With the NBA season just days old, many fans are drafting their fantasy teams this weekend. Here are some players I've targeted in my drafts so far, mainly because they have the potential to greatly exceed their draft-day position.
PG Raymond  Felton
Felton struggled mightily in Portland last year, but it will be interesting to see how he performs in his second go-round with the Knicks. He played some of the best basketball of his life leading Mike D'Antoni's run-and-gun offense in 2010-2011 before New York blew up their team for Carmelo  Anthony and Chauncey  Billups. Felton hasn't been the same since, but I'm tempted to believe he can approach the 17 points and 9 dimes he averaged during his first stint in the Big Apple (especially with Amare  Stoudemire needing 6-8 weeks to recover from knee surgery). He's going in the eighth round with the likes Jason  Terry, Isaiah  Thomas, Kenneth  Faried, and his replacement Damian  Lillard. I prefer Felton's upside.
Also Darren  Collison
SG Arron  Afflalo
The 27 year-old Afflalo should be the focal point of Orlando's gutted offense after taking a backseat to Ty  Lawson, Danilo  Gallinari and Al  Harrington at times in Denver. Perennially underrated, he's not a sexy pick but is poised for a big year and can be counted on to exceed last season's figures. He may be a bit rusty after missing most of preseason with a hamstring injury, but it shouldn't take him too long to round into form.
Also Wesley  Matthews
SF Luol  Deng
Deng never gets much press, but the 2012 All-Star contributes across the board and is as steady as they come. His numbers should see a slight boost with Derrick  Rose expected to miss most of the season and a frontcourt (Joakim  Noah and Carlos  Boozer) prone to injury. I expect his paltry 41.2 FG% from last season to rebound, and his counting numbers will remain strong as he averages close to 40 minutes per game.
Also Michael  Beasley
PF Zach  Randolph
Z-Bo is getting picked 70th overall, behind guys like Klay  Thompson, Marcus  Thornton and Louis  Williams. What's with all the hate? Sure, there's a good deal of risk involved because he's on the wrong side of 30, is coming off a down year and has been plagued by injuries throughout his career. He doesn't swat many shots and isn't the most efficient scorer in the world. Marc  Gasol's emergence as an elite center detracts from his value somewhat. I can see why his draft position is deflated, but the hate has gone too far. When healthy, he's a threat to go 20-10 on a nightly basis while making nearly half his shots.  He's also a plus free-throw shooter who can average a steal per game and provide the occasional three-pointer. I would much rather have Randolph over other power forwards Kevin  Garnett, Chris  Bosh and Tim  Duncan, all of whom are being selected several rounds ahead of him. Great value here.
Also David  West (especially now that Danny  Granger is hurt)
C Nikola  Pekovic
With Kevin  Love and Rick Rubio sidelined for at least another month, Pekovic will benefit from a surge in points and rebounds. At the very least, he should be able to duplicate his production as a starter last year; 15.4 points and 8.5 rebounds while shooting 55 percent from the floor and 75 percent from the line. Unfortunately he doesn't provide much in the way of assists, steals, blocks, or threes, so he's a lot like Luis  Scola. But with Love out of the picture he should put up some monster numbers early on. This tenth round pick should be a double-double machine that provides plenty of value, especially since he's going in the same neighborhood as Elton  Brand, Spencer  Hawes, and George  Hill.
Also Anderson  Varejao
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