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*JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - JayWhy75 - 09-12-2021

Quote:Word Count: 18,055. 1.5x Media.

It's been a very busy time for me, I meant to get this out right around draft day, but I just had a lot of things go out of control. Glad I managed to get it in in time for 1.5x though, and I hope you all enjoy this!

JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza
Last season, I gave this a shot to try and stack rank the prospects in my own draft, which I will admit can be a conflict of interest as well. I feel that it went alright, but I had to learn more about the league and thankfully am now a season older here and thus a season wiser. I still don’t know much, but I do know more than I did before.

What ultimately happens here is that I use my expertise from the SHL and try to apply it as much as possible to the ISFL. When it comes to scouting and ranking prospects, the leagues have a lot of overlap of what a general manager will be looking for come draft day. There are differences in the sense of positional needs applying more in the ISFL potentially, and there is a difficulty for me in that I haven’t spoken with prospects in the ISFL Draft and thus cannot comment on what their expectations may be. I know the ISFL is a lot more heavy on position switching, and so it is very possible that I may rank prospects differently if I knew they would be willing to move and others not so willing.

That is the role of a journalist, though. We don’t always have all of the information, but we can run with the information we have. This is going to play a lot like a ranking article from The Athletic. If you saw my big board last season, it will look similar. I will divide the prospects up into their buckets so to say (positional rankings, or on the defense in groupings more so) and rank them by that. In the ISFL there are so many positions at play, one team may have wildly different rankings from another based on needs. Because I can’t account for needs as much, I just rank positionally and can maybe make an argument of who is in the discussion for being the top prospects overall.



QUARTERBACKS

The most publicized position in football, where a team realistically is made or broken. In the ISFL, this is the hardest position to play as there are just so few positions to be able to fill and with so much possible competition you need to be an absolute maximum earner to be able to take a spot typically. It is always going to be a lower count in this section, but the ones who are here are really great earners.

1. Wendell Sailor, POR
269 TPE, $162,435,352 Bank, 2 Former Players (1181 Max TPE, 57 Min TPE)
Passing Statistics: 49/69, 711 Yds, 71% Completion Percentage, 6 TD, 4 INT, 109 Passer Rating

This is guaranteed to be the hardest ranking I have to make. In the debate of quarterbacks, this is an extremely close field. When it’s close, I tend to lean on pedigree a bit but in this case I actually took a different approach and looked more at the bank to help me determine a leader for the class.

Wendell Sailor is the TPE leader for quarterbacks, has the biggest bank by a fairly wide margin and while his max TPE of a previous player is lower than the others, it was a recent player and I would fully expect that to be able to continue. That kind of bank is one that can carry you to max earning on this player, and really sets you up to be a great quarterback as a long-term option. The only fear to have is that something can come up in real life that pulls him away, and let’s be honest that fear exists for everybody. You can’t pass up on a great talent, simo is a fantastic user and addition to a locker room who can play that leader role perfectly.

Taking a look at the on field talent, Sailor was the only one restricted this season in play. It kind of works in my mind like a pitch count in baseball. They had a young quarterback who just saw the field when he needed to, getting reps in without a fear of getting hurt. Sailor is going to be taking over long-term for Portland soon, and showed out well with by far the highest passer rating of the league and an incredible 71% completion percentage. He can hit any window you leave open, but when he does miss it can be dangerous as he only has 20 incompletions but a fifth of those became interceptions. If that continues, he may be a liability, but with his incredible accuracy, I don’t foresee it being a problem.

Sailor is going to be a fantastic addition for any team, and while he doesn’t have the history you look for, he has recent history on his side and a massive bank that is prepared to make him a superstar for a long, long time.

 

2. Malcolm Savage, NOR
256 TPE, $63,039,320 Bank, 1 Former Player (1293 Max TPE)
Passing Statistics: 288/501, 3766 Yds, 57.5% Completion Percentage, 19 TD, 12 INT, 84 Passer Rating

Now on to the part where I continue to be conflicted. While I selected Sailor as the top quarterback prospect at this point, it just is so close and you can see it here. Savage is a great prospect, the second best in TPE but only by about 13 TPE. He does have the lowest bank among the quarterbacks, which is where he slid to second on my rankings, but his pedigree is solid. While the other two quarterbacks in this class have had failed players to go along with their more recent successes, this is somebody who has yet to have a failed player and I don’t foresee it happening here with Savage.

Norfolk was not a great team this year, and so Savage’s numbers being a bit lower are reasonable and understandable. He had the lowest completion percentage in the league, showing that he may be a bit more wild and more of a gunslinger. That is further supported by him also having the longest passing play of the year in the DSFL this season. He has arm strength for days, but could work on getting it to the right target. For a team like Norfolk, he had his struggles for sure. But if he goes to a team with a solid receiving corps that can outrun and just get under the ball, he should have no problem putting up a ton of yards every season.

I’m not very familiar with Moosey, but I know he is in the SHL as well and to my understanding is a fairly likeable person. Ultimately, they have every reason to expect that he’ll be a fantastic addition to any team and should be a huge pick up in the draft for anyone in need of a quarterback.



3. Carter Knight, KCC
220 TPE, $113,274,139 Bank, 2 Former Players (1559 Max TPE, 214 Min TPE)
Passing Statistics: 308/498, 3503 Yds, 61.8% Completion Percentage, 22 TD, 9 INT, 90.1 Passer Rating

Finally on to the third rank where we have yet another player that could easily be the top ranked prospect for the quarterbacks. He is behind quite a bit in TPE, nearly a full 50 TPE behind Sailor. However, he has the second largest bank and a previous max earner that led the quarterback prospects. To my understanding, 1500 TPE here is like the 2000 TPE of the SHL, you have to be a super earner to make it there and this is someone who was able to manage that. That is incredible, and with it being their most recent player, it is logical to say they can do it again in a very highly sought after position where you need the best of the best in terms of earning. That bank can ride you out for a long time, and the TPE is something that can be negligible. In the grand scheme of things, what is 50 TPE? Not a ton.

Knight played on a fairly good Kansas City team this year, and showed that he has great touch. He had the lowest interceptions in the league among players with more than 400 pass attempts – the Portland duo had fewer but neither hit 400 pass attempts. He was second in completion percentage, ignoring Sailor and his few attempts, and put up respectable middle of the road numbers on yardage and passer rating. Knight showed to have the ability to get the ball where it needs to go, though he did have a fairly low yards per attempt comparatively. He seems to have a good head on his shoulders, able to make a solid read and make a play without trying to force things. It’s harder to teach at the ISFL level, and so to see that poise at this level is huge.

This is another user I just am not familiar with personally, but with a high bank and the pedigree of a maximum earning player, it’s reasonable to think he should be highly sought after as well. He is going to be a great pick up for anybody who jumps on him, but to me he landed third just on basically a coin flip.



RUNNING BACK

This can be a big difference maker for a team, and if you get the right person for your offense, they can open things up massively. Not every team can run an air raid, and realistically the most successful at passing are the teams that can run the ball just as well. This group wasn’t the hardest to rank, but does feature some good options this time around.


1. Ken Oath, BBB
261 TPE, $61,242,473 Bank, 1 Former Player (1267 Max TPE)
Rushing Statistics: 147 Carries, 641 Yds, 4.4 AYC, 5 TD
Receiving Statistics: 9 Catches, 47 Yds

What a surprise pick, right? I pick the player with the highest bank, highest TPE and a former player that shows great pedigree as they were a very high earner just under 1300 TPE at their peak. This feels like a no-brainer as the top running back of the class, and realistically is somebody that could easily be a high earner for their second player in a row. There is always a hesitation with players who have never experienced failure, as it is possible they could find themselves getting burned out on their newest player but I don’t see that coming up as a problem here. With such a good bank stored up, Oath should be a fine player no matter what.

Oath was the worst statistically among the rookies this season, with only 147 carries, he just wasn’t as featured in the line-up as the others were. He had a fair average yards per carry, getting a number that any coach would love at just over four yards per carry, but it just isn’t really spectacular. He didn’t get too involved in the passing game either, having about a third as many drops as he had catches and not really getting things moving in the air much. Realistically, a running back is usually a check down option, and Oath was splitting carries with Tron Carter, so it isn’t out of the realm of possibility that he could be a bit of a sleeper agent for the passing game and just didn’t have as much of an opportunity to show it.

Oath is a great option for a team in need of a strong running game, seemingly more of a hard-nosed, north-south runner than the others in the draft. However, if you want to be an air it out offense, maybe he isn’t the best pick up right now. He has a long way to go, though, and could easily develop into an all-around player over time. He seems like a good user with a great history of making good players, and so I see him as the first running back off the board personally.

 

2. Beniri T'Chawama, DAL
273 TPE, $1,219,430 Bank, No Former Players
Rushing Statistics: 193 Carries, 941 Yds, 4.9 AYC, 8 TD
Receiving Statistics: 12 Catches, 107 Yds

I know Dextaria from the SHL and I know him as a very smart, very active user that people really love to be around. That is a fantastic addition to any team, and somebody that you want around. The fear here is that he just doesn’t have the bank to keep up. While he is the TPE leader for the running backs this season, that 12 TPE is negligible compared to an over $60-million difference in bank accounts. Dextaria has built a great bank in the SHL, but I know there are a lot of users that make their way from the SHL and see the ISFL as a bit of a more casual experience and don’t intend to make a lot of money. He could be that way with it, just using the affiliation. He’ll have no problem earning TPE, but I don’t know that he’ll be racking up the equipment purchases every season.

