{"id":1831027,"date":"2023-06-27T12:29:09","date_gmt":"2023-06-27T16:29:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/platogaming.com\/plato-data\/win-your-fantasy-football-league-with-this-draft-strategy\/"},"modified":"2023-06-27T12:29:09","modified_gmt":"2023-06-27T16:29:09","slug":"win-your-fantasy-football-league-with-this-draft-strategy","status":"publish","type":"station","link":"https:\/\/platogaming.com\/plato-data\/win-your-fantasy-football-league-with-this-draft-strategy\/","title":{"rendered":"Win Your Fantasy Football League With This Draft Strategy"},"content":{"rendered":"
For many NFL fans around the country, drafting a fantasy football team is a mandatory precursor to the eventual kickoff of the 17-game season.<\/p>\n
There are all sorts of different strategies for drafting rosters, such as only taking the most valuable positions and later trading for other positions of need, going through each position one-by-one, and avoiding rookies entirely, to name a few.<\/p>\n
\na mathematical approach that fantasy GMs should take when they draft their rosters<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
Without replacing too much of the entertainment value of fantasy football with pragmatism, there is a mathematical approach that fantasy GMs should take when they draft their rosters\u2014let\u2019s talk about why.<\/p>\n
Fantasy football drafting 101<\/h2>\n
Fantasy sports encourage team owners to put the greatest distance possible between themselves and their competitors. The goal is always to score the most points and win every week, but being second-best will still put players in favorable positions against the majority of their opponents. Pay-per-entry leagues also frequently delegate prize money to the top three finishers, which would still put the runner-up GM on the podium.<\/p>\n
Let\u2019s boil that idea down to the most basic element: if a player cannot finish first, then finishing as close to first as possible is the next-best option. Sounds easy right? Wrong!<\/p>\n
Pretend that you are in control of a fantasy team that has the next pick in the draft. You desperately want to take Joe Mixon with your next pick because you feel like he\u2019d be a solid early-round addition to your roster.<\/p>\n
To your horror, the person with the pick ahead of you takes Mixon off the board. You are resigned to the fact that you will have to take the next-highest-ranked running back and send in the pick.<\/p>\n
\nplayers want to limit the gaps<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
This decision could ultimately be a critical mistake. While it is true that players want to limit the gaps between them and opponents, that is not accomplished by linearly following a planned order of positions, looking at rankings, or following the trend of where the rest of the picks are going.<\/p>\n
Gaining the advantage <\/h2>\n
Here\u2019s what a fantasy football player in the situation above, and truly, with nearly every pick they ever make, should do: find the disparities.<\/p>\n
Using rankings from 2022, let\u2019s assume the top ten receivers and running backs are off the board, and the top picks from each of those positions are now Dalvin Cook and Ja\u2019Marr Chase. Cook only scored 11.7 more points than the next-closest back, and Chase only .5 more than the next wide receiver.<\/p>\n
\nTravis Kelce produced 100.9 more points than the TE2<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
Now, look at quarterbacks and tight ends\u2014Patrick Mahomes scored 21.88 more points than the second-highest-scoring QB, and Travis Kelce produced 100.9 more points than the TE2. In this situation, drafting Kelce would create the largest separation in scoring, meaning that opponents would have the least opportunity to account for the difference between him and their starter.<\/p>\n
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