Fantasy Football: Busts

My last column focused on deep sleepers. While finding that diamond in the rough is certainly an important and fulfilling aspect of fantasy football, avoiding the overvalued players is at least equally as rewarding. In fact, it may be even more important, as an early round bust can destroy a fantasy football owner’s season from

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Fantasy Handcuffing (for Football, People)

As training camp rolls along, certain running back situations are starting to show some clarity (and some aren’t). The following is a list of “handcuff situations.” This means that if you take one of these players, you should make an effort to take the other as well because the competitions are so close that the second option could easily be the first option at some point during the season. Let’s get on with it before another Bengal gets arrested.

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Pre-season Running Back Value Changers

With Droughns running for over 1,200 yards in 2005, expectations with Bentley in place were on the rise. And then the Browns started training camp. Bentley tore his left patellar tendon on the very first play of the very first practice of the very first day of the Browns’ training camp. Droughns had been going in the third or fourth rounds of many drafts before the Bentley injury, but the upside he once had is souring. You can knock his value down a few pegs on your cheat sheets.

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