On the field, T’Chawama was clearly the guy for Dallas and nearly put up over a thousand yards on the ground and if we include his receiving yardage, he did have over a thousand yards from scrimmage at least. He has the highest average yards per carry and touchdowns among the draftees this season, showing he has the ability to make big plays and find the endzone. His play in the passing game wasn’t the best, but he was able to be a big more featured and have a bit more of an impact. While he didn’t find a way to the endzone in the passing game, he was able to get the ball moving consistently and as running backs are more of a checkdown option, that shows the ability to ball and make plays.

Like I said, I know Dextaria is a great user. Realistically, I would rank him pretty highly based on TPE and the knowledge that he’s a big locker room addition. The fear is just that you have nothing from his past to bank on to know that he’ll make a good player, and with such a low bank value, he could be on the fringes for a long time or be someone that needs to take up extra budget space that some teams just don’t have. He would be a great pick-up, but it is a debate to have and that is why he finished second here.

 

3. Lot Smith VIII, KCC
242 TPE, $36,428,765 Bank, 2 Former Players (408 Max TPE, 85 Min TPE)
Rushing Statistics: 215 Carries, 1005 Yds, 4.7 AYC, 7 TD
Receiving Statistics: 11 Catches, 75 Yds, 1 TD

Another user I know I have encountered on the SHL before, and I believe comes from the PBE as well. So you know he has the affiliation that he can lean on, similar to Dextaria. The good with him is that he has an alright bank that should mean he can be decent earner at the least. He has one negative to him, really, which is that his past will haunt teams. Having two players and barely making it over 400 TPE, it’s hard to foresee him being a superstar in the league. He has the ability to, and that bank is good enough to give you a chance at anything. He just isn’t going to be able to lean on it like say Sailor could. This could be a shortsighted view on my part, and I accept that. It just seems that history shows a bit of a reputation, and so I lean into that on what is ultimately a very difficult decision.

What adds to how difficult this is, is if we look at the sim side of things. Smith had it all figured out for the most part, putting up over a thousand yards in his rookie season on the ground and being the only rookie running back to score through the air this season. He was also the most relied on of the rookies, but his 4.7 average yards per carry is a ridiculously high number and shows that he has a prowess for moving the chains. Realistically, Smith was a high impact player and the question will just be if that can translate to the next level as well.

Smith is a tricky one to rank, and ultimately I put him third mostly on history. He has a lot to back up that he should be great this time around, showing that he has the bank and the TPE and he had success with his build to a degree. This is just something that I always get a little wary of. One miss is a mistake, two is a trend. Whatever team does take the risk and takes him may end up with a hall of fame worthy player. This is probably the most boom or bust pick I can line out from this group.



WIDE RECEIVERS

After a very deep group last season at this position, we again have a pretty deep group. This is the second largest group in the draft, and it is an important one. While quarterbacks are the motor that keeps the train moving, the wide receiver is the track keeping it from going off a cliff. It is a glamorous position, one that has a major impact on play and is often filled with loud characters. The teams that jump on wide receivers do it with confidence they’ll be impact players soon, and I see quite a few who could be here.


1. Kotoni Staggs, BBB
271 TPE, $19,109,105 Bank, No Former Players
Receiving Statistics: 85 Receptions, 1111 Yds, 13.1 YPR, 4 TD, 15 Drops

This wasn’t all that close to me. Staggs may not have any history in this league, but the ones in this group that do really lack much success in the past. What we’ve seen already from Staggs here is somebody who knows how to build a good, deep bank account, and is a fantastic earner as the second highest earner in the class behind only Dextaria listed earlier. I don’t know if emfaith comes from another league, as I haven’t encountered them in SHL and I don’t have a history in PBE. However, they seem to be pretty comfortable with what they’re doing here and they have definitely set themselves apart in this class by a pretty wide margin.

In terms of play, Staggs was one of many to top the thousand yard marker in the air. Really the only struggles that Staggs had was in what are ultimately turnovers. They had four fumbles, which is a pretty massive number for a wide receiver who only gets the ball typically when they have some openings to work with. They also had 15 drops, while only getting to the endzone 4 times. Those drops don’t look like the biggest deal in the world, but all it takes is to have the wrong drop at the wrong time and you’re basically stalling out an offense. The thing is, that doesn’t really hurt Staggs because even through all of that, they had 85 catches! That is ridiculous, and getting over a thousand yards is a massive achievement for a rookie. Realistically, Staggs was a big impact player with three plays over 40 yards even.

My lack of familiarity with this user plays a part for me, but I feel like this is the easiest no-brainer in this draft. A solid bank that can be built on and made to be a max earning bank, and great earning already that hasn’t really had a big effect on that bank yet. There is no history of a former player here, and so if they are a true first gen, that’s a great addition to a locker room in terms of enthusiasm and is likely to come in without having any prior feelings about a team. A nice easy pick at this stage when things are going to be difficult moving forward in this group.



2. French Fries, NOR
225 TPE, $12,750,000 Bank, No Former Players
Receiving Statistics: 96 Receptions, 1596 Yds, 16.6 YPR, 8 TD, 15 Drops

Like I said, things get difficult. I know, this is a different choice than probably many of you would have. Jaycee Higgins and Rodka Raskolnikov both have reasons to believe they belong in this spot. I made a different choice and went with French Fries, and that comes down to that pedigree. While it can help massively to be a recreate, I often lean toward first-generation players when I can and especially when that history isn’t some massive superstar player. French Fries is more likely to be a big locker room addition as someone who hasn’t had any preconceived notions coming in and could really be molded by the general manager that does get a hold of him. He hasn’t appeared to miss any point tasks, and so is on the path of a max earner and should have no issue catching up on the small TPE difference that remains here.

On the field is another place that French Fries excelled. Fries was the DSFL leader in yards, and nearly had 100 receptions while having a fairly solid 8 touchdown grabs. He was a deep ball threat, similar to a Randy Moss type of figure in Norfolk. While he still has the issue of drops, with his 15 matching that of Staggs, and he had three fumbles, he makes up for it with an extra four hundred yards. He was a dominating force in a group that was extremely young – they had three rookie receivers this season – and stood out massively from there.

The importance of this ranking is that Fries is a first-generation player to my knowledge. I like to lean toward that, knowing that he has yet to really stumble and can really be brought in as this excitable player who will be more likely to work with their general manager than someone coming in already with knowledge. Not everybody will think like I do on this, and that’s fine and understandable. This is a very contentious second place spot in the group, and I’ll explain why the others could easily make the argument to be here as well.



3. Jaycee Higgins, KCC
243 TPE, $46,707,850 Bank, 1 Former Player (567 Max TPE)
Receiving Statistics: 89 Receptions, 1300 Yds, 14.6 YPR, 11 TD, 11 Drops

The largest bank in the group falling to third, would you ever expect it? Not really, but it is what it is. Higgins is the third highest TPE player, and has some pedigree that actually was the key factor in them falling to the third spot. The TPE differences are negligible to me, but the history of a player that didn’t even make it to 600 TPE is a tricky one to estimate. I don’t know this user, of course. What I can speak on is that their history can show someone that was a steady earner, and is a good possible locker room addition. They have some familiarity, but seem like somebody that probably won’t be too dead set in their ways and could blow up from here.

Higgins has an argument also on the field to be the best receiver in this class. The 89 receptions is no joke, and hitting over 1300 yards is still a huge milestone to hit. They had 11 touchdowns to go against their 11 drops, one of two who had as many touchdowns as drops on the season. Higgins added more to the team than he cost them, only having one fumble as well. This is a great player who added in on the kick return with a 22-yard average on kick returns, and was a good run blocker with 14 pancake blocks in situations that some receivers just take a break.

This was a really difficult choice, and this is the reason Higgins is third when the next person also could argue to be second or third. They have a large enough bank to coast a bit, and can use it to give themselves time to build on it more and more. While they have a history that isn’t the greatest, they definitely aren’t damaged goods in any way and should be a good addition to whatever team comes around in the draft.



4. Rodka Raskolnikov, MINN
247 TPE, $24,356,000 Bank, 2 Former Players (725 Max TPE, 500 Min TPE)
Receiving Statistics: 51 Receptions, 775 Yds, 15.2 YPR, 6 TD, 7 Drops

The last of the players that could easily argue they deserve to be in the second spot on this list. Raskolnikov has the second largest bank in the group, and that partially comes from their history with the league having had two players prior to this point. Their best was just over 700 TPE, their worst at 500 TPE. That’s a good player, ultimately, because it does give you comfort. You know what you’re going to get if you take this player, and that can be a huge thing for a team making their pick. Getting somebody that you can comfortably say this is how they’ll develop is a great addition and helps you a lot with future planning to a degree. Raskolnikov is the second highest in TPE in the class, and could really be having their breakout in terms of building a player now, but I have them ranked lower with a lower bank needing to be built on still.

On the field, Raskolnikov represents a drop off of sorts in the class, with the lowest number of receptions of any receiver available. However, that ultimately comes down to opportunity. Raskolnikov is a very talented player, but being stuck behind Ivan Toastovich and Cliff Burton means there’s only so much to go around and you’re going to have a lot of times that you just don’t get the catches because they just aren’t even looking your way. The good for Raskolnikov is that he should see an increased role next season, and so while he wasn’t able to get to the thousand-yard mark, he still showed well with six touchdowns and should easily find himself on the rise quickly.

This was a hard ranking for me, as the comfort of knowing that this is someone who will give you a solid player almost guaranteed means that there is a natural value to be had there. However, at some point you have to swing for the fences really, and I don’t know that this is a fences kind of pick. Raskolnikov is likely going to have a very good career, but there is a question of if they’re a number one receiver on a winning team, and that’s okay.

