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Scott White

Tricks of the Trade: Bush name has value

By | Fantasy Writer


I try not to let natural phenomena throw me for a loop. Usually, they have reasonable explanations that I can understand on some distant level. The phases of the moon, the lengthening and shortening of days, the Patriots' undying allegiance to Kevin Faulk -- they all make sense to me.

But I can't for the life of me, on this earth or any other, figure out why Reggie Bush remains owned 91 percent of Fantasy leagues.

It's silly. It has no basis statistically or realistically. He's the third option out of the Saints' backfield and hasn't had more than 10 touches in a game since Week 3. Even when Lance Moore missed Sunday's game with an ankle injury and the Saints had to rely on Bush as their primary receiver underneath, he still handled the ball only nine times.

So what is it? His celebrity status? His college highlight reel? The fear that if he winds up on someone else's roster, he might just break a long one?

Hey, I've already said I don't understand it. But for some reason, some select group of people in the world, including the vast majority who play Fantasy Football, like him.

Sounds like a ripe opportunity to get whatever you can for him.

Trade No. 1: Bush bash
Team A gets:
Reggie Bush
Team B gets:
Braylon Edwards

"Oh, but Bush scores touchdowns," you tell me. "Anyone who scores touchdowns has value."

Fantasy Football - Tricks of the Trade: Bush name has value : FantasyNews.CBSSports.com

True, he has scored four touchdowns this season, so if you happened to start him one of those four games, he wasn't completely useless. Do four touchdowns in the first half of the season automatically mean four in the second? I don't know. I'll be the first to admit his skewed touchdown-to-yardage ratio might not be an accident. Perhaps the Saints prefer to use him at the goal line, where running backward for 5 yards in order to gain 2 makes some small amount of sense.

But even if he continues to score touchdowns with semi-regularity, how much do they really help your Fantasy team? Only once this season has he scored more than 10 points in a game, and it came back when Thomas had a sprained MCL.

Clearly, he has talent -- that college highlight reel says so -- but he hasn't gotten results with that talent, and barring another injury, he has no chance to. I see him as nothing more than a glorified handcuff option, a player more deserving of 60 percent ownership than 90.

Edwards hasn't offered reliable Fantasy numbers either, but at least he has the opportunity as a starting wide receiver with All-Pro talent. His role only stands to increase between now and the end of the year as rookie quarterback Mark Sanchez continues to develop. He showed signs just before the team's bye, catching four passes for 74 yards and a touchdown in Week 9.

Is he must-start? No, but neither is Bush. I'll take the one whose playing time gives him more upside from week to week.

Winner: Team B for getting some measure of value for Bush.

Trade No. 2: Boldin the pitiful
Team A gets: Anquan Boldin, Julius Jones, Terrell Owens and Colts DST
Team B gets: Calvin Johnson

This trade looks lopsided, and it is. Only one team gets a player it can start without worry.

It's not the team you'd think, of course. You'd think the one getting four players -- all plenty recognizable in Fantasy -- would at least stumble into something useful. But it's that other team, the one getting the player with 29 total receiving yards over the last five weeks, that got the better end of the deal.

Stop and consider how much (or how little) those four players will actually do for Team A. Owens has become little more than waiver fodder, averaging 35.1 receiving yards in eight games. Jones can contribute when he has the right matchups, but he rarely takes advantage of the few opportunities he gets. The Colts DST has had its moments, but defenses are interchangeable based on matchups and, other than the very best, don't have much value on their own. The only one of these four with any real significance is Boldin, making this trade essentially a straight-up swap of Boldin for Johnson.

And I'm sorry, but I'd rather have Johnson.

Boldin has issues. Not only did he miss last week's game with a high ankle sprain, but he questioned the coaching staff's decision to sit him -- a conflict magnified by his offseason trade requests. During an otherwise healthy season, he has yet to put up 100 yards in a game, has only twice put up 80 and has scored exactly one touchdown. Steve Breaston has done more than that, and between Breaston and Larry Fitzgerald, Boldin could continue to get the short end of the stick.

Johnson won't. He didn't make a big splash in his return from a knee injury last week and hasn't done much even when healthy this season, but he has to eventually. He's by far the most talented receiver on the Lions, who have to put the ball in the air every week just to stay in contention. Quarterback Matthew Stafford, even as a rookie, has thrown for at least 200 yards in four of his first six games. You don't think Johnson will eventually get his share of those yards?

Even if he doesn't, even if the fluke continues, he's no worse than Boldin.

Winner: Team B for getting someone to bite on an attractive-looking deal that really doesn't have much substance.

Trade No. 3: The lesser of two evils
Team A gets: LaDainian Tomlinson and Todd Heap
Team B gets: Jason Witten

Who cares, right?

