#Cameron Philip net worth
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biographyer · 2 years ago
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Cameron Philip Girlfriend, Age, Bio, Net Worth, Height and Much More
Cameron Philip Girlfriend, Age, Bio, Net Worth, Height and Much More
Hey guys, in this post we will know about Cameron Philip’s Biography, wiki, age, Girlfriend, family, fitness (weight, height), career, net worth, social media handles, and much more. Who Is Cameron Philip? Cameron Philip Images are only for information purposes. Learn more Hey guys, I think you know who Cameron Philip is, if you don’t know who is Cameron Philip and Cameron Philip’s biography and

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litheammunition · 5 years ago
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Brexit: An Unwinnable War
How do you stage a coup? You start a war. You fan its flames, until it grows out of control. You make it so that it’s impossible for the moderates to win, showing them as out of their depth, needing a stronger, unconventional hand to sort the mess out. Then you step in, and find that you can get away with breaking all the rules...
Act 1 - Project Fear
The spark was the slow part. There had always been rumblings of discontent around the UK’s place in Europe, dating right back to our accession to the European Community in 1972, and intensifying since the project formally became a political European Union in 1993. 
There had been a referendum in 1975, won by a 67.2% vote to remain, but the question was raised again after the 1993 Maastricht Treaty. No referendum was needed for the government to sign up, but neighbours Ireland and France held one to confirm the decision, and many in the UK thought they deserved the same. That year saw the birth of a number of protest parties, the most successful of which, UKIP, continues to pressure for ‘Brexit’ today.
After years of pressure from UKIP and the sizable Eurosceptic wing of his own Conservative party, Prime Minister David Cameron finally gave into their demands. In 2016, a referendum was held, with one simple question: Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union? No details were provided as to what the latter option would look like. That was down to the campaigns to provide.
It turned out that it was actually many options hidden within one. Every leaver had their own idea of what shape Brexit would come in. Many talked about the Norway model, a country with full access to single market, but which is obliged to make a financial contribution, accept most EU laws, and which has free movement with the rest of the EU. Others suggested a Swiss model, part of the EFTA but not the EEA, making a smaller financial contribution to access specific areas of trade, and again with free movement. 
Still others spoke about Turkey, with no membership of the EEA/EFTA but its own customs union with the EU, to avoid the need to impose tariffs on exports. They were a dozen combinations available. What was certain was that there would be some sort of deal, and it would be quick and painless to negotiate. What was clear was that “absolutely nobody is talking about threatening our place in the Single Market” as Daniel Hannan, known as the Godfather of Brexit and a major push behind it, had said the year before. I have saved a full raft of quotes from other Leave leaders for Act 2, below.
On 26 June, senior Leave campaigner and PM hopeful Boris Johnson wrote an article confirming that the UK would remain part of the single market. In government and parliament, discussing how to implement Brexit, the main debate was between full access to the single market or only a customs union. There was no mention of crashing out with no deal. There was certaintly no mention that, in August 2019, over three years after the debate, we would be no closer to a resolution.
The Leave campaign seemed happier telling voters what the former option on the ballot would look like. The electorate might have thought they already knew what staying in the EU would look like, seeing as it was just the continuation of a fairly agreeable status quo, but they were corrected with a spate of glossy leaflets from the multiple Leave campaigns, and the same talking points brought up in every interview.
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One colourful infographic, common across the material, tried to spread fear that the entirety of Turkey’s 76 million population was about to move in next door. The truth is that Turkey is nowhere near joining the EU, and that the UK has a veto (i.e. even if they tried to join, we alone could stop them). Turkey cannot join the EU unless the UK wants it to. But if you say “Turkey is joining the EU”, or treat it as a done deal, and slap FACT on it, people will get shocked. If you highlight it in orange and red with a big red arrow of Turkish people swarming into the UK, people will be worried. That’s what you want. It doesn’t matter if it’s true.