 

5. Tony Demonson, BBB
208 TPE, $563,150 Bank, No Former Players
Receiving Statistics: 60 Receptions, 982 Yds, 16.4 YPR, 10 TD, 4 Drops

As we mention boom or bust, this is probably a boom or bust pick and I’m leaning toward boom ultimately. Demonson doesn’t have any history in the league, and wasn’t exactly a max earner. This is the last of the receivers in the draft over 200 TPE, and he is pretty clearly separated from the four above him and the three below him. This is a clear middle ground where Demonson occupies, and it’s an interesting position to be in. They lack in the bank, and so that’s a clear red flag, however they also are one of the most active players in the draft at this position having been on the site over seven hours in the last three weeks of the season and making 20 posts, which is a pretty solid amount. It seems they’ve gotten involved a lot, and that’s a great sign for the likelihood that they’ll at the very least be able to stay consistent with updating and be a good addition to a team, the question being how far they can go with their bank to really give themselves the opportunity to be the top guy on their team.

In Bondi Beach, Demonson was a pretty good receiver. Just outside the thousand-yard mark, but with just 60 receptions due to sharing the field with Squidward Tentacles and Kotoni Staggs. Demonson was able to make a pretty big impact with more limited opportunities, and especially so when you take into account the ten touchdowns that make a huge difference. It really seems that Demonson was a huge playe driver for Bondi Beach this season, as the lack of drops shows that they really had a knack for getting the ball and making big plays anytime they got that opportunity. It is without a doubt that Demonson is going to be a terror to DSFL teams next season.

This is an interesting one to look at, as they aren’t really in the range of the potentially elite picks but also are definitely well above the others in the class. This middle space is fascinating and will get somebody to bite, but it just makes for a difficult situation to predict. Demonson could become a superstar in the league, considering their activity levels, but they could struggle without earning a lot of money.



6. Johnny Patey, NOR
136 TPE, $3,706,800 Bank, No Former Players
Receiving Statistics: 61 Receptions, 579 Yds, 9.5 YPR, 3 TD, 6 Drops

These last three are hard to rank, honestly. I went with Patey in this spot because ultimately, he has a fine bank and hasn’t shown to have any problems exactly. He is active, for sure, as in a two week span he put up 17 posts, so he definitely is around and participating. He just doesn’t seem to be doing the big tasks. He’s focusing on just getting what he can, it feels like, and isn’t going above and beyond in any way. That’s fine, but that isn’t someone that you typically prioritize. Realistically, if it weren’t for the lack of other options, he probably drops down thanks to being the lowest TPE receiver in the class. However, he’s definitely the best option here, and at the very least should be a solid player for whoever does take him.

Patey was kind of unspectacular on the field as well this season, with double the drops as he had touchdowns and falling under 10 yards per reception. He made an impact on the game, and he did have to deal with a pretty difficult hand to be dealt being behind other draftees in French Fries and Malcador “The Hero.” I wouldn’t say he was a huge piece of the offense, but he kept the ball moving forward and definitely gave some serious help to the offense as the more short-yardage option that could keep the defense honest with having to play tighter to the line. This kind of player is great for helping to open up the field deep, just may not be the superstar of the team down the road.

Patey is a fine user it seems like, and has an okay bank for what he is doing thus far. I don’t think anyone is going to look at him and say this is a future hall of fame, max earning player. But not everyone needs to be that. This is a player that will be solid for you, earn consistently and that’s all you can really hope for sometimes. I don’t anticipate him going early, but he will be a fine pick wherever he goes.



7. Dumais Wells, TIJ
181 TPE, $996,000 Bank, 1 Former Player (103 Max TPE)
Receiving Statistics: 69 Receptions, 921 Yds, 13.3 YPR, 8 TD, 8 Drops

Boy is this a tough decision, but I’m going to lean Dumais Wells here with the hope of him coming back around. Wells is a great user who really can add to a locker room significantly, and that’s huge for a pick this late in the draft. However, he lacks a bank account really, and only put up three minutes of activity in the week prior to the draft, so he is very likely to be passed on by the majority if not all of the teams. He has a history with a low earning player, but it was so low that I don’t know that I would count it as their first time in the league really. Wells is a great person, but if he is gone, he’s not going to add much. This is the ultimate boom or bust potential, as if he comes around, he’ll be a huge addition to a locker room, but if he’s gone, there just isn’t any value there.

On the field, Wells was stealing my catches in Tijuana. That’s fine, ultimately, he did really well this season. Falling just under the thousand-yard marker, he managed to have 69 receptions (nice.) and was a strong deep threat to compare to my mid-range type of style. His touchdowns and drops were even, but the touchdowns were pretty big when he had them. The fairly even spread of the Tijuana offense meant that Wells was able to be featured pretty well, and he balled out at times.

Like I was saying, Wells is just boom or bust, who knows what you’ll get exactly but if he does come back around consistently he can be a major addition. If it weren’t for the pedigree on display by the next guy, he’d probably be my last ranked receiver, but I have to hope sometimes that you can get the boom out of them.



8. Malcador "The Hero", NOR
171 TPE, $15,155,760 Bank, 2 Former Players (293 Max TPE, 266 Min TPE)
Receiving Statistics: 81 Receptions, 1131 Yds, 14 YPR, 3 TD, 21 Drops

The last guy on the receiver board for me, and I mean no offense with this. The key to this ranking was the former players. The bank is solid, the TPE isn’t bad. The only thing that makes me very wary of him is that history of not being able to make it to 300 TPE even. He seems like a DSFL lifer from my view, and that’s just as someone who doesn’t really know this person. There is reason to believe they could be on the right path and could be using that bank to be more consistent in their earning and could pass the DSFL level this time around. I just have a hard time trusting it. Once is an accident, twice is a trend, basically.

This is unfortunate also because Hero was fantastic on the field this season for Norfolk, putting up over 1100 yards with 81 receptions. The only part that Hero wasn’t able to do was get the ball past the line, only having 3 touchdown receptions this season. Norfolk was a very pass happy offense, and that feeds into the 21 drops, which is by far the most for any draftee. He seems to play kind of a boom or bust style, and that boom hasn’t been the biggest thing but he does have that deep ball energy and can definitely move the chains at least. He just seems to struggle to get the ball when the field shortens, and that’s fine, there are other players with those abilities.

I like Hero to a degree, because that bank has been good and shows the ability to be consistent. He put up exactly an hour of time on the site in the last two weeks of the season before the draft, and so he hasn’t been around a lot but he is around more than Wells was. It is reasonable to expect that this could be the breakthrough for Hero, but I don’t see a superstar coming out of it and that is perfectly fine. Hero has an easy argument to make to be ranked at 7th, I just hold out hope for Wells. Hero will be a fine prospect, I hope they’re able to find consistency and break 300 for the first time.



TIGHT END

One of the most interesting positions in the sport of football, Tight End is the only one that really has a significant impact on both pass and run plays without often getting the ball. This is a position that you need to get right, just to make the others on your team that much better.



1. Mark Goodhead, POR
212 TPE, $16,477,110 Bank, No Former Players
Receiving Statistics: 40 Receptions, 380 Yds, 9.5 YPR, 2 TD, 1 Drop, 21 Pancake Blocks

This is one of the more obvious picks for the top player at their position on this board, as Goodhead is very clearly the best tight end available. He has the most TPE, the best bank and while he doesn’t exactly have a history of great players, he is a first generation player and should be a more easily molded player to a degree. Goodhead looks to me like a fantastic prospect, somebody who has done a good amount of media and who has spent over five hours on the site in the last two weeks before the draft. To me, if you have an inkling that you need a tight end in the near future, this is a great pick to make and somebody that I would likely rank pretty highly compared to other positions as well.

Goodhead may not have been the most impactful tight end this season, but he definitely was a good contributor to the team with a huge amount of pancake blocks showing his effectiveness in the run game. Like I said at the start, tight ends are crucial at making the other players on your team better, and that is an example of how Goodhead is a great complementary piece for a dangerous running game. Then you take into account that he only had one drop, while he wasn’t targeted a lot, he is great at ball security and helping to move the chains. This is everything you want in a tight end, and is incredible to see honestly.

The clearest number one on the board, and that isn’t any offense to the others behind him who have been good. This is just a very good player, seems to be a great user, and I see no way to make an argument to drop him down this board at all. I could easily see him being a first round pick in this league considering how much of an impact he can make.



2. Anthony MacGuire, DAL
174 TPE, $9,319,320 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 118)
Receiving Statistics: 60 Receptions, 548 Yds, 9.1 YPR, 5 TDs, 5 Drops, 31 Pancake Blocks, 2 Sacks Allowed

This one is mostly built on the TPE and bank difference for the ranking. MacGuire is a good kid, who I know has a big impact over in the SHL as a new co-GM for the New Orleans Specters. I fully anticipate him being a pretty solid addition to whatever team does draft him, as he is a highly active user on discord and should be a good locker room piece. He has a fine enough bank to carry him to a good career going along with contract money over time. The real risk with him is that his first player busted pretty quickly, but I don’t foresee that here and because of that the guy with the better bank and TPE at draft time takes the lead on the board here.

MacGuire was a great addition to the Dallas offense, and in a season where it was pretty clear that tight ends just didn’t get the workload that they typically would, MacGuire was a player that was relied on in the Birddogs offense. His five drops are effectively negated by his five touchdowns, and he was a big part of the run game with 31 pancake blocks. The two sacks that were allowed are a bit of a fear to have, but he seems pretty solid as a blocker and can easily maul with the best of them. Realistically, he didn’t manage to move the ball very far, but he had enough to move the chains pretty consistently and should be admired for powering through pretty well as a versatile player.

It is a difficult rank to make, because the next player has the pedigree to show that they know what they’re doing. However, I lean on my expertise here and I see a better bank and higher TPE and I say let’s go for it. Add in that I know the user and can feel confident that they are going to be a great addition to any locker room you have, I feel this is the right choice to make, just won’t be as sought after as Goodhead should be.



