The NFL season is upon us, with great drama and optimism for all (most) teams with aspirations of a run to Super Bowl 58 in Las Vegas.
Prolific young passers Justin Herbert, Lamar Jackson and Jalen Hurts inked new deals over the offseason to ensure their teams are in the championship race for the next half decade. While the Arizona Cardinals parted ways with veteran Colt McCoy in favor 5th-round draft pick Clayton Rune, the Indianapolis Colts are starting rookie Anthony Richardson over Gardner Minshew. Richardson will be Indy's eighth different starting quarterback since 2019.
Offseason of RB Turmoil
The offseason of turmoil for running backs began with Miles Sanders receiving the biggest deal of the summer, a 4-year $25 million dollar contract with the Carolina Panthers. In six months, only five running back have received contract extensions. Three were for replacement level players, and the main two were only one-year extensions for Saquon Barkley and Josh Jacobs.
The market for 24- and 25-year-old backs is not what it was three seasons ago, when Todd Gurley and Ezekiel Elliott received mega-deals.
Ridley to Jacksonville a Great Move
In the wide receiver world, DeAndre Hopkins escaped Phoenix for greener pastures in Nashville to play with Derrick Henry and the Titans. My favorite offseason move belongs to Calvin Ridley.
Although the trade was made in November 2022, Ridley wasn’t allowed on campus until the spring. Ridley hasn’t played in an NFL game since October of 2021, but in just five games that season he totaled 52 targets in Atlanta.
A position once overlooked may now be the staple, when looking at tight ends in 2023. Dalton Kincaid and Kyle Pitts are the only two tight ends since 2020 to be drafted in Round 1. Both are prolific pass-catchers with comparisons to a lot of wide receivers.
Record-Setting Deal
Darren Waller was traded to the New York Giants in March while being regarded as the “top receiving option”, while 26-year-old stud T.J. Hockenson inked a record-setting deal -- $16.5 million per season. That deal would make him the 16th highest paid wide receiver by annual salary.
Don't miss the rest of Cody's Week 1 Positional Rankings:
Running Back Rankings
Wide Receiver Rankings
Tight End, Kicker, Def/ST Rankings
Rank-QB-Team-Opponent
- Lamar Jackson BAL-HOU
- Justin Herbert LAC-MIA
- Patrick Mahomes KC-DET
- Josh Allen BUF@NYJ
- Tua Tagovailoa MIA@LAC
- Jalen Hurts PHI@NE
- Russell Wilson DEN-LV
- Trevor Lawrence JAX-@IND
- Kirk Cousins MIN-TB
- Joe Burrow CIN@CLE
- Justin Fields CHI-GB
- Jared Goff DET@KC
- Anthony Richardson IND-JAX
- Dak Prescott DAL@NYG
- Sam Howell WSH-ARI
- Derek Carr NO-TEN
- Aaron Rodgers NYJ-BUF
- Deshaun Watson CLE-CIN
- Baker Mayfield TB@MIN
- Daniel Jones NYG-DAL
- Geno Smith SEA-LAR
- Kenny Pickett PIT-SF
- Ryan Tannehill TEN@NO
- Bryce Young CAR@ATL
- Jordan Love GB@CHI
- Brock Purdy SF@PIT
- Desmond Ridder ATL-CAR
- Matthew Stafford LAR@SEA
- Clayton Tune ARI@WSH
- C.J. Stroud HOU@BAL
- Jimmy Garoppolo LV@DEN
- Mac Jones NE-PHI
- Joshua Dobbs ARI@WSH
- Kyle Trask TB@MIN
- Jacoby Brissett WSH-ARI
Lamar a Safe Choice, But What About Wilson?
In three of the last four seasons, Lamar Jackson and the Ravens have gotten off to very fast starts, most notably in 2019, when the Ravens went to Miami and put a 59-10 walking on the Dolphins. This ignited the storm that was Jackson’s MVP season. In 2022, Jackson and the Ravens started strong against the AFC East with Jackson totaling 12 touchdowns over the first three games of the season.
Russell Wilson is coming off of the worst year of his 10-year career, seeing efficiency drops in all categories, including completion percentage that has dropped almost nine points over the last two seasons. Wilson was consistently an undrafted option in fantasy football over the summer, and rightly so after losing Tim Patrick, KJ Hamler and most recently Jerry Jeudy in the receiving room.
New Regime in Denver
The positive is new head coach Sean Payton, offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi and recently healthy rookie receiver, Marvin Mims. Mims brings back a dynamic to Wilson’s repertoire that only Tyler Lockett had, while being on the field with overlooked veteran Courtland Sutton.
Denver’s team total is projected as a middling 23.5 in Week 1, but Las Vegas continues to neglect putting high-end resources into the back end of their defense, and giving Lombardi and Payton an entire off-season to plan is something to bet on.
Geno Tries to Regain the Magic
Everything went right for Geno Smith during the first 12 weeks in 2022. He had a 72% completion percentage, better than a 3:1 touchdown-interception ratio and won seven games. But the back end of the season saw Geno return to the mean. He lost three of five games, dropped nine points in completion percentage and threw only eight touchdowns against five interceptions.
In Week 1, the Seahawks are seen as the fourth biggest favorite at some sportsbooks, but Rams coach Sean McVay and QB Matthew Stafford have had four months to plan for this one divisional matchup with Seattle, and Aaron Donald is healthy.