Transcript for:
Fantasy Football 2025 My Guys & Draft Tips

The Fantasy Footballer Studio is sponsored by Walmart. Welcome to the Fantasy Footballer's Podcast with your hosts, Andy Holloway, Jason Moore, and Mike Wright. Welcome in! What, you wanted a My Guy? Yeah, of course I wanted a My Guy time! Of course I wanted it! Because, you know what? It's My Guy time! Yes, it is. Yeah, see there, that's fine. Alright. That's fine. I'm the captain now. Friday, August 15th, the Fantasy Footballers, it's a... You write a song. It's a My Guy... You want to have your own lyrics? ...episode. Welcome in. We're doing well today. Oh, yes. This is a big day. It's a one-of-one. It's the My Guy Show. It is the 11th My Guy Show. According to Kyle, if you count the Dante Pettis pivot, this will give us 100 My Guys all time. Okay. Then we count it. So we're going to count it, the five days of Dante Pettis or whatever it was. But today, we'll be revealing our three My Guys, the flag plants for the 2025 season. The players that we are most excited about that represent a player that we fundamentally believe in their talent. What they represent in your fantasy football drafts. It is Friday, August 15th. You never know what wild cards are coming down the way. But we are going to reveal them here on the show today. There's been a lot of predictions out there. I know you two both put a post up that was people trying to guess them. Did anybody nail it? Did anybody get the three names on your list? I did not. I haven't gone back after the first few hundred, but I did not see one in the first few hundred that nailed all three. Mike, did you have anybody that got close? I have not, but I'm going to run this thing through and see if we... We'll double check it right now. But I haven't seen a three for three yet. All right. So we'll get into that very shortly. Start revealing the My Guys for 2025. We've got some news. We got some news we got to cover. It was breaking yesterday, right when the show released about Rashi Rice. We'll talk about that shortly. We've got time for some mailbag potentially today. We've got the UDK for Life giveaway. It's Friday, which means we want to remind you the live stream is Monday. So your opportunity to pick up the UDK before the giveaway is... Well, we're almost out of time here. Monday afternoon, we'll be doing a live stream event answering more questions and giving away an Ultimate Draft Kit for life as well as a signed Jamar Chase jersey. So the way you win that, go to ultimatedraftkit.com. Make sure you have picked it up. If you've already bought it, if you're already an Ultimate member, you're already in there to win. Yeah. If you're in the Ultimate Foot Clan subscription, which comes with the UDK, you are automatically... If you did this, you know, last year and you're signed up, you are in the running for it forever. All right. Let's jump right into that news. News and notes from around the league. Presented by Progressive Insurance. Well, we did the mock draft show. We talked about Rashi Rice later in the episode. We talked about him going in the eighth round and whether that was a good place for him to go in light of a suspension that is on the way. At that time, the assumption, like Jordan Addison, was that the suspension would occur before the season began. And it would be anywhere from two-day games. We got word yesterday morning that, from Adam Schefter and others, Rashi Rice's disciplinary hearing is now scheduled for September 30th. So, that means there's a lot of games before September 30th. He's likely to play the first four weeks of the season. The Chiefs play against the Chargers in week one, then Philadelphia, then on the road against the Giants, and then Baltimore. It's a gauntlet for those first four weeks. Every expectation on the draft cost of Rashi Rice was based on, hey, at some point, I'll just get him back, and then I'll have him for the fantasy playoffs and for the stretch run. And he represents, I mean, you made the case yesterday, or two days ago on the mock draft. That was yesterday. Yeah. You made the case that, like, the reason you're willing to spend the draft capital is because he represents a wide receiver one. It was different than the Addison argument. Yes. What's funny is, you know, we're doing the My Guy episode today, and spoiler, Travis Kelsey is not one. But I do know he was on the somewhat short list for Andy. I kind of toyed with him. I think right now, before today, the idea that Travis Kelsey gets off, you know, the first four, six, eight weeks gets off to a hot start when, you know. Which, older players, they're better at the front half of the year. Yeah. So, it made a lot of sense as a draft pick. But this news really hurts Travis Kelsey as a draft pick for getting off to a hot start. I mean, obviously, we still expect Rushy Rice to miss time this year. Yeah. So, I was going to lay the rest of that out. By the way, 2015, My Guy, Travis Kelsey, was Mike's My Guy in 2015. That was a long time ago. A long time ago. Seems like a good one, though. But the situation now is that Rushy Rice is going to probably play the first four weeks, have this hearing. We don't know whether it will be an immediate suspension. We think it probably will be at this point. That will be two to eight games. You also now have a bye week, right? You've got week 10. Week 10 bye week, yeah. Bye week. So, just to paint the worst picture here for your Rushy Rice gamble in the draft, it's you spend a pick on him. He plays four weeks. If he got to spend it eight weeks, which is in the realm of the outcome, they're expecting two to eight, then you miss another game with the bye. So, you would not have him from five to 13. And then, do you have the confidence coming back in a week 14, 15 that this guy that missed, you know, they get into a groove on their offense. They have all these other players doing things. He's going to come back week one and dominate. That's a tough bet. Like, to me, this is worse than the scenario that was already bad. I totally agree. We are. It's a. You have to be in a holding pattern, which I guess we don't even have time to hold because you won't know. He's. I still believe he can be a difference maker. There's a chance because, like, we're all we're all three of us expecting six. Is that where we are? That was my. I think Andy was at eight, but you're still OK. Yeah. But it's like there's a chance, I guess it's four. Yeah. And if it's four, then, you know, like the mock draft that happened with the eighth round in a 10 teamer, that's still perfectly fine. If it goes to six because of the bye week. Now you're really inviting some chaos of just having to hold him on your bench and then really hoping he's ready to go. He won't be on your bench. It's a tough situation. Once the suspension happens without IR eligibility. Right. Right. So instead of like trying to hold in the beginning of the year when you don't need there's no bye weeks right in the beginning of the year. So you maybe can get by with a player sitting there doing nothing. It's harder to have a roster spot filled up for those other weeks. You can make that argument, but I don't I don't really I don't see this as significantly worse from a strategy standpoint. I prefer to draft players who get off to a hot start. I want players that, you know, I want to start for no. It gives me more room to maneuver and make decisions and trades and waiver pickups that, you know, allow me space and time to prepare for the playoffs. Now, obviously, if Rushy Rice gets into week six and then his suspension comes down for eight weeks. OK, at that point, you can maybe just drop him, you know, but I like getting off to a hot start. And I we don't know what the suspension is going to be. He's obviously got this meeting on September 30th. I don't know if there's a way to push it into the next year still or not. It's still a possibility. I do like the fact that it's like, OK, if I draft this