This year's series of "By Committee" articles sparked a few great questions from the readers, and that led to a recent article where I discussed using a few different approaches (such as Ben Roethlisberger only at home plus another quarterback). At the end of the article, a table was presented to show several options at quarterback for committee pairs that involved quarterbacks that were higher than the cutoff line that I had drawn (QB13+ on the ADP list). The readers asked why the line was drawn at QB12, and I felt that it was a good question and a different answer (and article) was needed. Further investigation of this seemlingly arbitrary line led me to ask the question for wide receiver - should the line be drawn higher, and could better pairs result?
So with this in mind, I revisited the arguments I made about the committee approach, and then I explored raising the line (and the bar) for better pairs. Below are the results, which I hope help you on your fantasy draft day:
ELIGIBLE RECEIVERS
I mentioned this the first time - defenses and quarterbacks are relatively easy to "committee" together. There's usually only one QB and certainly only one team defense per NFL club, so the approach is pretty simple as far as picking out which players / teams to try and pair up. When it comes to wide receivers, the line is not quite so easy to draw, but I needed some basis to pick which players it made sense to try and combine for a decent committee. This time I decided that I would use the following criteria to decide which players to start with for evaluating:
CRITERIA #1 - WR12 AND BEYOND
This seems pretty simple. If we want to have a duo that puts up elite numbers, that means we want WR10 or better production - else we would just draft a Top 10 option and forget the whole idea. So here is the list of players with which I started, based on their Average Draft Position (ADP):
ADP | Player | ADP | Player |
WR12 | Doug Baldwin | WR22 | Golden Tate |
WR13 | Dez Bryant | WR23 | Stefon Diggs |
WR14 | Brandin Cooks | WR24 | Emmanuel Sanders |
WR15 | Larry Fitzgerald | WR25 | Julian Edelman |
WR16 | Tyreek Hill | WR26 | Davante Adams |
WR17 | Michael Crabtree | WR27 | Brandon Marshall |
WR18 | Allen Robinson | WR28 | Sammy Watkins |
WR19 | Keenan Allen | WR29 | Willie Snead |
WR20 | Alshon Jeffery | WR30 | Jamison Crowder |
WR21 | Jarvis Landry |
Table 1: Wide Receivers WR12-30 Based on ADP
Now we have 19 guys to pair up and see how they do. That makes 171 potential committees, so there had better be a decent one (or several, we hope) out of all of those couplets. Now, before I go over the method of how to pair them up and the results, we need one more rule:
CRITERIA #2 - NO MORE THAN ONE WR FROM ROUND 7 AND ONE FROM ROUND 8
Rather than keep Criteria #2 from the original article, I am allowing for more flexibility in your draft. Let us let the results speak for themselves and then decide which pairs are the correct ones to select as the draft progresses.
So what do we do now to figure out some WR pairs?
CRITERIA #3 - USE FOOTBALLGUYS' WR STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE
This sounds pretty simple, doesn't it? Just take the WR Strength of Schedule to figure out when certain players are more likely to score well. What I did is similar to what the Projections Dominator and Draft Dominator do for you - take the projected fantasy points and slice them up over 17 weeks based on the strength of schedule. I call this result the "distributed fantasy points" for each receiver.