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I use the term ‘swarming’ advisably, because although it’s a despicable way to describe to human beings, dehumanising them to insects, vermin, it’s the term that David Cameron used in July 2015, shortly after plans for the referendum were confirmed. As shown in other Leave material, such as the UKIP poster above that has been frequently compared to the Nazi propaganda below it, this debate was consistently coded with xenophobia and racism, an attempt to win by appealing to voter’s fears of mass immigration, the need to secure our borders, even though this was a picture of refugees moving approximately one thousand miles away and several countries away from the UK. 
If there was any doubt over the racial intention, the original photograph for this poster is below. It has a prominent white face at the front. Now note the way the original has been cropped and where the single opaque box of text has been placed, with everything else transparent. Note which one individual has been covered up, with all of the others put on show.
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Even if they weren’t abhorrent, the claims around immigration are also not true. The UK already has control of its own borders. Whilst some other EU countries like France and Germany have chosen (of their own will), to have open borders with each other, in a region called the Schengen Area, the UK had the free choice not to be a part of this. This means that the UK has full border checks on every individual entering the country. The UK’s agreement with the other EU countries is that nationals of those countries (not refugees from the Middle East passing through) can stay here on a three month visa, but after that it’s our choice.
In addition, that agreement has always been subject to ‘grounds of public policy, public security or public health’, which effectively means that the UK can choose not to let in any individual they don’t want to. The UK has specific power to expel any EU citizen who they believe poses ‘a genuine, present and sufficiently serious threat affecting one of the fundamental interests of society’, and the country they came from has to accept them back.
In short, the UK only needs to accept productive members of society. Indeed, all research (including by the government’s own Office of Budget Responsibility) has shown that immigrants make a net contribution to the country’s economy, and many industries are dependent on migrant workers. The campaign to ‘end uncontrolled immigration from the EU’ or ‘protect our security - open borders gives criminals and terrorists an easy route into the UK’ is therefore another straight-up lie designed to leverage people’s base xenophobic fears. 
The frequently repeated idea that the NHS and UK benefits system are being exploited by migrants is also fake. Not only do migrants pay £78,000 more into the UK government over their lifetime than they take out over their lifetimes, but the NHS specifically depends on immigration: 37% of doctors qualified overseas. The problem with long NHS waiting times is not because the system is overcrowded, but because it is understaffed, and immigrants are the solution rather than the problem. But this is a government policy problem, and for too long they have found it easier to blame the people coming here to help. 
Before the referendum, David Cameron had also secured the UK further powers in restricting benefits paid to migrants, a massive compromise from EU principles of fairness which would have given the UK privileged status amongst member states. There would be a 4 year break before benefits had to be paid to EU citizens working in the UK, with tax credits phased in over the same period. EU migrants without a job would be restricted to claiming jobseeker’s allowance for 3 months, and then deported after 6 in they were still unemployed. Benefit payments would be fixed to the amounts available in their home countries, removing any incentive to come to the UK to claim them. 
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This is all without even considering a fourth angle, that the freedom works both ways. Hundreds of thousands of British citizens exercise their right to visit and live in and work in the EU, just as happens the other way around. Finally, it’s worth noting that immigration from the EU makes up a minority of total migration to the UK, even with these supposed ‘open borders’, and specifically when net migration is considered. Most of the people coming for the long term do so from elsewhere in the world, where we have never had ‘open borders’ but still freely choose to let them in, suggesting that immigration numbers have always been up to the UK government and migration from EU countries will similarly continue at a similar rate no matter what the border situation is.
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There were many other obvious lies at the time, such as the suggestion that the EU were in the process of building an army, a completely transparent attempt to spark fear, but they were told so often that they started to be believed. On the other side, all concerns about the risks of leaving were dismissed as Project Fear, a classic example of projecting: as the Leave campaign were in the business of fearmongering, it helped distract from that by accusing their opponents of the same at every opportunity.