guy, you play him, I can play him to start the year. So you're good with the tougher schedule to start the year on purpose. You know, that is one of the things that I think is intimidating. So whereabouts, Jay, are you OK taking him? I'm OK taking him when he's basically not one of my starters. So round six or seven? Yeah, exactly. I would say round seven, I would pull the trigger still. Also, I get the NFL. I'm sure everyone there is extremely busy. Like, you know, multi-billion dollar industry. Right. I get it. Yeah, busy buying ESPN or whatever they're doing. They can't squeeze this meeting in? Like, what? How is it being planned this far in advance when they've known about the situation for... Like, when did it take place? Also, why do you need this meeting? Did Addison have this meeting? Or did they just go... I think they all get a chance to go, like, share their side. It does feel weird that it's the end of September. Maybe you need more time to gather information because his legal situation was so significant. I don't know. But that is the lay of the land as of today. What we know. And I'm sure we'll have updates for you. It makes it a... It is a gamble. It's a huge gamble. There could be that... You know, I don't know what the odds are. Maybe it's a 10% chance he gets pushed to another year. I mean, you get surprised. You take him in... If you get Rashi Rice in the sixth, seventh, eighth round... And he plays the whole year. And he plays the full season you just stole. So, it's wild. Dan Campbell said Sam Laporta. He's going to miss a little bit of time. It's been rumored to be only a few days, though. Still expected for week one. Yeah, he said it was not serious. Chris Godwin. At least the most recent report from Scott Reynolds said he would be shocked if he wasn't on the pup to start the year. Yeah, I mean, I expect he's going to miss the first month of the season and then come back slow. I have a funny feeling we'll talk about him a little bit more later. Shadur Sanders... Is he a my guy? Yeah, Rashi Rice, Chris Godwin, both my guys. Shadur Sanders, unlikely to play in the second preseason game with the oblique injury. That's a bummer for him. And then this is... I don't know. Beckham's agent must have paid Tom Pellicero. Wait, oh! He must have paid us. Why are we... We are choosing to put this in our show now. I didn't know who tweeted it. And I was... Before you jumped, I'm like, oh, I'm going to guess. This is Pellicero. Oh, you were right. Yeah, he... Of course it is. He's reporting that Beckham has drawn interest from several teams and plans to play. Tom's on the take! Tom's on the take. Tom! This is a scratch my back, I'll scratch your sitch. It really is. For all of his people. The reason he gets some good scoops is because he's like, yeah, okay, I'll put this out for you. Next week will be Beckham looks better than he's ever looked. No one... And it'll be all pro. Drawn interest from several teams is a flat out lie. Like, there is... If Odell Beckham Jr. signs a contract, I'll eat cold SpaghettiOs or whatever, you know, what do you do? Oh, SpaghettiOs or cottage cheese? Oh, that's disgusting. I'll eat that during the show. But it's not cold. That would be gross. But the nice thing is, I don't have to do that because no one's signing Odell Beckham Jr. In the year 2025. Oh, yeah. Look, I'm not going that far. I think he probably finds a team, but I don't think a bunch of teams are interested and I don't think it's going to be a good deal and I don't think he's going to do anything. But you can eat your humble pie or whatever it is. SpaghettiOs. That was... He's like, please sign with the team. I'm really... I've been on a health kick. I haven't had SpaghettiOs in a while. I would really like Odell Beckham. Oh, come on. This isn't real. Oh, okay. No, that's... All right. What are you trying to do back there, Matt? I don't know what you're doing. I was going to hit the breaking news button, you buffoon. He's trying to... You're trying to give us fake information during a recording? Just... Good Lord. We got like a Slack update that he's coming to Baltimore, but it was just him signing last year. Thanks for nothing, Matt. All right. That was News and Notes. Sponsored by Progressive Insurance. Quote today at Progressive.com. Progressive Casualty Insurance Company affiliates and third-party insurers. Not available in all states or situations. Coverage subject to policy terms, limits, and conditions. It is time for my guys. Nothing you can take can tear me away from my guys. I was told we were redoing the video drop for my guys this year. I canceled it. We should have. Did you cancel it, Matt? No. That's retro now, guys. It's cool. It's one of the worst things that I've ever seen. Horrific. That's just... Like, this episode is too important. It's fantastic. It's a horror movie. It's too big for that kind of... Those lips? That is disgusting. That was our prime animator. We paid him zero dollars. I do have an update as I see one person did get my three, and I haven't scoured Jason's entire one, but at least one person got Jason's. Oh, really? Yes. Oh, fantastic. We will send you a swag pack. Do we... I mean, do you guys want to go first? Do you want me to go first? What do you want to do here? Are you either? You're up. I'm up. Let's get this one out of the way. Jameson Williams. Jameson Williams is my guy for 2025. I alluded to the fact very early in the offseason that if his draft cost does not rise significantly, that he was most likely going to be here. Jameson Williams is currently going in the late fifth round on Sleeper, the late seventh round on ESPN. This was the wide receiver 19 last year. He's being drafted at the wide receiver 27. My guy is always around... You know, the story of a my guy is draft cost, upside potential. Last year, over 1,000 yards, seven touchdowns. He gets the end of rounds. He gets the rushing opportunity. He was one of nine players in the last decade with 1,000-plus receiving yards on fewer than 100 targets. But what I love about the offseason buzz, the vibes, all of the conversations around their offense, he's taking those next steps. He is a true top 12 potential type of wide receiver with the physical gifts, skills, and abilities that he has. He is moved all over the field and yet is a full-time guy. He was the primary X receiver in two wide, the Z in three wide, and then he lined up in the slot 36% of the time. He runs super high-value routes. It's the explosive play type of situation with him, posts, go routes, crossers. He was, you know, on those routes in particular, he's targeted more than Chase, more than Jefferson. And he's got those kind of skills and abilities. He's the 80-yard touchdown guy. He's the guy that can go out there and do major, major damage and play action. And unlike previous offseasons, the drumbeat right now is so positive around Jamison Williams. Yes. And so a true breakout for him, it's very clear that you can go from wide receiver 19. You get those target totals up. You get more of those opportunities. He's a threat for double-digit touchdowns. I think those are all within the, you know, the realm of outcomes. And you've got comments this offseason. I'll just give you some of that fluff because that's what my guys, you know, we're going to bring some of that up. John Morton. I mean, their offensive coordinator talks about Jamison Williams. He has been unbelievable. Unbelievable. In the meetings, the attention to detail. Excited to have him out there. It's going to be a breakout year for him. Previous years, it's like he's got a long way to go. He's got to figure a lot of things out. Dan Campbell was always equivocating. We always had doubts. Like if you look at... We used to make fun of the, you know, we talk about negative news is more important than positive news this time of year. And we would always bring up the comments like, this does not seem good for Jamison Williams. And it's completely 180 