3. Marquees Acho Jr., KCC
154 TPE, $1,452,988 Bank, 3 Former Players (Max TPE 900, Min TPE 50)
Receiving Statistics: 46 Receptions, 366 Yds, 8 YPR, 0 TD, 9 Drops, 11 Pancake Blocks, 1 Sack Allowed

Once again, there is nothing wrong with this player or user to say that they’re ranked last among the tight ends. The tight end group is a good group, and Acho has a lot to hang their hat on really to say they should be higher in the ranking. While they have the lowest TPE and bank, they also have the longest tenure on the site and have been the most active overall. They bring with them experience, which is a huge thing sometimes to add as they likely have people they’re close with and can help you bring to your team as well. They may be able to contribute ideas that others just don’t have the concept of at this point in time. The pedigree is the saving grace to me, the ability to get to 900 TPE is pretty huge and I truly think Acho is capable of doing it again. I just get scared away by that low bank account, personally.

Acho is in a similar predicament to Goodhead on the field, just somebody that wasn’t really used very often. He had more receptions, but went for fewer yards and definitely shows that this was the checkdown option when nothing would open up deep. No touchdowns shows a lack of ability to push through defenses, and the nine drops could be a pretty big deal. The pancake blocks are good, but also allowing a sack is just interesting to me for a tight end. Acho is an up-and-down kind of player, who I think will be fine down the line, but right now just didn’t pop on the field much.

I feel bad about this ranking, but I can justify it at least. Acho seems fine overall, and it seems if you need a tight end you can’t exactly go wrong with any of the three, it just is clear that there is a divide between them all to a degree. Acho is going to be a good player, but isn’t going to pop off the page for you.



OFFENSIVE LINE

I will always argue that this is possibly the most valuable position on the team. You need to score to win, and it’s hard to do that without a good blocker in front of your skill players. You need to give your quarterback time, you need to open lanes for your running back to get through. These are the least publicized guys, but some of the most impressive in the world, and every team should be praising their offensive lines massively.



1. Zoltan, OT, TIJ
190 TPE, $9,600,000 Bank, No Former Players
Statistics: 63 Pancake Blocks, 1 Sack Allowed

When it’s close, I lean on my expertise. In this case, I know Zoltan well. Not only from my connection in Tijuana with him, but also from knowing he’s a head office member in the SHL and is likely to be a very committed user just based on his history with the SHL. He is a great addition to a locker room, and it’s well known that his dog becomes the star of the show just about everywhere he goes. He is behind in TPE, but he has the higher bank and so to me is more likely to be able to fight his way back in that TPE difference. It being such a small difference, it is negligible down the line. Zoltan is a great locker room guy to have, and that’s really the big difference maker here is my knowledge of these guys.

Zoltan is a big, big boy. He’s 6’7” and 325 pounds, and that is fantastic for the position he plays. As a tackle, he did have one lapse where he allowed a sack but he bulldozes people pretty easily as shown in his 63 pancake blocks this season. He has the wingspan and athleticism needed to defend against some speedy and strong pass rushers, and should have a good first step to set the pocket and keep your quarterback safe. Last season I saw a lot of linemen playing in positions I thought didn’t really fit them, but this is a perfect fit for the tackle position and being realistically the most important player for a pass heavy offense.

This is a close debate, and if you told me you had Carimi above Zoltan, I wouldn’t argue it. I like both options here, and Carimi is a bit more active in the ISFL than Zoltan is. This is just a personal preference, and I have more exposure to Zoltan driving my choices here. He is a fantastic person and I have no doubt he’ll make a fantastic player here as well.



2. Michael Carimi, G, POR
212 TPE, $6,418,440 Bank, No Former Players
Statistics: 53 Pancake Blocks, 0 Sacks Allowed

Looking at Carimi, he definitely has an argument to be the top dog in the offensive line for this draft class. He is 22 TPE above Zoltan, and still has a good bank account to be able to build from here as this isn’t exactly a slacker in that regard. He just has a little less than Zoltan, but that isn’t exactly something that will guarantee more or less earning really. Just like Zoltan, this is his first player in the league, so the chances are that Carimi is moldable, excited to get into things and should be a good addition to whatever team he gets on. He is a more active user on the boards, with nearly four hours on the boards in the two weeks prior to the draft. That can be pretty important, as you can’t earn if you aren’t getting on the boards and for Zoltan, it may be that ISFL gets cut when busy while Carimi is more committed that way. Who knows, really.

On the field, Carimi is a great player for the inside of the line. He’s 6’5” and 325 pounds. That is a serious force to be reckoned with on run blocking primarily. He had 53 pancake blocks, which is a major number to have, and his ability to keep from allowing a sack is great, though it is a lot more rare for a guard to allow a sack against their quarterback. Carimi has the wingspan and ability to move to the outside of the line, but with his more stout nature – he is the same weight as Zoltan while two inches shorter – is perfectly aligned for that inside role that can really push through and lead the way for an effective run offense. It is a perfect balance here, Zoltan is a pass offense dream while Carimi is perfect for running games.

This is a toss up, legitimately. Carimi could be the number one lineman in this draft easily, and it really depends on your team and the conversations you have. Realistically, this is why scouting interviews are a thing, because that is what it would come down to for Zoltan and Carimi. The two are going to be in a heavy debate for any team considering a lineman, and there doesn’t appear to be a wrong option here at all.


PLEASE CONTINUE TO POST 2



RE: JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - JayWhy75 - 09-12-2021

DEFENSIVE LINE

While I would typically separate these positions, with just three total defensive line prospects in the draft it is pretty clear that this is more of a group thing this time around. The defensive line has the same job realistically, to disrupt everything the offense does by any means necessary. If that means breaking through a pocket to get the quarterback moving or down, that’s going to typically be the job of the defensive ends. Defensive tackles are more likely to be the run stopper that really stuffs things up and holds it together, or draws in more blockers to help the linebackers get to their guy.


1. Morpheus Czargyros, DE, MINN
262 TPE, $8,606,150 Bank, 0 Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 43 Tackles, 3 TFL, 10 Sacks

This is a pretty easy ranking to make. Czargyros is one of the TPE leaders of the class, and arguably the best defensive prospect in the draft as a whole. He has a solid bank, and as a first-generation user is probably moldable as I’ve said for others. He has the ability to be a big addition to a locker room, and has shown that he is definitely committed to making himself one of the best players in this draft at the very least. Czargyros is extremely impressive as a player and user, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see him go very early in the draft at this point. This just isn’t even a debate among the defensive linemen.

On the field, Czargyros continues to be extremely impressive. His 43 tackles are a solid amount for a defensive lineman, it’s hard to be a legitimate force that way when you’re only able to get involved in about half the plays naturally and are the force fighting through blocks the most. Speaking of fighting through blocks, he was fantastic at it with 10 sacks that were among the league leaders, just fourth in the entire league and the best of any rookies this season. He is a physical force to be reckoned with for Minnesota, and showed that he is impressive in every single way this season.

The only negative to potentially bring up for Czargyros is that he isn’t the only Czargyros in the draft, and the question will always be there if he would leave to join his brother or vice versa. Realistically, you have to take that risk when you get an opportunity at a massive talent like this, and just hope that you make a big enough impact to hold on to them and maybe even draw the other in. Nonetheless, this is a pretty clear future superstar in the league, and it won’t take long to hear his name in the draft.



2. Lennay Kekua, DT, LON
132 TPE, $12,163,165 Bank, 2 Former Players (Max TPE 432, Min TPE 304)
Defensive Statistics: 45 Tackles, 4 TFL, 2 FF, 1 FR

Unfortunately, if you’re looking for defensive line, this is a pretty big step down. Kekua has a solid bank account, and should be able to build a perfectly fine player. But what we see in the history of this user is a very low tpe, low impact player. Kekua is going to be a long-time DSFL send-down at the least, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see it be a full career thing potentially. That isn’t a bad thing exactly, but shows that this is not the guy to plan on building a defense around like you need. This is the top defensive tackle in the draft, so if you’re looking for help in the middle of your line, you may want to start working on back-up options.

The good news with Kekua is that he was a very good player defensively for London this year. His 45 tackles were sixth among defensive tackles, including behind one of his own teammates running a two defensive tackle system. He wasn’t super explosive, with only four tackles for a loss, but it is hard from the middle of the line to break through and blow up a play at any point. What he was able to do is still incredible, and his ability to force fumbles and even recovering one of them, shows he has incredible strength and competitiveness to force mistakes. He had a very good year and it was truly impressive.

Kekua is probably going to be fine, but he’s really the only defensive tackle worth taking in this draft and so you need to be working on other plans where you can. Only one team can get him, and even then he’s a work in progress to say the least. He has the bank to be able to build a fine player, but don’t expect a superstar out of him.



3. Johnny Bravo, DT, TIJ
81 TPE, $4,400,000 Bank, 0 Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 33 Tackles, 6 TFL

The last of the “actives” on the defensive line here is Bravo, who has not done much this season. He’s at only 81 TPE, and while he has been relatively active, I don’t know that we’ll see that continue. He only has seven minutes on the site in the week prior to the draft and made one post in that time. The commitment is something you have to draw into question there. His bank is fine, nothing spectacular, but it doesn’t appear to have been used much. Overall, he’s a throwaway pick at the end of the draft that you hope comes around and does something but I wouldn’t advise expecting anything out of him coming up.

This is unfortunate as on the field, Bravo was a fine player. His 33 tackles aren’t exactly spectacular, but definitely are good for a defensive tackle who really can only get so involved in the game at times. He was definitely a more explosive player to a degree, as he was able to get six tackles for loss instead, but he doesn’t have the power that Kekua had. He can’t really break players down as much, but he has the ability to blow past people at times. He was a steady player for a good defense, and did his job well and that’s all you ask really.