Project Fear became a term used to silence all dissent as part of some elitist conspiracy. Some experts said that Brexit will cost the economy? Project Fear. Since the referendum the value of the pound has dropped off the charts, the UK has experienced negative growth at a time of economic success for its neighbours, and Sony, Dyson, Flybmi, Nissan, Honda, Ford, Moneygram, Philips, P&O, Airbus, Barclays, Hitachi, JPMorgan, Citibank and other firms have announced they are closing their UK operations and moving to Ireland or the Netherlands or other countries who still have trade links with the EU. Brexit hasn’t even hit its hardest yet, and it had already cost the economy £66 billion by April this year, about £1,000 per person. It turns out that the experts were exactly right.
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Project Fear said that leaving threatened a break up of the UK. “If we vote to leave then I think the union will be stronger”, Michael Gove countered in May 2016, but the referendum vote has predictably intensified movements for Scottish (and Northern Irish) independence, as well as creating an endless dispute over the Irish-UK border, reopening scars that were just started to heal. Again, it seems that the people who knew what they were talking about... actually knew what they were talking about. The Leave campaign told people to ignore these false warnings as part of elite conspiracy, writing off the expertise of academics and industry leaders as ‘this country has had enough of experts’, an unexcusable anti-intellectualism that excused all lies and criticised anyone who dared to point out the truth.
They still put their fingers in their ears now, when reminded that those warnings have virtually all come true. This weak, the government’s reports on Operation Yellowhammer were leaked, their own forecasts suggesting a massive negative hit from leaving without a deal. When Kwasi Kwarteng, Minister of State for Business and Energy, was asked about them on TV, he described his government’s own projections as scaremongering and Project Fear, confused as to which lie he was supposed to be telling. Lead Brexiteer Michael Gove came out to dismiss them as the ‘worst case scenario’, even as a Whitehall source clarified ‘this is the most realistic assessment of what the public face with no deal. These are likely, basic, reasonable scenarios – not the worst case’.
It isn’t the first time. Theresa May withheld projections and legal advice from voters and MPs, and her government was the first ever to be held in contempt of parliament for deliberately hiding the facts to push through her votes: in contempt of democracy, in contempt of the truth, adding constitutional offences to the free-flowing lies that have been a feature throughout. Amongst all of them, perhaps the biggest lie was that Brexit was about the sovereignty of the UK parliament, taking back control from the undemocratic elites: from Theresa May and Boris Johnson we have seen two unelected Prime Ministers who have tried everything they can to circumvent British democracy, as detailed below.
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yahoo-roto-arcade-blog · 6 years ago
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Fantasy Football Booms/Busts 2018: The New Orleans Saints
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Missing four games due to suspension, Mark Ingram is a disputed fantasy value in Round 4 of 12-team drafts. Should you invest? (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
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As the mercury rises and we inch closer to the open of training camps, our resident fantasy football sickos, Brad Evans and Liz Loza, will profile their favorite booms/busts of every NFL team. Today’s topic: The Bourbon Street Bombers.
Ignoring obvious names Alvin Kamara and Michael Thomas, what Saint has the most BOOM potential in 2018?
Brad – CAMERON MEREDITH. As Loza discusses below, Scott is one of my favorite late-draft targets. His bowling ball build, per-touch efficiency at Louisiana Tech (3.87 YAC/att; No. 3 in elusive rating among all FBS rushers) and versatile skill set, sets him apart from competitors vying to fill the power back role with Mark Ingram sidelined. The wide receiver, though, also deserves a mention.
