2014-01-02

Fantasy History: 1992 Fantasy Football Rankings

I’ve been playing Fantasy Football for over 20 years now, and I still have magazines dating back to the early ’90s. Here are the 1992 Fantasy Football Rankings from the 1992 Fantasy Football Index Magazine that I got at a local grocery store back then.

I thought I’d start printing these old rankings and cheatsheets over the next few weeks, just as a way to preserve this old Fantasy history. I’m a big fan of looking back before we look forward, and while we might not glean too much from the player rankings themselves, we can definitely learn a lot about the industry and the game itself.

There are a few things you need to remember, though, as you look through these rankings.

Remember that back then, basic touchdown leagues were the norm. In other words, you didn’t get points if your running back rushed for 140 yards and no touchdowns. That’s a big fat zero in the scoring column for your Fantasy team. Doesn’t seem right, does it!?! Yeah, well, that’s why it was changed once online commissioner leagues made running the stats easier.

The city of Los Angeles had two teams in 1992, as opposed to the cities of Arizona, Baltimore, Carolina, Jacksonville and Nashville, which had none. The Raiders and Rams co-existed in L.A. for several years before moving on to Oakland and St. Louis.

1992 Fantasy Football Rankings

Remember that these are the preseason rankings – not the end-of-the-season rankings.

Top 20 Overall Rankings For 1992

(This is the extent of their overall rankings. Good luck if you’re in a draft that lasts longer than two rounds!)

1. Barry Sanders, RB, Detroit Lions

2. Jerry Rice, WR, San Francisco 49ers

3. Emmitt Smith, RB, Dallas Cowboys

4. Thurman Thomas, RB, Buffalo Bills

5. Mark Rypien, QB, Washington Redskins

6. Jim Kelly, QB, Buffalo Bills

7. Chris Miller, QB, Atlanta Falcons

8. Warren Moon, QB, Houston Oilers

9. Dan Marino, QB, Miami Dolphins

10. Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco 49ers

11. Randall Cunningham, QB, Philadelphia Eagles

12. Andre Reed, WR, Buffalo Bills

13. Andre Rison, WR, Atlanta Falcons

14. Rodney Hampton, RB, N.Y. Giants

15. Gary Clark, WR, Washington Redskins

16. Mark Clayton, WR, Miami Dolphins

17. John Taylor, WR, San Francisco 49ers

18. Neal Anderson, RB, Chicago Bears

19. Michael Irvin, WR, Dallas Cowboys

20. Lorenzo White, RB, Houston Oilers

The Stud-RB Theory was still years away from being figured out, so you’ll notice some quirky things in the cheatsheet. Plus, remember that since it was a basic, touchdown-only league, running backs weren’t quite as valuable as good quarterbacks. Or so the thinking was at the time. In reality, you can’t tell me the sixth quarterback (Montana) was a better pick than whoever the fourth running back (Hampton) would have been.

Jerry Rice was a first-round pick for longer than any other player in NFL history. Take that in. The only person to come close might have been LaDainian Tomlinson.

