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Fantasy Football Cheat Sheet 2015: Recapping Top 10 Players at Every Position

Gary DavenportJun 25, 2015

It's officially summertime.

The kids are out of school and in the pool. Grills have been fired up from sea to shining sea. Flip-flops are the footwear of the day.

Summer means another thing. A very important thing to devotees of fantasy football.

It's fantasy draft season.

So, as leagues across the land prepare to gather in watering holes, man caves and online to draft the teams who will hopefully guide them to fantasy glory, here's a look at the best of the best, the cream of the crop, the top dogs.

The top 10 fantasy options at every position in fantasy football in 2015.

These rankings are based on fantasy scoring that awards one point for every 25 passing yards and 10 rushing or receiving yards, six points for all touchdowns, one point per reception, two points for a two-point conversion, and minus-two points for a lost fumble or interception.

Quarterbacks

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It's a tale of two worlds at the quarterback position in fantasy football in 2015.

At the top of the food chain, there are the "elite" options—Andrew Luck of the Indianapolis Colts and Aaron Rodgers of the Green Bay Packers. They were the top two fantasy quarterbacks of 2014. Both are at the helm of potent passing games. Both possess fantasy upside galore.

Of course, both also possess hefty price tags. According to the average draft position data at Fantasy Pros, both signal-callers will be gone by the middle of Round 2.

After that, the questions start. How will the changing offense in New Orleans affect Drew Brees? Was Peyton Manning's late-season swoon last year the beginning of the end?

In fact, if the asking price for Rodgers or Brees is too rich for your blood, you're best served by skipping the next tier of quarterbacks altogether and waiting until later in the draft to choose from a deep group of mid-range options such as Ben Roethlisberger of the Pittsburgh Steelers or Tony Romo of the Dallas Cowboys.

1) Andrew Luck, Indianapolis Colts

Luck was the top quarterback in fantasy scoring in 2014 thanks in no small part to his league-leading 40 touchdown passes. He's just entering the prime of his career, the Colts added several pieces on offense in the offseason and Luck's ability to pick up yards with his legs is highly underrated. What's not to like?

2) Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Packers

In the opinion of ESPN.com's KC Joyner, it's Rodgers (not Luck) who is fantasy's top passer in 2015. "Rodgers posted a league-leading 310 fantasy points on passing plays despite ranking 14th in passing attempts (520)," Joyner wrote. "There probably isn't another quarterback in the league who is capable of this type of achievement and that talent makes Rodgers hands down the top fantasy quarterback."

3) Peyton Manning, Denver Broncos

Just two years ago, Manning rewrote the single-season record books at the quarterback spot, and the Broncos certainly aren't hurting for offensive weapons. But Manning is 39, looked it during a shaky December last year and the Broncos are rolling out four new starters on the offensive line this year. There's upside, sure, but more than a little risk as well.

4) Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints

Brees tied for the NFL lead in passing yardage and finished fourth among fantasy quarterbacks in scoring last year. However, he also dipped below 5,000 passing yards for the first time since 2010 and threw his fewest touchdown passes (33) since that season. The Saints also bid adieu to tight end Jimmy Graham and wide receiver Kenny Stills in trades.

5) Russell Wilson, Seattle Seahawks

No team attempted fewer passes last year than the Seahawks, but Wilson gained almost 850 yards and scored eight touchdowns on the ground. The addition of Jimmy Graham gives Wilson the most potent weapon in the passing game he's ever had, but you're drafting the fourth-year pro much closer to his ceiling than his floor in this slot.

6) Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers

It was Roethlisberger who tied Brees with 4,952 passing yards in 2014, adding a career-best (tied) 32 scoring passes. These aren't your father's Pittsburgh Steelers. In fact, with young wide receivers such as Antonio Brown and Martavis Bryant at his disposal, it wouldn't be a bit surprising to see Big Ben outpoint Brees in 2015—at a much lower fantasy asking price.

7) Matt Ryan, Atlanta Falcons

Last year's eighth-ranked fantasy signal-caller in this format, Ryan has now gone over 4,500 passing yards and 25 touchdown passes in three consecutive seasons. With weapons in the passing game and a shaky defense that could lead to shootouts, Ryan's a solid weekly starter for fantasy owners who like to wait at the position.

