Finn Callaghan has been one of the improvers in the GWS engine room this season, following much the same trajectory as Josh Kelly did years before. Like Kelly, his one wood is acceleration from congestion to start those trademark Giant tsunamis, but you're only as good in that role as the amount of times that you get it, and Callaghan has had some quiet ones when the flow of the game hasn't suited his skill set, as Kelly has done over the years. Fantasy coaches want a high scoring floor, and in Callaghan they have a high-ceiling operator with maybe too much variability.
Finn Callaghan has been one of the improvers in the GWS engine room this season, following much the same trajectory as Josh Kelly did years before. Like Kelly, his one wood is acceleration from congestion to start those trademark Giant tsunamis, but you're only as good in that role as the amount of times that you get it, and Callaghan has had some quiet ones when the flow of the game hasn't suited his skill set, as Kelly has done over the years. Fantasy coaches want a high scoring floor, and in Callaghan they have a high-ceiling operator with maybe too much variability.
Finn Callaghan made his name last year as a jet-propelled wingman but has spent more time this year rotating through the centre, and with a medium-term injury to Josh Kelly that trend will only continue. His ceiling as a player is similar to that of Kelly, albeit to join the ranks of the true elite fantasy midfielders he would have to find a higher ceiling. It would be too much to ask that of him in this still-early section of his career, but he has all the opportunity he would want to show just how far he has come with the Giants needing some inside-outside burst running.