1992 Quarterback Rankings

1. Mark Rypien, Washington Redskins

2. Jim Kelly, Buffalo Bills

3. Chris Miller, Atlanta Falcons

4. Warren Moon, Houston Oilers

5. Dan Marino, Miami Dolphins

6. Joe Montana, San Francisco 49ers

7. Randall Cunningham, Philadelphia Eagles

8. Dave Krieg, Kansas City Chiefs

9. Troy Aikman, Dallas Cowboys

10. Steve Young, San Francisco 49ers

11. Jeff George, Indianapolis Colts

12. Bernie Kosar, Cleveland Browns

13. Jim Everett, L.A. Rams

14. John Elway, Denver Broncos

15. Jim Harbaugh, Chicago Bears

16. Boomer Esiason, Cincinnati Bengals

17. Bobby Hebert, New Orleans Saints

18. Rodney Peete, Detroit Lions

19. Rich Gannon, Minnesota Vikings

20. John Friesz, San Diego Chargers

21. Matt Millen, New England Patriots

22. Vinny Testaverde, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

23. Neil O’Donnell, Pittsburgh Steelers

24. Jay Schroeder, L.A. Raiders

25. Jeff Hostetler, N.Y. Giants

26. Don Majkowski, Green Bay Packers

27. Steve Bono, San Francisco 49ers

28. Browning Nagle, N.Y. Jets

29. Timm Rosenbach, Phoenix Cardinals

30. Bubby Brister, Pittsburgh Steelers

31. Erik Kramer, Detroit Lions

32. Dan McGwire, Seattle Seahawks

33. Frank Reich, Buffalo Bills

34. Cody Carlson, Houston Oilers

35. Mike Tomczak, Pittsburgh Steelers

36. Steve Walsh, New Orleans Saints

37. Steve Beuerlein, Dallas Cowboys

38. Phil Simms, N.Y. Giants

39. Mark Vlasic, Kansas City Chiefs

40. Ken O’Brien, N.Y. Jets

41. Todd Marinovich, L.A. Raiders

42. Kelly Stouffer, Seattle Seahawks

43. Cary Conklin, Washington Redskins

44. Jim McMahon, Philadelphia Eagles

45. Chris Chandler, Phoenix Cardinals

46. Sean Salisbury, Minnesota Vikings

47. Tommy Hodson, New England Patriots

48. Jeff Rutledge, Washington Redskins

49. Steve DeBerg, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

50. Jeff Kemp, Philadelphia Eagles

51. Billy Joe Tolliver, Atlanta Falcons

52. David Klingler, Cincinnati Bengals

53. Jeff Trudeau, Indianapolis Colts

54. Andre Ware, Detroit Lions

55. Todd Philcox, Cleveland Browns

56. Steve Pelluer, Denver Broncos

57. Mike Pagel, L.A. Rams

58. Peter Tom Willis, Chicago Bears

59. Scott Mitchell, Miami Dolphins

60. Jeff Graham, San Diego Chargers

Ahem. Why are there 60 quarterbacks ranked and only 20 players overall? Love seeing some of these names on here, like



Jim Kelly makes the cover of the 1992 Fantasy Index Magazine. FantasyIndex.com

The 49ers were so good, they had three quarterbacks ranked in the top 30 overall. Whoever threw to Rice-Taylor-Jones was going to be a Fantasy stud.

Dan McGwire and Todd Marinovich were both expected to be beasts. Dan was the younger brother to HR king Mark McGwire, and Marinovich was nicknamed, “Robo-QB” because he was groomed to be an NFL QB from early childhood.

They both stunk.

Notice that Brett Favre wasn’t even listed in the quarterback rankings? The NFL all-time passing touchdown leader!?! This was his second season in the NFL, too! The Falcons traded him to Green Bay during the offseason before the ’92 season.