Most have forgotten about Meredith. Before shredding his knee last August, he was a fixture on “sleeper” and “undervalued” lists, a receiver posed to break out. Remember how good he was down the stretch in 2016? Let me refresh your memory. During the fantasy playoffs (Weeks 14-16), he was the second-most valuable WR, totaling a 33-24-311-2 line. Proficient in multiple capacities, Meredith, according to Matt Harmon’s Reception Perception, finished that season top-12 at the position in dig, post, comeback and flat success rates. Yes, Michael Thomas, and his super jacked frame, is Brees’ primary weapon of choice, but Meredith is in line to net 18-20 percent of the target share, especially if he secures the slot gig. Ahead of schedule in his ACL recovery, he’s a WR3 available at a WR5 price (140.3 ADP, WR50).
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Liz – BOSTON SCOTT. What do Boston Scott, acts of kindness, bullet ants, and toddlers have in common? They’re all small, but mighty. Except that Scott is more than strong
 he’s fast and crazy elusive too. With a breath-catching stiff arm, dizzying spin move, and popcorn-worthy truck stick, the 5-foot-7 and 195-pound rookie isn’t any ordinary satellite back. Boasting elite speed (4.40) and above average power (21 reps via the bench press), he’s a well-rounded RB with outlier potential.
Suspended for four-games for violating the league’s PED policy, Mark Ingram will miss the first month of the regular season. That’s not a good look for the vet, who’s in the last year of his deal. As the organization transitions Alvin Kamara to the lead back role, Scott has a chance to play second fiddle. I get that there are other bodies on the roster, but Jonathan Williams, Daniel Lasco, and Trey Edmunds can’t touch Scott’s ceiling. This hometown prospect is a headline waiting to happen.
Mark Ingram’s average ADP since his four-game suspension was levied is 39.2 (RB20). At that price point is the rusher OVERVALUED, UNDERVALUED or PROPERLY VALUED??
Liz – OVERVALUED (slightly). Sean Payton is wild man with a reputation for hotheadedness. He and Ingram have sparred in the past and he was reportedly peeved that Ingram skipped OTAs. Entering the last year of his deal, the veteran RB isn’t an automatic lock for 14+ carries per game, not with so many other options available. Without that guarantee, it’s hard to imagine that Ingram makes up enough ground to stay inside the top-twenty players at the position.
Brad – PROPERLY VALUED. Unlike other Alabama products, Ingram, after a rocky career start, has lived up to his pro promise. In .5 PPR, he’s finished RB12 or higher in four-straight seasons. His underlying metrics have also impressed. Last fall, he ranked top-10 in total breakaway runs, yards after contact per attempt (3.1), red-zone touches and catch rate (81.7%). Toss in the Saints’ elite run-blocking line and he’s very dependable.
Missing four games, however, comprises 30.8 percent of the fantasy season. Think about that. If I had 30.8 percent more active follicles on my dome, I would sport a Paul Rudd head salad. It’s a significant chunk. Given the questions tied to RBs in a similar tier (e.g. Derrick Henry, Derrius Guice, Kenyan Drake and Rashaad Penny), Ingram’s perceived worth feels right.
In 2017, Drew Brees failed to throw 30 touchdowns for the first time in 10 seasons. OVER or UNDER 29.5 passing TDs this fall?
Brad – UNDER. For years Drew Brees resembled the beignets from the world famous Cafe Du Monde – unchanged, decadent, highly sought after. Fantasy owners far and wide lined up on draft day in the hopes of consuming his delicious numbers. Going back to his days in San Diego, he finished No. 9 or better in overall QB production 13 consecutive seasons, seven of those inside the top-five. Then 2017 happened.
New Orleans underwent an offensive metamorphosis last season. A run-centered dose of Kamara and Ingram replaced the air-first system fantasy owners had grown accustomed to. As a result, Brees finished outside the position’s top-10, experiencing a dramatic decline in passing touchdowns (23) and yards per game (270.9). The future HOFer remains one of the game’s most accurate passers and his aggressiveness downfield (8.1 ypa in ’17) hasn’t waned, but the Saints’ defensive emphasis combined with a strong ground attack arrow to a 25-27 TD campaign. At his QB7 ADP (97.6 overall), he’s appropriately valued.
