Friday, July 17, 2009

Fantasy Football Preparation Checklist

We just reached the Major League All-Star game, but I bet many of you feel like you are behind on your preparation work for the 2009 NFL Fantasy Football season. Sure, you could take the easy way out and let your autodraft engine pick your team for you and hope that you will be competitive. However, very few leagues are won this way. You need to gain the advantage at draft time by picking the sleepers ahead of the other managers and being positioned to pick the waiver wire clean at the appropriate times during the season. So, here is a basic checklist to start with.

  1. Determine if you want to start your own league on MFS, join a friend's league and/or play in a Public league. You have many options for fun and profit. Also, remember that you can offset or eliminate your league fees by signing up and making a deposit into the Bookmaker.com sports book. Use the link on the MFS home page to make it easier.

  2. Start building the pool of players that will one day make up your player rankings. Many sites have players ranked at draft time, but everyone in your league will have access to that information. You want your list of players ranked by your expectation of how they will perform this season. If you do your homework before the draft, you should be in position to take home the crown at the end of the season. If it looks iffy, bribe a few other managers to dump players your way.

  3. Now, that player pool is not as easy to pour as a cold beer. Start by going over the free agent movement since the Super Bowl ended. There is a lot of time between now and your league's draft for NFL teams to build their depth chart. You want to flag potential position battles for the number 1 and number 2 slots in your money positions. No reason to worry about who the number 1 running back is in New York, but you may be concerned about who will win the number 2 slot. You want to focus on news involving these players.

  4. Of course, you better factor rookies into the mix. Not many make an impact so drafting the correct players will save draft picks for more useful players or backups to your studs. So, grab the draft results from April. Everyone knows that Chris “Beanie” Wells will be a rookie to draft, but what about Donald Brown? You want to be the team that drafts him first. Of course, he’ll be known by draft time, so go through all picks and try to imagine where they will factor into the depth chart, even if they will not be the obvious number 2 back. For example, get to know LeSean McCoy. Wow, I could just hear a resounding “Who?!”. With Brian Westbrook a perennial injury risk, McCoy could be the feature back on a very good team in no time.

  5. Start digesting news and injury reports, making sure to focus on the teams where you see the best position battles and greatest opportunity for upside. If you keep a comprehensive diary of these happenings, you can trust this more than random articles found before the draft….except mine, of course. Also, my mock draft will be on the heels of this article.

  6. Don’t rely on your research to be the only source of influence on your initial player pool. Pick up a few trade magazines. We suggest picking up a copy of Fantasy Football Cheatsheets or Fantasy Football Diehards. Add some of their sleepers and rookies to your pool that you have omitted and you will have a good collection of players to track news on this summer and help you set your player rankings before your draft. Once again, you can ignore the news about Michael Turner, Larry Fitzgerald. and the like, that is, unless they have poor habits like jumping out of an airplane without a parachute, swimming with sharks with an open wound, or constantly complaining about how unfair their contract is.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

How to Play Fantasy Football Confidence Pools

Maybe you’ve been playing fantasy football for a while and you’ve been asked to play in your first Confidence Pool. Or perhaps you’re new to fantasy sport games entirely. In either case, a Confidence Pool is actually a pretty interesting way to bet on games. We say “bet” because you’re picking a team to win each of each week’s games, though you are not actually placing a wager.

The game is pretty simple. In a standard Confidence Pool, you’re asked to pick the winners of each NFL contest for the week (yep, all 16 games; less during bye weeks). Then you weight each pick with a number of confidence points between 1 and 16 (where higher is better). You can’t re-use a number, and you must use all numbers. When the team you picked to win actually wins, you get the points you assigned to that game.

Scoring and Payouts
So how do scoring and payouts work? Many pools will collect an entry fee. That fee is collected from all participants and dispersed in the form of weekly and/or season prizes. The weekly winner is the person whose coin flips yielded the most points from correct picks (as close to 136 points as possible). Those rankings are tabulated throughout the season to determine standings within your league. You can win one week to win money, and you can also win the aggregate scoring for the season.

This kind of award structure means that even rookie confidence poolboys can compete with experts. Even a novice who uses the “animal strategy” can pick the best during any given week. (The “animal strategy” is whereby you pick the winner as if it were a cage battle in the wilderness. For example, in a game pitting the Chicago Bears versus the Philadelphia Eagles, the Bears win every time. Of course, this strategy has a few pitfalls: see “Detroit Lions” or on the other end, “Arizona Cardinals.”)

Variable League Settings
A good fantasy sports site will allow pool commissioners to pick from a wide variety of customizable settings. We’ll address a few of the most common league options below. You will want to weigh the options and the cost amongst a few of the providers. There are some good websites out there that offer Free Confidence Pools. You just have to do a search for them.

Confidence Pools usually allow each team owner to discard a certain number of bad week’s worth of picks per season (say, your lowest 2 weeks out of the 16 weeks). These are often referred to as “Drop Weeks.” This feature allows you to forget about the week when you were heading out of town and didn’t read up, and it helps to brighten your spirits after an unusually bad week.

Another common option is to not rank weekly straight-up winners, but rather rank winners against the spread. This tougher option requires that if the Broncos – Raiders spread is 6 points (in favor of the Broncos in this case), you’d have to pick whether the Broncos will win by 6 or more, or win by less than 6. You’d then assign confidence points to that pick as you would a normal pool.

Finally, does your pool allow “autopicks” to be used when the owner does not make picks for the week? Autopicks allow the computer to use your default decision-making system, such as to pick all favorites, ranked in descending order by the point spread. If your pool closes the opportunity to make picks at the start of the first game and you are busy sleeping off your Saturday night’s drinks, at least you are playing that week.

Winning
If you’ve read this far, you deserve some advice on how to win your Confidence Pool. Beyond the obvious (which is to make sure to assign points according to your confidence), every confidence league player should be aware of the major factors that affect winning in the NFL: injuries, weather, home-field advantage, team matchups, and coaching matchups. Studying all of this information for every game can be tedious for the non-NFL-aholic, but there are many websites and experts that will offer predictions for each game. It’s worth checking with these websites if you don’t have time to do the research yourself.

Best of luck!