Friday, October 24, 2014

More lineup info for week 8!

Heres some great contrarian insight from Rotogrinders

Market Exploitation:FanDuel

Quarterback

Cam Newton ($8,100) vs. Seattle Seahawks

Starting a struggling quarterback against the Legion of Boom seems awfully enticing, doesn’t it?

But what if the Legion of Boom is a shell of its former self? Seattle has given up the 10th-most fantasy points to quarterbacks through seven weeks, thanks to five straight games of two or more touchdown tosses from opposing passers.

The Seahawks are only allowing 238.5 passing yards per contest, but signal callers are completing a sky-high 68.8 percent of passes against Seattle’s secondary. Only three defenses give up a higher completion percentage.

Newton is FanDuel’s 14th-most expensive quarterback for Week 8 after a $300 price tag drop. While he’s certainly not a steal at $8,100, I see Newton as an against-the-grain option with decently high upside. Newton, quarterbacking a team with no semblance of a running game, could have volume on his side. Seattle is facing 34.8 pass attempts per game this season.

Running Back

Ben Tate ($7,000) vs. Oakland Raiders

Tate is coming off a game in which he tanked in a favorable matchup against the Jaguars – and in Week 8, he comes complete with a $300 reduction inFanDuel price.

Tate is the primary running back on a team that wishes to keep the ball on the ground as much as possible, and this week goes against an Oakland defense that sees the most rushing attempts (36.2) of any defense in the NFL this year. Tate, barring disastrous game flow, could be in for an enormous workload against the Raiders. Only one team – the Patriots – have failed to gain 100 yards on the ground against Oakland.

Tate is notching a decent .59 fantasy points per touch in four games this season, and with the Raiders allowing 145.3 rushing yards, Tate could be an arbitrage play on FanDuel’s top-tier Week 8 runners.

Wide Receivers

Jordan Matthews ($6,000) at Arizona Cardinals

Matthews’ FanDuel price tag continues its fall as the Eagles return from their bye week. He’s now $300 cheaper than he was two weeks ago following three straight pedestrian stat lines. This week, of course, Matthews plays a Cardinals’ defense giving up more fantasy production to receivers than all but three teams.

Matthews, now cheaper than Robert Woods and Louis Murphy (to name a couple), has caught at least four passes over his past four games. The Cardinals, meanwhile, had allowed an average of 20 receptions to opposing receivers before they shut down a lifeless Oakland passing attack in Week 7.

Here’s the equation: Philadelphia’s run game is stuck in the proverbial mud + Arizona’s run defense is stout = considerable passing volume for Nick Foles and company. Matthews, who is running a respectable 28.5 pass routes per game, makes for a slightly risky if not sensible tournament play in Week 8.

Cecil Shorts ($6,200) vs. Miami Dolphins

Shorts is nothing less than a target hog in the Blake Bortles-led Jacksonville offense. He’s averaged 8.9 targets with the rookie at the helm, and that won’t change just because the Jags had success on the ground last week against Cleveland. Bortles will still have to throw quite a bit.

Miami’s secondary looked to have shut down Chicago’s big pass catchers in Week 7, though I think there’s a fair argument that Jay Cutler effectively shut down the Bears’ aerial attack. The Dolphins’ cornerbacks haven’t been all that impressive through seven weeks. Pro Football Focus grades Brent Grimes and Cortland Finnegan as the league’s 40th and 27th best cover corners.

A $200 hit to Shorts’ FanDuel price tag brings him down to the site’s 42nd-priciest wide receiver. I’m greedy on Shorts this week.

Tight End

Martellus Bennett ($5,900) at New England Patriots

Featuring the Unicorn in this space so often in 2014 probably isn’t a great sign of recent production, though it’s worth noting that a disappointing outing for Bennett constitutes five grabs for 58 yards, or 8.3 FanDuel points (as he posted in Week 7 against Miami).

Bennett has fizzled after a white-hot start to the season. After a $100 FanDuel price tag reduction, he faces off against a New England defense that, in the midst of linebacker injury woes, has allowed 28 fantasy points to tight ends over the past couple weeks.

Bennett, the second-most targeted tight end in football, could very well be set to reap the benefits of the Pats’ tight end coverage struggles. He’ll be an understandably unpopular Week 8 option at a price that has consistently dropped since Week 5. Be greedy with the Unicorn.