now. Yeah, no, it's been very, very positive. And when you really look at this, like you still haven't seen a full season out of him. That was a wide receiver 18 finish in half point in 15 games last year. He played 12 the year before. He played six as a rookie. You haven't gotten the whole picture of Jamison Williams yet. I don't know if that's why he is discounted right now. I don't know if the perception of Jamison Williams is just wide receiver 2-3. Like that's all you can think about or like it's going to be a very hit and miss. And I think you've got the opportunity this year to take it to the next level. So, you know, to me, that makes him a my guy. He's in that perfect range. A couple years ago, Evans was going much later. Finally, you know, he was starting with Baker. You hadn't seen that together yet. But I'm just very confident about Jamison Williams and the cost has not gone up. All right. Well, are you in, Mike, on Jamison Williams? No. Oh, I thought you were saying it might have. Yeah, I'm very in on Jamison Williams. The breakout came at the right time in his career to keep his draft costs down. You know, like had he done this a year ago, I think we are not talking about him going anywhere close to where he is going in ADP. So I there there's still I can still see a path where it doesn't work because, you know, they the offense is there. Even the other morning I was reading, I think it was a quote from Amon Ross St. Brown saying like, yeah, the offense isn't firing like it had been in past training camps. So like if we change it a little bit, it could not work out. But the but ADP wise for his upside, it's tremendous. That that is the one thing like when when I look at Jamison Williams, I don't know if I'm as bullish on the full breakout happening. He certainly has the skill set to do it. He has the offense to do it. The path is there. But when he's being drafted as the wide receiver 29, it makes no sense to me. Like it really doesn't like he he finishes a top 20 wide receiver last year with missed games. And now he's being drafted way below. Well, and the biggest challenge for me actually is how how much do I overspend on Jamison Williams? Oh, you've seen that because we've done mock drafts. The further you answer is too much. Well, there was one. There was a third round one time. But but the further you get in the draft, the more you can make that choice. Right. And the more that the ADP is variable and somebody might take a shot. And luckily, when I do my real draft, I won't be announcing all of my ambitions and picks in front of the entire staff like we did on the show yesterday. But like I am definitely willing to go up around and take that shot because I want the potential of Jamison Williams. All right. I'll go next. I'm going to go with the player that I think is potentially and probably the best single value in all of fantasy football. That's my man. George Kittle. Yeah. Georgie Porgie, Puddin' and Pie. Tight end San Francisco 49ers. Maybe the best tight end in the league right now. George Kittle's the man. OK, first of all, smelling salts. They're back, baby. They were outlawed for about a minute. George Kittle called up the office and said, I'm retiring there. Like, you can have your smelling salts. Second, he just signed a four year, $76 million extension. He's the highest paid tight end in the NFL. So if you're worried about the age, stop. That's dumb. The camp reports are glowing. Here's from ESPN's Nick Wagner. Kittle and Purdy have been in sync all camp and continue with the deep ball Tuesday. Maybe it goes without saying, but we'll say it anyways. Kittle has had a tremendous camp. There are zero signs of a drop off. And he looks every bit the guy who was the best all around tight end in football in 2024. I sent you that quote, and I know the first thing you thought when I sent you that quote was it was going to be something bad about George Kittle getting hurt. Because San Francisco has not avoided the injuries. No, they haven't. He is fine. He is well. And he will benefit from all those injuries. So here's the thing in 2025. Tight end strategy is very similar to how it's been pretty much the last decade. Either go early, early, early on a tight end stud or go late, late, late. OK, so the earlies are Bowers, Trey McBride, and Kittle. Well, if you go early with Bowers, who I love, he's awesome, you do not get Drake London or Jonathan Taylor or Bucky Irving or Josh Jacobs. Those are really impactful fantasy assets. If you go early with Trey McBride, you get no Chase Brown. You get no T. Meat Higgins. You get no Kyron Williams. You're sacrificing real studs. Now, if you go early with Kittle, you're missing out on Brees Hall or Terry McLaurin or Alvin Kamara. Oh, I want to miss out on Brees Hall. If I compare those options between, oh, I've got to take one of these three stud tight ends, I'm fine missing out on Brees Hall or Terry McLaurin or Alvin Kamara and getting Chase Brown and Drake London. Like, that sounds like the path. Kittle is too cheap compared to the other elite options, in my opinion. Literally, in the UDK, he's in a tier of his own. He's not moved. Well, he... That much. When I put him on the board, he's been like an all-year my guy. Did he move? He was in the fifth. Okay. Now, if you look at his ADP, he's a late third round, sometimes fourth round pick. But he's great. Here is, I think, the most telling stat. Because you say, well, okay, you sacrifice less to get Kittle than the other two guys. But can he be as good as those other two guys? He's older. Those other two guys are alphas. Over the last three seasons, we have, you know, a lot of times we're like, oh, look at this eight-game sample. Look at this six-game, you know, extrapolated to a 17-game pace. We have 38 games in the last three seasons where Brock Purdy has played with George Kittle in full games. Eight without, 38 together. In 38 games, he averages 12.67 half PPR points. Now, if you don't know how that is, like, how good is that? How good is that? Last year, the number one tight end did not score 12.67 fantasy points. He scored 12.2. That was Brock Bowers. The year prior, the number one. So it's number one good? It's number one good. The year prior, Sam Laporta scored 11.5 fantasy points per game. In 38 games together. Yeah. And so what's crazy is it used to be George Kittle, this amazing yardage guy, such a great yards after catch, not a red zone guy, not a touchdown guy. But that is completely morphed into a red zone monster. I mean, he's targeted 33% of his routes inside the 20. That's number one for all tight ends. 33. Sir. Sir. Sir. Sir. Have some respect. I just drafted Chase Brown again. There is a sanctity of numbers and singing. It's one of those days. But he has 18. Tomorrow, it's 44. What are we up to? For you? Yeah, probably. 