Drew Loftis

Drew Loftis

NFL

Fantasy football: NFL schedule makes these QBs ones to watch

Anyone recall ā€œRed Dragon,ā€ the 2002 Edward Norton movie? It was a solid flick, bringiną¶£g back Anthony Hopkinsā€™ Hannibal Lecter character for a prequel to ā€œSilence of the Lambs.ā€ Nevertheless, it is largely forgotten.

But that doesnā€™t mean it wasnā€™t fun, interesting and a fine film on its own merits. But because it was inferior to its predecessor, because it was essentially a remake of the 1980ā€™s movie ā€œManhuntšŸøerā€ and based on the same novel, because it did nothing exceptional to separate itself from either, it became forgettable. Or as one pal so expertly described it: The best movie ever with no reason to exist.

With that, I bring the ā€œRed Dragonā€ of fantasy analysis: broad-reaching forecasts based on defensive matchups, matchups that rely on data from 2020 and earlier, because thatā€™s all we have right now. SuršŸŒŸe, itā€™s fun, and it can be interesting, but ultimately it has no reason to exist.

With the release of the 2021 NFL schedule, we now know the order and timing of matchups across the entire season. But it is far too soon to breakš”‰ down short weeks versus long weeks, much less forecast injuries or road-trip weariness or potential weather hazards. Weā€™ll leave that for later.

For now, we foāœ±cus just the soon-to-be-forgettable breakdown of team versus team based on past fantasy generosity by opposing defenses. But donā€™t worry, weā€™ll give you plenty to forget. Weā€™ll start with quarterbacks.

Carson Wentz and Jameis Winston
Carson Wentz and Jameis Winston Getty Images (2)

Our first stop involves a pair of top-tier names. The two toughest schedules fšŸŒƒor QBs across the entire league belong to the Ravens and Seahawks. So Lamar Jackson and Russell Wilson have a hard road ahead, based on recent defensive history. The collectivź¦Æe opposition on both schedules yields fewer than 19 fantasy points fewer per game to opposing QBs. The league average is just more than 20.

Other QBs with difficult roads include Baker Mayfield and Derek Carr, and, to a lesser extent, Daniel Jones. That doesnā€™t mean you have to steź§‚er clear of these QBšŸŒ³s, but maybe only grab them if they slip in your draft.

On the flip side are two potential bargainsšŸ… . Carson Wentz and the Saintsā€™ starter ā€” Jameis Winston or Taysom Hill ā€” have thą¹„e easiest fantasy schedules, based on current data. Both will face defenses that give up more than one point a week, on average, above the league average.

The Saintsā€™ case is particularly interesting, considering four of their first five matchups are against above-average fantasy defenses všŸŽersus QBs ā€” the Packers, the Patriots, the Giants and Washington, with the Panthers providing a Week 2 breather. So whomever has the job could get off to a slow start. That could prompt a QB change, or could lead fantasy owners to dump their shares of the starter.

Following a Week 5 bye, the final 12 matchups feature just two better-than-average QB defenses. So that could provide an opportunity to snag a QB off waivers in-season, or acquire cheaply by trade one who is on a solid offensive team with a favorable schedule. That woąµ²uld be a nice find.