This is an unfortunate situation, but that’s all you have here is a fine player that just doesn’t appear to want to push themselves for updates when they have the ability to make an alright player still at the ISFL level. Hopefully they get picked and come back, but if nothing else, this is worth giving a shot.



LINEBACKERS

This can be the most important position to any defense at times, as the coach is trusting this player to be the guy calling the shots on the field. At some point, the headset cuts out and you have to hope you have the right people on the field and the linebacker is the one that will keep everyone in the game and doing the right things. You need smart and competitive players, and this season this position is absolutely stacked.


1. Omni Man, TIJ
256 TPE, $21,159,357 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 1250)
Defensive Statistics: 86 Tackles, 8 TFL, 1 FR, 8 Sacks, 2 INT, 4 PD

This is probably the most contested position in the draft, as realistically I could name off seven players who easily could make an argument to be first round talents and another two who have the ability to become stars in the league still down the line. My choice is ultimately to take Omni Man at the top mostly because the top two are such similar people and there is one thing that is a difference. Both Omni Man and Orpheus Czargyros have 256 TPE, leading all linebackers in the class. Both of them have around $21-million in their bank, with a difference of around $200,000 between their banks and that is entirely negligible. The only differences is in their histories, Omni Man has only had one player before and was a 1250 TPE player. That is a stunningly good player, and you can expect that to be the case again seeing him already among the top in his class here again. This is an incredibly difficult decision, and I don’t blame anyone for having it flipped, but Omni Man is the top of the linebackers to me.

In terms of production, Omni Man has very few contemporaries. He led all linebackers in sacks and tackles for loss, showing that he is an explosive player that can really make plays happen and force teams to have to gameplan around him. You see all the time, defenses have to move players like Omni Man around because teams are literally going to change direction or adjust play calls just to stay away from him as much as possible. He was a threat at all levels, and it really shows just how incredible he was. A bunch of tackles, a lot of sacks and the ability to cover the pass and get interceptions when he needs to sit back just shows that this is one of the best athletes in the game.

This decision was so difficult, and ultimately just comes down to one small difference between Omni Man and Orpheus Czargyros. Omni Man has a slightly better history, and even that is just not a major difference. Still, in a paper-thin margin, I give it to Omni Man. I can agree with any argument you have for any of the next few to be here, but how do you not give it to a literal god among men?



2. Orpheus Czargyros, DAL
256 TPE, $20,944,965 Bank, 3 Former Players (Max TPE 971, Min TPE 179)
Defensive Statistics: 90 Tackles, 6 TFL, 2 FF, 5 Sacks, 1 INT, 8 PD, 1 Defensive TD

I already talked him up above a bit, but let’s actually dig into the numbers here. Orpheus has the same TPE and relatively same bank as Omni Man. His best player thus far has fell about 300 TPE less than Omni Man’s best and that’s really the difference there. Beyond that, he has had two other players and one of them was a DSFL lifer type of player, but that isn’t a bad thing really. At this point, he’s a highly active user that just in the last two weeks before the draft was on for over four hours. He is a very connected person it seems, and now has another Czargyros in the draft as well. This could be a good two-for-one down the line, or could be a great point of contention between the two. It will be interesting as time will tell, but for me Czargyros just narrowly falls to second on the board, but by the thinnest of margins possibly ever.

On the field, Czargyros continued to shine just like Omni Man did. He had a huge 90 tackles, was second in tackles for loss and third in sacks for linebackers in the draft and in possibly the more impressive statistic, tied for the most passes defended as well. Czargyros is basically no different from what you saw above, and to some may even be more athletic, more dangerous and that shined through when he managed to get a touchdown on the defensive side of the ball. It is not an easy feat to read the play and be able to find open space once you get the ball to move forward with. He is going to be an incredible force wherever he goes, and he really showed that he can do it all here.

This is a legitimate debate, and I have no issue saying that I may be wrong in my rankings here. It is so hard to judge. There are many other great options below this as well, but this just feels like an incredible top two that really highlights just how deep this group of linebackers is. Czargyros could go top two, could go later first, and I have no idea. But wherever he goes, I think this is going to be his best player ever and he is going to be a legitimate superstar here.



3. Sconnie McHits, NOR
221 TPE, $13,261,963 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 135 Tackles, 4 TFL, 3 FF, 1 FR, 1 INT, 4 PD, 1 Defensive TD

Here is where things get even more interesting, as it becomes a different kind of debate. While the top two were almost identical in all ways, the rankings from three through six are a lot of people with vast differences but ones that can mean it all depends on what you value most. In this case, I put up Sconnie McHits here at third because of activity. He is a first-generation user, so he is the perfect type to be blinded by the light and really commit hard to this and becoming the best player ever, and that’s fantastic. You want that out of a player. It seems like it’s already hit him pretty well too, as he has spent over 15 hours on the site in the two weeks prior to the draft. That is an INSANE amount of activity, and is fantastic to see. While his bank is a bit low compared to some below him, and his TPE may not be the third best, he is so committed to being great and it shows in his activity that I think it’s undeniable to put him high on the board.

This is the tackles leader for the season. That’s right, McHits is the guy who had the most tackles in the DSFL this season and it wasn’t even close. He had 24 more tackles than the next guy. Now there’s the negative of that, as to get tackles that means your team doesn’t have the ball, but there’s the positive of in spite of not having the ball, they were never really out of it because this guy could go sideline to sideline and make a play anytime. McHits is an incredibly dangerous player on the defense, able to decimate opponents. He didn’t manage a sack, but that isn’t because he couldn’t. It’s because he wasn’t asked to. When given the chance, he blew up run plays, forced fumbles, defended the pass and even scored a touchdown himself. He is an all-around threat that can canvas the field however you need him to.

A super active user, McHits is definitely committed. There is burnout concern here, as I believe he also created in PBE and SHL as well and at some point you can be stretched too thin. He does need to work on his bank a bit, but he is such a great user that you take that risk and hope to make it that if he does have to cut back somewhere, it won’t be in the ISFL. The right team is going to be important, but ultimately whatever team he goes to is getting a player that will legitimately become the face of the franchise from day one.



4. Nick Kaepercolin Jr., MINN
218 TPE, $93,409,515 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 1526)
Defensive Statistics: 75 Tackles, 3 TFL, 1 FR, 2 Sacks, 2 INT, 8 PD

Things just get harder here even, as this could be literally either of the two behind him and I would not argue with you about that placement. In this situation, Nick Kaepercolin Jr has the bank and the pedigree to justify being in this spot and even justify being a spot higher by chance. Being just below $100-million, he has the fourth highest bank in the entire draft class and the highest among linebackers in the class. His past player just happened to be a maximum earner basically, and he is set up to be able to do it again. He seems like a perfect option for anybody needing a linebacker, as he should have a pretty good network in the league already and is going to become a high earning player yet again pretty easily.

As usual, we continue to see linebackers who just absolutely shined on the field this season. Kaepercolin is similar to McHits, he did what was specifically asked of him. He was a five-tool kind of player, getting consistent tackles, breaking up plays in the backfield, blitzing when needed, and defending the pass incredibly well. He has a quarterback’s mind, able to identify just about any play coming and make it work to his benefit every time. He tied for the top in passes defended, and is another one of those sideline-to-sideline type of players that can make a play happen anywhere. Opposing offenses gameplan specifically around players like this. Kaepercolin is a fantastic player, and will be incredibly dangerous in the future.

This is difficult, the call is extremely hard. His TPE isn’t the best among the class, but he has the bank to be able to make up that difference and then some. He seems like someone who will guaranteed be a superstar just like everyone above and a few more below him. I don’t know how teams can make such a difficult decision, this is like being told to pick between the best flavors of ice cream and being given flavors like literal gold and sugar-free literal gold.



5. Ray the Manta Ray, BBB
213 TPE, $81,367,950 Bank, 2 Former Players (Max TPE 1217, Min TPE 246)
Defensive Statistics: 81 Tackles, 1 TFL, 1 FR, 2 Sacks, 1 INT, 5 PD

Once again, just such a hard choice to make. In this case, Ray has the history and the bank to set him apart just slightly. While Kaepercolin has the highest bank in the linebacker position, Ray is the second highest and has also had success with a former player having had a player nearly hit the DSFL cap at the worst and then making a player over 1200 TPE. This is a tough debate to have because again this is a player who is a bit behind in TPE compared to some others, specifically the guy immediately following him on this list, and it just comes down to that pedigree and the incredible bank that really gives a clear path to making a superstar player yet again.

Ray was yet again the clear best player on the defense for Bondi Beach, as expected for a linebacker. He put up a ton of tackles, was still able to break through blockers and was solid in pass defense. He wasn’t someone as spectacular as some of them above him, but he showed legitimate athleticism and skill with the ability to make plays at all levels of the defense. This is the first time that we have someone that was just good, not spectacular, and so it feels a little underwhelming, but make no mistake that Ray is still an amazing player who has the ability to develop really well. There is no reason to doubt he could still be a superstar player on the defense of whatever team picks him up.

Realistically, this is where the decisions are toughest sometimes. While you hope for the top to be difficult, and it was, the middle is just as hard as you have three people who have their own individual flaws and you need to debate them and find the happy middle ground. In this case, Ray is the middle as though he has the low TPE, he has a good history and a great bank and can make up the differences over time.