8) Cam Newton, Carolina Panthers

Jeff Smith of Fantasy Pros sees big-time value present with Newton in 2015. "The leader of the Panthers offense is a player who usually falls to rounds 7-9 in most 12-team leagues," Smith said, "or possibly later. But in reality, he could turn into one of the biggest steals of your draft this coming year. Newton has the weapons, he’s healthy and he’s ready to silence doubters, just as he’s always done to this point in his career."

9) Tony Romo, Dallas Cowboys

Even in a 2014 season that saw Romo's pass attempts drop precipitously, the 35-year-old still managed yet another top-10 fantasy finish. If Joseph Randle and Darren McInjured (McFadden, whatever) can't carry the ground game this season, Romo's passing attempts are going to go back up. So will his fantasy production.

10) Tom Brady, New England Patriots

This ranking may seem high given that Golden Boy is staring at a four-game league-imposed vacation for his role in Deflategate. However, the smart money says that suspension is going to be reduced, and the last time the Patriots were embroiled in a scandal, Brady threw 50 touchdown passes and the Pats went 16-0. Revenge Tour Part 2, anyone?

Running Backs

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For many years, running backs were the unquestioned kings of fantasy football. There was no question that a running back would be the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts. It was just a matter of which one.

However, as the NFL becomes more and more pass-wacky, many fantasy owners are flipping that script, choosing instead to invest early in wide receivers or even a tight end or quarterback in Round 1.

It hasn't helped that over the past couple of seasons, the first round has been littered with busts at the running back position. According to the average draft position data at My Fantasy League, Adrian Peterson of the Minnesota Vikings (1.03), Montee Ball of the Denver Broncos (1.07) and Doug Martin of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1.10) were all first-round picks in 12-team leagues.

Bust, bust and bust for the second straight season.

Per the ADP info at Fantasy Pros this year, half the players being selected in the first round in 2015 are non-backs.

However, make no mistake, a fantasy team will go only as far as its backfield takes it.

And with the number of true "bellcow" ball-carriers dwindling by the season, an early investment in one of those "featured" backs remains as wise a course of action as ever.

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

1) Jamaal Charles, Kansas City Chiefs

If you have the No. 1 overall pick in your fantasy draft and are a fan of playing things safe, then Charles is your man. No running back in NFL history has averaged more yards per carry for his career than Charles, who has posted over 1,300 total yards in five of the past six seasons. The 33 total touchdowns over the past two years don't hurt, either.

2) Le'Veon Bell, Pittsburgh Steelers

Sure, Bell is facing a three-game vacation to start the season thanks to a marijuana bust last year, but his gaudy 2014 production can't be ignored: over 2,200 total yards, 11 touchdowns and 83 receptions. And the top spot among running backs in fantasy scoring a year ago. Let other fantasy owners be spooked by Bell's suspension, and then reap the rewards.

3) Adrian Peterson, Minnesota Vikings

Graham Barfield of NumberFire believes Peterson is a risky play in 2015. "Peterson will look to add to his on-field legacy in his age-30 season in 2015," Barfield wrote. "He has a year's rest under his belt, but that's a shaky, narrative-based foundation to build your fantasy team on. If Peterson does defy history and re-pay his average draft position, he'll do so facing long odds this season." Of course, the last time we wrote Peterson off (after his ACL tear), he responded by nearly breaking the single-season rushing record.

4) Eddie Lacy, Green Bay Packers

In the opinion of USA Today's Tim Heaney, it's Lacy, and not Charles or Peterson, who should be the top overall pick in 2015: "Youth, a potent offense, an already effective track record, power, receiving ability, elusiveness, and nearly guaranteed red-zone opportunities — no other No. 1 candidate, regardless of format, matches Lacy’s mix of stability and upside over a full season."

5) Arian Foster, Houston Texans

Frankly, a pretty solid argument can be had that the back half of the first round is preferable to the front this season, precisely because backs such as Foster are going to be available. Even in a 2014 season where Foster missed three games, the 28-year-old still finished sixth at his position in fantasy points, and the Texans will rely heavily on the run again in 2015.

6) Marshawn Lynch, Seattle Seahawks

The rub on Lynch in PPR scoring systems has long been he isn't involved much in the passing game, but his 37 catches last year were his most since 2008. Even if Beast Mode doesn't catch the ball a lot out of the backfield, it's hard to argue against a player with double-digit rushing scores in four consecutive seasons. Skittles!

