RB2 By Committee: PPR

Jeff Pasquino's RB2 By Committee: PPR Jeff Pasquino Published 08/10/2015

Over the past few years, there have been two very popular articles written by our very own Chase Stuart that look at an interesting approach to building a fantasy team with late value picks. Based upon the theory of using both Strength of Schedule ("SOS") and taking two players as a combination to build one very good player, he has discussed both Team Defense by Committee ("TDBC") and Quarterback by Committee ("QBBC") as a general fantasy league strategy. In general I think that this is a wise move because very early on in fantasy drafts there are a ton of RB and WR prospects to go after to build a great team. While there are a few studs at QB and also a few choice defenses, I do not see a huge need in leagues to pursue either too hard in the beginning stages of a fantasy draft.

So with this in mind, I started to think about what else can be done with the committee approach. Tight end? Perhaps. Wide receiver? A possibility, but it might be better to look at third WR options than any other option. What about running back? Hmmm, that's really intriguing. What if you could grab two running backs later in the draft that could combine to perform on a RB2 - or even RB1 - level, based solely on their current projections and their schedule? Now we're talking. This really got my attention, so I went after this one first. Let's take a look at how I went about this and then we can digest and discuss the results.

THE GROUND(GAME) RULES

So how to begin? Defenses and quarterbacks are relatively easy to "committee" together. There's usually only one QB and certainly only one team defense per NFL club, so the approach is pretty simple as far as picking out which players / teams to try and pair up. When it comes to running backs, the line is not quite so easy to draw, but I needed some basis to pick which players it made sense to try and combine for a decent committee. I decided that I would use the following criteria to decide which players to start with for evaluating:

CRITERIA #1 - RB25 AND BEYOND

This seems pretty simple. If we want to have a duo that puts up RB2 numbers, that means we want RB24 or better production - else we would just draft RB24 (Trent Richardson) or higher and forget the whole idea. So here is the list of players with which I started, based on their Average Draft Position (ADP):

ADP Player ADP Player
RB25 Jonathan Stewart RB38 Duke Johnson
RB26 Giovani Bernard RB39 Devonta Freeman
RB27 Joique Bell RB40 Bishop Sankey
RB28 Ameer Abdullah RB41 Ryan Mathews
RB29 Tevin Coleman RB42 David Johnson
RB30 Rashad Jennings RB43 Charles Sims
RB31 LeGarrette Blount RB44 Danny Woodhead
RB32 Shane Vereen RB45 David Cobb
RB33 Isaiah Crowell RB46 Reggie Bush
RB34 Doug Martin RB47 Knile Davis
RB35 Tre Mason RB48 Darren Sproles
RB36 Darren McFadden RB49 Jay Ajayi
RB37 Chris Ivory RB50 Montee Ball

Table 1: Running Backs RB25-RB50 Based on PPR ADP

Great, now we have 26 guys to pair up and see how they do. That makes 325 potential committees, so there had better be a decent one (or several, we hope) out of all of those couplets. Now, before I go over the method of how to pair them up and the results, we need one more rule:

CRITERIA #2 - NO MORE THAN ONE RB FROM ROUND 5 AND ONE FROM ROUND 6

This could get tricky here, but understand the overall goal. The point of RB2BC is to "free up" the first 4 rounds of your fantasy draft to pursue 3 receivers (especially in PPR leagues) after grabbing a stud RB in Round 1. This also gives you the flexibility of grabbing two receivers and a stud QB or TE, depending on your personal preference, or even to get RB2 and have the "RB2BC" be your RB3. Flexibility is the name of the game here. We all want value in our drafts, and having the ability to grab two RBs in Rounds 5 and 6 to act as our RB2BC gives us that ability.

Here is the good news - all the running backs on the list above has an ADP that is Round 6 or higher (later). It might even be possible to push this into a Round 6 and Round 7 RB pair.  We will have to keep that goal in mind when we look at the results because it would not make sense to expect to get two Round 6 running backs in one of these combinations based on their ADP.

So what do we do now to figure out some RB pairs?

CRITERIA #3 - USE FOOTBALLGUYS' RB STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE

This sounds pretty simple, doesn't it? Just take the RB Strength of Schedule to figure out when certain players are more likely to score well. What I did is similar to what the Projections Dominator and Draft Dominator do for you - take the projected fantasy points and slice them up over 16 weeks based on the strength of schedule. I call this result the "distributed fantasy points" for each back.