1992 Running Back Rankings

1. Barry Sanders, Detroit

2. Emmitt Smith, Dallas

3. Thurman Thomas, Buffalo

4. Rodney Hampton, N.Y. Giants

5. Neal Anderson, Chicago

6. Lorenzo White, Houston

7. Marion Butts, San Diego

8. Ricky Ervins, Washington

9. Reggie Cobb, Tampa Bay

10. Brad Baxter, N.Y. Jets

11. Barry Word, Kansas City

12. Leonard Russell, New England

13. Terry Allen, Minnesota

14. Vaughn Dunbar, New Orleans

15. Tommy Vardell, Cleveland

16. Gerald Riggs, Washington

17. Christan Okoye, Kansas City

18. Harold Green, Cincinnati

19. Greg Bell, L.A. Raiders

20. Vince Workman, Green Bay

21. Rod Bernstine, San Diego

22. Tony Smith, Atlanta Falcons

23. Herschel Walker, Minnesota Vikings

24. Mark Higgs, Miami Dolphins

25. Leroy Hoard, Cleveland Browns

26. Brad Muster, Chicago Bears

27. Siran Stacy, Philadelphia Eagles

28. Eric Dickerson, L.A. Raiders

29. Ernest Byner, Washington Redskins

30. Johnny Johnson, Phoenix Cardinals

31. Blair Thomas, N.Y. Jets

32. Albert Bentley, Indianapolis Colts

33. Greg Lewis, Denver Broncos

34. Harvey Williams, Kansas City Chiefs

35. Barry Foster, Pittsburgh Steelers

36. Cleveland Gary, L.A. Rams

37. Bobby Humphrey, Denver Broncos

38. Tom Rathman, San Francisco 49ers

39. Kevin Mack, Cleveland Browns

40. Marcus Allen, L.A. Raiders

41. Kenneth Davis, Buffalo Bills

42. John L. Williams, Seattle Seahawks

43. Robert Delpino, L.A. Rams

44. Merril Hoge, Pittsburgh Steelers

45. Gaston Green, Denver Broncos

46. Darren Lewis, Chicago Bears

47. Sammie Smith, Miami Dolphins

48. Amp Lee, San Francisco 49ers

49. Rueben Mayes, Seattle Seahawks

50. Darrell Thompson, Green Bay Packers

51. Reggie Brooks, Philadelphia Eagles

52. Rodney Culver, Indianapolis Colts

53. Anthony Thompson, Phoenix Cardinals

54. Gary Anderson, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

55. Dave Meggett, N.Y. Giants

56. Steve Broussard, Atlanta Falcons

57. Allen Pinkett, New Orleans Saints

58. Gary Brown, Houston Oilers

59. Derrick Fenner, Cincinnati Bengals

60. Lewis Tillman, N.Y. Giants

Sanders-Smith-Thomas was an argument for the ages, up there with A-Rod-Nomar-Jeter in the late ’90s.

Plenty of good stories among this group, including Terry Allen, who was great with Minnesota before tearing his ACL, then playing great for Washington – and tearing his ACL again.

Gary Brown and Barry Foster were studs in this season – and then barely heard from after that.

The Chiefs were exasperating to deal with in Fantasy because they had the “Nigerian Nightmare” Christian Okoye, Barry Word and Harvey Williams.

Seeing Herschel Walker at No. 23 is painful. This guy was so talented, but over the hill at this point, and on the wrong team.

Note: Tony Smith, ranked 22nd here, was the player the Falcons drafted with the first-round pick they got from the Packers for Favre. How in the world did the Falcons make it to the Super Bowl in 1998, after horrible decisions like that one?

