Mock Draft Musings: PPR Edition

Mock Draft Musings: PPR Edition

My 2019 fantasy football journey unofficially began Monday when I took part in my first mock of the year — a 14-team PPR experts draft to be printed in the annual RotoWire Football magazine

My work on said magazine has kept me too busy for other mocks or best-ball leagues, but it's also given me a solid foundation of knowledge to prepare for the upcoming NFL season. I'll continue to refine my draft strategy throughout the summer...or at least that will be my excuse when I'm glued to my computer drafting five best-ball teams at the same time on a beautiful, sunny day in June.

While this first mock might be viewed as a rude awakening, I'll cut myself some slack given that I was drafting against the likes of Chris Liss, Mario Puig, Brad Evans, Dalton Del Don and Brandon Marianne Lee. There's also the reality of picking 13th, which forced me to start my draft with Travis Kelce rather than one of the three-down studs at RB (scroll down to see my picks in list form).

No regrets on the Kelce pick, but with the benefit of hindsight I'd switch my selection at No. 16 from Dalvin Cook to Julio Jones. My thinking was that Cook has a chance to enter the elite tier at RB based on his talent and the lack of depth behind him in Minnesota. Of course, there's a reason Cook is usually still available in

My 2019 fantasy football journey unofficially began Monday when I took part in my first mock of the year — a 14-team PPR experts draft to be printed in the annual RotoWire Football magazine

My work on said magazine has kept me too busy for other mocks or best-ball leagues, but it's also given me a solid foundation of knowledge to prepare for the upcoming NFL season. I'll continue to refine my draft strategy throughout the summer...or at least that will be my excuse when I'm glued to my computer drafting five best-ball teams at the same time on a beautiful, sunny day in June.

While this first mock might be viewed as a rude awakening, I'll cut myself some slack given that I was drafting against the likes of Chris Liss, Mario Puig, Brad Evans, Dalton Del Don and Brandon Marianne Lee. There's also the reality of picking 13th, which forced me to start my draft with Travis Kelce rather than one of the three-down studs at RB (scroll down to see my picks in list form).

No regrets on the Kelce pick, but with the benefit of hindsight I'd switch my selection at No. 16 from Dalvin Cook to Julio Jones. My thinking was that Cook has a chance to enter the elite tier at RB based on his talent and the lack of depth behind him in Minnesota. Of course, there's a reason Cook is usually still available in Round 2  — injury history first and foremost, but also concerns about the general state of Minnesota's offense behind a shaky line.

I still prefer Cook to a few of the players drafted ahead of him in this exercise — namely James Conner and Joe Mixon — but it was a mistake to pass on Jones under the optimistic delusion that a WR like Robert Woods or Brandin Cooks might be available for me in Round 3 at No. 41 overall. Instead, I felt pigeonholed into drafting RBs with my next two picks, selecting Kerryon Johnson and Devonta Freeman rather than reaching for WRs that land outside the top 40 of my overall rankings (Kenny Golladay, Calvin Ridley, Sammy Watkins, Tyler Boyd, Allen Robinson, etc.).

The draft confirmed my most important observation from prior ADP analysis: I prefer the RBs over the WRs in the range of picks 40-60. The WRs all start to blend together after the first few rounds, while RBs available at No. 40 or later included the two guys I drafted plus Josh Jacobs, Phillip Lindsay, Derrick Henry, Kenyan Drake, James White and Tarik Cohen (remember, this is a PPR draft). 

Lindsay, Henry, Drake, White and Cohen finished top 16 among RBs in PPR scoring last season, and each player besides White (No. 7) has a decent shot to see more work in 2019. In fact, I should've drafted Lindsay instead of Freeman — that's actually a bigger regret than passing on Julio in Round 2.

With Kelce and three RBs in place, I hammered WR in five consecutive rounds with Sterling Shepard (pick No. 69), Larry Fitzgerald (72nd), Anthony Miller (97th), Mecole Hardman (100th) and Marquise Brown (125th). Can't say I'm thrilled about taking Shepard and Fitzgerald in those spots, but a glance at the alternatives doesn't inspire much regret.

