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LGHL Buckeyes in the NFL: 2023 Fantasy Football Preview — Terry McLaurin

Buckeyes in the NFL: 2023 Fantasy Football Preview — Terry McLaurin
Josh Dooley
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


usa_today_20851289.0.jpg

Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

Scary Terry has been a model of consistency despite lackluster QB play in the nation’s capital. Facing another season with another unknown at signal caller, can this former Buckeye produce solid fantasy stats again in 2023?

Terry McLaurin was a versatile and hardworking wide receiver at Ohio State, but one whose stats never really jumped off the page. He finished his OSU career with 75 receptions for 1,251 yards and 19 touchdowns, 11 of which were scored during his senior season. Instead of pumping out record-breaking stats, Scary Terry was more than willing to ‘do it all’. And over the course of four seasons, he became one of the most highly respected players and teammates of the Urban Meyer era.

However, McLaurin’s college production did little to inspire (others’) confidence that he would develop into an NFL star, a fantasy football gem, or even a video game stud.

Terry McLaurin is the 8th highest rated receiver in this year’s Madden #HTTC || #TakeCommand pic.twitter.com/M0oI8hymAV

— Jordan (@wshingtontoday) July 17, 2023

Fortunately for Scary Terry, his own confidence (and hard work, skill, etc.) has been more than enough to take him and his game to the next level. Drafted in the third round of the 2019 NFL Draft by the now-Washington Commanders, McLaurin hit the ground running and has never looked back. He hauled in 58 receptions for 919 yards and 7 touchdowns as a rookie, quickly putting the league on notice McLaurin’s profile as both a star WR and fantasy football asset has only continued to grow.

He has since added three consecutive 1,000-yard seasons and a Pro Bowl nod, while also earning a lucrative contract. He will enter the 2023 season as Washington’s go-to pass catcher, provided he is able to return from injury quickly and re-establish chemistry with the team’s new quarterback.


The last part of that last sentence likely reminds Commanders fans of Bill Murray and/or the movie Groundhog Day, because the same scenario seems to play out year after year: The team lets an aging QB battle it out with the young gun, only to watch both (or all) fail. Washington has had 10 different starting QBs since McLaurin entered the league and roughly 100 since the turn of the century... No need to fact-check, all numbers are correct.

Last season it was Carson Wentz who got dragged in to save the day, despite the fact that he had just fallen on his face in Indianapolis. Naturally, he was awful when not injured, forcing the Commanders to turn (back) to Taylor Heinicke. The latter also kinda stunk, and that just sort of sums up Washington’s recent existence. The organization is hoping that 2022 fifth-rounder Sam Howell will finally be the answer moving forward, but fifth-round picks tend to get drafted when and where they do for a reason.

Yet nothing has stopped McLaurin from lacing ‘em up and trying to go win a game every week (three games missed in four seasons). All the man does is give effort and produce. Perhaps more impressively, he has outperformed expectations without the benefit of any positional support or backup. Due to Washington’s typically poor team-building, the former Buckeye has been flanked on the outside by WRs Kelvin Harmon, Cam Sims, Isaiah Wright, Adam Humphries, and Dyami Brown, just to name a few.

Tight end Logan Thomas has been the team’s second pass-catching option, and the second-highest yardage total produced by a WR not named McLaurin was Sims’ 477 yards in 2020. That is, until last season, when both Jahan Dotson and fellow Buckeye Curtis Samuel exceeded 500 yards... barely. But you get my point! McLaurin has been a one-man band for much of his NFL career.

WHAT A CATCH BY TERRY MCLAURIN pic.twitter.com/D0dckbWMyE

— Action Network (@ActionNetworkHQ) October 30, 2022

Now entering his age 28 season, McLaurin still appears to be in the early stages of his prime. His speed and athleticism are (still) quite evident, and he just put up the biggest total of his career, yardage-wise (1,191 in 2022). When factoring in an average of 75 receptions per season, McLaurin should be viewed as a strong WR2 in fantasy, with weekly WR1 upside... Provided, again, that he remains healthy.

And those numbers I mentioned represent Scary Terry’s floor! If the Commanders hit on Howell or any other QB – or McLaurin gets traded away from the dysfunctional Washington franchise – his production could skyrocket. 90 catches and 1,200+ yards is absolutely within the realm of possibility. Same goes for an uptick in TD (McLaurin’s career high is 7, as a rookie). It’s just going to take better QB play. But unfortunately, there is no guarantee of that in the nation’s capital.

Scary Terry is scary good, however, his fantasy value is not even remotely reflective of his talent and/or ability. His current ADP is right around No. 50 overall, and most sites have him as a fringe top-20 WR. But again, those rankings are a byproduct of his situation. Regardless, McLaurin is about as rock-solid as they come. Fantasy owners may want to aim a little higher for their WR1, but this former Buckeye is an ideal WR2. And there will absolutely be weeks during which he balls out and finishes top-5, top-6 at his position.

McLaurin might never reach the heights of a Michael Thomas, or generate the buzz of a Garrett Wilson, but he is arguably the safest fantasy option one will find, as far as former Buckeyes go. And if he ever gets to play with a good-to-great QB, watch out. Here’s hoping it happens sooner rather than later, because you won’t find an easier player to root for.

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LGHL How can ‘Parks and Recreation’ help recap Ohio State’s 23-3 win over Indiana?

How can ‘Parks and Recreation’ help recap Ohio State’s 23-3 win over Indiana?
Brett Ludwiczak
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

We all know a fictional city is truly the best city in Indiana.

If you asked me what my favorite sitcom of all time is, the answer would be easy. “Parks and Recreation.” Ron Swanson alone makes it gold. The show started off slow in the first season or two, but it really hit its stride after and was must-see television for me. Even now, if I see re-runs on I pretty much have to turn it on.