18 red zone receptions. That was fourth among all pass catchers. And if you just look at the situations, final thing I'll say here, between the top three, which I love grabbing one of the top three and Kittle's the one I prefer. Bowers last year dealt with no one else to target. You had Jacoby Myers. I mean, the fourth highest target last year on the Raiders. And no running game. Yeah. And no running game in Las Vegas. Well, and no one to throw the ball to. But the fourth highest target on the Raiders last year was Alexander Madison. Nice. Yeah. Trey McBride. And obviously, this year, they spent their second round pick and their fourth round pick on Jack Bash and Deontay Thornton. So they've got other people to target to. McBride last year was the clear number one target. Way more targeted than Marvin Harrison. As a Cardinals fan, I would assume we all hope that Marvin Harrison's the number one target in this offense. Like, he develops into the number one. Not that that'll make McBride bad. But, like, he should be. He's the number four pick overall. With Kittle, he's got to deal with Debo Sam. Oh, no, no. Debo's gone. Okay. But Brandon Ayuk. Oh, wait. No, he's injured. Pop, pop, pop. That's right. I mean, we do love Jennings. Oh, wait. No, Jennings is currently injured. Okay. But Pearsall, just back from injury, maybe year two is better. I mean, Jacob Cowing is there. No, he's injured. Jordan Watkins is there. He's injured. DeMarcus Robinson, he's suspended. Like, George Kittle is so needed. He is a value. He is a stud. Don't overthink it. Draft George Kittle. Yeah, right now, as of today, Bowers, 204. McBride, 302. Kittle, 402. Yeah, the value is Kittle. And you don't sacrifice those upper echelon talents. Yes, it makes sense. All right, we'll take a break. We'll come back with Mike's first My Guy. All right, Mike, what do you got for us? It's 2025. It's not going to be Kelsey, I guess. No, it will not be Travis Kelsey for me. But I'm trying to figure out what order I wanted to go in. But Jason kept saying this guy's name. So we'll start there. Chase Brown. Yeah. Oh, man. I would draft him in any draft. Chase Brown of the Cincinnati Bengals. I am madly in love with the situation. And he, I mean, he has consistently been in the third round. He currently still is there on Sleeper, Yahoo, ESPN. He's looking like a mega value almost going into the fourth round. But here is my case for Chase Brown. Last year, you know, the Bengals, the situation, we know it's good for running backs. We just, we're not sure who it's going to be. The team started off with Zach Moss. And it wasn't working that great. And then Zach Moss gets injured. Chase Brown takes the job. And becomes an absolute fantasy superstar. Winning people leagues. He finishes the RB11. But from week nine on, he was the running back five in fantasy. In the final eight-game run, he was on pace for 414 total opportunities. Like, he was a true workhorse. And not just on the ground. As a receiver. 54 for 360 yards and four receiving touchdowns. That run I was talking about, week nine on, the most routes among all running backs. The second most receptions. The third most running back yards in that time. And when they get in close to the goal line, like, the Bengals throw. They're like, hey, Joe Burrows is the captain of this team. Let's open it up. And let's him be the, let's let Burrow keep throwing. So they end up throwing the ball to everybody, including Chase Brown. Checking out offensive coordinator Dan Pitcher earlier this summer. Chase Brown is going to, by the end of the season, be a household name. He is everything Austin Eckler was. Y'all know who he is. Talking about Austin Eckler. And honestly, to throw out the Austin Eckler comp is perfection. Chase Brown was a later, Chase Brown was a day three guy. Eckler was undrafted. But essentially a player who had to truly work his way up and become the focal point of the running back position for a team. And if you're out there saying, well, it's just, it's a one year thing, one year thing here for Chase Brown. And I'm saying absolutely. It is not going to be that the depth chart. You know, yeah, they took Taj Brooks in the third round and they got Samajay Pirine. Yeah, of course, Pirine's going to get some veteran snaps. The third day, not the third round. Or yeah, did I say third round? Yeah, Taj Brooks was a late round pick. Yeah, Taj Brooks was a day three pick. Samajay Pirine, well, he'll be in there. But he was in there when Joe Mixon was there. It's difficult. And one of the reasons why I think all of us are very enthusiastic about Chase Brown and have been. And it's really hard to make the case of how it goes poorly for him this season. That's one of the things. Like, there's not a really good, you know, nothing in the offseason, nothing in the training camp, nothing in the draft room, nothing in the depth chart, nothing in the offense. It's all positive. Yes. It's just, for fantasy players, not quite the pedigree or years of history to drive him up into a place where, like, eventually. Look, Eckler was very similar. Yeah, it took time. And Eckler did not get anointed a top five draft pick to start, you know, it was a committee year with Melvin Gordon. And then it became, oh, he can do more. And then it's like, oh, do I trust just the passing down back with Eckler? And, like, it took a lot of level ups. Yes, and it did. And so we can look at, you know, it's not apples to apples, of course, because these guys came from all different places in terms of draft pedigree. But it's looking at running backs over the last decade who hit 15 or more PPR points per game in year two, like Chase Brown did. The list is incredible. It's 18 running backs in the sample. And 12 of them maintained the 15 or more points per game. And so it's just like we're talking McCaffrey, Zeke, Melvin Gordon, Kamara, Chubb, Kyron, James Conner, Joe Mixon, you know, Johnny Taylor. It's just it is a list of hits. And then there's just there's a couple of misses in here. Trero CTN. But the point is, historically, this profile, especially pass catchers, it's turned into fantasy success. And there is there. The downside is not is not it's not in the ADP. He's not going in the second round, which I'm OK taking him in the second round. Like, I would be perfectly happy starting with a wide receiver. And Chase Brown is my RB1. And that's totally take him in the second round. I would totally be willing. We saw it already. I mean, we lived in evidence. We lived it last year when he was the running back five once he got the job. And I remember watching film as the Brees Hall manager and being so upset. We're watching games on one Sunday. And every time Chase Brown touched the ball, it's like this because at that point it was early on. It was like Chase Brown's a schlub. Chase Brown is a backup thrust into the starting role. And then I was like, every time Chase Brown touches the ball, he looks special. When Brees Hall touches the ball, he doesn't. And then it turned out, I think Chase Brown's special. I think he's better. He looks pretty good. Chase Brown, in terms of the explosive athletic metric, he's a 96th percentile guy. Like, this is a true athlete who he fell in the draft and it took him some time to establish. And he has established. All right. So, Jamison Williams, George Kittle, Chase Brown, the first three my guys. My second my guy. Amarion Hampton. All right. It is time for the rookie to take over. Talent, opportunity, the landing spot, the draft capital. I can't believe how it is just shaken out for him with the naugy stuff. I mean, this was a player that we did not know exactly where he'd go in the draft. On our film review of collegiate running backs, he was Jason and I's number one talent. To me. Well, number two. Ashton Jensen doesn't count as a rookie. Golly, I always forget Ashton Jensen. I know. He's deleted out of rookies. But yes. He's just like, yes. Of the rest, he was by far both of our favorites. You got it. And to me, when you looked at the college film, this was, you know, some college running backs, they've got a ways to go to get to that NFL level of consistency. To me, that's what you saw in film. True three down back. Great pass protector. And the word that kept coming to mind when I watched film on him from the college performances, smooth. He's just a smooth runner. He's smooth. It reminded me a little bit of like the way that, you know, Arian Foster, it was very smooth in terms of reading blocks. Not herky-jerky. Making the right decisions. No Pacheco in him. No. No Pacheco. No Kenneth Walker. Ground give me power. But he's a tackle breaker. He's in the hundredth percentile in yards after contact among all running back prospects. Good Lord. That's called the best of the best. We haven't heard a hundredth before. I've never heard that. I honestly, saying it out loud made me feel like I was lying. Like you can't. A hundredth. So you could just say like you're the best. Yeah. I think that's what I could have said. That's how we usually say it. He's in the hundredth percentile. We're going to start