Tomlinson and Witten have stood out as two of the biggest busts of the Fantasy Football season, neither living up to expectations and both forcing their owners to seek out alternatives. Swapping the two only prolongs the misery, delays the inevitable and gives the illusion of progress. Nope, there are no winners in this deal, only losers.

So says the loser.

I see value here for one team because I think one of these players still has a chance to resuscitate his season. I'll give you a hint: It's not Tomlinson.

When a player struggles, instead of bemoaning the struggles themselves and resigning to the belief they'll continue, I try to get to the bottom of them. If I don't have any good reasons why they happened, then I don't have any good reasons for them to continue.

I do have good reasons they won't continue for Witten. He still plays a consistent role in the Cowboys' passing game. He hasn't disappeared, ranking second among all tight ends in receptions. He just hasn't gotten the big plays and the touchdowns he did in years past. Why? You could blame the loss of Terrell Owens, which allowed defenses to direct their attention to Witten, but all that changes with the emergence of Miles Austin. The distribution of talent gives you some hope that, with all those touches, Witten will eventually break a few long ones.

Plus, he's a tight end. Just how much can you expect from him? Even with his struggles, he ranks 15th at the position, so one big game would vault him right back into the top 10.

Tomlinson, on the other hand, is old. He's injury prone. He splits carries with Darren Sproles on a team that has become increasingly pass-heavy. He has plenty of reasons for his demise, which is why I take it more seriously than Witten's.

Winner: Team B for trading a player who doesn't have a chance to rebound for one who does.

Trade No. 4: Turn that Brown upside down
Team A gets: Ronnie Brown, Steve Smith (Giants) and Matt Hasselbeck
Team B gets: Calvin Johnson, Eli Manning and Willis McGahee

Brown has lost some of his luster over the past three weeks -- a development that has everything to do with numbers. During that stretch, he's averaging 41 rushing yards per game and 2.9 per carry.

It's enough to make even the most loyal Brown supporters question his prospects for the rest of the season. Were those 443 yards and six touchdowns he accumulated over the first five games a fluke? Does he lose too many carries to Ricky Williams? Will he have a chance to succeed with an unproven quarterback under center?

With that line of questioning comes doubt, and with that doubt comes worry, and with that worry -- if you're lucky -- comes a willingness to deal.

Not for just anyone, of course. No, any deal for Brown would have to include someone just as useful -- someone like Johnson, who I like, you like, and the majority of the Fantasy-playing community likes because he offers elite potential.

But Brown offers something even better.

In case you didn't notice, his struggles came against the Saints, Jets and Patriots. Kind of puts it in perspective, right? In the weeks that follow, he faces the Buccaneers, Panthers, Bills, Jaguars, Titans and Texans, who offer about as much resistance as a fitted bed sheet. The only thing close to a difficult matchup for him the rest of the way is Week 13 against the Patriots. He faces the Steelers in Week 17, but by then, who cares?

That schedule doesn't just hint of a resurgence. It suggests he could conceivably outscore every running back the rest of the way. He certainly gets the touches to make it happen.

As much as I like Johnson, the Dolphins' schedule makes this deal too enticing to pass up, especially since Team A also gets a satisfactory replacement for Johnson in Smith. Team B doesn't get any sort of replacement, not unless you think McGahee still has value.

Winner: Team A for buying low on a player destined to get hot.

Trade No. 5: Hightower within reach
Team A gets: Tim Hightower
Team B gets: Brandon Jacobs and Roy E. Williams

I'll admit it upfront: Hightower has become a reliable Fantasy option.

He matters more this year than he did as a rookie last year, when he scored 10 touchdowns despite only 399 yards rushing and a pitiful 2.8 yards per carry.

Has his rushing improved this year? Not by much, but he has become a viable receiver out of the backfield, actually putting up more yards through the air (307) than on the ground (283). That ability combined with his presence at the goal line has enabled him to score 10 points or more in five of his first eight games.

That's consistency.

But it comes with a limit since the Cardinals lean so heavily on their passing game. Hightower never gets 20 carries, meaning he never gets 100 yards, so while he might continually score more than 10 points, he has yet to score as many as 15.

Enter Jacobs -- by all accounts, one of the biggest disappointments in Fantasy this season. He has yet to rush for 100 yards in a game and has scored only two touchdowns to Hightower's five, limiting him to fewer than 10 points in six of his first nine games.

But unlike the Cardinals, the Giants do like to establish a running game, routinely giving Jacobs more than 20 carries per game. He hasn't exactly rolled over with them either, averaging 4.1 yards per carry. He scored 15 touchdowns last year and still gets enough carries at the goal line for me to think his luck has to turn eventually.

He has the better opportunity for breakout games, ones where he scores 15-20 points and single-handedly delivers you victories. I'll take that upside over Hightower's consistency, especially since Jacobs exactly isn't a boom-or-bust type himself. You can't really disappear when you get that many touches.