After I had all 26 running backs with distributed fantasy points on a weekly basis, I just compared all of the possible RB pairs to find the best duos for RB2BC. So here we are - time for some results.

Rank Running Back 1 Running Back 2 Value
1 Giovani Bernard Tevin Coleman 191.6
2 Jonathan Stewart Giovani Bernard 189.8
3 Giovani Bernard Shane Vereen 189.7
4 Giovani Bernard Joique Bell 189.5
5 Giovani Bernard Rashad Jennings 186.7
6 Giovani Bernard Chris Ivory 184.9
7 Giovani Bernard Isaiah Crowell 184.3
8 Giovani Bernard Danny Woodhead 183.7
9 Giovani Bernard Ameer Abdullah 183.6
10 Giovani Bernard LeGarrette Blount 183.6
11 Giovani Bernard Devonta Freeman 183.1
12 Giovani Bernard Duke Johnson 181.5
13 Joique Bell Shane Vereen 181.1
14 Jonathan Stewart Shane Vereen 181
15 Jonathan Stewart Joique Bell 180.1
16 Tevin Coleman Shane Vereen 179.8
17 Jonathan Stewart Tevin Coleman 178.9
18 Shane Vereen Chris Ivory 178.2
19 Jonathan Stewart Rashad Jennings 178
20 Giovani Bernard Bishop Sankey 177.7
21 Giovani Bernard David Cobb 177.6
22 Joique Bell Isaiah Crowell 177.6
23 Joique Bell Chris Ivory 177.6
24 Joique Bell Rashad Jennings 177.3
25 Giovani Bernard Darren Sproles 177.1
26 Joique Bell LeGarrette Blount 177.1
27 Giovani Bernard Darren McFadden 177
28 Tevin Coleman Rashad Jennings 176.9
29 Giovani Bernard Tre Mason 176.6
30 Giovani Bernard David Johnson 176.1
31 Joique Bell Tevin Coleman 176
32 Ameer Abdullah Shane Vereen 175.3
33 Tevin Coleman Isaiah Crowell 175
34 Giovani Bernard Ryan Mathews 174.9
35 Shane Vereen Devonta Freeman 174.9
36 Giovani Bernard Charles Sims 174.8
37 Rashad Jennings Chris Ivory 174.7
38 Jonathan Stewart LeGarrette Blount 174.7
39 Giovani Bernard Jay Ajayi 174.6
40 Giovani Bernard Doug Martin 174.5
41 Tevin Coleman Chris Ivory 174.3
42 LeGarrette Blount Shane Vereen 174.2
43 Shane Vereen Danny Woodhead 174.2
44 Joique Bell Duke Johnson 173.9
45 Giovani Bernard Knile Davis 173.6
46 Jonathan Stewart Ameer Abdullah 173.1
47 Joique Bell Devonta Freeman 172.2
48 LeGarrette Blount Chris Ivory 172.1
49 Tevin Coleman LeGarrette Blount 172
50 Jonathan Stewart Devonta Freeman 171.7
51 Joique Bell Danny Woodhead 171.7
52 Ameer Abdullah Rashad Jennings 170.7
53 Joique Bell Darren Sproles 170.4
54 Rashad Jennings Devonta Freeman 170.2
55 Ameer Abdullah Tevin Coleman 170.1
56 Jonathan Stewart Isaiah Crowell 170.1
57 Rashad Jennings LeGarrette Blount 170.1
58 Shane Vereen David Johnson 170.1
59 Tevin Coleman Darren Sproles 169.8
60 Jonathan Stewart Darren Sproles 169.7
61 Rashad Jennings Danny Woodhead 169.1
62 Shane Vereen Isaiah Crowell 168.8
63 Ameer Abdullah Chris Ivory 168.7
64 Shane Vereen Charles Sims 168.7
65 Giovani Bernard n/a 168.6

Table 2: PPR Running Back #2 Committee Pairs

As we can see from Table 2, we have some very good pairs to select from for RB2BC. There is one running back outside of the Top 24 that is projected to outpace several Top 24 RBs in fantasy scoring in 2014 - Giovani Bernard - so expect to see his name appear quite often as I build these pairs.  I could almost stop right there, but I need to be thorough as the ADPs tend to get very fluid as preseason wears on, and we need to make certain we have the very best pairings in case our draft plans go awry.  So digging in, there are 64 pairs that are worth more than or equal to Giovani Bernard by his lonesome, so it looks like there will be a number of options.  Let's also take a look at how often some of these guys show up on the table:

Running Back Frq Running Back Frq
Giovani Bernard 23 Darren Sproles 4
Joique Bell 12 Charles Sims 2
Shane Vereen 12 David Johnson 2
Jonathan Stewart 10 Duke Johnson 2
Tevin Coleman 10 Bishop Sankey 1
Rashad Jennings 9 Darren McFadden 1
Chris Ivory 7 David Cobb 1
LeGarrette Blount 7 Doug Martin 1
Ameer Abdullah 6 Jay Ajayi 1
Devonta Freeman 5 Knile Davis 1
Isaiah Crowell 5 Ryan Mathews 1
Danny Woodhead 4 Tre Mason 1

Table 3: PPR Running Back #2 Committee Pair Appearances by Player

As we can see from Table 3, two RBs in addition to Bernard show up on this list with a lot of regularity – Joique Bell and Shane Vereen.  In fact, as I mentioned earlier, Bernard is projected to be worth more on his own than Carlos Hyde (ADP of RB18) himself.  That tells that this tier of RB18-30 is pretty up in the air as far as who will do the best.  All the more reason to get a favorable pair when it comes to strength of schedule.

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER

Now that we have 64 possible pairs that are better than Giovani Bernard, what exactly does that mean? Should Bernard be the basis of our comparison? Of course not. Remember our goal - find a pair of running backs that can combine for RB2 (or better) fantasy production. To figure that out we need a better metric, so here are the projections for RB1 through RB24, using PPR:

ADP RB Rank Player Team FPs
1 1 LeVeon Bell Pit/11 268
12 2 Matt Forte Chi/7 260.8
5 3 Eddie Lacy GB/7 251.5
3 4 Jamaal Charles KC/9 251.3
9 5 Marshawn Lynch Sea/9 248.3
4 6 Adrian Peterson Min/5 248.1
15 7 Arian Foster Hou/9 240.5
14 8 C.J. Anderson Den/7 234
26 9 Justin Forsett Bal/9 233
20 10 DeMarco Murray Phi/8 230.7
18 11 LeSean McCoy Buf/8 223.6
23 12 Jeremy Hill Cin/7 211.7
52 13 Joseph Randle Dal/6 197
40 14 C.J. Spiller NO/11 196.8
35 15 Lamar Miller Mia/5 195.1
34 16 Frank Gore Ind/10 192.9
37 17 Mark Ingram NO/11 186.9
30 18 Melvin Gordon SD/10 185.4
43 19 Andre Ellington Ari/9 185.3
39 20 Alfred Morris Was/8 181.9
53 21 T.J. Yeldon Jac/8 173.4
41 22 Latavius Murray Oak/6 170.8
49 23 Todd Gurley StL/6 170.3
62 24 Giovani Bernard Cin/7 168.8
38 18 Carlos Hyde SF/10 166.3
56 25 Jonathan Stewart Car/5 159.3

Table 4: Projected PPR Fantasy Points for RBs 1-24

Based on Table 4, we see some things that catch the eye.  First, the projections and the ADP do not line up well at all. There is a total jumble from RB12-18, with RB13 (Joseph Randle) and RB14 (C.J. Spiller) projected to finish above where their ADP suggests.  Both Andre Ellington and T.J. Yeldon look to be value picks as well.  Next, it jumps out that only 16 running backs are projected to score over 190 points.  Now, to be fair, these running backs in Table 4 have a giant “zero” on their bye week, while our RB2BC duos never have a week off.  To compensate for that, we should add in 5-10 points for a bye week lineup fill-in that someone who owned of these players would use.  Even with an extra 5-10 points, however, only 20 running backs would be over 185 projected points.  Looking at our possible pairs, we have six pairs that meet or beat 184.9 fantasy points, which would put those duos comparable to projected RB21, T.J. Yeldon (173.4 + 10 points with a bye week replacement).  This tells us that choosing the correct pair can give us the result we wanted - RB2 production on the cheap.