After I had all 19 wide receivers with distributed fantasy points on a weekly basis, I just compared all of the possible WR pairs to find the best duos for WR3BC. So here we are - time for some results:
Rank | Wide Receiver 1 | Wide Receiver 2 | Value |
1 | Doug Baldwin | Brandin Cooks | 273.13 |
2 | Dez Bryant | Brandin Cooks | 272.5 |
3 | Dez Bryant | Tyreek Hill | 269.09 |
4 | Doug Baldwin | Michael Crabtree | 267.29 |
5 | Dez Bryant | Michael Crabtree | 266.78 |
6 | Doug Baldwin | Tyreek Hill | 266.26 |
7 | Dez Bryant | Allen Robinson | 265.45 |
8 | Brandin Cooks | Golden Tate | 265.13 |
9 | Doug Baldwin | Allen Robinson | 265.06 |
10 | Brandin Cooks | Michael Crabtree | 264.15 |
11 | Doug Baldwin | Alshon Jeffery | 264.03 |
12 | Doug Baldwin | Larry Fitzgerald | 263.8 |
13 | Doug Baldwin | Stefon Diggs | 263.63 |
14 | Michael Crabtree | Allen Robinson | 263.41 |
15 | Dez Bryant | Larry Fitzgerald | 263.28 |
16 | Doug Baldwin | Keenan Allen | 262.12 |
17 | Dez Bryant | Golden Tate | 261.03 |
18 | Doug Baldwin | Golden Tate | 261.02 |
19 | Dez Bryant | Alshon Jeffery | 260.78 |
20 | Dez Bryant | Keenan Allen | 260.72 |
21 | Brandin Cooks | Larry Fitzgerald | 260.59 |
22 | Doug Baldwin | Jarvis Landry | 260.52 |
23 | Brandin Cooks | Emmanuel Sanders | 259.61 |
24 | Brandin Cooks | Jarvis Landry | 259.6 |
25 | Brandin Cooks | Allen Robinson | 259.5 |
26 | Brandin Cooks | Tyreek Hill | 259.28 |
27 | Larry Fitzgerald | Michael Crabtree | 257.77 |
28 | Dez Bryant | Julian Edelman | 257.57 |
29 | Doug Baldwin | Willie Snead | 257.25 |
30 | Doug Baldwin | Julian Edelman | 257.1 |
31 | Dez Bryant | Stefon Diggs | 256.89 |
32 | Tyreek Hill | Golden Tate | 256.72 |
33 | Doug Baldwin | Jamison Crowder | 256.67 |
34 | Allen Robinson | Golden Tate | 256.33 |
35 | Michael Crabtree | Keenan Allen | 256.27 |
36 | Brandin Cooks | Brandon Marshall | 256.21 |
37 | Doug Baldwin | Emmanuel Sanders | 256.12 |
38 | Dez Bryant | Jarvis Landry | 255.43 |
39 | Dez Bryant | Jamison Crowder | 255.4 |
40 | Doug Baldwin | Dez Bryant | 255 |
41 | Brandin Cooks | Davante Adams | 254.98 |
42 | Doug Baldwin | Sammy Watkins | 254.89 |
43 | Tyreek Hill | Allen Robinson | 254.75 |
44 | Dez Bryant | Emmanuel Sanders | 254.56 |
45 | Doug Baldwin | Davante Adams | 254.23 |
46 | Brandin Cooks | Jamison Crowder | 253.52 |
47 | Allen Robinson | Jarvis Landry | 253.38 |
48 | Allen Robinson | Alshon Jeffery | 253.29 |
49 | Michael Crabtree | Golden Tate | 253.27 |
50 | Michael Crabtree | Emmanuel Sanders | 253 |
51 | Brandin Cooks | Willie Snead | 252.88 |
52 | Dez Bryant | Davante Adams | 252.31 |
53 | Dez Bryant | Willie Snead | 251.9 |
54 | Tyreek Hill | Jarvis Landry | 251.85 |
55 | Michael Crabtree | Jarvis Landry | 251.44 |
56 | Tyreek Hill | Keenan Allen | 251.25 |
57 | Larry Fitzgerald | Keenan Allen | 250.9 |
58 | Allen Robinson | Emmanuel Sanders | 250.67 |
59 | Dez Bryant | Sammy Watkins | 250.65 |
60 | Michael Crabtree | Stefon Diggs | 250.17 |
61 | Brandin Cooks | Sammy Watkins | 250.07 |
62 | Brandin Cooks | Alshon Jeffery | 249.92 |
63 | Doug Baldwin | Brandon Marshall | 249.92 |
64 | Larry Fitzgerald | Golden Tate | 249.75 |
65 | Larry Fitzgerald | Tyreek Hill | 249.45 |
66 | Alshon Jeffery | Golden Tate | 249.41 |
67 | Larry Fitzgerald | Stefon Diggs | 249.27 |
68 | Allen Robinson | Keenan Allen | 248.67 |
69 | Larry Fitzgerald | Alshon Jeffery | 248.05 |
