What the fuck is Gavin doing?
Let's just get into it. Gavin in three seasons into the Sarasota Dynasty league (with zero playoff appearances) and a quarterback room that looks like it was assembled by Hellen Keller just traded Justin Jefferson. His most valuable player. Gone.
And what did he get? A 1.04 pick that'll probably land on Carnell Tate or Jordyn Tyson, a 2027 first that could be anything, and the privilege of sliding down six spots in the second round. He gave up a generational receiver and got futures. From a team that has no present.
Let me paint you a picture of Gavin's QB situation right now. Kyler Murray is in a legitimate competition with JJ McCarthy. JJ McCarthy is in a legitimate competition with Kyler Murray. Tua Tagovailoa is competing with Michael Penix. Jacoby Brissett is holding out. Joe Flacco is a backup. Russell Wilson just retired. And Will Howard is buried behind Aaron Rodgers and Drew Allar on the depth chart of an ugly Steelers' offense.
That's the roster. Between Kyler and JJ, Gavin has maybe one — maybe — who will be a Week 1 starter. And his response to this crisis wasn't "let me get a quarterback." His response was "you know what this situation needs? Fewer wide receivers."
The truly deranged part? He was offered Drake Maye (Drake FUCKING Maye) in a three-team deal earlier this offseason. All it cost him was a 2027 first and Treveyon Henderson. And he said no. Why? Because he didn't want me getting extra picks. Not because the deal was bad. Not because of some grand roster vision. Because of spite.
He torched a franchise quarterback opportunity out of pettiness. In a Superflex league. I cannot stress this enough. In a Superflex league. The format literally doubles the position's value.
Now, I'm not here to relitigate the collusion situation from last season (we'll just note that it happened, that it was investigated, and that the league has not forgotten) but I will say this: a guy willing to burn his own team down to inconvenience a rival and help others is someone you need to watch very closely at all times.