7) LeSean McCoy, Buffalo Bills

After a relatively down 2014 and a trade to the Bills, many fantasy pundits are down on Shady in 2015. However, even in last year's "disappointing" campaign, McCoy still gained nearly 1,500 total yards and finished as a fantasy RB1. As the focal point of the Buffalo offense, those numbers represent McCoy's floor in 2015—and it's a safe bet he'll tally more than 28 receptions this year.

8) Matt Forte, Chicago Bears

Last year, Forte rode an eye-popping 102 receptions to a runner-up finish (behind Bell) in PPR scoring systems. However, Forte turns 30 in December, has over 2,200 career touches' worth of wear and tear on his body and Marc Trestman gave way to John Fox as head coach in Chicago. All three are red flags where Forte's 2015 fantasy prospects are concerned.

9) C.J. Anderson, Denver Broncos

Montee ball was a fantasy bust last year—in no small part because Anderson ran circles around him en route to wresting away the starting job in Denver's backfield. New Broncos head coach Gary Kubiak has long been a proponent of the ground game, which could mean even bigger and better things for Anderson in 2015—just ask fantasy owners of Justin Forsett of the Baltimore Ravens in 2014.

10) DeMarco Murray, Philadelphia Eagles

Last year's rushing king changed teams in the offseason, moving across the NFC East from Dallas to Philly. Losing the Cowboys' dominant offensive line isn't as big as it could be (the Eagles' line is hardly chopped liver), but the 27-year-old's 392 carries last year is a huge concern. The historical data on players who have shouldered that big a load in the past shows that nearly all backslide in a big way the following season.

Wide Receivers

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You down with ODB? Yeah you know me!

Sorry, couldn't be helped.

The story of the wide receiver position in fantasy football a season ago was the rookie explosion spearheaded by Odell Beckham of the New York Giants. After missing the first month of his first season, Beckham made up for lost time and then some the rest of the way. By season's end, he had posted top-10 numbers in PPR formats. No wide receiver in fantasy football posted more points per game.

It used to be that running backs were considered the "safe" play in the first round of fantasy drafts, but in recent years, it's actually been the elite wideouts who have been more reliable. There's little chance (barring injury) that Beckham or Demaryius Thomas of the Denver Broncos won't post huge numbers in 2015.

However, there's also a lot more depth in fantasy drafts at wide receiver than in the backfield. In a recent PPR industry draft I participated in, both Thomas and long-time fantasy stud Calvin Johnson of the Detroit Lions lasted into the middle of Round 2.

Don't be afraid to use that depth to your advantage.

1) Antonio Brown, Pittsburgh Steelers

Outside of the tight end spot, there isn't a position in fantasy football where there's less doubt as to this year's No. 1 option than at wide receiver. The 26-year-old led the NFL last year in both catches (129) and yardage (1,698), added 13 touchdown grabs and finished as the top wide receiver in PPR scoring by almost 40 fantasy points.

2) Odell Beckham, New York Giants

Michael Fabiano of NFL.com isn't quite this high on Beckham, ranking him fifth entering his second NFL season: "Beckham went nuts as a rookie, averaging 17 fantasy points a game (in standard scoring) while scoring 19-plus points in five of his last six contests. While those video-game totals will tempt some owners to draft him in the first round, I see Beckham being picked in Round 2 in most leagues. While he's an incredible talent, repeating that high level of success again will be difficult."

3) Demaryius Thomas, Denver Broncos

Over the past three seasons, there hasn't been a more consistently productive wide receiver in all of football than Thomas. Over each of those seasons, Thomas has posted at least 90 receptions, racked up over 1,400 receiving yards and scored at least 10 times. If those numbers don't get your juices going, you have a busted valve.

4) Dez Bryant, Dallas Cowboys

After pacing the National Football League with 16 touchdown catches in 2014, Bryant's unhappiness over his franchise tag designation led to the 26-year-old skipping OTAs and threatening to hold out into the regular season. However, that's likely all it is. A threat. The smart money says Bryant will be right back at it catching passes from Tony Romo in Week 1.