1992 Wide Receiver Rankings

1. Jerry Rice, San Francisco 49ers

2. Andre Reed, Buffalo Bills

3. Andre Rison, Atlanta Falcons

4. Gary Clark, Washington Redskins

5. Mark Clayton, Miami Dolphins

6. John Taylor, San Francisco 49ers

7. Michael Irvin, Dallas Cowboys

8. Haywood Jeffires, Houston Oilers

9. Michael Haynes, Atlanta Falcons

10. Fred Barnett, Philadelphia Eagles

11. James Lofton, Buffalo Bills

12. Ernest Givins, Houston Oilers

13. Sterling Sharpe, Green Bay Packers

14. Anthony Miller, San Diego Chargers

15. Calvin Williams, Philadelphia Eagles

16. Tim Brown, L.A. Raiders

17. Art Monk, Washington Redskins

18. Floyd Turner, New Orleans Saints

19. Rob Moore, N.Y. Jets

20. Tim Barnett, Kansas City Chiefs

21. Willie Green, Detroit Lions

22. Henry Ellard, L.A. Rams

23. Anthony Carter, Minnesota Vikings

24. Wendell Davis, Chicago Bears

25. Eddie Brown, Cincinnati Bengals

26. Don Beebe, Buffalo Bills

27. Jessie Hester, Indianapolis Colts

28. Cris Carter, Minnesota Vikings

29. Herman Moore, Detroit Lions

30. Desmond Howard, Washington Redskins

31. Lawrence Dawsey, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

32. Irving Fryar, New England Patriots

33. Webster Slaughter, Cleveland Browns

34. Brian Blades, Seattle Seahawks

35. Curtis Duncan, Houston Oilers

36. Ernie Jones, Phoenix Cardinals

37. Mike Pritchard, Atlanta Falcons

38. Mark Ingram, N.Y. Giants

39. Brett Perriman, Detroit Lions

40. Mark Duper, Miami Dolphins

41. Bill Brooks, Indianapolis Colts

42. Flipper Anderson, L.A. Rams

43. Vance Johnson, Denver Broncos

44. Ricky Proehl, Phoenix Cardinals

45. Al Toon, N.Y. Jets

46. Eric Martin, New Orleans Saints

47. Stephone Paige, Kansas City Chiiefs

48. Alvin Harper, Dallas Cowboys

49. Mario Bailey, Houston Oilers

50. Ricky Sanders, Washington Redskins

51. Gary Clark, Miami Dolphins

52. Carl Pickens, Cincinnati Bengals

53. Stephen Baker, N.Y. Giants

54. Reggie Langhorne, Indianapolis Colts

55. Mark Carrier, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

56. Patrick Rowe, Cleveland Browns

57. Mike Sherrard, San Francisco 49ers

58. Mervyn Fernandez, L.A. Raiders

59. Tim McGee, Cincinnati Bengals

60. Hart Lee Dykes, New England Patriots

Lots of beneficiaries of the run-n-shoot offense in this list, including guys in Buffalo’s Kelly Gun No-Huddle offense.

I would like to see Randall Cobb, Steve Smith, Wes Welker and Danny Amendola in a 2014 version of the Run-n-Shoot offense. Which QB would you want: Peyton Manning, Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers – or hell, Andrew Luck?

I’m not sure but this might be the last time you see Sterling Sharpe outside of the top five at this position for the remainder of his career. People don’t know just how amazing this guy was. He was a tough receiver that ran great routes and was very tough to tackle — with Brett Favre at the helm. Sharpe would end up having the best season of his career in 1992, with 108 catches for 1,461 yards and 13 touchdown catches.

1992 Tight End Rankings

1. Eric Green, Pittsburgh Steelers

2. Keith Jackson, Philadelphia Eagles

3. Marv Cook, New England Patriots

4. Ethan Horton, L.A. Raiders

5. Jay Novacek, Dallas Cowboys

6. Keith McKellar, Buffalo Bills

7. Johnny Mitchell, N.Y. Jets

8. Derek Brown, N.Y. Giants

9. Brent Jones, San Francisco 49ers

10. Steve Jordan, Minnesota Vikings

11. Ferrell Edmunds, Miami Dolphins

12. Rodney Holman, Cincinnati Bengals

13. Terry Orr, Washington Redskins

14. Ron Hall, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

15. Jackie Harris, Green Bay Packers

16. Andrew Glover, L.A. Raiders

17. Travis McNeal, Seattle Seahawks

18. James Thornton, Chicago Bears

19. Robert Awalt, Denver Broncos

20. Derrick Walker, San Diego Chargers

21. Ed West, Green Bay Packers

22. Scott Galbraith, Cleveland Browns

23. Damone Johnson, L.A. Rams

24. Jonathan Hayes, Kansas City Chiefs

25. Duane Young, San Diego Chargers

26. Pete Metzelaars, Buffalo Bills

27. Pete Holohan, Cleveland Browns

28. Mike Tice, New Orleans Saints

29. Jimmie Johnson, Detroit Lions

30. Shannon Sharpe, Denver Broncos

31. Mike Dyal, Kansas City Chiefs

32. Adrian Cooper, Pittsburgh Steelers

33. Howard Cross, N.Y. Giants

34. Kerry Cash, Indianapolis Colts

35. Jamie Williams, San Francisco 49ers

Look waaaaaay down to No. 30, Shannon Sharpe. He still wouldn’t come into his own for another season. This future Hall-of-Fame tight end went on to post three 1,000-yard seasons with the Broncos, and he caught 62 career touchdowns.

