waddle (WR – MIA): ADP 35.7 | WR17
Teammate Tyreek Hill is clearly a top-two wide receiver in the NFL, but can the Miami Dolphins offense actually support two top-20 receivers? Why not? The offense Miami unveiled last year was high-speed, built around getting their best players the ball in space and focused on pushing the ball downfield. If anything, Waddle’s 14.1 fantasy points per game (21st among wide receivers) was a product of him being slightly unlucky and dealing with Tua Tagovailoa‘s end-of-season inconsistency.
Remember St. Brown and his seventh-most yards per route run? Want to guess who was eighth? That’s right, Jaylen Waddle, who had to also contend with Tyreek Hill, the number one overall player in YPRR. Waddle is also top-25 in target share, yards after the catch, yards per target and separation from coverage.
The only real thing dinging Waddle is his red-zone usage. With just eight targets in that area in 2023, he was 54th at the position behind players like Demarcus Robinson and K.J. Osborn. Any positive regression in that area in 2024 likely propels Waddle to top-12 status among wide receivers.
Mid-Round Targets
Chris Godwin (WR – TB): ADP 78.0 | WR33
Major touchdown regression is coming for Chris Godwin in 2024. After only two scores in 2023, countless hours of film were watched and numbers were analyzed to determine what went wrong for Godwin in 2023 (WR32 in fantasy points). After all, Baker Mayfield had a career year that allowed Mike Evans to get 1,255 yards and 13 touchdowns. Why couldn’t Godwin come along for the offensive ride at the same time?
It turns out the offensive scheme the Buccaneers played last year moved Godwin way out of position for too much of the year. He played only 32% of his snaps in the slot last season when he was above 55% in both 2022 and 2021 (when he was a top-15 receiver both years). In camp this year, Godwin is already talking about how he is so happy to be back in that position under new offensive coordinator Liam Coen. That way, Godwin does not have to compete with Evans on all the downfield stuff and he can own the intermediate area of the field as he did three years straight.
Rashee Rice (WR – KC): ADP 91.0 | WR37
There has been silence around the Rashee Rice legal situation for a couple of months now, and the closer we get to the regular season, it seems more and more likely Rice’s potential suspension will be pushed to later in the season, into 2025 or never comes. If we get confirmation that the latter two scenarios happen, Rice’s ADP should jump up about 60 spots. He was that dominant as a rookie in Kansas City last year, even without playing a full complement of snaps.
As a 23-year-old rookie who played just 58.6% of snaps last year (Andy Reid didn’t get the Rashee Rice Religion until later in the year), Rice commanded 102 targets and 938 receiving yards. And while those numbers are impressive, perhaps the most important part of Rice’s game came after he caught the ball. He ranked third in the NFL with 654 yards after the catch as Patrick Mahomes was able to find him in the best possible locations time and time again.
Despite the additions of Hollywood Brown and Xavier Worthy, Rice remains the top option in this wide receiver room when available. After pick 90 in drafts, it is certainly worth risking the fact that there might be a few games where you don’t have his services.
Late-Round Targets
Khalil Shakir (WR – BUF): ADP 139.7 | WR52
In case you’ve been under a rock this offseason, Stefon Diggs and Gabe Davis are both out of Buffalo and off to new teams in the AFC South. With those two top receivers from 2023 gone, that means over 240 targets are vacated from last season. Where will they go in 2024? Tight end Dalton Kincaid is sure to make a leap and command more than his 91 last season. Rookie Keon Coleman (second-round pick) is nasty, but he is very raw and just turned 21 years old. Curtis Samuel is now in town, but I picture him to be something like what he did with Carolina in 2020 (95 targets and 41 rush attempts).
For those paying attention, it was clear Khalil Shakir began his breakout even before 2023 ended. In Weeks 1-14 last season, Khalil Shakir averaged 2.3 targets and 30.1 receiving yards per game. He scored one touchdown in those 14 weeks. From Weeks 15-20, he averaged five targets and 52.8 receiving yards per game. Plus, he scored two touchdowns in those late-season games.
Shakir has been a standout at camp through the first few weeks and it’s clear Josh Allen trusts him. Down past pick 130 in most drafts, don’t be surprised if Shakir leads all wide receivers in that range in fantasy points. In one of the best offenses in the league, he is an absolute steal.
Rashid Shaheed (WR – NO): ADP 154.0 | WR58
Rashid Shaheed is a player who would not have nearly the same ADP if this same piece was written three weeks from now. The reports out of camp are so glowing, and he is such a talented player, I would not be surprised if Shaheed ends up around pick 100 by the time draft season comes to a close. If the 719 yards and five touchdowns from last year don’t get you too excited, it’s understandable. This year, however, will almost assuredly be different.
Shaheed has always been one of the best deep ball receivers in the leagues. His 14.6-yard aDOT was 10th-best in the league last year and he had a 93.9% true catch rate (23rd among all receivers). The issue with Shaheed has always been consistency and the Saints’ willingness to get him the ball. That’s where the change in offensive philosophy comes in this year. For the first time since 2006, the New Orleans Saints offense will not be run by Sean Payton or Pete Carmichael Jr. Klink Kubiak, the architect of the San Francisco 49ers’ passing attack last year, is the new man in charge, and that changes everything.
Why does that personnel change matter? At 6.6 yards after the catch per reception, the San Francisco 49ers led the league in that category, beating out Kansas City and Miami. Klint Kubiak was a master at getting wide receivers and tight ends the ball in places where they could make big plays. That certainly means the Saints are going to scheme the ball more to Shaheed so he can make easier catches and burn people with his speed upfield. There may be no more valuable pick after 150 than Shaheed, so grab him at that value while you still can.
This post was edited on 8/12/24 at 9:54 am
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