5) Julio Jones, Atlanta Falcons

Heading into the final year of his rookie contract, Justin Dade of Fantasy Pros sees big things in store for Jones in the upcoming campaign. "After a great 2014 campaign, owners should be very excited to watch Jones in a contract year," Dade wrote. "The Falcons are confident they will be able to keep him in Atlanta, but we expect big things from Jones this year in new Falcons offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan's offense."

6) Calvin Johnson, Detroit Lions

How deep is the wide receiver position this year? Deep enough that Megatron himself didn't crack the top five at his position. Lower-body injuries have cost Johnson five games over the past two seasons, and Johnson turns 30 in September, but, um, how shall I put this: It's Clavin freaking Johnson we're talking about. Bet against the leader of the Decepticons at your own peril.

7) Jordy Nelson, Green Bay Packers

After a career year that saw Nelson come up just shy of 100 catches, top 1,500 receiving yards, score 13 times and finish third among fantasy wideouts in this scoring, the 30-year-old Nelson had offseason surgery on his hip. Still, reports on Nelson's recovery have been positive, and I hear the Packers offense is supposed to be pretty good.

8) A.J. Green, Cincinnati Bengals

Green's another elite fantasy receiver in a contract year, but Brandon Gdula of NumberFire thinks trouble could be brewing for Green after a down 2014: "Sure, Green's personal opportunities were down (in 2014), but we can't assume they'll spike back up to his pre-2014 numbers either because this might be a run-first and run-second team near the goal line."

9) Randall Cobb, Green Bay Packers

After shattering his career bests across the board with his 91-catch, 1,287-yard, 12-touchdown season in 2014, the Packers rewarded Cobb with a lucrative contract extension. Some fantasy owners might be reluctant to count on two receivers from the same team both posting top-10 fantasy numbers. They're right. Last year, both Cobb and Nelson finished in the top eight.

10) Alshon Jeffery, Chicago Bears

With Brandon Marshall now in New York, Jeffery is the undisputed No. 1 receiver for the Bears. The 25-year-old's talent isn't in question. Neither is his ability to produce for fantasy owners after last year's top-10 fantasy finish. If new Bears offensive coordinator Adam Gase can do for Jeffery what he did for Demaryius Thomas in Denver, look out.

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Tight Ends

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Where tight ends are concerned in fantasy football in 2015, one thing is clear.

It's Rob Gronkowski's world. We're all just living in it.

With Jimmy Graham (Seattle Seahawks) and Julius Thomas (Jacksonville Jaguars) landing in much less favorable fantasy situations, Gronkowski isn't just the No. 1 tight end in fantasy football—he's a tier unto himself.

And that, in turn, has driven up Gronkowski's asking price in drafts. In fact, per the average draft position data at Fantasy Pros, if you want "A Gronking to Remember" in 2015, it's going to cost you your first pick.

There just aren't that many reliable (or even semi-reliable) weekly starters at tight end available in 2015. Less than the number of teams in most leagues, to be sure.

That leaves fantasy owners two choices: 1) Be prepared to invest the pick required to obtain one of those weekly starters or 2) hope like heck you can hit on one of the upside options later on.

1) Rob Gronkowski, New England Patriots

Not only is Gronkowski the top tight end in fantasy football and a legitimate first-round pick, but a fairly strong argument can be made for making Gronkowski the No. 1 pick overall. It's all about the edge that Gronkowski gives his fantasy owners at his position. If the 26-year-old comes anywhere close to his fantasy ceiling, he's going to obliterate the competition at the position.

2) Jimmy Graham, Seattle Seahawks

Graham's value no doubt takes a hit in Seattle, but Adam Rank of NFL.com cautions fantasy owners not to over-react to Graham's new digs in the Pacific Northwest: "Sure, he's not the top tight end in fantasy. Or at least it's up for spirited debate. But if you look at his numbers last season, 85 receptions, 900-plus yards and 10 touchdowns, those marks seem pretty doable this year in Seattle."

3) Greg Olsen, Carolina Panthers

Olsen caught 84 passes and topped 1,000 yards for the first time in his eight-year career, finishing fourth in PPR scoring systems at his position. There's little reason to believe Olsen can't duplicate those numbers in 2015, and according to the ADP info at Fantasy Pros, Olsen is available 2.5 rounds later than Graham.