Since the fictional town of Pawnee is the best thing to ever come out of Indiana, I figured it would be fitting to look at yesterday’s performance by Ohio State in the Hoosier State through the prism of Parks and Recreation. Whether it be characters, places, or products, I’ll try and find the best of the best to encapsulate what we saw in Bloomington yesterday.


Fart Attack


In season five, Garry (or Jerry) Gergich has a heart attack, which also results in uncontrollable farting. Watching Ohio State’s quarterbacks yesterday felt like a big fart attack. In Kyle McCord’s defense, he did start to look better as the game went on in the second half, the performance just wasn’t what Ohio State fans were expecting to see against an Indiana team that should finish in the basement of the Big Ten East.

Ohio State v Indiana
Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images

What we saw out of McCord on Saturday will be enough to beat Indiana in Bloomington, but it definitely won’t fly later in this month when the Buckeyes head back to Indiana to take on Notre Dame in South Bend. Until then, as Ohio State fans we pretty much have to overreact to anything that goes the slightest bit wrong when it comes to the quarterbacks. We saw it a few years ago when C.J. Stroud struggled early in the 2021 season, and we will see it this year. The fart attacks from the quarterbacks lead to verbal diarrhea from Buckeye fans about the quarterbacks.


You got Jammed


A lot of the underwhelming performance from the quarterback position yesterday from the Buckeyes can be blamed on Ryan “Jeremy Jamm” Day. Where was the play-calling we saw from Day in the Georgia game that almost resulted in Ohio State beating the Bulldogs and making the national title game in January? After saying he was going to give up some of the play-calling to Brian Hartline, how much of that actually happened in this game? Honestly, I can’t think Hartline had much say in what happened yesterday because it looked so much like the same scared coaching we saw from Day in other games over the last few years.

Also, bringing in Devin Brown on Ohio State’s third offensive series of the game only to run the ball was insanely stupid to me. It felt like wanting to teach a kid to swim and then just throwing them in the shallowest part of the pool with water wings on. Brown isn’t going to learn or have any confidence out on the field if you don’t have any trust in him. If you want to try and shake things up, there’s no better place for Brown (or even McCord) to get some road experience than in Bloomington, where the crowd is going to be a little gentler than what they’ll see later this month.


Johnny Karate/Burt Macklin, FBI


Even though his name isn’t Johnny, Sonny Styles was awesome like Johnny Karate and Burt Macklin. It felt like Styles was all over the field against the Hoosiers, sniffing out the mysteries that Indiana was trying to throw at him and laying the lumber like Johnny Karate would with some of his sick kung fu. There’s no question Styles is the future of the Ohio State secondary.

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

Even more amazing is Styles should really be in his first year at Ohio State right now. Instead, after reclassifying in high school to allow him to become a member of the Buckeyes last year, he already has a year under his belt. With how good he is, I can’t imagine Styles not declaring for the NFL Draft after next season since if he’s not the best safety in the country, he certainly will be in the conversation. It feels like Styles is Vonn Bell, but even better, which is high praise since Bell was really good as a Buckeye, and has gone on to have a strong NFL career.


“You had me at meat tornado”


I know Ohio State wasn’t facing anything special at quarterback, but the Buckeye defensive line certainly did get after Tayven Jackson and Brendan Sorsby. The duo combined to go just 9/20 for 82 yards yesterday. The Hoosier quarterbacks were under pressure all day from J.T. Tuimoloau, Michael Hall Jr., and the rest of the Ohio State defensive line.

The best way to describe the defensive line is a meat tornado. There is a lot of mass and they are dangerous. Even though Tuimoloau didn’t put up numbers like we saw in the Penn State game last year, it was clear that he was altering what Indiana was trying to do with his rushes. Had the Hoosier quarterbacks not been so green and looking to get rid of the football as soon as possible, we likely would have seen more than the one sack Ohio State got late in the game from Hero Kanu.


Paunch Burger


Since he describes himself as a farm guy, I figured that Paunch Burger was a perfect description from what we saw from Cade Stover on Saturday. Marvin Harrison Jr. and Emeka Egbuka deservedly received most of the attention heading into this season, but it was Stover who made the most plays out of anyone in the Ohio State receiving corps.

Cade Stover is essentially like eating at Paunch Burger. At times you know it’s not good for you, but when you do have it you don’t regret your decision. The times when you know it’s not good is when you see some of the lapses with his blocking. All is forgiven though when he has catches the the 49-yarder, which was the longest for the Buckeyes yesterday. The 98 receiving yards were a career-high for Stover.


Turf & turf


One area where Ohio State did find success on offense was with their running game. Even though he only saw 12 carries, most of them in the first half, TreVeyon Henderson did show some glimpses of what we saw from him in 2021 when he came to Columbus as a freshman. Miyan Williams found the end zone twice, while Chip Trayanum was the leading rusher for the Buckeyes with 57 yards in the game.

The numbers might not blow you away, but the trio were able to find some holes behind an offensive line with three new starters. While early on the line didn’t look very good, they started to find their rhythm later in the day. Also, you have to tip your cap to Indiana linebacker Aaron Casey, who was a one-man wrecking crew for the Hoosiers. If McCord and Brown continue to struggle at quarterback, Ohio State is going to need their running backs to shoulder even more of the load.

NCAA Football: Ohio State at Indiana
Marc Lebryk-USA TODAY Sports

One thing I would have liked to have seen a little more of in the opener was a few carries for Dallan Hayden and Evan Pryor. Before his injury last year, it sounded like Pryor was going to have a sizable role in the run game, while we saw what Hayden could do late in the season last year. I know there are only so many carries to go around, and you want to let some guys get into a rhythm, it would have just been nice to see a few touches for those two.

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