Now that the major pieces have re-sorted in free agency and teams have further filled needs in the NFL draft, we have a good idea of the locations for veteran players and can start to piece together what their 2021 will look like.
PFF's fantasy team has had their fantasy rankings ready for a while now. We’ve also added fantasy projections, which leverage the modeling capabilities of Eric Eager and our research and development team. This series of articles, which started with quarterbacks, wide receivers and running backs, will go through the top fantasy players by best ball ADP at Underdog Fantasy and compare their relative positional value versus our projections. Today, we will focus on the tight end position.
It’s not intuitive, but projections and rankings aren’t interchangeable. Each provides valuable insight but through different methods. Our projections are based on a combination of model-based efficiency projections and analyst-informed share assumptions. Rankings and ADP are informed by projections, but they combine more opaque effects like upside, floor and contingency value that are more difficult to model into projections.
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While acknowledging that projections aren’t a substitute for rankings, I’ve translated our projections into positional rankings for comparison with best-ball ADP ranks in this piece. Projections aren’t a better way for ranking players, but they aren’t as influenced by market sentiment and can be a more independent view of player value.
Below, I’ve visualized the top 24 tight ends by current Underdog ADP, contrasting their ranks with PFF projections. Often our projections are in agreement about the valuation of players relative to ADP, identifying players who should be prioritized or faded in drafts. We also find some substantially misvalued players, and the visualization provides an easy way to judge the magnitude of the differences in rankings.
THE TOP 12 TIGHT ENDS
The tight ends below are listed in order of positional ADP rank, with the blue points representing Underdog ADP and the red points marking the rank by PFF projections. When two or more of the measures fall on the same positional rank, the point's color will represent a mix. The lines between points illustrate the magnitude of the difference between the maximum and minimum ranking for each player.
Darren Waller beats out George Kittle for the TE2 spot in our projections, with the latter losing volume and efficiency because we expect that he'll be playing with a rookie quarterback for the majority of the season. T.J. Hockenson flips with Kyle Pitts in the rankings, but Pitts would receive a material bump in his projection if the Atlanta Falcons trade Julio Jones this offseason.