Liz – UNDER. In 2016 the Saints racked up the nineteenth most rushing attempts (404) in the league. The following year, however, New Orleans prioritized the running game and managed the FIFTH most totes in the NFL (444). This was clearly done to exploit Alvin Kamara’s many gifts and to keep their aging QB’s arm fresh. With an improved defense and Brees entering his age-39 season, the formula doesn’t figure to change.
But don’t fret, fantasy footballers. Philip Rivers and Matt Stafford both passed for fewer than 30 TDs (while also failing to score via the ground) and still managed top-eight fantasy performances.
Bring the blitz on Twitter. Follow Brad (@YahooNoise) and Liz (@LizLoza_FF).
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realstyle-blog · 7 years ago
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Dove Cameron age, Boyfriend, Height, Lifestyle, Family | Real Style How tall is dove cameron, Who is dove cameron dating, is dove cameron married
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Dove Cameron is an American actress and singer, best known for playing a dual role as both title characters in the Disney Channel teen sitcom Liv and Maddie and playing Mal, daughter of Maleficent in Descendants. Born: January 15, 1996 (age 21), Seattle, Washington, United States Height: 1.57 m Full name: Chloe Celeste Hosterman Parents: Bonnie Wallace, Philip Alan Hosterman Siblings: Claire Hosterman
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biographyspy · 7 years ago
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Dove Cameron Net Worth, Age, Height, Weight, Wiki
Dove Cameron Age, Height, Net Worth, Wiki, and Family. Dove Cameron is a famous American actress in America she born on 15-Jan-1996 in Seattle, Washington, America, Her home city is Seattle, Washington and Nationality American. she born on her mother home city in Seattle, Washington, America, Right now she is 21 years old (last update 2017) and her father name is Philip Alan Hosterman and mother

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thepeterssite · 7 years ago
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Mark Zuckerberg Net Worth
Mark Elliot Zuckerberg is an American Internet Entrepreneur, Computer Programmer and philanthropist who has a net worth of $50 billion dollar. He is the chairman, chief executive and co-founder of social networking website Facebook. Since 2010, according to Time Magazine, he is named among the 100 wealthiest and most influential people in the world. He was born on 14th May 1984 in White Plains, New York and attended Ardsley High School and transferred to Phillips Exeter Academy. After the graduation from Philips Exeter, he enrolled on Harvard College. He started using computers and writing software in middle school and he was taught Atari Basic Programming in 1990s by his father. His father hired software developer David Newman to tutor him privately. Mark launched Facebook from Harvard’s dormitory rooms with fellow students including Eduardo Saverin, Andrew McCollum, Dustin Moskovitz and Chris Hughes. Before the development of the Facebook, he developed a program called Facemash and CourseMatch.
In January 2004, Zuckerberg began writing code for ‘thefacebook.com’ and launched it in next month. After the 6 days of the launch, the senior of the Harvard, Tyler Winklevoss, Cameron Winklevoss and Divya Narendra accused Zuckerberg of using their ideas to create a rival product instead of building ‘HarvardConnection.com’ for them as promised by him. The complaint given by seniors was subsequently investigated by Harvard Crimson Newspaper. They sued Zuckerberg after the official launch of Facebook. For the settlement, Zuckerberg gave them 1.2 million shares of Facebook which was worth of $300 million during the IPO of the company. He decided to spread the website to other schools and campuses and seek the help of Dustin MOskovitz, his roommate. For the spread of the website, they soon add Columbia, Stanford, New York University, Dartmouth, Penn, Brown and Cornell. For the enlargement of the Facebook, Zuckerberg moved to Palo Alto with Moskovitz and other friends and rented a house where they made their office. With the increasing craze of the Facebook, till July 21, 2010, the Facebook has 500 million users.