4) Travis Kelce, Kansas City Chiefs

Normally, this is about the time that I'd be touting Kelce as a great pick for fantasy owners who want elite tight end upside without the elite sticker price. The problem is that every fantasy pundit and his mother is touting the third-year pro as a potential breakout candidate in 2015 after he led the Chiefs in catches and touchdowns last year, and that's driving up his ADP. Hi mom!

5) Antonio Gates, San Diego Chargers

Heading into last season, many fantasy experts predicted that youngster Ladarius Green would emerge as the top tight end for the Bolts in 2015. Instead, Gates tied Gronkowski for the most scoring grabs by a tight end (12) and finished third at the position in fantasy points. The $64,000 question now: Does the 35-year-old have one more productive season left in the tank?

6) Martellus Bennett, Chicago Bears

Of all NFL tight ends in 2014, only Gronkowski amassed more targets than Bennett's 128, which paved the way for a top-five fantasy finish. Granted, with Marc Trestman no longer calling the shots in Chicago, the Bears may not throw the ball as much in 2015, but Julius Thomas didn't exactly suck under new Bears head coach John Fox and offensive coordinator Adam Gase last year.

7) Zach Ertz, Philadelphia Eagles

James Brimacombe of Fantasy Pros expects big things from Ertz in the third season of his NFL career. "Ertz was the 20th ranked TE in his rookie season and last year came in ranked 13th among TE's," Brimacombe said. "Everything is pointing in the right direction for Ertz to improve once again and crack the top 10 fantasy TE's with a more accurate Sam Bradford as the new Eagles QB."

8) Jordan Cameron, Miami Dolphins

When it comes to risk/reward fantasy picks at the tight end position in 2015, Cameron is the poster child. The 26-year-old showed the ability when healthy to post elite-level fantasy production on a per-game basis the past couple of years in Cleveland. The problem is that Cameron has also shown absolutely no ability to stay healthy for any length of time the past couple of years in Cleveland.

9) Jason Witten, Dallas Cowboys

After a down 2014, Witten's fantasy stock is as low as it's been in years. And NumberFire's JJ Zachariason thinks that's makes Witten an excellent draft-day target in 2015: "When you factor in Tony Romo's ability to throw the ball and that the Cowboys are almost certain to be a more pass-friendly team without DeMarco Murray, this becomes a no-brainer: Jason Witten is a crazy-good value in fantasy football this year."

10) Delanie Walker, Tennessee Titans

Yes, it's hard to get all that excited about any players from the Titans offense in 2015, especially with rookie quarterback Marcus Mariota set to take the reins. However, Walker quietly set career highs in both receptions and yardage last year, finishing ninth at the position in PPR fantasy points. Mariota is going to need a safety valve. Walker is that valve.

Team Defenses

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There isn't a harder position in fantasy football to predict than team defenses.

For starters, the scoring for team defenses can vary wildly from league to league. Some award points only for sacks, turnovers and defensive touchdowns. Others also factor points and yards allowed into the equation. Others still include the return game.

It sounds obvious, but know your scoring and how it affects the value of team defenses relative to both one another and offensive players.

Also, team defenses fluctuate wildly from season to season. Penthouse to outhouse and back again. After all, it isn't just one player's offseason that must be taken into consideration—there's 11.

As an example, two seasons ago the Kansas City Chiefs were the top-scoring fantasy defense. Last year, they finished outside the top 20.

It might be tempting to invest a pick in one of the so-called "elite" defenses—such as the Seattle Seahawks—teams with something of a track record of consistent production.

However, the real fantasy sharks know better. You can get elite fantasy production from the defense slot for a fraction of the price of the big-name squads by playing the matchups. Find a team with a cupcake opponent in Week 1 and draft them late. Then, as soon as the favorable matchups dry up, cut that team loose and grab another matchup play off the waiver wire.

Looking for just such a target in 2015? Look no further than the Carolina Panthers. With Greg Hardy on the shelf last year, the Panthers pass rush dried up, and the team dropped from third in fantasy points in 2013 to 11th.

This year, the Panthers' ADP among team defenses at Fantasy Pros is 14th. I'd wager they score a fair bit higher than that in Week 1 when they travel to face an anemic Jacksonville Jaguars offense that allowed a staggering 71 sacks in 2014.

1) St. Louis Rams

The Rams may well finish the 2015 season at the back end of the NFC West, but their defense is the cream of the fantasy crop at the position. The reason? A deep and talented front four featuring ends Robert Quinn and Chris Long and tackles Aaron Donald and Michael Brockers.

