Tight End By Committee: PPR

Jeff Pasquino's Tight End By Committee: PPR Jeff Pasquino Published 08/04/2014

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 running back and wide receiver prospects to go after to build a great team. While there are a few studs at quarterback 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. Wide receiver? Perhaps, but not a WR1. Running back? Maybe. Tight end? Hmmm, that's really intriguing. What if you could grab tight ends later in the draft that could combine to perform on a TE1 level, based solely on their current projections and their schedule? Now we're talking. This really got my attention, so I went after this. Let's take a look at how I went about building this committee and then we can digest and discuss the results.

(TIGHT) END GAME

So how to begin? Defenses and quarterbacks are relatively easy to "committee" together. There's usually only one quarterback 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 tight ends, 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 - TE13 AND BEYOND

This seems pretty simple. If we want to have a duo that puts up TE1 numbers, that means we want TE12 or better production - else we would just draft TE12 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):

ADPPlayer
TE13 Charles Clay
TE14 Ladarius Green
TE15 Martellus Bennett
TE16 Heath Miller
TE17 Antonio Gates
TE18 Delanie Walker
TE19 Dwayne Allen
TE20 Jared Cook
TE21 Tyler Eifert
TE22 Garrett Graham
TE23 Marcedes Lewis
TE24 Coby Fleener
TE25 Jace Amaro
TE26 Travis Kelce

Table 1: Tight Ends TE13-TE23 Based on ADP

So now we have 14 guys to pair up and see how they do. That makes 91 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 TE FROM ROUND 10 AND ONE FROM ROUND 12

 

This could get tricky here, but understand the overall goal. The point of TEBC is to "free up" the first 9-10 rounds of your fantasy draft to pursue all of the other positions for your team. Grabbing 3-4 running backs and 4-5 receivers after grabbing a stud RB in Round 1 sounds like a good idea to me. This also gives you the flexibility of grabbing a stud QB, depending on your personal preference, or even to get TE1 if there's a huge value play available and have the "TEBC" be your TE2 (although I would only recommend this in very deep leagues with 20+ roster spots). Flexibility is the name of the game here. We all want value in our drafts, and having the ability to grab lots of RBs and WRs in the first 9-10 Rounds gives us that ability.

Here is the good news - all of the tight ends on the list above have ADPs that are Round 10 or higher (later). In fact, only Charles Clay and Martellus Bennett are borderline Round 10 / Round 11 guys. We will have to keep that in mind when we look at the result because if we decide to wait unit Round 11 to get this pair to make up our TEBC we may be pushing it a little too far and may not get the combination that we want.

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

CRITERIA #3 - USE FOOTBALLGUYS' TE STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE

This sounds pretty simple, doesn't it? Just take the TE 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 receiver.

After I had all 14 tight ends with distributed fantasy points on a weekly basis, I just compared all of the possible TE pairs to find the best duos for TEBC. So here we are - time for some results.

RankTight End 1Tight End 2Value
1 Antonio Gates Martellus Bennett 162.3
2 Antonio Gates Delanie Walker 160.9
3 Charles Clay Martellus Bennett 160.8
4 Charles Clay Antonio Gates 156.8
5 Jared Cook Martellus Bennett 155.1
6 Charles Clay Delanie Walker 154.9
7 Ladarius Green Delanie Walker 154.6
8 Delanie Walker Jared Cook 154.4
9 Heath Miller Delanie Walker 153.5
10 Ladarius Green Martellus Bennett 153.1
11 Charles Clay Heath Miller 153.0
12 Delanie Walker Martellus Bennett 153.0
13 Heath Miller Martellus Bennett 152.6
14 Heath Miller Antonio Gates 152.3
15 Charles Clay Jared Cook 151.4
16 Antonio Gates Jared Cook 151.2
17 Tyler Eifert Martellus Bennett 151.0
18 Charles Clay Tyler Eifert 149.1
19 Delanie Walker Travis Kelce 149.0
20 Delanie Walker Tyler Eifert 148.8
21 Garrett Graham Martellus Bennett 148.4
22 Martellus Bennett Coby Fleener 148.4
23 Antonio Gates Tyler Eifert 148.1
24 Dwayne Allen Martellus Bennett 148.0
25 Charles Clay Ladarius Green 147.9
26 Delanie Walker Coby Fleener 147.9
27 Delanie Walker Dwayne Allen 147.4
28 Martellus Bennett Travis Kelce 147.1
29 Charles Clay Garrett Graham 146.1
30 Delanie Walker Garrett Graham 145.9
31 Marcedes Lewis Martellus Bennett 145.9
32 Marcedes Lewis Antonio Gates 144.5
33 Charles Clay Travis Kelce 144.4
34 Charles Clay Marcedes Lewis 143.9
35 Marcedes Lewis Delanie Walker 143.0
36 Martellus Bennett Jace Amaro 143.0
37 Charles Clay Coby Fleener 142.8
38 Charles Clay Dwayne Allen 142.6
39 Heath Miller Jared Cook 142.4
40 Antonio Gates Travis Kelce 142.3
41 Heath Miller Tyler Eifert 141.8
42 Ladarius Green Heath Miller 141.6
43 Delanie Walker Jace Amaro 140.7
44 Heath Miller Coby Fleener 139.5
  Martellus Bennett 0 139.3

Table 2: Tight End Committee Pairs

As we can see from Table 2, we have some very good pairs to select from for TEBC. There are 44 pairs that are worth more than Martellus Bennett by his lonesome, who is projected to come in with 139.2 points. Let's also take a look at how often some of these guys show up on the table:

Tight EndFreq
Martellus Bennett 13
Delanie Walker 13
Charles Clay 12
Antonio Gates 8
Heath Miller 8
Jared Cook 5
Tyler Eifert 5
Coby Fleener 4
Ladarius Green 4
Marcedes Lewis 4
Travis Kelce 4
Dwayne Allen 3
Garrett Graham 3
Jace Amaro 2

Table 3: Tight End Committee Pair Appearances by Player

 

As we can see from Table 3, the results are dominated by three guys – Charles Clay, Delanie Walker and Martellus Bennett.  That is a significant result as it gives us the key players to target for the TEBC approach to the draft.  It is quite possible that putting two of these two guys together will form this year's best option for TEBC.  It is also worth noting that 11 of the 14 names appear at least four times on the list, which screams out that there are a ton of choices this year to mix and match for a solid pair of tight ends.

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER

Now that we have 44 possible pairs that are better than Martellus Bennett, what exactly does that mean? Should Bennett be the basis of our comparison? Of course not. Remember our goal - find a pair of tight ends that can combine for TE1-type fantasy production. To figure that out we need a better metric, so here are the projections for the Top 12 TEs in standard scoring:

ADPTE RankPlayerTeam/ByeFPsFP Rank
6 1 Jimmy Graham NO/6 248.4 1
29 3 Rob Gronkowski NE/10 243.9 2
27 2 Julius Thomas Den/4 200.4 3
50 4 Jordan Cameron Cle/4 181.9 4
81 8 Greg Olsen Car/12 172.4 5
68 6 Jason Witten Dal/11 168.0 6
78 7 Jordan Reed Was/10 154.2 7
83 9 Dennis Pitta Bal/11 151.7 8
91 10 Kyle Rudolph Min/10 146.3 9
58 5 Vernon Davis SF/8 143.0 10
196 23 Martellus Bennett Chi/9 139.2 11
155 18 Delanie Walker Ten/9 136.9 12
123 13 Charles Clay Mia/5 135.2 13
151 17 Antonio Gates SD/10 134.7 14
135 16 Heath Miller Pit/12 127.5 15
106 11 Zach Ertz Phi/7 125.8 16
171 20 Jared Cook StL/4 117.9 17
172 21 Tyler Eifert Cin/4 116.8 18
120 12 Eric Ebron Det/9 115.4 19
127 14 Ladarius Green SD/10 115.2 20
206 24 Coby Fleener Ind/10 110.5 21
194 22 Garrett Graham Hou/10 109.2 22
166 19 Dwayne Allen Ind/10 108.9 23
224 26 Travis Kelce KC/6 102.3 24
133 15 Marcedes Lewis Jac/11 100.1 25

Table 4: Projected Fantasy Points for Top 12+ ADP TEs

Based on Table 4, we see that TEs beyond the Top 4 are really jumbled all over the place thanks to a good number of people sleeping on Martellus Bennett and Delanie Walker, and drafting Vernon Davis too early.  Looking at our possible pairs, we have 2-3 duos that are about even or slightly higher than Jordan Reed (TE7) plus 5-7 points for a bye week filler.  Those top pairs would be a reasonable target to strive for with a TEBC approach. This tells us that choosing the correct pair can give us the result we wanted - TE1 production on the cheap.

Considering all of the results, the committee recipe is pretty clear - get Martellus Bennett.  Bennett dominates the top of the TEBC chart with three appearances in the Top 5 duos, and three more in the Top 13 as well.  That creates a little bit of a concern, because Bennett's ADP is so low (which is a good and manageable problem to have).  Taking Bennett first with an ADP that puts him beyond Round 13 would be unwise, so we need to play it smart but also not jeopardize the plan.  Looking once again at the list, Antonio Gates appears often, but San Diego is in a tight end transition from Gates to Ladarius Green, so I am leery of selecting either one. Charles Clay is a reliable choice and makes a lot of appearances as well, and if he is the first choice, backup plans can be made if Bennett is stolen away.  Clay has put up respectable numbers in Miami even in a suspect passing attack, while Bennett is a big contributor in pass-happy Chicago.  With this in mind, I am recommending Charles Clay and Martellus Bennett as the TEBC for 2014.  Take Clay late in Round 10 or early in Round 11 and follow up with Bennett no later than Round 13 (just to be safe) to pair together for your TE committee.  Yes, that is a round or two earlier than expected, so if you want to wait then there are many options near the top of Table 2 that will be there in Round 14 (like Tyler Eifert or Garrett Graham) if Walker is gone. 

For thoroughness, Table 2 should be your guide on Fantasy Draft Day if you attempt to use TEBC.

Here is a final summary of the combined schedules for Charles Clay and Delanie Walker, and when the committee approach suggests starting each one:

WkSuggested PlayerOpponent
1 Charles Clay New England
2 Martellus Bennett at San Francisco
3 Martellus Bennett at New York Jets
4 Martellus Bennett Green Bay
5 Martellus Bennett at Carolina
6 Martellus Bennett at Atlanta
7 Martellus Bennett Miami
8 Charles Clay at Jacksonville
9 Charles Clay San Diego
10 Martellus Bennett at Green Bay
11 Martellus Bennett Minnesota
12 Charles Clay at Denver
13 Charles Clay at Detroit
14 Martellus Bennett Dallas
15 Charles Clay at New England
16 Charles Clay Minnesota

Table 5: Suggested TEBC 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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