Based on the IPO Price of $42 a share for Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg has sold 30 million shares on the stock’s debut day in order to raise cash to pay taxes, but still he had $503 million at the conclusion of the IPO. He is listed on the 25th richest people in the world after losing $7.2 billion. He runes the network of more than a billion “Friends” who announces births, deaths, breakups, share photos in their Facebook timeline and harvest squash 30 billion times a month. His developed site is the second-most-visited site after Google, where users spend over 700 billion minutes per month on the site. Mark Zuckerberg is married to his longtime girlfriend Priscilla Chan, at a small ceremony at his home in Palo Alto, California on May 19, 2012. The couple have been together for nine years after they met on Harvard University. Zuckerberg and Chan announced the birth of their daughter Max on December 1, 2015. In an open letter to Max, they vowed to donate 99% of their Facebook Shares, then valued at $45 billion to Chan Zuckerberg Inititative. The Zuckerberg family lives in a Palo Alto mansion which was built in 1903. His mansion was worth of $7 million at the time of purchase which was his first property investment. Facebook billionaire Zuckerberg drives in a luxurious cars including Volkswagen Golf GTI, Acura TSX, Pagani Huyara, and Honda Fit. Today, 31 years old Mark Zuckerberg is the 4th richest person in the world. His net worth is sure to be increased in the coming time.
Things to know about Mark Zuckerberg
Full Name: Mark Eliot Zuckerberg Date of Birth: 14th May, 1984 Mark Zuckerberg in Facebook: 98M Followers in Facebook Mark Zuckerberg in Instagram: 3.5M Followers in Instagram Mark Zuckerberg Net Worth: $74 Billion
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yahoo-roto-arcade-blog · 7 years ago
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Fantasy Football All-Man Crush team: Terrelle Pryor, Tyreek Hill top list
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Tyreek Hill is sure to spread his wings and fly this season. (AP)
For the past several years, the Noise has lived a double-life. By day, I maintain a conventional existence playing the role of husband, father, terrier lover and, on Thursdays, foul-mouthed tequila imbiber. However, come nightfall, I walk a much different line, transforming into a connoisseur of the mantastic.
It’s true, when it comes to fantasy football, I’m admittedly a proud lush. Over the years, my fantasy feels were unrestrained. Brandon Jacobs, Rashard Mendenhall, Pierre Thomas,  Arian Foster, Le’Veon Bell and Melvin Gordon are just a few once unheralded names that were lustfully pursued. Those infatuations largely paid off. Others like Ameer Abullah, Felix Jones and Ryan Mathews, however, left my heart broken and rosters in squalor.
In a game where individual players are idolized owners can empathize. Professed obsessions commonly lead to lopsided trades, arm tendon tears and empty pockets. Don’t even ask how much I paid for Montee Ball in an auction a few years back (Think the approximate street value of one kidney).
In honor of fantasy fixations everywhere, here is your must avoid list the Noise’s 2017 All Man-Crush team — ridiculous adjectives and hyperbole included:
[Pick one winner a week. Play Survival Football for chance at $100K]
Marcus Mariota, Ten, QB (97.5, QB8) – People with memory lapses tend to forget how volcanic the native Hawaiian was for a large chunk of 2016. From Weeks 5-12 he erupted, netting the third-most valuable passer line in fantasy, a stretch he completed 67.4 percent of his attempts, averaged 259.1 passing yards per game, 29.8 rushing yards per game and tallied a 25:3 TD:INT (two rushing) split. He was also dynamite inside the red zone (QB9 in RZ completion%) and downfield (QB8 in deep-ball completion%) while also padding the bottom line on the ground (24.3 rush ypg).
With Corey Davis and Eric Decker now running routes in Tennessee, I suspect Terry Robskie removes padlock from playbook and features more spread formations. Last year, the Titans ranked dead last in percentage of three-wide receiver sets (42, NFL average: 60). Fully recovered from a broken leg, Mariota is about to become a QB top-five megastar. There simply isn’t a better mid-draft option at the position.