2) Buffalo Bills

The Bills paced the NFL with 54 sacks last season on their way to a second consecutive top-three fantasy finish. The arrival of Rex Ryan as head coach brings a switch to a 3-4 front, but no worries—the Bills ran that defense just two years ago and produced just fine.

3) Seattle Seahawks

No team in the NFL allowed fewer yards (267.1) or points (15.9) per game last year than the Seahawks, but a dearth of big plays cost the team dearly from a fantasy perspective. If your league favors the former categories, bump the Seahawks up draft boards accordingly.

4) Houston Texans

The Texans boast the NFL's top defensive player in end J.J. Watt and the No. 1 overall pick in the 2014 NFL draft in outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney. If Clowney can bounce back from a lost rookie year and provide Watt with a pass-rushing playmate, look out.

5) New York Jets

Given what Todd Bowles was able to accomplish a year ago in Arizona, it will be interesting to see what he can do with a loaded Jets defense that includes pass-rushers Muhammad Wilkerson and Sheldon Richardson and Pro Bowl cornerback Darrelle Revis.

6) Denver Broncos

The Denver defense sprung some leaks down the stretch last year and finished only a so-so 12th in fantasy points. However, in players such as outside linebackers DeMarcus Ware and Von Miller and cornerback Aqib Talib, the Broncos aren't short on big-play talent.

7) Green Bay Packers

The Packers were a middle-of-the-pack defense in yardage allowed last year and fell to pieces in the team's NFC title game collapse, but Dom Capers-coached units have a penchant for big plays. The kind of big plays that produce fantasy finishes like last year's (second).

8) New England Patriots

In defensive ends Chandler Jones and Rob Ninkovich, tackles Dominique Easley and Malcolm Brown and linebackers Dont'a Hightower, Jamie Collins and Jerod Mayo, the front seven in Beantown is stacked. The secondary, on the other hand? Not so much.

9) Carolina Panthers

As I mentioned in the intro, the Panthers open the season with a matchup that's about as good as matchups get. If Carolina can get one of its young defensive ends to step up opposite Charles Johnson, this is a unit that could provide big-time value for fantasy drafters.

10) Miami Dolphins

As ESPN.com's Jim McCormick pointed out, the Dolphins' fantasy value lies mainly in their early-season slate. "Just peep at the opening slate for this group," McCormick wrote, "and you'll begin to see why I'm high on the Dolphins: beginning in Week 1 with Washington, Jacksonville, Buffalo, New York Jets, Tennessee and Houston. That looks like a custom "Madden" schedule."

Kickers

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There's actually a bit of intrigue at the kicker position in fantasy leagues in 2015.

That intrigue comes not from the kickers themselves, but from the NFLand its decision to move extra-point attempts from the 2-yard line to the 15. What was once a virtually automatic point after is now essentially a 32-yard field-goal attempt.

If there's one kicker who should have a beef with the new rule, it's Nick Folk of the New York Jets. After all, over the 30-year-old's eight-year NFL career, Folk has made only 80.6 percent of his field goal attemptsbut all 292 extra points.

Still, Folk told Kristian Dyer of Metro that he isn't going to lose sleep over the rule change:

"

I try to make every kick look the same, whether it is an extra-point or a long field goal. It might at the end of the year, change the play-calling. In order to win a game at the end of the year, you might want to go for two. I don't know. I've been working on it this whole offseason from 23-yard line middle. I knew in my head it was going to change.

"

Fantasy owners shouldn't lose sleep, either. Is it possible we'll see some coaches go for two with more frequency, especially in bad weather? Yes.

But if nothing else, all that is is one more reason not to draft a kicker until the final round of your fantasy draft.

Kickers
RankPlayerTeamBye
1Stephen GostkowskiNE4
2Justin TuckerBAL9
3Mason CrosbyGB7
4Adam VinatieriIND10
5Steven HauschkaSEA9
6Cody ParkeyPHI8
7Dan BaileyDAL6
8Connor BarthDEN7
9Matt BryantATL10
10Matt PraterDET9

If you're wondering where the analysis is for the kickers, here you go.

They are kickers. If you draft one before the final round, congratulations...

You just wasted a pick.

Fantasy numbers courtesy of FFToday unless otherwise noted.

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