Now, to look for the best bargains available, let's take one more final look at these pairs, focusing on those that project to be comparable to at least 175 total points:

Rank Running Back 1 Running Back 2 Value ADP1 ADP2
1 Giovani Bernard Tevin Coleman 191.6 26 29
2 Jonathan Stewart Giovani Bernard 189.8 25 26
3 Giovani Bernard Shane Vereen 189.7 26 32
4 Giovani Bernard Joique Bell 189.5 26 27
5 Giovani Bernard Rashad Jennings 186.7 26 30
6 Giovani Bernard Chris Ivory 184.9 26 37
7 Giovani Bernard Isaiah Crowell 184.3 26 33
8 Giovani Bernard Danny Woodhead 183.7 26 44
9 Giovani Bernard Ameer Abdullah 183.6 26 28
10 Giovani Bernard LeGarrette Blount 183.6 26 31
11 Giovani Bernard Devonta Freeman 183.1 26 39
12 Giovani Bernard Duke Johnson 181.5 26 38
13 Joique Bell Shane Vereen 181.1 27 32
14 Jonathan Stewart Shane Vereen 181 25 32
15 Jonathan Stewart Joique Bell 180.1 25 27
16 Tevin Coleman Shane Vereen 179.8 29 32
17 Jonathan Stewart Tevin Coleman 178.9 25 29
18 Shane Vereen Chris Ivory 178.2 32 37
19 Jonathan Stewart Rashad Jennings 178 25 30
20 Giovani Bernard Bishop Sankey 177.7 26 40
21 Giovani Bernard David Cobb 177.6 26 45
22 Joique Bell Isaiah Crowell 177.6 27 33
23 Joique Bell Chris Ivory 177.6 27 37
24 Joique Bell Rashad Jennings 177.3 27 30
25 Giovani Bernard Darren Sproles 177.1 26 48
26 Joique Bell LeGarrette Blount 177.1 27 31
27 Giovani Bernard Darren McFadden 177 26 36
28 Tevin Coleman Rashad Jennings 176.9 29 30
29 Giovani Bernard Tre Mason 176.6 26 35
30 Giovani Bernard David Johnson 176.1 26 42
31 Joique Bell Tevin Coleman 176 27 29
32 Ameer Abdullah Shane Vereen 175.3 28 32
33 Tevin Coleman Isaiah Crowell 175 29 33

Table 5: Top 33 PPR RB2BC Options for 2015

In prior years,  I would have said that we should focus on the best of the bargain bin - pairs of running backs that include no more than one RB with ADP of RB27, and possibly both backs with ADP of 30 or higher. This year, with the value you can steal with getting Giovani Bernard in Round 5, I say to throw that plan out (or make it "Plan B") and just go get Giovani Bernard in Round 5.  No matter who you pair him with in Round 6 or 7 - Joique Bell, Tevin Coleman, Rashad Jennings or Shane Vereen - you should have 186+ points and have a RB2BC that projects to be at or near a higher end RB2.  Taking Bernard in Round 5 and then snapping up Coleman in Round 6 is the safest way to play it as Coleman should last until the last pick of Round 6 in most drafts, although his ADP could begin to rise if he gets more work as the lead Atlanta back in the preseason.  For all of these reasons, I am recommending that the RB2BC this year is Giovani Bernard and Tevin Coleman.   Take Bernard in Round 5 and Coleman and Round 6 and be happy that you stole a virtual mid-tier RB2 by waiting on the position.

Here is a final summary of the combined schedules for Giovana Bernard and Tevin Coleman, and when the committee approach suggests starting each one:

Wk Suggested RB Opponent
1 Giovani Bernard at Oakland
2 Giovani Bernard San Diego
3 Tevin Coleman at Dallas
4 Giovani Bernard Kansas City
5 Giovani Bernard Seattle
6 Tevin Coleman at New Orleans
7 Tevin Coleman at Tennessee
8 Tevin Coleman Tampa Bay
9 Giovani Bernard Cleveland
10 Giovani Bernard Houston
11 Tevin Coleman Indianapolis
12 Tevin Coleman Minnesota
13 Giovani Bernard at Cleveland
14 Tevin Coleman at Carolina
15 Giovani Bernard at San Francisco
16 Tevin Coleman Carolina

Table 6: Suggested PPR RB2BC Schedule Plan

The committee approach is not a perfect one, but having this knowledge prior to your fantasy draft can prove to be invaluable if you decide to adopt this approach.  If all the players on your starter list are gone, goiong with a committee can save your team and help you deal with the loss of bigger names.  The method is also a big help in "Best Ball" leagues, where lineup decisions are not necessary every week.  That's exactly where a committee can do the best, as either player can count for you each week.

Questions, suggestions and comments are always welcome to pasquino@footballguys.com.

Photos provided by Imagn Images
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