Winner: Team B for using Hightower's current value to acquire a player with more upside.

You can e-mail your Fantasy Football questions to DMFantasyFootball@cbs.com. Be sure to put Attn: Tricks of the Trade in the subject field. Please include your full name, hometown and state and we'll get to as many as we can.

 
 
 
Player News
Richard Seymour
Seymour gets bonus from Raiders
Richard Seymour, DT, OAK
2/12/2012
News: The Oakland Raiders have paid DL Richard Seymour his $7.5 million roster bonus, ensuring he'll stay with the Raiders next season. The Raiders could have released Seymour and his massive contract, but chose instead to keep him and not make wholesale changes to the roster.
Analysis: The 32-year-old Seymour played in all 16 games for the Raiders in 2011 as he recorded 29 tackles and six sacks. His six sacks were his highest total since notching eight in 2008 for New England. Seymour is just a low-end option when it comes to IDP formats in Fantasy play.

Rey Maualuga
Maualuga charged by police
Rey Maualuga, MLB, CIN
2/11/2012
News: Bengals LB Rey Maualuga has officially been charged by Cincinnati police with misdemeanor assault stemming from a bar fight last weekend. This report comes from The Associated Press. The Bengals had no comment.
Analysis: Maualuga is likely to be at least fined for this incident, especially after his 2010 DUI arrest cost him two game checks. He won't miss any playing time, though. Maualuga is just a low-end option in IDP formats heading into next season.

Hines Ward
Report: Steelers to cut ties with Ward
Hines Ward, WR, PIT
2/11/2012
News: NFL.com reports that the Steelers are not expected to bring back receiver Hines Ward for 2012. This news comes according to NFL Network's Jason La Canfora. "He has one year left on his deal worth $4 million," said La Canfora. "According to my sources, he won't be back there. So that's $4 million off the books."
Analysis: Ward has said he'd be open to taking a pay cut, but it sounds like Pittsburgh is ready to just cut ties with him. Ward would be a No. 4 WR and that means he'd likely have to play on special teams, which he likely would not want. Ward will have little Fantasy value entering 2012, that is for sure.

Kevin Faulk
Faulk contemplating retirement
Kevin Faulk, RB, NE
2/11/2012
News: New England RB Kevin Faulk is contemplating retirement after being a healthy inactive for the Super Bowl loss to the Giants, reports the Boston Globe. "That morning, when I got the word that I wasn’t going to dress . . . wow," Faulk said. “I went in the room, cried a little bit, because 75 percent of me knew that this could be my last game playing, not playing, just dressing. If I dress, there could be that chance that I could play. So that really crushed me a whole lot. Went into my room, read my Bible, read so many different Scriptures, so many different chapters in the Bible, until it was time to go to the stadium. [I took] my exit physical after the game and the trainers give me a big hug and that’s when I knew, like ‘Wow, that might be it'."
Analysis: Faulk was drafted in 1999 and the 35-year-old RB is a member of New England's 50th anniversary team. He didn't actually declare himself retired, leaving the door slightly ajar on his 14th NFL season. Faulk might finish his career with 31 total touchdowns, 15 receiving and 16 rushing. He had a solid career, but isn't a recommended Fantasy option if he does return next year.

Rob Gronkowski
Gronkowski has ankle surgery
Rob Gronkowski, TE, NE
2/10/2012
News: The Boston Herald reports that Patriots TE Rob Gronkowski underwent successful surgery Friday to fix his ailing ankle. The surgery was an arthroscopic procedure to clean out the ankle. Gronkowski played on a high-ankle sprain in Super Bowl XLVI, battling ligament damage to make two catches for 26 yards. The estimate is that it’s a 10-week recovery. That should allow him to be ready by mid-April, possibly for mini-camp.
Analysis: Continue to monitor what happens with Gronkowski this offseason, but he should be fine for the start of the 2012 season. Consider Gronkowski the No. 1 TE heading into the season. We can see Gronkowski being drafted as a Top 15 pick in all leagues, but it's a safer option to take him toward the end of Round 2 or beginning of Round 3 in all formats.

Reggie Wayne
Wayne unsure of future
Reggie Wayne, WR, IND
2/10/2012
News: Reggie Wayne told ESPN that while he'd like to stay with the Colts, he's just not sure if they want him. Wayne is scheduled to be a free agent this offseason and understands that his time might be over in Indy after 11 years. "I have been there 11 years and I would prefer to end my career a Colt. However, in due time those feelings could subside," he said. "I haven't heard anything from them yet, so maybe I am not as important on the chain of command as I should be. But either way, I'm cool. I have nothing bad to say about the Colts. ... My phone hasn't rung yet. It's only fair I worry about number 87 first. When I'm signed, then I can weigh in more."
Analysis: Wayne had a mostly horrible season thanks in big part to Peyton Manning being on the sideline. He caught 75 passes for 960 yards and four touchdowns, three coming in the final six weeks of the year. We don't think his 2011 is indicative of a slow-down in his game, but uncertainty about who he'll catch passes from and what his role will be keeps him from being a receiver we can get excited about. For now consider him a No. 3 Fantasy WR worth a mid-round pick.