using that more. Anytime someone is leading in anything. He's hundredth percentile in yards so far this year. Yeah, it's correct. I mean, he's in the hundredth percentile. Technically, yards after contact among the RB prospects. He's one out of all. He's one out of all. Look, the draft cost is inevitably rising. Najee Harris, it's been slow going getting back from the injury and we don't know if he's there week one. We don't know if he's there week three. Regardless, you're not keeping Amari and Hampton off the field. This is going to be one of the stalwarts of your fantasy football championship run. He is one of only four ACC players in history with 1500 plus rushing yards and 15 touchdowns and back-to-back collegiate seasons. Lamar Jackson, Dalvin Cook, Amari and Hampton, and Travis Etienne. Those are the only four to ever do it. So yes, the cost is rising, but I don't care. You got to get them on your team and it's not the cost. I mean, look at that. It's never going to rise like Gentry. I was going to say, look at the contrast from Gentry to Hampton. Yeah. And you're telling me that it's a guarantee that Gentry has a better season? He does not check every box that we talked about the other day. Hampton does. Hampton does in terms of offensive line, winning team, workload. I do not have fear of Najee Harris. He can be a compliment. Do you want to know what it reminds me of so much? I think when I say this, everyone will be like, oh my gosh, it's totally the same thing. I don't know about that. Well, we'll see. Here's what I'm going to say. Omari and Hampton is to Ashton Gentry what Malik Nabors was to Marvin Harrison Jr. This was the clear, awesome, great prospect. I'll allow it. He is a good. He is a good. That works. He is a clear, great prospect. Everyone knew Malik Nabors was the dude. Yeah. But he wasn't Marvin Harrison Jr. He wasn't the generational prospect. Or what Brian Thomas was to Malik Nabors. Right. But it still cost a lot to get Malik Nabors, but not nearly as much as it cost to get Marvin Harrison. And to me, he's the right one to target. And Khalil Mack, this is a good quote because it's not just offensive coordinator. I can give you some Greg Roman quotes about how much they think of Omari and Hampton. And you know it by what they did in the draft. That was a shocker. They, they spend it on Omari and Hampton. They could have taken some other, they could have taken Travion, Mike's, uh, you know, favorite guy, but Khalil Mack, we were no one's perfect, right? No, you make mistakes, but no Khalil Mack on playing against Omari and Hampton in practice. I don't want to say how impressed, how he's impressed me, but I can tell you if you play football, then, you know, it's going to be fun to watch him play. And they talk about how good he is at finding like the hardest thing for a rookie running back is to take what's given to you. A lot of them want to make the big plays that they made their entire life in high school and in college. And in, you know, Reggie Bush was kind of, um, a victim of this when he came to the NFL. He was great in the passing game, but in the running game, he was so used to hitting home runs for the last 20 years of his life. Right. Omari and Hampton is a pros pro at running back. He is a guarantee to give you like his, his floor is so high, but his ceiling is so high and it kind of goes with the mystery bag tip from yesterday. It's like you get this rookie that really could be in the Ashton Gentry category, but without the Ashton Gentry price. So for me, my second, my guy, Omari and Hampton. Nice. The I'm, I'm in, you know, we've, uh, been kind of bringing this up the last couple of weeks of like, we're, we're at the point where you just have to push all your chips in on, on Hampton. The ADP is that of like the community hasn't. So I think this is a, like an area of the draft that you can exploit and get an, get an edge. And it's like right now, he's still fourth, fifth round. Yeah. He might jump into the third. Yeah. And that's fine. That is okay. Yeah. It's perfect. Like you need to re adjust how you, if you've been with us the whole off season, you have to readjust how you're thinking about Hampton. Yes. He's the weak one starter. It's no longer, how many weeks does it take until he takes over? He takes over now and Najee will be the backup for the season. JK Dobbins had nearly 200 attempts and over 900 yards and he missed four games and he has, and he has one strong leg. Right. Right. Yeah. As far as I know, Hampton has at least two. You know, I've, I've seen both legs. They're very good. JK Dobbins has like a stick leg and a, and a beefy leg. Omari and Hampton. He's got them quads. Yeah. Jason, you've got more of my guys to share. I sure do. And I'm very excited about this next one. Let's kick it off with. George Pickens. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. George. I had to pry George Pickens from Mike's cold, dead hand. Yeah. We did a Jersey swap. We did a Jersey swap situation. Um, we were on the, my guy board for months. Yeah. Let's put it that way. Yeah. Uh, it was, it was going to be Mike's or mine. I get them. George Pickens is a, I win. George Pickens is a wide receiver value that I think is completely mispriced. The talent, the perfect marriage of his skillset with the team needs and Dak Prescott's skillset is going to surprise people. Yeah. I mean, if you've been watching any of the camp videos, they're not, there's nonstop. Like just go to X and search George Pickens. You know, you search any player and you're going to see a touchdown from camp. But if you search George Pickens, you're going to see 12 touchdowns from camp there. And they're all different videos. He is all over the place. Right. He's a deep threat that matches Dak Prescott. And what are you going to do as a defense? Are you going to really focus on George Pickens? No, you're not going to focus. That's like, are you going to focus on T Higgins? You know, if you're, if you're playing against the Bengals, you don't have the option. You don't have the option. Cause there's got Jamar Chase over there. So T Higgins out there doing his thing in one-on-one coverage against your second best at best defender, if not your third best. And that's what is going to happen for George Pickens, except George Pickens is going in the sixth round. The hardest thing about George Pickens, the sixth round cost is very explainable. It's because it's three consecutive years of high expectations and not quite delivering. Yes. Like the talent of George Pickens has never been questioned. The output has always been like, what's going on? Yep. And then, and then you've got Steelers leaving the Steelers up, you know, when wide receivers leave the Steelers, they go to die. Right. You know, there's that, there's that argument, but that's really not fair because if you go on a case by case, like Antonio Brown was still good when he left. He just ended up taking a shirt off and leaving in the middle of, in the middle of the season. With Pickens, it does feel like you, you'd stolen from Mike, but like, did you get like a lit stick of dynamite? Like I sure did. And I'm going to toss it right over there against my opponent. Yeah. There you go. And it's going to go blah, blah. All right. Yeah. You're Najee Harris. Okay. So, uh, Oh, Oh no, you can't stop me. I'll say what I want. Oh no. Here's the thing. What you were just saying, the story with George Pickens has always been potential, right? Potential. Look, I'm just, I'm just, uh, I'm opening, I'm opening eyes here. It's my guys. What are you going to do? You can't, you can't stop us. All right. The potential for George Pickens. He is a, he is a contested catch. Awesome. Deep, uh, threat. You know, look in, in NFL history, there's only two wide receivers who before turning 24 had 2,800 receiving yards while being a 16 plus yards per reception player is George Pickens. And some dude named Randy Moss. He has that potential. The