Hey Slam,
a short, one line question, that is ohhhhh so complicated! I like it.
Ok, let's start by eliminating some of the possibilities.
Newnes - has gone up $100k from his opening quote, and is currently priced close enough to his average ($456,200 & 92.7). He's only had one score over 95 (114, and last year only one score over 95 for the season, 99). To take him now would seem to be hoping he can suddenly start scoring some 100,s, and his last 29 games have ony produced one 100+ score. I think those that started Newnes did well, but I wouldn't be falling into him now.
If someone was
twisting my arm, and forcing me to take a Fwd that cost less than $460,000, I'd be more heading to
Menegola,
Marshall or possibly even
Dahlhaus, but not Newnes. I like Daniel better than those three, but obviously there is a price difference involved.
Fyfe - I personally have Fyfe in the start him, or forget him basket. His record in the 2nd half of seasons is too problematical to be trading him in. Even when you remove the 2016 season, where he was out for the rest of the season after Round 5, he still only averages 8 games/season, in the 2nd half of the season. He might defy that history, but i'm not willing to back it in. Since 2013, his Rnd 12-23 figures are:
2013 11/103
2014 10/129
2015 7/109
2016 0/0
2017 9/121
2018 4/94
Ave Total 7/114
If you remove the 2016 season, it becomes 8/114. That PIT65's out at 8/101.
As I said, he may do better, but those high scores quickly get watered down, when he misses games, or throws in those 43 & 66 (2018), 81, 84 & 93 (2017), 89, 80 & 92 (2015) type scores. I just think the history risk is too great. Start him, or skip him, and if you start him, dump him at the first sign of trouble!
I like
Daniel, and I'm looking at
Bont myself this week. Bont is actually on the outer limit of break out territory, so it's not beyond the possibilities this his year, and it doesn't necessarily have to be a spike season to get him there. After this season, it would tend to be a spike, if he doesn't go 110+ this season.
Now the more complicated part of the question. Trading
Dangerfield out. It should be noted, this is written before selections (or late outs!) are confirmed. Dangerfield is currently $541,000, has a B/E of 198, and last two scores of 94 & 26, so even if he plays, and scores well, he drops cash, and faces another decent B/E in his next game.
So let's paint a (worst case) scenario. Dangerfield misses this week, and another game later in the season. He scores at 105 in all the games he does play from now on. That means Dangerfield plays 13 out of 15 games, for a 13/105 return, or a PIT60 of 13/99. During that period, his price bottoms out in Rnd 10 at $410k, which is $131k lower than he is now. A PIT60 return of 13/99 is actually not too bad, and if his name wasn't Dangerfield, and someone guaranteed you a PIT60 13/99 return on a $541k Fwd for the last 15 games, you'd actually consider it.
So what do you gain by trading him out? In his worst case scenario, you gain the opportunity to trade him back in, $131k cheaper, while dodging his missed game. Those that keep him face a Rookie 60, then 105, 105 while he is out of your team, and you trade him back in after those scores, so that's where the loop closes again. So those that keep him score 270 for that place in their team, while you score let's say 60 points higher than that. So your net gain is 60 points + $131k, at the cost of 2 trades. It's not enough. It will feel right, and look good at the time, but it doesn't stand up to a "let's look back at the end of the season, and see how it worked out" test. To be worthwhile, you have to have Danger either miss say 4 games, or average a 100 less in the games he does play. The notional idea that this might be worthwhile, comes I think, from the idea that Dangerfield is a high priced player. The problem is, he's not anymore, so you just don't get the value needed in trading him out, unless things really go pear shaped for him from here. Dangerfield is actually the 27th highest priced played in SC, and is slightly less than Luke Ryan in price. In a blind test, who do you want, Ryan or Danger?
It would be a big risk to bet against a player that has only missed 5 games in the past 8 seasons, and averaged around 120 in the past 7 seasons, to say he'll suddenly miss 3 or more games this season, and average 105 in the games he does play from here.
TL;DR - Danger is no longer a high priced commodity, there is no value in trading him out now, unless it is a confirmed LTI.