Thanks for the advice and your posts regarding players to select. Made a couple of changes to my first iteration and would appreciate your thoughts on which structure/team is better out of the below or my previous iteration.
HK: C Smith, (V Radley)
FR: A Fifita, M Taupau, (R Sutton, P Haas)
2FR: V Kikau, S Burgess, T Pangai, (S Murray, B Cartwright, T Fuimaono)
HB: N Cleary, (C Harris-Tavita)
5/8: M Morgan, (D Brown)
W/C: E Masters, C Gutherson, J Bateman, K Capewell, (Z Lomax, A Hopotate, B Xerri)
FB: M Moylan, (C Abbey)
Remaining salary: 26,400
4 Reserves would be V Radley, R Sutton, S Murray and one of B Cartwright/Z Lomax/etc
Yeah this is definitely looking better now in my opinion. Kikau and Surgess are both low floor and high ceiling players, but certainly nothing wrong with them as choices in the second row. Kikau was a rookie last year which a lot rode into genuine gun-status so I think he might be a bit of a POD this year as a lot of people like myself feel strange paying megabucks for a player we had on the cheap (we shouldn't though, Kikau is a absolute beast on the Panthers edge). Surgess could be value IF he is still playing lock. If young gun Murray takes his position and he moves out to the edge I do not think he will be worthwhile. Everyone else looks solid enough too. Nice looking team.
So to reiterate my positional writeups, my team has changed slightly overnight due to an injury to Greg Inglis, but I ensured not to change the Hookers and FRF I have already written about (besides which I am quite happy with).
Cook (Radley*)
Tolman Tevita-Pangai (R. Sutton Haas)
Arrow Matterson Murray (Stimson* Afoa* Carrigan)
Morgan (Harris-Tavita)
Widdop (Salmon)
Mitchell J.Bateman Capewell Lomax (Abbey Allen Bird)
Tedesco (Tuivasa-Sheck*)
Second Row Forwards:
So to the NRL-shy, the second row is a distinct group of forwards very different from the props in the front row, and surprisingly few players actually play both positions, even if they have dual-positions in a fantasy game. You can split the Second row into two distinct categories- the lock forward (Jersey 13) and the edge forwards (Jerseys 11 and 12). The lock forward is probably more akin to the props in the front row- usually a hulking behemoth tackling machine, and in the modern game he also needs to excel in attack as well as defense- whether he breaks tackles or has an adept offload game, or both. They will rarely play the full 80 minutes (with the exception of Jake Trbojevic and sometimes Nathan Brown, both weapons of mass destruction) but being in the middle of the park they definitely see the most action (because the play moves from side to side and always passes through the middle). The best amongst them should play for a good 60-70 minutes and play
aggressively in that time. The edge forwards are a different breed again- Occasionally we will see an edge forward who looks more like a lock/front rower (TPJ, Kikau) but usually they are less bulky and more athletic since most of them are required to play for the full 80 minutes. They usually find less tackles than locks forwards but are more likely to make tacklebreaks and score tries since they frequently come up against the smaller outside backs of opposition teams (though this is not a hard and fast rule). A good point to note is that if you have chosen an edge rower as your gun and he is not getting 80 minutes, he is useless to your fantasy team, they really need the full 80 in this position, only a lock can get his work-rate up enough to score well in ~60 minutes when it comes to second rowers.
I have a predilection for the bankable tackle points of lock forwards rather than the more volatile attacking stats of edge forwards, but this year I might be breaking that trend by picking a few who play out wider.
Jai Arrow was a rock in the 13 jersey for the Titans for the first half of last season and he looked like he was going to be the best thing since sliced bread when it comes to fantasy, making huge amounts of tackles and also beaking tackles for fun. He played so well he was brought into the QLD origin team, but came back a little underdone and injured, his fantasy scores falling off a cliff. As expensive as he is, he might actually be at a discount because of his poor backhalf of the season. I am hoping with an off season to recover he returns to that original form, but with a couple of new recruits to the forward pack at the Titans this year, this pick is not without its risk.
Ryan Matterson was another rookie-turned-gun last year, a right edge forward who went looking for work (he made 65 tackles in one game!) and also finds his way to the tryline now and then. He suffered some serious concussion symptoms and sat 8 games or so out, but just wasn't quite the same player when he returned (but I suspect he was being managed quite carefully). He has now changed clubs and rumour says he might even play as their lock this year, which should be good for a tacklebot like him, as long as he really is over his health problems. He could be a good selection even if he plays on an edge, but definitely not as much of a lock in my team as Jai Arrow or Cam Murray. Speaking of Cam Murray, he is fantasy gold- tackles anything with a pulse, breaks tackles and has a good offload game to boot. The only thing that stopped him from being a gun last year was that he played mostly from the bench (the 7 or 8 times he started and found 50+ minutes he made gun-like scores). Angus Crichton has left the bunnies this year and Murray will either play on his vacant right edge, or (preferably for Fantasy purposes) oust Sam Burgess from the lock position, moving him to the right instead. Either way I think this kid will be in my (and everyones) team. Stimson and Afoa are in similar positions, in that they are both bench players who have shown promise in the past who *might* be looking at starting positions.
Stimson is probably the better prospect of those two (ie. more likely to start) and tipped to sew up an edge spot for the Storm, he will be in a lot of teams.
Afoa plays agressive football and has fantastic hair for someone who runs hard- truly a glorious sight. He is something of a POD for me at the moment, but if he finds a starting position people will jump on. If either of these guys are still playing from the bench, avoid them in your teams.
Carrigan is a nobody, he probably wont even make the Broncos team in round 1, but is a placeholder while I figure things out, like with any forward position (HK, FRF,2RF) basement priced cash cows are virtually non existent.
Alternative guns: Trbojevic, Taumalolo
Crichton, Papilii, Brown, Kikau, Gallen
Value buys: Matt Gillet, Victor Radley, Kurt Capewell, Kelepi Tanginoa