6. DeCarr Rek, KCC
235 TPE, $20,350,976 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 390)
Defensive Statistics: 66 Tackles, 5 TFL, 1 FF, 7 Sacks, 2 INT, 5 PD

Onward we go to DeCarr Rek, where once again we can easily argue he should be two spots higher even. He has the third highest TPE of the linebackers in this draft class, and yet here he falls to sixth on my board because his bank is unspectacular, his activity is fine with just around an hour in two weeks on the site before the draft, and he has a history where he made an alright player that just didn’t really set him apart. There are flaws here, that need to be addressed. Ultimately, the bank is still fine. The history is something that can be ignored with the right work from Rek. The activity is good enough to do the tasks, and the TPE is already there showing some level of commitment here as it is. I am in no way saying he’s a bad player or anything, I’m just pointing out that these factors led me to drop him down my list, but if we look back in a few seasons and he’s at the top of the linebackers in this class, I wouldn’t be surprised.

On field play, it’s clear that Rek was used in all situations as well, but his biggest impact was as a pass rusher. Rek was incredible at battling through blocks, and pass blocking is a very different beast in terms of how you get through. Rek has the ability to power through or finesse his way, and it shows that he was great at breaking it down with his seven sacks being the second most among linebackers. His five tackles for a loss really help highlight this part of his game as well. He wasn’t just a one-note player, he had his strengths in pass coverage, but it is clear that he was making the highlight reels because he has an innate ability to get behind the line and break things up before they even begin.

Like I was saying, Rek has an easy argument to be way higher on this list, but has some question marks that come up as you look deeper. By no means is he a bad pick, and I would still rate him as a first round value in terms of the player you’re getting, I just have him a little lower on this list currently. Rek is going to be dangerous defensively, and really make a major impact on how teams play in the long run, I have no doubts about that.



7. Anya Mind, LON
182 TPE, $15,700,000 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 90 Tackles, 2 TFL, 1 FF, 3 Sacks, 1 INT, 5 PD

Well, this is an interesting one. Anya Mind to me makes it in the tier of those above, but is really on the edge and realistically is a tier of their own. Mind has a fairly good bank, at least good enough to show that they’ve been working on it and that they can probably ride for a couple of seasons when contracts get deposited as well. The TPE may not be super high, but it’s a good amount and definitely shows a commitment. This player did have some struggles with activity, as they barely appeared online for the two weeks prior to the draft, and it is entirely possible they drop pretty significantly if they don’t pull it together a bit. But with their TPE, they seem like they’ve been pretty committed and may have just had a rough week or two. With no history to go off of, we really are kind of in the dark on that kind of thing.

Mind is at least another good, but not great, player when it comes to statistics. Mind was able to put up a great amount of tackles, being tied for ninth in the DSFL in one fewer game than everybody else. They showed some solid ability, getting a few sacks and tackles for loss, but nothing too spectacular. They also performed fine in pass coverage. Ultimately, this is what you hope for out of a linebacker if they aren’t going to be an absolute superstar at one thing, this is basically a jack of all trades kind of line. Mind is a good player, maybe not a superstar, but is good and can definitely be serviceable enough to make a team not feel the need to think about their defense much in the middle.

If they can get their activity back on track, Mind is a great pick up later in the draft that has a ton of potential with a solid bank and that first-generation mentality. If they don’t, they end up probably the worst of the linebackers, but that is a debate to have in war rooms and who knows what happens. This is the ultimate boom or bust pick to make.



8. Nathan Claflin, NOR
97 TPE, $7,244,050 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 79 Tackles, 3 TFL, 1 FF, 3 FR, 6 Sacks, 4 PD

We get into the bottom tier of the linebackers, but that isn’t a commentary on these users at all, both have been legitimately fine but with their TPE so far below the others they just fall to the bottom of these rankings. In this case, I have Claflin landing in the eighth spot among linebackers for a variety of reasons. While he has no history, I have stated that can be a big positive to me realistically. His TPE is the lowest among the class, but not by that much, and his bank is also low but the odd numbers shows that he has completed some media and is working on it at least. The ultimate decider was activity, Claflin is someone who put up over an hour per week in the two weeks before the draft, has been consistent in posting and doing tasks, and is somebody that you can trust to keep it up. With over six hours on the site thus far, I fully believe that Claflin is going to be a good pick-up for whatever team does decide to take him and should skyrocket up this board in no time once he gets some more time in.

Similar to Rek, Claflin is a pass rusher, outside linebacker type of player. He is disruptive as can be, getting three tackles for loss and six sacks. His four passes defended show that he isn’t exactly inept in the pass coverage, but when it’s a passing down, you should expect him running at that line and breaking his way through or at least disrupting the pocket in some way. He also has a nose for the ball and good hands, as he seems very competent at recovering fumbles in particular which takes a good amount of awareness of the field around you really. He is a steady player, who was overshadowed by being on a team with Sconnie McHits and thus without any fault of his own just had fewer tackles, but definitely showed an ability to make a serious impact on the field.

Claflin is a great late-round pick up to make and somebody that legitimately could break out and be a solid contributor to a really good defense down the line. He has everything you need, and specifically, he is an active user who seems to be committed to trying to get better however he can.



9. Erick Bolanos, TIJ
116 TPE, $11,000,000 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 66 Tackles, 3 TFL, 3 FF, 1 FR, 1 INT, 4 PD, 1 Defensive TD

The last guy on the list, but not a bad pick up still. Bolanos is second-lowest in TPE, and has a fine bank at $11-million. He has been online for about an hour combined over the past two weeks, though, which is really the difference here between eight and nine. Bolanos comes around, does what he can, but doesn’t pop off the page much in terms of going above and beyond like Claflin did. That doesn’t mean Bolanos isn’t good, he should be a fine pick-up for any team, just that he may be a bit lower on the totem pole to a degree. With no history to show for, nobody knows what you’re getting exactly, but he seems to be a fine option still if a team needs a linebacker down the line.

Statistically, Bolanos had a solid season. He was effective in pass coverage, and was another player to get a defensive touchdown himself. He wasn’t really involved in blitzing, but not everybody can be. He was still a disruptive force, mostly on running downs, where he was great at getting through and forcing fumbles. His three forced fumbles were the most of any linebacker in this class, showing he has a talent there. He is a competitive player, at the very least. He has talent, he has skill, it’s just going to be about putting it together consistently.

Bolanos is a fine pick-up if you’re looking for a linebacker in a few seasons, because he is going to need time to develop. He’s going to be someone that plays extra seasons down, and that is perfectly fine. You don’t have to rush anybody, and I think Bolanos has a lot of potential with a solid bank. We just have to see him put it all together.



SECONDARY

Here we go, combining the cornerbacks and safeties again. I understand, this group definitely has the depth to separate them. However, they have overlapping skills to a degree as both need to be quick and intelligent, able to read the quarterback or their man and make a play in the air at the right time. They have a hard job, in a mental and physical battle that takes a lot of strength, stamina, speed and intelligence combined.


1. Cedric Wilkins II, CB, LON
256 TPE, $129,280,855 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 1297)
Defensive Statistics: 54 Tackles, 2 FF, 1 FR, 1 INT, 13 PD

This should be a hard decision at the top, right? I mean, you have two players who have the same TPE, in the same position, both just some of the best of the best in this entire class. Yet, I feel like this is a pretty clear ranking actually. Wilkins has over double the bank of the number two on this list, with over $129-million, and has had one player who was nearly 1300 TPE. That is a great player, a ton of money to make another great player, and no reason to believe they won’t become arguably the best cornerback in the league. I’m sure an argument can be made either way, realistically, between the top two in this section. However, I see no way that I wouldn’t be jumping at Wilkins pretty early in the draft all things considered. He just has a lot of positives, and I have yet to see the red flags that may bring him down.

On the field, Wilkins continued to be great. The fun of a position like this is that you only get statistics if somebody plays toward you basically. The quarterback has to decide to put the ball in your direction, and in a sign of respect really, Wilkins didn’t seem to face much really. Only one interception and 13 passes defended, that isn’t a lot for the talent and skill level of Wilkins. However, he likely just didn’t have the opportunity like others would have to make plays on the ball much. When he did, he made the most of it and kept quarterbacks from getting the ball to the receiver or kept receivers from making a big play. This is the Revis Island kind of play, and I have a ton of respect for it. Wilkins is an absolute stud, that’s clear.

I know that there is a debate to be had here, but I got blinded by a massive bank and a great history in this league. Yes, there is a good debate to be had as neither of the top two on this board have any red flags popping up. Both can become arguably the best at their position by their peaks. I just see Wilkins as even more of a sure-thing, and I fully believe that Wilkins is going to be a shutdown corner one day.



2. Tessie Garciaparra, CB, KCC
256 TPE, $50,993,705 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 1106)
Defensive Statistics: 91 Tackles, 7 FF, 5 FR, 3 INT, 21 PD

No offense to Tessie Garciaparra, as she has been an incredible player overall. They have a great bank at over $50-million, good enough to easily carry deep into a career as a high-earning defensive force. They have the history of building a player over 1100 TPE, and so while that 200 TPE is a difference, that isn’t a huge difference between Garciaparra and Wilkins in terms of their pedigree. Both have very high TPE. This is the best case scenario for teams needing help in pass coverage, as no matter which way you go, you’re getting a fantastic user and player. Garciaparra ends up second here, but is definitely in line to be a great, great player in no time.

When looking statistically, you can see the skill level of Garciaparra. It really looks like a stat line of a linebacker or maybe even a safety, but Garciaparra was just a dominant force as a cornerback. The 91 tackles is a very high number for somebody in the secondary, and typically means that the pass coverage wasn’t great. But in the case of Garciaparra, they’re such a great sideline-to-sideline kind of player that it wouldn’t surprise me to find that they’re just making up for the mistakes of others on the team. Seven forced fumbles is remarkable, and shows a legitimate skill, and the five fumble recoveries is intelligence and hands combined. They still were great in pass coverage, with one of the highest passes defended numbers in the class, and still had three interceptions as well. Garciaparra was dangerous on the field, and really made life hell for opposing offenses.

