Thursday, July 18, 2013

Fantasy Football: Winning without watching any games Part I

Playing fantasy football without watching the games is like:
  • Watching movie previews and claiming to be a movie critic
  • Acting like an expert rodeo clown on the premise you…


I acknowledge the claim you can be one of the best performing teams in your fantasy football league without watching more than a handful of regular season games (and mostly Vikings games...) in the last 5 years sounds absurd. I assure you though, I am fully committed to this strategy. More importantly, my wife fully supports the countless hours I save by not watching them as well :).

I started playing fantasy football in 2004 and have been playing ever since. Click the expandable text below to see a synopsis of my performances with a few comments. Otherwise the bottom line is listed right below.

Previous Results


Bottom line:
Playoffs made while watching games: 3/7
Playoffs made while not watching games: 10/12

The numbers speak for themselves. The most common objection I receive is I have gotten better as I have gained experience. My counter would be so have all my other league members, especially in the Warhawk league. In addition, the case I am presenting is the ability to win fantasy football leagues without watching games. Regardless of how I improved, I have consistently shown across multiple leagues, spanning multiple years, my strategy of not watching any games has been very successful.

I will showcase transparency by posting my research and plan before my drafts as in 2012. Due to the extensive amount of information and lengthy explanations, I plan to breakdown the topic into multiple posts as follows:
    1. Overview
    2. League Rules and Scoring System
    3. Risk Management Overview
    4. ADP Charts
    5. Tiers (initial player valuation)
    6. Research
    7. Update Tiers (second player valuation)
    8. Draft Map
    9. Mock Drafts
    10. Draft Day

Draft Strategy Overview –
Most of my time and effort goes into draft preparation. Draft preparation is to fantasy football what rodeo clowns are to bull riders: you don’t need clowns to ride a bull, but things get ugly without them.

My draft preparation starts ~1 month prior to my draft. I recommend budgeting 10-20 hours to complete draft preparation (more detailed estimates are found throughout ensuing posts). My time investment into fantasy football is heavily front loaded. I spend little time managing my team after the draft. Remember, I don’t watch games. The time I save not watching games is far more substantial than the initial draft preparation time investment.

Building my house of cards :)
My edge in fantasy football over my competition comes not from picking winners (aka sleepers), but rather from managing risk and getting good value with each draft pick. I loosely ascribe to value based drafting and finding an optimal balance of risk and reward.

In summary, I want to get the best value for the players I am taking at my draft position. Getting good value is something everyone wants, however, in the following posts I will go into detail exactly how I maximize value and manage risk.


Next week's topic: Fantasy Football Part 2: Preparing for Draft Day

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