I hear you that Gawn is a reliable big scorer but at what price is he too expensive?
Would you pay $800k for him?
I think he's overpriced but he's proven to not drop in price much for an extended period now. That's an established form line that you kind of have to back, imo, which doesn't make it a guarantee by any means!
There are a few factors to consider for mine.
The first is Preuss, I'm not sold he's the right call (I reckon Marshall at R2 and the midprice in the backs or forwards may make more sense). Realistically if Preuss was a midfielder, would you be picking him? I haven't heard a single person say Preuss can be a keeper. You're taking a genuine midpricer with next to no chance of being a keeper, aka you're most likely sacrificing cash generation and trades.
I actually don't dislike Preuss, if he was an R/F I'd 100% be starting him but he's a R only. Can you make more cash from a 100k rookie elsewhere? Can you get a keeper for 300k at another position? Definitely needs consideration.
Second is the value of trades. Let's say you can close it to 150k, that's still a good rookie and two trades to get Gawn. Can they be better deployed? That's the best case. If Preuss flops (the disaster that is possible) and/or Gawn just rolls on, that suddenly could be 250k+ and 3 trades. At 10% of your moves, all required in the most important trading period, it can require enormous sacrifice to fulfill, only takes a couple of injuries in that period as well and you're looking at week 10 and a bunch of lost upgrades just to get Gawn in.
Having said all that, I'm absolutely considering Preuss. If he can average 95 then he comes into consideration as a cash cow, he's a high risk one because of the lack of contingency plans and he absolutely forces you into Marshall as a starting pick (basically spending a chunk of that saving) but Preuss can make great cash. Gawn can get injured, he can fail, not starting him can be a masterstroke.
I've had a couple of drafts without Gawn.
Personally I'm expecting Gawn to score similarly to 2018 and 2019, which would hopefully see him drop to about 650k at some point between RD6 and RD12, depending on where the big scores and (relatively) small scores pop up.
I think the idea that expensive players are impossible to trade for is one of the self-defeating myths of SC. You just have to plan for it. Things move slowly in trading land, so you know two weeks ahead of time when the spike or dip in price is going to come so you just have to make sure you leave enough in the bank to make it work.
I would also add that if you have Marshall in your team then you don't need the Preuss spike to coincide with the Gawn dip. You can sell Preuss to someone on another line when the time is right, and then get Gawn later when the time is right.
I think if you don't have Gawn, Marshall is a lock, you have to have him. The only flaw with your planning is that injuries, suspension and players getting dropped, must have rookies and the like all happen. Sure you can try and plan but it's a very difficult plan to pull off. I say this as someone who used his last 3 trades to finally get Neale in round 15, just so I could say I got him, last year after planning to upgrade to him in round 6 or 7 and then planning to get him every week after that... When it starts taking 3 trades and 2 weeks to get it done you're introducing a lot of possible variables into the best of plans.
It can absolutely be done, I haven't even thought about picking Lloyd down back who is similarly overpriced, imo, but would like to have him in my side and will plan for it but it's certainly a difficult move to actually pull off.