problem is Kenny Pickett, Mason Rudolph, Mitchell Trubisky. Those are big problems. Russell Wilson, Justin Fields. And you might say, Oh, Russell Wilson, Justin Fields. He had at least a decent chance. No, they were worse than those other names. Here is our names that come up in his therapy sessions. Yeah. Here is Pickens rank among wide receivers in catchable target percentage. So not his fault. Just like, could you have caught this pass headed your direction? Uh, his rookie year 25th. Okay. That's not too bad. His sophomore year 61st in catchable percentage. And then last year with his best wider, best quarterbacks ever 71st, he was 71st in catchable target rate. So like he didn't have the option to go be great because the passes weren't catchable over that span. Dak Prescott is seventh in pass success rate, sixth in completion percentage, eighth in passer rating. And here's a great step from Warren Sharp. I think this really highlights what I love the most about this fit and finish with George Pickens as a cowboy. The last two years, number one in passing yards on 15 plus yard go routes is Dak Prescott. Love it. Dak Prescott number two in most attempts on 15 plus yard go routes. Love it. George Pickens over the same two years. Number one in most receiving yards on 15 plus yard go routes. Number two in most catches on 15 plus yard go routes. This is a match made in heaven. It reminds me a little of the Baker Evans match because Baker was always a great downfield thrower. And he found his guy. And now Dak has a trustworthy downfield receiver. And if you look where they are used on the field, they are CD Lamb and George Pickens. It's an exact inverse. Like CD dominates the middle of the field, the line of scrimmage and the crossers. Pickens is going to be the boundary and the deep end zone guy. Do you think you can get consistency in fantasy for Pickens in light of like I'm sure some of the uncatchable target can be attributed to the fact he is a downfield guy? Yes. Yes, absolutely. I don't ever expect George Pickens to walk away being the number one in consistency. But you're going to have monster games. Where is he going right now? Right now he is the wide receiver 29. So he's not even being drafted as a wide receiver 2. He's in the 6th or 7th round depending on your platform. And here's my final takeaway is I just want to remind people, Andy, a long time ago you used to bring up you had a problem drafting wide receiver 2s for their team. Like you would draft a bad wide receiver 1 for a bad offense over a great wide receiver 2 on a great offense and you realize that was a mistake. And here's a stat that proves that. In the last 10 years, 10 sets of teammates have both finished as wide receiver 1s. And we've seen an average of 4 sets of teammates per year since 2010 that are both at the same time top 24 wide receivers. This is an offense that can't run the ball. Well, please, Micah Parsons, don't be a cowboy. Be a bad defense. Throw the ball a ton. And you can't cover George Pickens when you've got C.D. Lamb on the field. So I believe he is mispriced monster games. He, to me, is a lock as a top 24 wide receiver. And I think there's a world that exists where he is a top 12 wide receiver. Brandon Cooks was a touchdown machine a couple years ago when he was 30 years old. I was going to bring it up for you. The Cowboys year, when they went into the bye week, the schedule, the gates opened to the heavens. And C.D. Lamb and Dak went on the run of winning people championships. But in that time, from weeks 8 through 18, Brandon Cooks had seven touchdowns. He had, you know, in that, this is Brandon, an old Brandon Cooks. He had six games, if I'm counting right real quick, in that time period of double-digit fantasy points. And that was Brandon Cooks. That is not a. Yeah, that was old, washed Brandon Cooks. That is not the peak of his career, George Pickens. And who, like, yeah, he's not met expectations a lot of due to inconsistency. But it's like, maybe he's not a true number one. But maybe he's a 1B. Like, there's guys out there. Is T. Higgins truly a number one? The question is, I think, still fair to ask. But he's a great 1B. I would love a 6'3", super athletic, downfield contested guy who is 24 years old going into a contract year with a good offense. It does make sense. And the draft price is very attractive. All right, we'll take one more break, and we'll come back with our last four My Guys. All right, Mike. We took a little break in case you wanted to completely pivot to somebody else. It's your last shot. Right. Are you good? The pivot will not be happening. Well, I will say, a pivot did had to happen because oftentimes with these My Guys, I try to bring someone who I have been, you know, steady and higher than 80p on. But I haven't been talking about them ad nauseum over the offseason. This player was on the Ice and Fire show because he wasn't going to be in the My Guys part because everyone knows. But we got to the point where it's just, I can't resist. I can't stop it. Travian Henderson. Oh, boy. Travo Henderson, as I call him, the demon. He is an absolute speed demon. Like, just start with the athleticism. 95th percentile explosive score. You see that in all the camp highlights. If you saw the wheel route, yes, that the Minnesota Vikings misplayed. But that's the point of he's so fast. It is easy to misplay him in the receiving game. He's a second-round rookie. And you might start at the point of, okay, well, what if we have Cromagenev, Rabel, like, ah, the rookies. They got to earn it. What's the best way for a rookie running back to be able to earn playing time? Pass protection. How about pass protection? He is an unreal pass blocker. Henderson graded out as the best pass protector of the class at the running back position. Ball control. The dude does not fumble. The incumbent starter? He has fumbled. He has a massive fumbling problem. He has been benched. Ramondre? We're talking about Ramondre. What? Has been benched multiple times in his career for having a fumbling problem. The only reason that he got back on the field was because his backup, Antonio Gibson, fumbled more than he did. That was a fumbling problem. And, look, I'm going to keep it a little bit shorter because, like I said, the Ice and Fire show, if you want to go back, that was, was that this Monday? Yeah. Who knows what day it is? It was one of the days recently. But, like, I just laid it all out. But here, a quick summary. Rookie running backs taken in the first six rounds of redraft since 2011, 60% of them exceed their ADP expectations. And when you factor in rookies who saw two and a half or more targets per game, which Henderson has a specialty as a pass catcher, that jumps to an 80% of those drafted running backs exceed their expectations. And it took Andy, I think, a little bit longer to get on board with Henderson. But we're all at the point of our stat projections where we got him at more than 210 opportunities. He is a player that checks more boxes than we realize because of the projected win total for the Patriots. It's much higher than the average Joe would expect seeing what they did last year. This is a team that is on the rise, and Henderson is going to be a massive part of it. His ADP is going to keep going up. We're currently looking at the sixth round. He will not be there. He probably jumps into the fourth, and I have no problem with it. I didn't even know you liked him. All right. My final my guy. We're going back to this well. It's worked out very good in fantasy football for a couple of years. But that's not the reason why you believe is because it's happened before. The reason is the player himself and the talent he possesses. The third my guy. Tyler Warren. Tyler Warren, the tight end for the Indianapolis Colts, currently going in the ninth round on Sleeper. Much later on Yahoo and ESPN. This was pick 14 of the NFL draft. Yes, Laporta. Yes, Brock Bowers. It's been a good