This site is only as valuable as its predictions are accurate. I aim to be constantly ahead of the curve, so you know who to sell when their value has peaked, and who to buy when no one thinks they’re worth the time of day. As I’ve written many times here, my goal is to be right at least 60%-65% on the tough calls—the calls that most of the fantasy universe aren’t making. It’s a differentiator. It’s the most effective path for victory.
WR Mohamed Sanu was one example. When WR Marvin Jones went down last preseason, it became clear that Sanu would become Cincinnati’s #2 receiver. I respected his track record and, from what I read, believed that his skillset and versatility (he was a high school quarterback) would come in handy.
So I talked up Sanu on this blog and on the radio. I believed he’d be a difference maker on any fantasy team. He needed to be owned:
https://www.facebook.com/FantasyFootballForWinners/posts/733157970065518
Despite ending the season with a whimper (five fantasy points in his last five games), he tied for the 30th most fantasy points among all WRs, and for the season’s first half he was a borderline WR1. Not bad for a guy most deemed next-to-worthless.
RB Jeremy Hill was another story. As most of you read here last season, when starter Gio Bernard was hobbled in practice one day in October, I projected that they’d rest him and give their more talented rookie RB the start. This blog was, I believe, the only site to claim that Hill would score more fantasy points than Bernard the rest of the way before he even showed what he could do as a starter. The rest was history.
https://www.facebook.com/FantasyFootballForWinners/posts/759358880778760
Those who pounced on Hill retained an RB1 for the rest of the season. Those who waited for proof of Hill’s talents waited too long.
Tomorrow I’ll write about Sanu, Hill, and their Bengal teammates, some of whom offer fantasy owners extraordinary buy-low opportunities. One or more of them might help you win a championship.
WR Mohamed Sanu was one example. When WR Marvin Jones went down last preseason, it became clear that Sanu would become Cincinnati’s #2 receiver. I respected his track record and, from what I read, believed that his skillset and versatility (he was a high school quarterback) would come in handy.
So I talked up Sanu on this blog and on the radio. I believed he’d be a difference maker on any fantasy team. He needed to be owned:
https://www.facebook.com/FantasyFootballForWinners/posts/733157970065518
Despite ending the season with a whimper (five fantasy points in his last five games), he tied for the 30th most fantasy points among all WRs, and for the season’s first half he was a borderline WR1. Not bad for a guy most deemed next-to-worthless.
RB Jeremy Hill was another story. As most of you read here last season, when starter Gio Bernard was hobbled in practice one day in October, I projected that they’d rest him and give their more talented rookie RB the start. This blog was, I believe, the only site to claim that Hill would score more fantasy points than Bernard the rest of the way before he even showed what he could do as a starter. The rest was history.
https://www.facebook.com/FantasyFootballForWinners/posts/759358880778760
Those who pounced on Hill retained an RB1 for the rest of the season. Those who waited for proof of Hill’s talents waited too long.
Tomorrow I’ll write about Sanu, Hill, and their Bengal teammates, some of whom offer fantasy owners extraordinary buy-low opportunities. One or more of them might help you win a championship.