Peyton Manning
Differing views on Peyton
Peyton Manning, QB, IND
2/10/2012
News: There are two differing reports on Colts QB Peyton Manning as the saga continues early this offseason in his recovery from missing this past season from neck surgery. CBSSports.com NFL Insider Mike Freeman reports that there remain a handful of team personnel men who have serious doubts he will ever play again or at the very least will miss most of next season. But, according to NFL.com, former Colts vice chairman Bill Polian, who was fired in early January, said he believes Manning will be fine in 2012 after he last saw Manning throw in late December. "It's marked (improvement) from where he was back in September," Polian said. "He threw it accurately, he threw it with a good, tight spiral, and he threw it with velocity. Generally, he looked like a pretty confident quarterback out there." Polian also indicated that Manning was able to make a variety of throws and throw across his body, which differs from a report on NFL Network earlier this week. Polian said that Manning's recovery is "coming, but coming slowly. But, nonetheless, its making progress."
Analysis: The bottom line with Manning is until the public sees him throw or work in practice we won't know where he's at in his recovery. The Colts also have to make a decision on his contract or else he can sign with a new team, with Arizona, Miami and Washington the likely suitors. If healthy, Manning will remain a No. 1 Fantasy QB no matter where he plays, but he has to prove that his neck is 100 percent. Continue to monitor what happens with Manning, and hopefully he can resume his career without any problems.

Fred Jackson
Jackson cleared, contract coming
Fred Jackson, RB, BUF
2/10/2012
News: Fred Jackson has been cleared to return to football activities for a couple of weeks following a broken fibula, but the good news for him doesn't stop there. The official team website reports that Jackson has been promised by team GM Buddy Nix that he will receive a contract extension, with the timeline set for before the 2012 season. Jackson is slated to be in a contract year as it stands now, but a new deal would change that. "Fred and I have talked," said Nix. "We want to extend Fred. I'd like for Fred to finish his career as a Bill. He's meant a lot to us. I've got great respect for him. We do want Fred back and we do intend to try to work out a deal with him. I've told him that. What we said is what we're going to do."
Analysis: Jackson told the site that he's ready to get started in 2012 after missing the last six games of the season with a broken leg. While he was sidelined, C.J. Spiller stepped up and put some good moves on the field, complicating the Buffalo running back situation heading into the new year. Chances are the Bills will lean on Jackson as they have been, but Spiller could take a bigger share of the run-game workload than in the past, and that could put a cap on what Jackson is capable of doing. He's also 31 years old but doesn't have the wear-and-tear that typically comes with rushers over 30. If the Bills extend Jackson then it will be clear that he's a part of their future and a potential 15-touch-per-game back. If not, he'll be in a contract year and could play well in hopes of cashing in after next season. Either way he represents a solid value as a No. 2 Fantasy RB worth a pick between late Round 3 and early Round 5.

Lavelle Hawkins
Hawkins gets three-year deal
Lavelle Hawkins, WR, TEN
2/10/2012
News: The Tennessean reports Friday that the Titans have agreed to terms on a contract extension for WR Lavelle Hawkins, who had his best season in 2011. He had 47 catches for 470 yards and one touchdown.
Analysis: Hawkins has minimal Fantasy value heading into 2012, especially if Kenny Britt (knee) returns at 100 percent. Keep an eye on what happens with the Titans receiving corps, but ignore Hawkins on Draft Day in most leagues.

Kenny Britt
Britt 'working hard'
Kenny Britt, WR, TEN
2/10/2012
News: The Sports Xchange reports that new Titans GM Ruston Webster said WR Kenny Britt, who suffered a torn ACL in September and had surgery in early October, should return in time for training camp in 2012. He said Britt appears to be a fast healer and is ahead of schedule in his recovery. "Kenny has been working hard and he's coming fast, probably even a little faster than I thought he would. So I'm real happy about that," he said. "We expect to have him out there for training camp. The good thing about his injury, is there is a good thing, is it happened early, and he's a very strong young and bounces back very quickly. We're hoping and planning to have him back for training camp."
Analysis: Britt is expected to make a full recovery in time for the start of the 2012 season, and hopefully he can come into training camp in shape. We consider Britt a low-end No. 2/high-end No. 3 Fantasy WR when healthy, and he is worth drafting with a mid-round pick if his knee proves to be 100 percent.

 
 
 
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