Fearless Forecast: 4,087 passing yards, 30 passing touchdowns, 395 rushing yards, 2 rushing touchdowns
Ty Montgomery, GB, RB (40.1 ADP, RB16) – Similar to a freshwater sturgeon traversing a frozen Wisconsin lake,  Montgomery is a rare sight. Though deployed only occasionally last year, he was nothing short of dominant on a per touch basis. The advanced numbers don’t lie. Last year, Monty ranked top-five among running backs in juke rate (RB3) – he forced 17 missed tackles alone against rival Chicago Week 15 – yards after contact per attempt (2.8, RB1) and breakaway run percentage (RB2). And he accomplished that level of production “acting on instincts.” With a full offseason to work on his biggest weakness, stonewalling blitzers, he busts out in a big way in 2017.
Yes, Jamaal Williams will work into Green Bay’s backfield flow. Mike McCarthy was always going to employ some sort of running back by committee. And, no, Monty’s mysterious lower leg injury isn’t overly concerning. Once camp breaks, No. 88 registers roughly 13-15 touches per game. If his effectiveness is anything close to last year’s 6.7 yards per touch, he’ll toe the RB1 line in 12-team leagues, especially PPR. Remember he plays alongside arguably the best quarterback in the game, Aaron Rodgers, who was the primary reason why Monty saw light fronts a jaw-dropping 89.6 percent of the time in ’16. Ty one on, #TeamHuevos.
Fearless Forecast: 159 carries, 890 rushing yards, 51 receptions, 404 receiving yards, 9 total touchdowns
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Bilal Powell, NYJ, RB (69.1, RB27) – I know what you’re thinking, “A Jet?! Really?! Man, those brownies in Denver (my home) are quite strong!” But featuring Powell on this list was done with complete sobriety and clarity.
Few Puddle Jumpers are worthy of a roster spot, but the crafty veteran back most definitely is. Last year, he showcased his three-down wares once thrust into a featured role. From Weeks 14-17 he logged a December to remember, posting the second-most valuable line among running backs (5.0 ypc, 138.0 total yards per game, 3 TDs). Diving deeper, he also compiled 14 missed tackles and a 3.2 YAC over that four-game span.
Overall, “Boom Boom” is a better-than-advertised inside runner. He’s also an accomplished receiver and difficult to corral in space. Among RBs, he ranked No. 14 in juke rate last season. His backfield compadre, Matt Forte, meanwhile, checked in at No. 56 in the category and was one of the worst qualifying backs in yards after contact per touch (No. 61). Nearly three years Forte’s junior and with 2,067 fewer career touches under his belt, Powell packs more across-the-board punch.
My best guess is New York installs a 60-40 platoon Week 1 at Buffalo with Powell shouldering the heavy side (14-15 touches per game). If Forte doesn’t recover soon from a hamstring setback, the speculated distribution will only widen. Essentially, Powell should provide owners with significant versatility and value, particularly in PPR leagues. The Jets’ suspect defense boosts his garbage time appeal. Heck, they’re already down 21-0 in every game.
Fearless Forecast: 191 carries, 842 rushing yards, 58 receptions, 435 receiving yards, 6 total touchdowns
Terrelle Pryor, Was, WR (38.7 ADP, WR18) – The converted quarterback is my ultimate bae. Already this month, my fingers have typed hundreds of superlatives about the receiver. Is my adoration unhealthy? Possibly, but I have my justifications.
For starters, he compiled WR2 numbers last year with punchlines Josh McCown, Robert Griffin III, Cody Kessler, Kevin Hogan and Charlie Whitehurst hurling wingless paper airplanes in his general direction. It was arguably THE most heroic campaign of the season next to Kenny Britt’s 1,000-yard effort in Los Angeles. And he achieved that in his first full season as a wide receiver. Unprecedented. Exchanging his Factory of Sadness punch card for a gig in Washington’s Factory of Fun, his worth rockets skyward. His viral videos from training camp are merely a warmup.