This is a 1A/1B kind of situation, realistically. While I think Wilkins is the top dog, Garciaparra has shown a great ability to earn and be successful. There is no doubt in my mind that both Wilkins and Garciaparra will be superstars, and I really think both should be top-five picks considering everything here.



3. Amari Springer, S, TIJ
250 TPE, $9,354,515 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 1331)
Defensive Statistics: 60 Tackles, 1 FF, 1 FR, 1 Sack, 1 INT, 4 PD

Springer has an argument to make here that they should go up a bit, being a 250 TPE player who has a history of having a player over 1300 TPE. However, that bank is just not great and having recreated in the SHL personally, I know that sometimes it is hard to bring that back up. That motivation may not be there as well as it was before to drive you to that 1300 TPE player the first time. There is a lot to like here, and I think Springer is going to be perfectly fine. A great pedigree and great earning rate already kind of sets them up right from the get go. They just need to work on that bank a little and they’d be in that top two conversation as well.

This is an interesting one to look at statistically. Springer was involved in a lot of plays, but did not get much after the tackles and even the tackles were low. Springer definitely was lined up in a way to play a little deeper on the field, and let the play develop and come to them more so, and it didn’t get to them much. They got one sack, so they did get involved in getting up tight on the line at some points, but just that one time to get behind the line. They had an interception and a few passes defended, but nothing spectacular. This seems like Springer was really just a rover on the defense, and didn’t get super involved, but was definitely in a great position to help get the team moving in the right direction on that side of the field.

Springer should be fine, and is a great pick to make in the first round considering the history and the TPE now. I just would raise a flag at the bank, and would probably bump him to lower in the first round personally. If you need a safety, he’s the one to go for, clearly. He should be just the same as Wilkins and Garciaparra, and he could get there perfectly fine. Once again, time will tell, but I just have a bit of a concern here.



4. Sakeem Webb, CB, DAL
247 TPE, $65,809,530 Bank, 7 Former Players (Max TPE 393, Min TPE 50)
Defensive Statistics: 81 Tackles, 1 TFL, 4 FF, 2 FR, 5 INT, 29 PD

Speaking of a concern, here we are with another clear player that should be in that top-two conversation but just falls short because of a red flag. Webb has a great bank, over $65-million is a massive total. He has the TPE to compete with them all, 247 is less than 10 behind the leaders in this position grouping. So much here that is really, legitimately great and can justify being up near the top and even be justified being above Springer, who is only 3 TPE above him. The issue here is they’ve had seven former players. That is a LOT of former players, and shows some serious commitment issues. The highest they’ve gotten is to 393 TPE, and sometimes they’ve had players they just created and left. At seven, it’s a legitimate and serious trend and I debated pushing them down the board because of it. I don’t blame teams for having Webb ranked as low as eight or nine in the position group. However, I gave some leeway thanks to the consistent earning now, in hopes that this is them turning a corner.

On the field, wow was Webb spectacular. 81 tackles is high for a player who primarily is used in pass coverage, but still shows that even if somebody gets past them, they can catch up. The five interceptions and 29 passes defended shows a player that really knows how to read a play and has the intelligence to play a tough position on the field and be successful in it. Webb was targeted quite a bit, mostly because it was possible to get the ball into your receivers hands on that side, but he really made it hard on them to get that to happen and if it did even managed to force four fumbles and recover two. Webb was very much an all-around player who really made a major impact for Dallas.

If it weren’t for that history of failed players, Webb would be third and could make an argument for the top-two. Instead, they fall in this fourth position, and are someone that I considered dropping to eight even. This is a player that has every reason to be successful, and it would only be the user that determines whether that happens. This could be the time they pull it all together, and I genuinely hope it is. However I don’t blame teams who are going to naturally be more risk-averse, putting him at the bottom of their list and just waiting to take him late and letting him prove he’s worth this spot.



5. Jay Spears, S, POR
227 TPE, $16,744,550 Bank, 1 Former Player (Max TPE 639)
Defensive Statistics: 66 Tackles, 1 FF, 1 FR, 2 INT, 3 PD, 1 Defensive Touchdown

I’m only just now recognizing something here – this is the last of the players in this group that has any kind of pedigree to them. Spears has a former player who was solid, nothing spectacular, but a good player at just over 600 TPE. He has a good bank at over $16-million, and has been a good earner. 227 TPE is nothing to scoff at, and actually falls fifth in a very deep group here. Ultimately, if that TPE was higher to show consistent earning, he easily passes Webb for the fourth spot, and has a legitimate argument to do so already with just 20 TPE behind. This is going to be a great pick that probably can be made later in the draft and would be a mistake by a team needing a safety to wait on.

His numbers are fine, he was involved in the play pretty often. This is a lot like Springer, showing that safeties just sometimes don’t get the respect they deserve for what they do. Spears was involved at times in pass coverage, getting two interceptions even and getting a touchdown at one point. The thing is, he just didn’t get a lot of action at his level. The safety is the third level of the defense and really the last line of defense you have. Because of that, they just don’t get a lot of involvement. They don’t usually have a man in man coverage, they don’t really have someone that they intrinsically cover and just rove around the field. And Spears did well doing that.

Spears is a fine option, and really kind of sets apart this group at this point of the recreates of the class. He has steady enough earning, just isn’t something special there. He had a good former player, but not great. He has a fine bank to carry for a bit, but needs some work to get really far. This is the perfect good, not great, prospect. There is nothing wrong with taking Spears, and could be a great option earlier in the draft than you’d think. They have a lot in the tank, and will be a consistent piece for any team.



6. Spike Daniels, S, NOR
218 TPE, $5,926,190 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 50 Tackles, 4 INT, 11 PD

We move to the players with no history in this league, starting at Spike Daniels. Why Spike Daniels here, you ask? Well, the bank is basically identical to the next guy on the list, a roughly $700-thousand diference. That does mean this is the highest bank remaining in the class, though. Daniels also has the most TPE remaining in this group, at 218 TPE, and has been a consistent earner. While there isn’t a history to base anything off of, you can clearly see somebody committed to being in the league, having had over 10 hours of time on site in the two weeks prior to the draft. Daniels definitely could be up higher on this board, and really just suffers from the lack of bank ultimately, but if they work on that steadily, they could be the steal of this draft and to me shine as a diamond in the rough.

On the field is pretty simple here, Daniels at safety did only so much. The 50 tackles is a fine number, but shows that he wasn’t super involved. Granted, like I was saying above about being the third line of defense, when you’re standing behind Sconnie McHits and his insane number of tackles, it’s hard to even get an opportunity to make a play. Nothing wrong with it, as Daniels was a bit more free to play the pass and didn’t have to be as prepared for run plays. Daniels was less likely to jump at play-action, and that’s when a safety is super important as if anybody ahead jumps, they’re the ones that have to pick up their man and the four interceptions and 11 passes defended shows that Daniels was great at picking up the play and making something happen.

All-in-all, Daniels is a great option to pick up that I think teams should really be considering highly. While here I rank him sixth because I’m basing off the empirical evidence, if the conversations went well in scouting, I would expect to put Daniels at third in this group on my board really and I could see down the line looking back and seeing that Daniels is actually the best safety or one of the best players in the secondary of this class easily.



7. Siaosi Multiauaopele, S, POR
192 TPE, $5,238,950 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 52 Tackles, 5 FF, 3 FR, 4 Sacks, 2 PD

Onward we go with Siaosi Multiauaopele, and I will say that I am not going to type that name often and am copy and pasting it like any reasonable person would. What we can see here is a player that isn’t far off the bank of Daniels, but is a little bit lower, and the bank just isn’t anything special really. The TPE is a clear step down from those above, and there isn’t a history to tell us if Multiauaopele is going to be a consistent earner or not but is showing well in it so far. They have had nearly four hours on the site in the last two weeks before the draft, showing a commitment here, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see them build that bank up a bit and find some more success. However, with the numbers I have as of the week of the draft, this is a tricky one to really rank any higher.

Statistically, once again we see a safety not getting super involved, however Multiauaopele was given a very different role than the other safeties in this class. While they had 52 tackles, they were super effective with them. They got to be involved in the blitz a ton for Portland, showing that their strategy really utilizes that rover ability of a safety, getting four sacks. When they did get some tackles in, they also stripped the ball, getting five forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries showing great hands and awareness. Multiauaopele is able to make big impact plays happen at any given moment, and that is a great skill to have when you’re that last line of defense and when you’re roving around the defense just looking for opportunity. Multiauaopele is utilized perfectly for their skill set, and it really showed here.

This is one that could easily be higher ranked, truthfully. Unfortunately, that bank and the lower TPE just doesn’t do enough to pull them up the ranking. I have no doubt that this ranking by the time it’s even posted is already outdated and Multiauaopele is a bonafide stud, a diamond in the rough. I just have no way of seeing it right now off the numbers I have available, and without interviews, I can only do so much. Multiauaopele could be a really great pick up for any team.



8. Ben Delabaguette, CB, DAL
181 TPE, $1,050,000 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 64 Tackles, 2 FF, 6 INT, 22 PD

I am hopeful that this name is a reference to Ben DeLaCreme, the legendary drag queen who is my favorite from RuPaul’s Drag Race. Because of that, I am referring to this player exclusively as Dela for this article and if I find out that this is a reference, I will immediately befriend this person. Anyway, once again a player who has no history here, but somebody who has lower TPE and a very low bank at just over $1-million. That just isn’t going to cut it usually at higher levels, and I am hopeful to see them put something out and get those numbers up as soon as possible. Dela has opportunity here, but needs to put in a bit of work to show that commitment considering the just under two-hours of time online in the last two weeks before the draft.

