Today in “just for fun” fantasy football thoughts …

For whatever reason, 1990 was an awful year for birthing quarterbacks. That year produced quarterbacks that largely were in the 2013 draft class, a draft class that produced all of 86 fantasy points in 2016. That wasn’t the worst year for active quarterbacking, because the 2010 class was crap as well but does offer Sam Bradford, who was hurt in 2017, but overall, it’s hard to get worse than 1990.

The best quarterback born in 1990 is probably Brock Osweiler … unless it's AJ McCarron … unless it's Robert Griffin III … unless it's Geno Smith. — Daniel Kelley (@danieltkelley) June 18, 2018

This sort of thing is meaningless — we aren’t crediting the alignment of the planets for Brock Osweiler having an argument as 1990’s top quarterback. It just happened, just as Austin Seferian-Jenkins is somehow the best tight end born in 1992, just as Travis Kelce is somehow not the best tight end born in 1989.

But it’s fun. Today, I’m looking at which birth year can put together the best fantasy roster. You get one quarterback, two running backs, two wide receivers, a tight end, and a flex. (I thought about kickers, too, but really, who cares.) At the extremes of the years, I combined a little bit, and of course there’s just a “1985 and earlier” class.

It gave us 11 birth-year teams to evaluate. I’ll run through each roster quickly and establish the finalists, and we’ll decide from there. (You might disagree on some specifics, but heck, this isn't hard and fast science.)

(click to enlarge)

1996-1997

QB: Lamar Jackson

RBs: Saquon Barkley and Christian McCaffrey

WRs: JuJu Smith-Schuster and Chris Godwin

TE: David Njoku

Flex: Joe Mixon

This roster is obviously huge on potential, and especially strong at running back. Check back in five years and this roster could take the crown. For now, though, it’s definitely an also-ran.

1995

QB: Deshaun Watson

RB: Alvin Kamara and Ezekiel Elliott

WR: Corey Davis and Zay Jones

TE: Dallas Goedert

Flex: Kareem Hunt

We’re seeing the effects of career length and age. Running backs are crushing it on the younger teams, but the pass-catchers have a ways to go yet. As amazing as it is, a roster with Kamara, Elliott, and Hunt can’t be considered a potential winner with Jones and Goedert also hanging out there.

1994

QB: Jameis Winston

RB: Todd Gurley and Jordan Howard

WR: Tyreek Hill and Amari Cooper

TE: Hunter Henry

Flex: Derrick Henry

I’m ignoring injuries for active players here, because I’m more looking at fantasy ability and not just 2018 outlook, but feel free to sub in Evan Engram here for Hunter Henry (and many probably would even without injury). This roster feels like a definite contender, even if Cooper has fallen flat a bit and the Titans refuse to let Derrick Henry be a bell cow. We’ll hold onto this one.

1993

QB: Dak Prescott

RB: Melvin Gordon and Jay Ajayi

WR: Michael Thomas and Mike Evans

TE: Eric Ebron

Flex: Brandin Cooks

As strong as the receivers are on this roster, 1993 is a fluke year where the running backs and tight ends are … well, they’re fine, but this isn’t a championship roster.

1992

QB: Carson Wentz

RB: Le’Veon Bell and Devonta Freeman

WR: DeAndre Hopkins and Odell Beckham Jr.

TE: Austin Seferian-Jenkins

WR: Keenan Allen

I was surprised to see that Wentz was two years older than Winston, but the truth is he’s actually one year and one week older; it’s just that their birthdays are just before and just after the new year. Anyway, this roster is a definite contender, even with a bit of a disappointment at tight end with Seferian-Jenkins.

1991

QB: Jimmy Garoppolo

RB: David Johnson and C.J. Anderson

WR: Josh Gordon and Kelvin Benjamin

TE: Cameron Brate

Flex: Giovani Bernard

Johnson and Gordon have worlds of talent, but this is ultimately not much of a fantasy roster. I’m underwhelmed.

