Turning College Tape into Dynasty Wins
At Film to Fantasy, we break down the game like scouts and think like fantasy managers. Every week, we dive deep into the film on tomorrow’s stars, analyzing how their skills translate from Saturday college football to your dynasty roster. From highlight-reel plays to subtle technique shifts, we connect what you see on the field to the decisions that win leagues. Whether you’re a seasoned dynasty veteran or just starting your rookie draft prep, our goal is simple — give you the insight to turn tape into trophies.
Recent Scouting Reports:
Bernard puts a clean perimeter-timing and zone-awareness profile on film against Vanderbilt. His cuts are crisp outside, he understands where the soft spots are between levels in zone coverage, and presents a big, friendly window to the QB. We also see vertical speed paired with in-stride tracking and enough strength to finish through contact at the goal line. In clutch situations, he’s reliable—good timing with his QB, creating separation, and securing passes thrown his way.
Against Vanderbilt, Simpson shows the skillset of an on-schedule operator with vertical aggression. He ties his feet to eyes off of PA drops, hits boundary routes in rhythm, and layers ball location on sideline/fade concepts. In key situations, he makes the right decision and makes the clutch throw to convert, and when the play breaks down, he can reset his base outside the pocket and deliver downfield. The only real blemish from this game is an INT on a 4th-and-1; the rest is efficient, explosive, and composed.
Sarratt puts a timing-and-YAC perimeter profile on tape against #3 Oregon. His cuts are crisp on curls/outs, he presents a big, friendly window for his QB, and transitions north-south immediately. In money spots he shows good pacing on routes, stays available, and adds yards after the catch. This game is all about clean, repeatable outside work with functional after-the-catch value and red-zone execution.
Tyson showcases a vertical-first profile on tape against TCU, complemented by functional intermediate work and red-zone utility. He threatens off the line, sells a double move to win deep, and tracks/catches in stride—true field-stretcher traits. Between the numbers, he shows hands and concentration, and at the boundary, he’s crisp on the break, presenting a clean, friendly window. In tight space, the angle route shows short-area separation and finish.
Mendoza against Iowa pairs clean in-structure work with some misses under pressure. Mendoza hits a quick red-zone corner for six, layers a 40-air-yard sideline shot between CB/S, and later rips a seam vs a blitz for 30—his best throw of the day. He also generates with his legs on 3rd & 15, escaping pressure and outrunning angles to the marker. The flipside: two overthrows under heat that show he needs to tighten ball control under pressure.