Had to google both those references but I am caught up - thanks (I think)!
In a longer version of my post (before my editor got to it) I referred approvingly to your point elsewhere about choosing where to ride your luck on breakouts so that you aim for ones that really help if your pick hits the mark. I have always had a slight misgiving about the use of 'POD' to describe an unpopular but fully-priced mid premo for example. It's right that it's a point of difference, but to what end? It's often just a different way to get the same points. The PODs that matter are the ones that shoot way over the fence, and can't be got back easily. Macrae or Grundy last year the obvious examples. In the opposite direction, betting against Goldy in 2016 or Shaw in 2017. The reason they were successful to bet against was they dropped 20+ points on their average, but the discussion about them preseason was mostly within a much tighter range, along the lines of "even if he's overpriced, he'll still be a top pick". I was trying to discuss that in the context of my 'our predictions are too conservative' point but it got too complicated.
I know sometimes I have in the back of my mind that I think a player can go 110 (I think that about Heeney, for example) but I also know it's pretty unlikely, and that people will tell me exactly why it's unlikely, and why I'm a dumb**** for thinking it, so instead I write "I think Heeney will probably score in the 95-105 range" when rationalising the pick. I'm not lying (that is the fat part of my range prediction), but it's not elite honesty. My SC new year's resolution is to post some of my more wild 'gut' predictions about players I'm considering. We'll see how that goes.