run. We're going to continue the run. And that's all built upon the true talent and ability on display from Tyler Warren. You can talk about Richardson or Daniel Jones all you want. Just like we talked about Gardner Minshew and Aiden O'Connell. He must have. Farva. Let's just throw out the ambiguity at quarterback. Let's throw out the ambiguity at wide receiver. I mean, we love Josh Downs, the talent. But I think we'd all agree. Josh Downs is not built like Jamar Chase. He's not built like Ted Aron McMillan. No, he's a felt smaller guy. He's got a role on the offense. Pittman. He's a good player. He's not a great player. He has a role on the offense. They spent the draft capital on Tyler Warren. You saw it on display in the first preseason game. The type of routes that he ran. Three targets. Three receptions with the starters. Never left the field with the starters. Had a hitch route. Sat down in the middle of the zone. Had a deep out for a first down. Saw the yards after the catch. On display. Looking like Trey McBride out there. Had a play-action crosser for another big play. The talent of Tyler Warren. I don't think people understand. Like, you look at Brock Bowers and what a dominator he was in college. This was... He's not far behind. Tyler Warren was... He had more receiving yards versus man coverage than any other receiver in college football last year. That's what Tyler Warren was capable of. They even used him in, like, some wildcat formations. He is an athlete. His per-route metrics were incredible. He had a higher targets per route run than Brock Bowers. He had a higher yards per route run than Brock Bowers. This... That's wild. This is a... And Brock Bowers was what? Pick... Was he 13th? Yeah. He was in the mid-teams. Same range. Like, and going to a very similar situation where you desperately need a culture-changing receiver, a mismatch. I gave you the numbers against man coverage. He's going to be that mismatch on every single play. And when you're betting on a receiving option, look, you get the ball in Indianapolis. We don't know what this team's going to do, but I don't think that we look at them as a... You know, this is not a supreme defense. They're going to need to throw the football. Daniel Jones or Richardson, either of those quarterbacks knows. We've got to get the ball to this guy with the huge catch radius, with the after-the-catch ability. And here we are again, the rookie tight end. It doesn't matter. It's a ninth-round pick. We're drafting a bunch of other guys that we know a lot about. You want the most compelling argument against Evan Ingram is Tyler Warren in terms of the draft cost. Because... Him and Loveland. Yeah, they represent so much more upside. I think the floor is great for Tyler Warren. I think you can take him and start him. And even if he doesn't give you a Bowers year, you're still happy you took him in terms of consistency at the position. He's got, you know, a natural feel for the game of football that I think is just impressing me more and more and is free. So that's part of the MyGuy equation. Take these players that have so much tremendous upside, get them late, throw them on the team, and suddenly everybody wants them in like three or four weeks. There's not a person out there, not a soul that will trade Brock Bowers right now. If you're in a dynasty or keeper league, you cannot get that player. And we've got a new generation of tight ends on the way. And they're going to be the perennial all-stars. And I think Tyler Warren is that guy. He's got that dog in him. Oh, I was going to start my argument with it. Like certified dog, watched his college tape. And I am, you know, we're in year 11 of this show. So we've seen a lot of things, a lot of trends come and go, a lot of shifts in ADP of where guys are going. It's pretty surprising to me that we've had two years in a row that a rookie tight end has finished at the number one spot. And these two guys of Loveland and Warren, both with the draft capital, both with teams where, like, Warren goes into, he could be, like, he could get that Brock Bowers target share. And then Colston Loveland, while he doesn't project as the number one, he goes to an offensive situation that should be very plus. And these guys are going late. Like, the fact that drafters didn't react to it is surprising to me. It shows the overpowering effect of team vibes. Because Detroit was awful before Laporta got there. Their offense was not special. And the Raiders, terrible. No idea what's going on at quarterback. And I think that's... Still were terrible on offense. Right. They were. They were terrible. And that's like, Brout Bowers could be very, very good. But then you look at Tyler Warren and the question marks, they all surround the other positions on the field. It's just a great ADP bet. All right, I'm doing another rookie ADP bet. Because if you want to say a player is mispriced, there is a first-round NFL draft pick at wide receiver who is on a great offense. Where the role is pretty much already established from week one as an on-the-field, you know, 100% type of player. And he's being drafted in the double digits, like 10th round? Oh, baby. This is a guy, pre-NFL draft, I was in love with. I think he is the best wide receiver of this draft class, personally. That doesn't necessarily mean he has the highest fantasy ceiling. But he is... But he might. He very well could. I mean, he profiles kind of like a Chris Godwin, right? Like, he is a really just solid route runner, great hands, good athleticism. He's going to have the boundary work. He's just like a kind of a perfect actual NFL wide receiver. And how did Chris Godwin do last year? There's not a guarantee that people know who he plays for. So, Emeka Ibuka... Listening to this show. That's how double-digit rounds he is. Yes. Right now on ESPN, he's at the back of the 11th round. If you're on ESPN, goodness gracious, 10th round comes, just pull the trigger on Emeka Ibuka. Rookie wide receiver for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Chris Godwin last year in the first seven weeks was the wide receiver two for this team, for this offense, with Baker Mayfield. And Godwin, we just talked about on the news today, he's not there week one. He's probably going to start on the pup. If he misses the... Pup is four games minimum, by the way. Four minimum. If he comes back in week seven, that makes sense. And I'm not worried about when he's back either. He'll start a little bit slow. But Ibuka will establish himself as such an important piece of this offense. Mike Evans will take a step back eventually. I think Mike Evans is a good pick this year. But this is an offense you want pieces of. And this is a double-digit first-round rookie. And if you're not familiar with Emeka Ibuka, because we talk a lot about the other two first-round wide receivers, and we haven't mentioned enough about Ibuka, he was a five-star recruit going into Ohio State. He was ahead of... In the 2021 high school draft class, he was ahead of Brian Thomas Jr., ahead of Xavier Worthy, ahead of Malik Nabors, ahead of Marvin Harrison. And then what did he go and do in college? Oh, he just set the Ohio State record for receptions all time while playing next to Garrett Wilson and Chris Olave and Marvin Harrison and JSN. He's a stud. He's a great wide receiver. If you listen to what is being said from Tampa Bay, everything is Ibuka. Everything is... He is a pro's pro. He's a great blocker. He knows every position. He knows the playbook perfectly. He's where you want him to be every time. There was... Baker Mayfield was talking with the Kelsey brothers. You know, and... Never heard of those guys. The question came from Jason Kelsey. Baker, what are you looking forward to this year with Tampa Bay? That's the question. Completely open-ended. Like, what are you looking forward to? His answer? Emeka Ibuka is an absolute stud. He's a real deal. Like, you know, he's not saying, like, what