Market Exploitation:DraftKings

Quarterback

Jay Cutler ($7,000) at New England Patriots

Would I like ole’ Cutty to be cheaper here? Sure. The general daily gaming public couldn’t be more down on theDGAF metric all-star, however, and I think this matchup presents a prime opportunity for market exploitation.

Cutler, fantasy’s No. 3 quarterback headed into Week 7’s debacle against Miami, saw his DraftKings price tag drop by $900 – enough to grab my attention in Week 8. New England, when adjusted for strength of schedule, is giving up 17 fantasy points per game to opposing passers.

The Patriots are giving up a paltry 6.4 yards per pass attempt – eighth best in the NFL – but have faced a string of less-than-stellar quarterbacks. Even after last week’s meltdown, Cutler has a .48 fantasy points per attempt (FPAT). Throw out Week 7 and that jumps to a healthy .51 FPAT. Daily fantasy fear abounds this week with the Chicago offense. Jump in.

Running Back

LeSean McCoy ($5,800) at Arizona Cardinals

Shady is no longer priced as a top-10 option on DraftKings. He’s 12th in pricing after a horrifically disappointing stretch that saw the Eagles’ offense struggle mightily with a banged-up offensive line.

McCoy’s price dropped by an incredible $2,000 as we head into Week 8. He faces off against a stout Arizona front seven that allows the third fewest schedule-adjusted fantasy points to opposing running backs. Here’s the rub: Philly’s offensive line is slowly but surely getting healthy, and even without an intact set of blockers, McCoy most recently ripped off 149 yards in three quarters against the Giants.

We don’t often get a monstrous discount on a runner like Shady. Plug him in.

Wide Receivers

Brandin Cooks ($4,700) vs. Green Bay Packers

Cooks in Week 8 represents a (very) cheap investment in what could be one of the highest scoring affairs of 2014. The rookie, after a hot start to the season, has faded of late, but still plays the vast majority of the Saints’ offensive snaps and runs a decent number of weekly pass routes. That’s important.

Cooks’ DraftKings price tag fell by $1,100 after Week 7’s 4.3-point performance against Detroit’s crushingly tough pass defense. Cooks is still averaging 12.4DraftKings points per week and sees 5.6 weekly targets from Drew Brees.

Think of Cooks as a bottom-barrel investment in a game that has a bunch of top-dollar DFS options. He’ll be in quite a few of my tourney lineups. More than 50 receivers are priced ahead of Cooks this week.

Vincent Jackson ($5,100) vs. Minnesota Vikings

VJax, as injury talk and trade rumors swirl amidst a statistical dry spell for the hulking pass catcher, saw his DraftKingssalary drop by $800. I’m so greedy on Jackson, I can hardly see straight. It’s a medical condition. Look it up.

Twenty-one receivers are now priced ahead of Jackson, who takes on a Vikings’ secondary that appears to be solid. A little context, however, tells a different story. In at least four games this season, Minnesota opponents have more or less called off the offensive dogs after mounting big leads against the Vikings. Receivers, in other words, haven’t had to do a whole lot against Minnesota.

The Bills last week offered a glimpse of how vulnerable the Minnesota secondary might be, as Buffalo receivers sliced through Vikings cover guys for 19 catches and 195 yards. Barring game flow disaster – always a threat with teams as awful as Minnesota and Tampa – I think Jackson has a crazy-high fantasy floor in this one.

Tight End

Zach Ertz ($3,200) at Arizona Cardinals

Ertz, after a $600 reduction in DraftKingsprice, is essentially free. And now he gets his crack at a Cardinals defense allowing 5.9 receptions and 69.9 yards to tight ends.

Ertz is running 26.1 pass routes per game – not a terribly low number, though we’d like to see that increase a bit going forward. I think it’s plenty of usage to take advantage of an Arizona coverage unit that has proven exploitable when teams decide to use the tight end as a weapon. It surprised me to see Ertz is notching 10.1 fantasy points per game this year.

Probably Ertz comes with a downside that makes him nothing more than a tournament option. His low salary frees up a ton of cash for elite backs and receivers too.


Good luck!

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