I know what you mean and I don't think Taranto is a top 8 mid, he's more of a value pick who will end up at M8, but I think the others will be top 8-10. Taranto could certainly leave the team, he's just in there for the time being. I agree that Taranto's spot might be better left open so I can bring 3 players in rather than 2, that's been my structure for most of the past two months til the last couple of days.
I don't think you can look at last years top scorers the same way as usual, a lot of them scored better than they usually would because of scaling and will fall back down to earth.
If you look at Steele's stats last year he's been scaled up quite a bit, Petracca's scoring came from out of nowhere, the Dogs mids are impossible to gauge with Bevo and Treloar coming in, Zerrett's time on ground was way up than the rest of his career, Lyons/Crouch/Boak/Adams are unlikely to score better than Cripps who was way below them in average last year.
I don't see those top positions from last year as meaning as much as usual or the top 35 meaning very much in general, I see them this year as more of a facade with a lot of strange caveats and an unusual seasons causing those averages. A lot of the skill this year in selection will be separating the fact from fiction. Cripps is very underpriced and much more proven than many of the players above him and Walsh I believe will go 110+.
Don't know about struggling to make 20k or first lol, don't think this team is all that wild, I think I'm just avoiding some of the overpriced players.
I agree with your point about going 6 deep with Taranto and might need to leave the midfield more room for change. I just wouldn't pay much attention to some of the top scorers from last year, Cripps and Walsh can easily catch them.
Taranto at his price is a wasted pick if you don't think he's a keeper. Better off fielding a rookie who scores 55 than him on value for points on the field and cash generation. Basically you're giving up trades, points and cash generation to pick him.
Steele's role changed last year, went from a tagger relying heavily on tackles to a ball winning and goal kicking midfielder. Petracca had always scored like that when playing midfield, the difference was he got fit and the coach played him there full time (admittedly the shorter quarters compound this), there's at least as strong a case that Petracca just had his breakout and is set to push onwards towards 130 as there is for him being overpriced. Zerrett finally played genuine midfield instead of rotting on the wing as Rutten transitioned to coach. All 4 of those guys scored better than Cripps last year and Cripps broke down physically for the 2nd straight season.
Just playing devils advocate on all those to show how easy it is to flip the script. I think the skill is going to be picking the very particular players who are genuinely overpriced as opposed to just the inflated averages which most relevant players have, quite simply the better players got bigger chunks of the scaling.
Last year the only changes from the 2019 top 10 mids were Petracca, Steele, Merrett, Mitchell and Hunter coming in for Fyfe (11th), Cripps(way out), Treloar (17th), Gaff (21st) and Boak (14th) (fwiw Treloar was 4ppg from top 10 still). Mitchell was injured in 2019 (1st in 2018) and Merrett was not far off the top 10 the year (3ppg, 15th) before but Petracca, role change, Steele, role change and Hunter, anomaly scoring imo, were all big movers from outside the top 35. While the averages were a bit higher overall the makeup of the group is pretty ****genous.
FWIW I actually really like both the Walsh and Cripps reasoning for breaking out.
For me it's the guys like Hunter, Sidebottom, Lyons, Menegola, Anderson and Dumont types that all stand out as the ones to really watch for being out of whack in SC. The "pure DT" guys as I'd call them, tackles, cheap +6s on the outside, low impact touches, guys who historically struggled to get above a 1:1 ratio, they're the ones who I think ate a disproportionate amount of the extra points that just wouldn't be there for them again this year. Their quantity stats held greater standing with a significantly reduced amount of impact stats.
As much as it seems like a weird year and I totally agree on most premiums being a bit overpriced, I'd also warn against overusing the blanket that kind of fits on everyone and perhaps over-adjusting in the opposite where you give the most recent season less respect than it deserves.
For example, I personally think that Steele and Petracca have the best narratives of the top 8 guys to improve their averages but they'd be the first two you throw out with the bathwater if you write off last season's information as irregular. I think the information is noisy but incredibly valuable still.