player? How are the rookies? He's just like, what are you excited about this year? He's like, dude, that dude's legit. I've seen Todd Bowles. We know Todd Bowles. He's been out here in Arizona. He's been the defensive coordinator. He's been a head coach before. I've listened to him talk. This is not a guy that is flowery with his language. He is kind of like one of those professional coaches. Keeps it close to the vest. He had no problem just basically saying that Ibuka was the real deal in every regard. So I agree. I'm so excited for what he represents in fantasy and for this team and for Baker. Right? Like, you want Baker to have a solidified, you know, set of wide receivers, and it feels like you just got this next generation guy as Godwin and Evans begin to, you know, wind it down. Yep. So Ibuka, your final my guy. My final my guy. Double-digit round auto selection. Yep. I love it. I am fully in on Ibuka too. And guess what? There is one more rookie wide receiver that I am all in as well. Tedaroa McMillan. TMAC. TMAC out of U of A. He plays for the Carolina Panthers. His ADP right now is about the back of the fifth on Sleeper. The other platforms are lagging. They are trying to catch up. So he's a rookie. So I can't talk about his production as a professional. Just I can talk about him as a prospect. Like I said, U of A. How did he do there? Well, year two, over 1,400 yards. His final year, year three, 84 for 1,308 touchdowns. We're talking about a player with the most receiving yards in school history. Starting there, that's a great place to start. Then you talk about the comparables. Marvin Eloquin, he's one of our writers. He especially helps us out on the Dynasty Pass, which is available in the UDK+. But he has his own way of looking at players, and he's just comparing them. And for McMillan, when you factor in weight, because this is a big dude. McMillan profiles as a true number one and X receiver, 6'5", 2'12". So when you factor in size, draft capital, McMillan was an early declarer. He didn't play his fourth year of college eligibility. The names that show up are shocking because it is DeAndre Hopkins, Drake London, and Julio Jones. This is exactly who you would like to be associated with if your goal is to be a good wide receiver in the NFL. Now talk about back to the production in college. You know, you've got to be able to play against zone. You've got to be able to play against man. Well, the good news is against zone coverage, he was excellent. A 2.82 yards per route run when defenses are playing zone against him. Smart player figuring out how to find the space and get it done. Man coverage, even better. And that's what I want out of my X wide receiver. I want a guy who can just bully a number one corner. We're talking three and a half yards per route run. This is absolute ridiculous production for him. Then you look at where is he going in the draft? Fifth round. Okay. Laporta. Jason's ice player from the Fire and Ice episode. Joe Mixon. Got a bum foot. David Montgomery. The backup running back on his own team. And then there's Ted Rowan McMillan. He is sitting in the perfect place for his draft pedigree and who he can become. He's not pulling a Marv. He's not pulling a Malik Neighbors. Who went in the second and third round or so last year in ADP. He's going in the back of the fifth round. There is very little risk for the upside that he could bring you. I don't know if in the very, very beginning of draft season I believed he was an alpha. I definitely believe he was an alpha. And I don't think that everybody understands what I think is the gap between McMillan and the rest of their roster at wide receiver. Right. I think, I'm sorry, Adam. How dare you? I'm sorry, Adam. I think it is a massive, massive gap between those. We're talking, you know, Garrett Wilson and everybody else he's ever played with not named Devontae Adams. We're talking, you know, Terry McLaurin and everybody else he's ever played with in Washington. It is a, it's very obvious to me, even from the preseason, what we've seen so far, the plan. The plan is you're the driver of the offense. It's not any of these other guys. We'll, we'll hand the ball off to Leggett every once in a while. We'll give a crosser to Thielen. Coker, you can contribute in the red zone. I really, truly believe Tedderola McMillan is there. Full plan on offense. And I think you'll see it sooner than later and regret not drafting him sooner than later. Speaking of the plan, let's go to the team level. We got the Carolina Panthers and I get it. There's a stink. There is a stench among the Carolina Panthers. They have been bad for years, but you have to look at where things are going from week 12 on. That's actually David Tepper is what you're smelling. Yeah. No, I recognize that smell anywhere. It's a little Tepper in here. It is bad. From week, look, Bryce Young, we all saw it the beginning of last year that you, you had the hope when the season opened and you went, holy crap. Bryce Young is a catastrophic bust, a true team killer that they traded up for. And it's just a total disaster. Gets benched for Andy Dalton. Okay. Bryce Young eventually gets the opportunity back. And Bryce Young plays extremely well. From week 12 on, Carolina averaged 25, the team, 25 points per game. That's 12th in the NFL. Like, that's a top half offense. They are on the way. And then talking about- You are on Team Bryce Young. I am. And it's a scary place to be. I will be honest about that. But the reason I kept saying an X receiver, an X receiver, head coach Dave Canales funnels targets to the X receiver. Two years ago in Tampa Bay, Mike Evans, monster season. Last year, before he worked his way off the team, remember what? Deontay Johnson was having a resurgence. When Andy Dalton took over because we were getting competent quarterback player, all of a sudden Deontay Johnson is a weekly must-start guy. Because this is the offense that Canales runs. I do believe that's why Canales, when McMillan felt him, they were like, holy crap. This is incredible. Rush the card in. Go get him. Going in the fifth is sensational. Oh, and we'll have one last point. We love teams that have a high-powered offense and their defense stinks. Carolina's defense last year allowed 534 points. The most of all time. Excuse me? The most, the 100th percentile. I believe that's the 0th percentile. Well, the 100th percentile in giving up the most points. And maybe they improve. But to go from the most points ever given up of all time to a good defense, that's going to take some time. So I love Ted Arroyo-McMillan in the fifth. He is a very juicy upside pick. He is a stud. So my three, Jamison Williams, Amari and Hampton, Tyler Warren, Jason. I've got George Kittle, George, and Emeka Obuka. That's right. It's just George. It took me a second. You got two Georges. I do. He tried to find a third. Yeah, but there's not a lot of good off. George, you want to go backwards? I think you'll get zero points. It's got to be first names. We got Chase Brown. We got Travion Henderson and Ted Arroyo-McMillan. All right. There it is, everybody. The My Guys for 2025 breakers. Breakers? Breakouts. Sleepers, Bustin' Value episodes coming next week. The UDK for Life giveaway is on Monday. Check out the Ultimate Draft Kit at ultimatedraftkit.com. And guess what? It's a lot more than a giveaway. You will also have the number one tool to help you dominate on draft day and set the foundation for your team. It is living. It is breathing. It is updated every single day. I made changes in the middle of this show. Yeah. We make sure right up to kickoff that it is actually what we would do, what we believe, our tier-based rankings, all of our stuff. We're recording new player profile videos whenever news changes and breaks. It's a very good tool. I've never heard someone get it and regret it. All right. That's ultimatedraftkit.com. 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