70 | Dez Bryant | Brandon Marshall | 247.79 |
71 | Tyreek Hill | Stefon Diggs | 247.51 |
72 | Larry Fitzgerald | Allen Robinson | 247.44 |
73 | Michael Crabtree | Willie Snead | 247.26 |
74 | Tyreek Hill | Emmanuel Sanders | 247.13 |
75 | Allen Robinson | Stefon Diggs | 247.04 |
76 | Allen Robinson | Jamison Crowder | 246.65 |
77 | Brandin Cooks | Keenan Allen | 246.52 |
78 | Keenan Allen | Golden Tate | 246.51 |
79 | Tyreek Hill | Michael Crabtree | 246.06 |
80 | Michael Crabtree | Brandon Marshall | 245.55 |
81 | Jarvis Landry | Golden Tate | 245.04 |
82 | Larry Fitzgerald | Jarvis Landry | 244.84 |
83 | Golden Tate | Stefon Diggs | 244.31 |
84 | Keenan Allen | Jarvis Landry | 244.23 |
85 | Michael Crabtree | Davante Adams | 244.12 |
86 | Michael Crabtree | Julian Edelman | 244.06 |
87 | Michael Crabtree | Sammy Watkins | 243.61 |
88 | Brandin Cooks | Stefon Diggs | 243.42 |
89 | Allen Robinson | Julian Edelman | 243.38 |
90 | Allen Robinson | Willie Snead | 243.02 |
91 | Michael Crabtree | Jamison Crowder | 242.99 |
92 | Larry Fitzgerald | Emmanuel Sanders | 242.95 |
93 | Doug Baldwin | n/a | 242.4 |
Table 2: Wide Receiver Committee Pairs
Okay, that is a really big table, but I wanted to be thorough. As you can see, we have some very good pairs to select from for an elite WRBC. So digging in, there are 92 pairs ot Table 2 to consider, so there are a number of options. Rather than looking at the frequency of appearances, let's just jump right into the comparison to the original table for our Top 12+ wide receivers from the original article:
ADP | WR Rank | Player | Team | FPs |
1 | 1 | Antonio Brown | PIT | 314.08 |
2 | 2 | Odell Beckham Jr | NYG | 293.86 |
3 | 3 | Julio Jones | ATL | 284.61 |
4 | 4 | Mike Evans | TB | 276.9 |
5 | 6 | A.J. Green | CIN | 265.25 |
6 | 5 | Jordy Nelson | GB | 270.18 |
7 | 7 | Michael Thomas | NO | 260.96 |
8 | 8 | T.Y. Hilton | IND | 257.6 |
9 | 9 | Amari Cooper | OAK | 247.94 |
10 | 15 | Dez Bryant | DAL | 231.97 |
11 | 11 | Doug Baldwin | SEA | 238.66 |
12 | 14 | DeAndre Hopkins | HOU | 233.38 |
13 | 12 | Brandin Cooks | NE | 235.84 |
14 | 10 | Demaryius Thomas | DEN | 241.38 |
15 | 19 | Allen Robinson | JAX | 225.12 |
Table 3: Projected Fantasy Points for Elite PPR Wide Receivers
PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
Based on Tables 2 and 3, we see that some combinations of wide receivers can afford elite production at a reduced price. Taking two wide receivers in the WR15-24 range with the right combined schedule gives 260+ fantasy points, which is equivalent to Amari Cooper (WR9) along with 10 points for a bye week filler. Not all of the pairings may fall into place in each draft, but having a chart like Table 2 can give you a leg up on the competition.
The committee approach is not a perfect one, but having this knowledge prior to your fantasy draft can prove to be invaluable if you decide to adopt this approach. If all the players on your starter list are gone, goiong with a committee can save your team and help you deal with the loss of bigger names. The method is also a big help in "Best Ball" leagues, where lineup decisions are not necessary every week. That's exactly where a committee can do the best, as either player can count for you each week.
Questions, suggestions and comments are always welcome to pasquino@footballguys.com.