Kirk Cousins sorely needs to improve in red-zone efficiency, an area the receiver notched top-notch numbers with the Browns (69.2 catch rate in ’16). Sure Jordan Reed, Jamison Crowder and Josh Doctson will challenge him for targets, but Pryor could match 2016’s share total (141). Keep in mind, Washington castoffs DeSean Jackson and Pierre Garcon accounted for 37.1 percent of the club’s vertical workload a season ago. Currently my WR8 (I’m a sick puppy!), Pryor turns a massive profit for his investors.
Fearless forecast: 90 receptions, 1,211 receiving yards, 9 touchdowns
Tyreek Hill, KC, WR (43.9, WR23) – He’s too small. He’s tied to Alex Smith and Andy Reid. He’s still relatively unproven. 
 These are common arguments Hill haters spew when talking themselves out of the wide receiver, a terrible mistake. History says their gripes are reasonable, but the ‘Freak’ is about to get nasty. According to Reception Perception, last year he ranked No. 3, behind Antonio Brown and Willie Snead, in getting open whether against man, zone or press coverage. Equally impressive, he totaled outstanding success rates on myriad routes. Bottom line, doubter comps to Cordarrelle Patterson are unfounded and laughable. Unlike the former Viking, Hill’s route tree actually has branches.
Reflecting on ’16, Hill ranked No. 5 in total output at the position Weeks 8-17 netting 47 receptions, 724 combined yards (rush/receiving) and six touchdowns. Most importantly, he accomplished that seeing just 20.2 percent of the targets share. His home-run hitting ability and scoring diversity explained his amazing efficiency. In terms of fantasy points scored per target (2.42) only Taylor Gabriel outpaced him.
Reid has made it crystal clear, Hill is the Chiefs’ offensive engine. Underused even during his breakout period last fall, he should log a snap rate in the 60-65 percent range (43.5 in ’16). Maybe I’m nuts, but the trends and data indicate a WR top-10 campaign is no stretch.
Fearless Forecast: 73 receptions, 817 receiving yards, 236 rushing yards, 8 total touchdowns
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Tyrell Williams, LAC, WR (89.6, WR41) – Close to the double-digit rounds, there isn’t a better receiver value out there. A true shocker special last season, the long drink became a favorite Philip Rivers beverage post-Keenan Allen ACL disintegration. He attracted a respectable 21.1 percent of the targets share and tallied a 69-1059-7 line (WR22). Most impressively, Williams averaged 15.2 yards per route and finished top-11 in contested catch rate.
With Mike Williams on the PUP and without an official timetable to return (October?), it seems unlikely he’ll suddenly take a backseat to the rookie at any point this fall. Tyrell is the franchise’s new Vincent Jackson, an explosive weapon who was 87 percent successful against man or zone coverages and ranked No. 11 in contested catch rate in 2016. In other words, he isn’t some one-trick streak-only pony. His absurdly discounted ADP is a gift from the fantasy gods. With a highly competent quarterback throwing him the pill, he should match or slightly exceed last year’s WR2 output.
Fearless Forecast: 72 receptions, 1,103 receiving yards, 8 touchdowns
Cameron Brate, TB, TE (160.1, TE20) – In the later rounds, ‘X’ marks the spot for the grossly underrated Buccaneer. Many forget he was the sixth-most valuable tight end from Week 8 on last season. He and Jameis Winston, whether on short, intermediate or long connections, were around 63 percent successful according to Sharp Football. That hyper efficiency combined with Brate’s solidified red-zone role (25.4% red-zone targets share in ’16) and benefits playing alongside Mike Evans and DeSean Jackson point to another top-12 return. Yes, even with the supposedly divine O.J. Howard on roster. Understand Dirk Koetter features a ton of two-TE sets. Bank on Brate and Winston picking up where they left off.
Fearless Forecast: 52 receptions, 629 receiving yards, 6 touchdowns
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