Hunter Henry, who went one pick after I took Shepard, wasn't a realistic option with Kelce already on my roster. It does leave me to wonder if it's better to have Julio + Henry or Kelce + Shepard? I think most people would lean toward the former, but I actually disagree given that Julio outscored Kelce by only 33.3 PPR points last season, while Shepard's 180.5 points put him ahead of all but five TEs.

Now let's take a look at my actual draft, then compare it to what I think I should've done with the benefit of hindsight, followed by what a conventional approach might've yielded. (This was only a 13-round draft, so we can assume my bench would have two more players in a typical league.)

My Actual Draft

R1 (No. 13) - TE Travis Kelce

R2 (No. 16) - RB Dalvin Cook

R3 (No. 41) - RB Kerryon Johnson

R4 (No. 44) - RB Devonta Freeman

R5 (No. 69) - WR Sterling Shepard

R6 (No. 72) - WR Larry Fitzgerald

R7 (No. 97) - WR Anthony Miller

R8 (No. 100) - WR Mecole Hardman

 R9 (No. 125) - WR Marquise Brown

R10 (No. 128) - RB Jalen Richard

R11 (No. 153) - D/ST Philadelphia Eagles

R12 (No. 156) - QB Lamar Jackson

R13 (No. 181) - K Michael Badgley

What I Probably Should've Done

R1 (No. 13) - TE Travis Kelce

R2 (No. 16) - WR Julio Jones

R3 (No. 41) - RB Kerryon Johnson

R4 (No. 44) - RB Phillip Lindsay

R5 (No. 69) - RB Latavius Murray

R6 (No. 72) - RB Rashaad Penny

R7 (No. 97) - WR Anthony Miller

R8 (No. 100) - WR Mecole Hardman

 R9 (No. 125) - WR Marquise Brown

R10 (No. 128) - WR Tyrell Williams

R11 (No. 153) - D/ST Philadelphia Eagles

R12 (No. 156) - QB Lamar Jackson

R13 (No. 181) - K Michael Badgley

A More Conventional Approach

R1 (No. 13) - WR Julio Jones

R2 (No. 16) - RB Dalvin Cook

R3 (No. 41) - WR Kenny Golladay

R4 (No. 44) - RB Devonta Freeman

R5 (No. 69) - TE Hunter Henry

R6 (No. 72) - RB Latavius Murray

R7 (No. 97) - WR Anthony Miller

R8 (No. 100) - WR Mecole Hardman

 R9 (No. 125) - WR Marquise Brown

R10 (No. 128) - QB Jared Goff

R11 (No. 153) - D/ST Philadelphia Eagles

R12 (No. 156) - RB Kalen Ballage

R13 (No. 181) - K Michael Badgley

It looks like I still have a lot of work to do this summer, considering I'm not quite sure which of these three drafts is best (Ok, Option B is the best, but it's kind of close, right?). The common thread is my satisfaction with Miller, Hardman and Hollywood at their respective spots, making up for shaky WR selections (Shepard, Fitzgerald) in Rounds 5 and 6 of the actual draft. 

Want to Read More?
Subscribe to RotoWire to see the full article.

We reserve some of our best content for our paid subscribers. Plus, if you choose to subscribe you can discuss this article with the author and the rest of the RotoWire community.

Get Instant Access To This Article Get Access To This Article
RotoWire Community
Join Our Subscriber-Only NFL Chat
Chat with our writers and other RotoWire NFL fans for all the pre-game info and in-game banter.
Join The Discussion
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jerry Donabedian
Jerry was a 2018 finalist for the FSWA's Player Notes Writer of the Year and DFS Writer of the Year awards. A Baltimore native, Jerry roots for the Ravens and watches "The Wire" in his spare time.
Ryan Grubb and the History of College Coaches Headed to the NFL
Ryan Grubb and the History of College Coaches Headed to the NFL
10 Sneaky Tricks For Your Upcoming Rookie Draft (Video)
10 Sneaky Tricks For Your Upcoming Rookie Draft (Video)
NFL Draft Decisions: Navigating Make-or-Break Moments
NFL Draft Decisions: Navigating Make-or-Break Moments
Dynasty Startup Draft LIVE! Superflex; ROOKIES Included! (Video)
Dynasty Startup Draft LIVE! Superflex; ROOKIES Included! (Video)