1990

QB: AJ McCarron

RB: Carlos Hyde and Dion Lewis

WR: Marvin Jones and Adam Thielen

TE: Zach Ertz

WR: Alshon Jeffery

Seriously, McCarron. I don’t know who hurt you, 1990, but I apologize.

1989

QB: Cam Newton

RB: Mark Ingram and Doug Martin

WR: Julio Jones and T.Y. Hilton

TE: Rob Gronkowski

Flex: Travis Kelce

We’re reaching the outside edge of the typically productive running backs, which is how Martin makes his way onto this team. Still Newton and the pass-catchers are so incredible for fantasy that even the presence of Martin doesn’t keep it from being a contender.

1988

QB: Russell Wilson

RB: LeSean McCoy and Bilal Powell

WR: Antonio Brown and A.J. Green

TE: Garrett Celek

Flex: Doug Baldwin

We like to say that because tight ends pop late, they produce longer, but, um that’s Garrett Celek’s name there. I’ll call this one a contender still, based on just a ridiculous group of receivers, but that’s disappointing.

1986-1987

QB: Andy Dalton

RB: Marshawn Lynch and LeGarrette Blount

WR: Demaryius Thomas and Pierre Garcon

TE: Jimmy Graham

Flex: Julian Edelman

This was one hell of a fantasy group in, say, 2013, but in 2018 it’s not so much. Moving on.

1985 and earlier

QB: Aaron Rodgers

RB: Frank Gore and Adrian Peterson

WR: Larry Fitzgerald and Ted Ginn

TE: Delanie Walker

Flex: Greg Olsen

In the most recent years, one position (RB) dominated while others (WR and QB) suffered a bit. It’s flipped here. Quarterback is obviously excellent (and he could have Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Philip Rivers, Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Ryan, and Eli Manning as backups), but Peterson might not even have a job anymore and Gore is hanging on by a thread. Not even Rodgers can make this roster a contender.

The contenders

I entered into this thinking some roster would be just dominant, or at least we’d get some rosters with no obvious weak spots. But look:

1994 1992 1989 1988 QB Jameis Winston Carson Wentz Cam Newton Russell Wilson RB Todd Gurley Le'Veon Bell Mark Ingram LeSean McCoy RB Jordan Howard Devonta Freeman Doug Martin Bilal Powell WR Tyreek Hill DeAndre Hopkins Julio Jones Antonio Brown WR Amari Cooper Odell Beckham Jr. T.Y. Hilton A.J. Green TE Hunter Henry Austin Seferian-Jenkins Rob Gronkowski Garrett Celek Flex Derrick Henry Keenan Allen Travis Kelce Doug Baldwin

1994 has a flex back who can’t even get a full starter gig from his own team, a No. 2 receiver who fell flat last year, and a tight end who has been a breakout candidate for years and is now hurt.

1992 has a tight end on his third team in the last three seasons, whose “breakout” 2017 consisted of 3 touchdowns and 357 yards.

1989 has a running back with under 500 rushing yards in four of his six seasons, who just got released and is now a backup.

1988 has Garrett Celek, owner of barely 1,000 career receiving yards over six seasons and exactly zero top-25 fantasy years.

I guess the roster with the best worst player, if that makes sense, is the 1994 team, but that roster also lacks ceiling. But I’m not here to pick the best worst player. That’s boring. This is for the best birth year roster.

Because we’re looking for the best here, I’m going to eliminate 1994. Gurley aside, there just isn’t enough upside. After that, I’ll toss out 1989, for Martin’s flaws and concerns over Ingram’s longevity. That brings it down to our two flawed tight ends, and whether Seferian-Jenkins’ surroundings outweight Celek’s. Both have elite receiving groups. 1992 has the better running backs, while 1988 has the edge at quarterback. But in the end …

The winner is 1992. Austin Seferian-Jenkins and all. Who saw that coming.