Player of the Week: Kelvin Ransey Is Quietly Becoming the Most Dangerous Guard in the NBN
Every fantasy league has one. That player nobody drafted high enough but who keeps showing up in the box scores like a recurring nightmare for your opponents. In the NBN this week, that nightmare wears Kelvin Ransey's jersey, and he's absolutely terrorizing the competition.
Over the last five sim days, Ransey has been orchestrating the Washington Wizards' surge up the standings with a performance that screams "future superstar" every time he steps on the hardwood. While the league's big names get the headlines, Ransey is putting together a case for Player of the Week that should make fantasy owners who snagged him in the third round feel like absolute geniuses.
The Numbers Don't Lie
Let's talk about what Ransey is doing to opposing defenses. His season averages sit at a robust 32.3 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 8.6 assists per game. Those are borderline All-Star numbers wrapped in a efficiency bow — he's shooting 46.7% from the field with a true shooting percentage of 0.567. In a league where the average player is chucking up 9.01 points per game, Ransey is basically clearing that benchmark by himself three times over.
But the recent stretch has been something else entirely. The Wizards' statement win against the Sacramento Kings — a 141-124 demolition that wasn't as close as the final score suggests — featured Ransey operating as the offensive engine everything ran through. When your team drops 141 points and wins by 17, you're doing something right, and Ransey's court vision and scoring ability were on full display.
The Wizards have gone 3-2 in their last five, and while that's not spectacular on the surface, consider the company they're keeping in the standings. This team is playing with a confidence and purpose that starts with their floor general.
How He Stacks Up Against the Elite
Ransey sits at number two in the entire NBN scoring race, trailing only the legendary Nate "Tiny" Archibald (33.8 PPG). Think about that for a second. The man ahead of him is a 14-year veteran who has seen every defensive scheme ever invented and still averages almost 34 points. Ransey is doing this as a fifth-year player with exp=5, still learning the nuances of the professional game while putting up elite numbers.
Comparing their styles is fascinating. Archibald is a pure scorer who happens to facilitate. Ransey is a facilitator who happens to score at an elite rate. Their assist numbers are nearly identical (8.9 for Tiny, 8.6 for Ransey), but their paths to those numbers differ. Ransey makes his teammates better in a way that doesn't always show up in the highlight reels but shows up in the win column.
The Historical Comparison
Watching Ransey operate, I'm getting serious Gary Payton vibes. Not the old-man version we saw in his final seasons, but the mid-90s Payton who could guard anyone and score when needed. Ransey doesn't have Payton's defensive reputation yet, but the offensive skill set is similar — the ability to get to the rim, the crafty ball-handling, and perhaps most importantly, the willingness to make the right play instead of the highlight play.
There's also a touch of Lenny Wilkens in his game, particularly in how he runs an offense. Wilkens himself averages 10.2 assists per game on the Dallas Mavericks, and Ransey's 8.6 dimes suggest he's building toward that kind of all-around dominance.
What to Watch For
Here's the thing about Ransey that should terrify the rest of the league: he's getting better. With only five years of experience, there's still untapped potential in that frame, and the Wizards are building around him perfectly. If the supporting cast continues to develop, we're looking at a scenario where Ransey could challenge for the scoring title by season's end.
The schedule ahead looks favorable. If Ransey keeps distributing the ball like he's been doing — and hitting his shots at that 46.7% clip — the Wizards could climb even higher in the standings.
Fantasy owners, take note: this is the time to acquire Kelvin Ransey if you haven't already. The price might be high, but the ceiling? Nobody in the NBN has figured that out yet.
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