New York Post

COVID makes handcuffin­g dangerous

- Dloftis@nypost.com

IT SEEMS impossible that the NFL season is already on the cusp of Week 13, which marks the final week of the fantasy regular season in most leagues. So time is running out to set up your roster for playoff success. And whatever plans you did have, the Broncos quarterbac­k debacle this weekend might have sent up a warning flare for those who practice the traditiona­l strategy of handcuffin­g.

Denver laid out a perfect game plan for how to sa bot a ge an e nt i re position on a team’s roster. Ultimately, it had no QBs left to send on the field on Sunday, so used practice squad/ college QB Kendall Hinton — a player so far down real-world depth charts that even NFL coaches would ask, “Who’s that guy?”

Hinton played like a Who’s That Guy guy, completing just one of nine passes with two intercepti­ons. (As a side note, any of those who in the past have sat at the bar and complained about a QB’s play and said, with some degree of seriousnes­s, “I could make that throw,” well: Kendall Hinton made it to an NFL roster. He is much better than you. And he was awful. Imagine how bad you would stink.)

The lesson here isn’t about Hinton, it is about the dangers COVID poses to NFL teams, and entire position groups — since those players have meetings together, often in small spaces. Certainly, we would hope not every team or positional group is as irresponsi­ble as it seems the Denver QBs were, but even proper precaution­s are still just precaution­s. They aren’t guaranteed sa fe g uards from i nfe c - tion.

So, what happens if starting RB Jimmy Rungood gets COVID and doesn’t know it yet. He goes to an RB meeting where he spreads it to backup Johnny Stepslower. Both are ruled out for Sunday’s game. What happens if your fantasy team relies on Rungood as a weekly starter? And what if your insurance was a handcuff Stepslower on your bench?

So instead of handcuffin­g to protect yourself, your handcuff has been counterpro­ductive. The Madman suggests trying to f ind equitable backups who aren’t on the same real-world roster. Let’s say you have Alvin Kamara at RB and Latavius Murray as a handcuff.

To avoid a Denver-QB-type calamity, check to see if you can f ind some other player of similar production, use or upside as Murray — like, say, Jamaal Williams. Both get a not-insignif icant amount of work behind the primary starter, both would immediatel­y assume the bell-cow role if the starter goes down. Maybe Williams scores slightly fewer per week on average, but that’s OK. It is not like you’re planning to use them anyway, you’re just trying to diversify your roster so you can’t be crushed by an outbreak at one position for one team.

Whether your handcuff is Murray, Williams, Benny Snell, Alexander Mattison or someone else, it is OK to pivot to a Phillip Lindsay, Zack Moss, James White or someone similar.

Find your key, and unlock those handcuffs.

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