As a cornerback, Dela has a clear target of what to do. They can clearly do it also. Like I said, you don’t get targeted when you’re a great cornerback. Dela may not be great, but was definitely very good with a strong six interceptions and 22 passes defended. That leaves Dela tied for first in interceptions in this group of the draft class, and really showing off incredible ball skills. High tackle numbers show that Dela wasn’t the best at stopping their man from getting the ball, but with two forced fumbles we again see that they have great hands and compete and can really fight for every inch as well. Dela isn’t some spectacular, superstar player, but is definitely a good player who can make a difference for a defense.

If only that bank was higher, Dela would be competing for a higher spot in this ranking. Instead, falling toward the bottom of this ranking, there is some work to be done here. I see potential here, somebody who is trying for sure and can be a very good player at corner by their peak. It just is going to take some elbow grease, and we will see if that comes together.



9. Doc Holliday, CB, TIJ
205 TPE, $-1,200,000 Bank, No Former Players
Defensive Statistics: 82 Tackles, 5 FF, 3 FR, 6 INT, 17 PD

Speaking of elbow grease, here we are with somebody that really needs to put in some work on media or graphics or something. Contracts can only take you so far in these kinds of leagues, and this kind of shows how far it takes you. Doc Holliday is one of two people on this entire list, not just in this section, but the whole draft who is in the negatives in the bank. That is not a great sign. He has fine TPE totals, at 205 showing consistency with updating and doing tasks. It just isn’t enough to do that sometimes, and we really need to see some money coming in. That contract dried up quick, and it doesn’t seem they did the rookie tasks to get them some extra money to work with either. If they could just go the extra step, not even the extra mile, and do a short media or two, they’d be ranking two spots higher most likely.

On the field, Holliday was definitely the targeted corner in Tijuana. A huge 82 tackles is wild for a cornerback, but is to be expected sometimes. Holliday was still a good player, getting six interceptions to tie for first in the class and putting up 17 passes defended to show that there is some serious skill there. He also has a high compete level, as he had five forced fumbles and the ability to be agile and get the recovery on three of them is pretty huge. It takes strength and skill to get a fumble, because that ball can go anywhere, all over the field. Holliday has clear skill, just isn’t able to always be consistent in putting it together. Hopefully with time that comes together a bit more.

Holliday is a fine player, nothing too special but nothing that bad. If he can get some money in, he’s going to be a very good player in this league and he is committed here, putting up nearly three hours on the site in the two weeks prior to the draft. It just takes some time, and hopefully we will see him pulling it together on getting some money in and being able to make a legitimately good player in the long run.



KICKER/PUNTER

We are to the last section, and we go with the players that often have the least respect but the most pressure at times. They get put into the game being asked to change field positions, being asked to make the big kick, being asked to endure the vitriol of thousands while remaining calm and being the only player to use their foot in football to actually make something happen. This is a very difficult position to be in, and really takes a lot of mental fortitude at the least.



1. IKick Ballz, TIJ
174 TPE, $13,600,000 Bank, 2 Former Players (Max TPE 50, Min TPE 50)
Kicking Statistics: 43/43 XPM, 19/27 FGM (70.4%), Long 49 Yards
Punting Statistics: 69 Punts, 42.8 Yard Avg, 29 Inside the 20, Long 60 Yards

This was actually a tough one. While Ballz has the highest TPE in this grouping, and has by far the best bank in the group, he also has a really bad history with a clear trend of not really getting anywhere. The interesting thing here is that the history shown is to create and never update. Well, what do you do when that person suddenly updates when they create? All that history is out the window and you really have nothing to go off of that way. Could this be the time that he breaks through and builds a great player? Nobody really knows, but I mean, anything can happen right? I’m going to lean on that and say that this is the time it all comes together, and I have faith that with the consistent updating already and the good bank, Ballz is on track to really have a solid career as a kicker.

Statistically, Ballz was actually fairly good as a kicker. He managed to be perfect on extra points, which is obviously not a given considering he was one of three to play every game and manage that feat. He made over 70% of his field goals, and while you would like to see more, that is a respectable number at least. His long of 49 yards shows that he doesn’t have the most kick power, but he definitely isn’t bad at it. Punting he got a good bit of word, and showed some great skill with getting that ball to soar in the air. His ability to get the ball to land inside the twenty landed him second in the DSFL for the season, and while he had a shorter average, he was pretty accurate with those kicks.

Ballz should be the first kicker off the board to me, but it is a fair debate to be had to say that Monitor is very good and could easily usurp him at the top. Either way, we have a couple good kickers in this draft thankfully, and this is the time that we’ve really seen somebody turn things around and become consistent. I’m very impressed, and think we’ll see pretty great work from him down the road.



2. Paul Monitor, BBB
170 TPE, $4,842,507 Bank, 2 Former Players (Max TPE 679, Min TPE 541)
Kicking Statistics: 43/46 XPM, 15/21 FGM (71.4%), Long 50 Yards
Punting Statistics: 55 Punts, 42.7 Yard Avg, 21 Inside the 20, Long 59 Yards

I’ll be honest, at times I look at this list and say this is the number one kicker. That is how close it is between these top two. Monitor has a lot to go off of, but with slightly less TPE and a lower bank, it leaves you with the history to base things off of. Monitor has been very consistent, two players who broke 500 TPE, with a difference of just over 100 TPE between the best and the worst of them. This is the safe pick, and I can’t blame teams for being a bit risk-averse and saying I know what I’m getting here and taking someone who has historically done very well with earning. Especially at a position like kicker where a lot of top teams have someone who is in that 500 TPE range, you can expect Monitor will have a fine career over the long term.

Statistically, Monitor only missed a couple extra points but had the best made field goal percentage of any players who played in all 14 games this season. He has the accuracy, and with his long of 50 yards has some leg power to him too, even going perfect 4/4 in kicks that were from 40-49 yards out. His punting game was extremely similar to Ballz above, just with fewer going inside the 20 but only a yard difference in their longest punts and a point-1 yard difference on average. You aren’t seeing any real differences on the field, but Monitor was a good kicker and a solid punter and really that’s all you can ask of him.

I fully think that a team will jump on Monitor before they do Ballz, and it is possible that’s the right option. Ballz is a bit more of a mystery to me, while Monitor is definitely a you get what you pay for, or what you see is what you get type of option. He should be a good option for whatever team does make the decision to take him. This is the higher ceiling, lower floor versus lower ceiling, higher floor debate, and in a position like kicker I can really see the higher floor debate winning.



3. Billy Doornob, LON
90 TPE, $-2,000,000 Bank, No Former Players
Kicking Statistics: 25/26 XPM, 9/16 FGM (56.2%), Long 52 Yards

Finally, the last player on the board, Billy Doornob. He’s a fine prospect, he updated at least a time or two to get to 90 TPE, but that is not a lot of TPE at the time of the draft. He has appeared on the site for about an hour and a half over the course of the two weeks before the draft, so he does have that going for him, and has been consistently posting on the site so should be able to complete tasks. It just seems he hasn’t been doing much to build the bank, didn’t complete rookie tasks and may not be much of an earner. It’s always worth a shot, but he is clearly the third option in a three-man race.

He also didn’t punt, compared to the others, which is interesting to see. That’s perfectly fine, and honestly between kicking and punting, I think I would rather kick. Doornob did fine, missed only one extra point, however he definitely struggled as he hit just below 60% of his kicks. He has power, as shown by his 52-yard long which was the third longest of the season in the DSFL. He just needs to work on that accuracy, getting the ball to land between the uprights is a huge impact and can really make a difference for a team.

Doornob is the clear third option, just a pick-up to make late and hope that it comes together. He appears online at times, and definitely is around and seems somewhat committed. It just is going to be difficult if he isn’t taking the steps to have some money in the bank, as the contract can only take you so far and eventually you kind of grind to a halt with updating without it. I hope to see him manage to get consistent and earn some money, but I won’t be holding my breath on it, I’ll say.



That’s that for the big board of the S31 class, and while I know it comes pretty late after the draft, unfortunately that is just how time works sometimes. I have had a lot going on, but made my rankings the week of the ultimus just before the draft presumably started in private. It has been a fun ride, just like last season, as I’ve gotten to know the prospects in the draft and get to make my own little predictions to a degree. I am sure a lot of these rankings will be different from team-to-team, and honestly a lot of it comes to needs, availability, and the interviews that are had with players.

Keep in mind, I did not speak with any players or teams for this, this is entirely my own rankings just based on the statistical evidence presented with earning, a user’s bank, their history and the time they spend on the site or their post counts. I may be way off the mark to some of you, and that’s fair and understandable. I hope to be, actually, because that difference of opinion is a good thing to have. What I hope to get out of this is that we all had fun and were all able to enjoy our time here. I don’t want to disparage anyone, everyone has their positives and negatives, and I fully believe these are going to be some amazing players in the future.


RE: JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - Frostbite - 09-12-2021

Wow I've gained 100+ mil since you started writing this


RE: JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - Vikain - 09-13-2021

Great write up! It tough getting the stats in stacked position. Mason Malone and Vincent Sharpei Jr. were monsters last season. Hopefully I can grown into my own this season.


RE: JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - Trempale - 09-13-2021

Awesome Article! I might need to steal this idea for my draft class. I'll write it after this season tho. Unless you want to write it Smile


RE: JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - UberBJ - 09-13-2021

Good article.

JY still stinky.


RE: JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - teddyoojo - 09-13-2021

since this does include stats just copied from somewhere i feel it should be graded as 18 words not 18k

honestly tho, idk how u can have the patience to write 18k words, thats damn impressive and the article is great! obviously wouldve been greaterest to have pre (mock) draft but 18k words is no light tasks so it quite understandable


RE: JY's S31 Big Board Extravaganza - Kotasa - 09-13-2021

Jay good