Eric Green and Johnny Mitchell were both huge disappointments after brief flashes of big talent.

1992 Kicker Rankings

1. Chip Lohmiller, Washington Redskins

2. Pete Stoyanovich, Miami Dolphins

3. Nick Lowery, Kansas City Chiefs

4. Steve Christie, Buffalo Bills

5. Morten Andersen, New Orleans Saints

6. Jason Hanson, Detroit Lions

7. Roger Ruzek, Philadelphia Eagles

8. Mike Cofer, San Francisco 49ers

9. Jeff Jaeger, L.A. Raiders

10. Norm Johnson, Atlanta Falcons

11. Jeff Treadwell, Denver Broncos

12. Al Del Greco, Houston Oilers

13. Brad Daluiso, Dallas Cowboys

14. Kevin Butler, Chicago Bears

15. Matt Bahr, N.Y. Giants

16. Gary Anderson, Pittsburgh Steelers

17. Matt Stover, Cleveland Browns

18. John Kasay, Seattle Seahawks

19. Ken Willis, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

20. Chris Jacke, Green Bay Packers

21. Jason Staurovsky, N.Y. Jets

22. Carlos Huerta, San Diego Chargers

23. Roman Anderson, Cleveland Browns

24. Fuad Reveiz, Minnesota Vikings

25. Charlie Baumann, New England Patriots

26. John Carney, San Diego Chargers

27. Tony Zendejas, L.A. Rams

28. Dean Biasucci, Indianapolis Colts

29. Raul Allegre, N.Y. Jets

30. Greg Davis, Phoenix Cardinals

31. Jim Breech, Cincinnati Bengals

32. Pat Leahy, N.Y. Jets

33. Chris Gardocki, Chicago Bears

34. Scott Norwood, Buffalo Bills

35. Mike Lansford, Kansas City Chiefs

36. Joe Wood, Houston Oilers

How weird is it to see names like Carney, Hanson, Kasay and Stover among this group of kickers from 1992? Those guys were around forever!

It’s also sad to see Norwood’s name at No.34. The Bills signed Christie away from the Bucs, after Norwood had a horrible ’91 season – one season after his famous “Wide Right” kick that could have changed Buffalo’s fate forever. He missed 11 field goals in 1991 (on 29 attempts) – and he never kicked an NFL field goal again.

1992 Special Teams Rankings

1. Atlanta Falcons

2. Philadelphia Eagles

3. Washington Redskins

4. Houston Oilers

5. Kansas City Chiefs

6. Dallas Cowboys

7. Cleveland Browns

8. Detroit Lions

9. L.A. Raiders

10. New Orleans Saints

11. Seattle Seahawks

12. Buffalo Bills

13. N.Y. Giants

14. Pittsburgh Steelers

15. Denver Broncos

16. Chicago Bears

17. N.Y. Jets

18. Green Bay Packers

19. San Diego Chargers

20. San Francisco 49ers

21. Minnesota Vikings

22. Indianapolis Colts

Notice that it’s rankings just for special teams, and not defense/special teams. I don’t remember how our league scored for this position, but I’m almost positive that we counted interceptions and fumbles returned for touchdowns on defense.

Again, remember that this was in the TD-only days. The Falcons were the top-ranked unit, most likely because of the presence of Prime Time – Deion Sanders.

I hope you enjoyed this walk down memory lane. Do you have any special memories from back then? What players from these 1992 Fantasy Football rankings jumped out at you? And a big thanks to FantasyIndex.com for printing these magazines back then – and getting me into this hobby! Without them, I likely wouldn’t have found it so early. You can still buy magazines every year from Fantasy Index – or at least you can follow them @FantasyIndex on Twitter!

Fantasy History: 1992 Fantasy Football Rankings is a post from: DavidGonos.com

The post Fantasy History: 1992 Fantasy Football Rankings appeared first on DavidGonos.com.

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