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Drafting Individual Defensive Players Most fantasy
leagues involve only offensive players but drafting individual defensive players is
becoming more common. We were recently invited to participate in Fantasy Football Indepths IDP
Challenge so I decided to do a statistical analysis to find out when individual defensive
players should be selected in these types of drafts. The Average Draft
Position Analysis Article compared the average draft position of players at each
position with their end of year statistics. This statistical analysis is quite similar to
that one but instead of looking at average draft position I will look at statistics from
the previous season. It is not a perfect method but the situation does not change as much
for defensive players from year to year so most people draft based on statistics from the
previous year. I wanted to improve on that since as mentioned quite a bit in other
articles, some statistics such as touchdowns are much harder to repeat than others. In the
case of defensive players, a player such as Patrick Willis is much more likely to have
over 150 tackle again than Antonio Cromartie is of having 10 interceptions again. The
statistics used in IDP leagues are usually tackles, assists, sacks, safeties,
interceptions, touchdowns, forced fumbles and fumbles recovered. In order to calculate
which of those are easier to repeat, I looked at statistics from the past five years and
imputed them in a program which gives a formula that best predicts how the player did in
the following year. For example, to have the most accurate average prediction of a
players tackles you take his previous years number, multiply it by 0.54 and
add 23. This means that players who have 100 tackles will generally average 77 (0.54 x 100
+ 23) in the following year. Here is a chart that shows the best formula to predict each
of the statistics mentioned earlier:
We
have projected the statistics for the top 300 defensive players based purely on these
formulas and they are adjustable to your scoring system which you can download here. Please note that these statistics are not
adjusted for games played so some players will be lower than they should be but it should
give you a general idea of what you can expect from defensive players this year. Although
the rankings can be interesting to look at the part that interests me the most is the
difference in points between players. The scoring system used for Fantasy Football Indepths IDP
Challenge is the following:
The
starting lineup consists of two defensive linemen, two linebackers, two defensive backs
and offensive players of course. There are twelve teams in the league so each week there
will be a total of 72 defensive players starting, 24 at each position. The following chart
shows the difference between the top players fantasy points projections and the 24th
bests projections at each position:
As
you can see the biggest difference is between linebackers but if you take out Patrick
Willis and Brian Urlacher, the difference drops to 14.4. This means that with this scoring
system, other than Willis and Urlacher you should draft defensive linemen before
linebackers and defensive backs. These differences are quite low however because as you
can see in our Average
Draft Position Analysis Article, the difference between the top wide receiver and the
36th receiver (since most leagues start three WRs) is about 125 fantasy points. It is
about the same for running backs while for tight ends its around 100 and around 60
for quarterbacks. In other scoring systems these differences may be higher but in this
case, defensive players are worth much less than players at every offensive position. The
main reason to explain this is that teams will generally have four defensive linemen,
three linebackers and four defensive backs on the field at the same time but they will
only have one starting quarterback. Furthermore, some defensive player statistics such as
touchdowns and interceptions are very hard to predict and vary a lot from year to year. In conclusion, as
shown by the statistics above, defensive players in IDP leagues are not as valuable as
some may think. We will analyze individual players more within the next few days but it is
very unlikely that we will draft any defensive players before the 11th round (after 2 QBs,
3 RBs, 4 WRs, 1 TE) and probably later depending on how the draft goes. We could be
tempted by Patrick Willis earlier but he is likely to be gone by that time. Although the
scoring system may be different in your league, it is quite obvious that defensive players
do not have very much value and you should wait until much later in your drafts to select
them. |
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