Even if you don't use a tiebreaker for the regular season, you best have one in place for playoff games.Here is what we use:The first tie-breaker is the highest scoring bench player. If the game is still tied, the next tie breaker is highest scoring TOTAL bench. If the game is STILL tied we go down the list of highest scoring starter until the tie is broken. If somehow the game is STILL tied, we go down the list of highest scoring bench player until the tie is broken.
Ours for playoffs is this just for referenceSubmit 2 bench players for tiebreaking purposesIf the 2 players tie then it is as follows. Avg top 3 scorers of the active roster TD scored Reserve Points Coin Flip
If I was ever in a game that got decided by a coin flip I'd probably quit the league. Just saying. Decimal scoring is easily the best way to go about not having a tie.
First off we allow ties in the regular season. And we are not going to decimal scoring just for the playoffs. So what do you do for tiebreakers in case there is a tie in a decimal score playoff?FTR, My 18 years as coimmish we have never had one tie playoff game.I don't know the exact odds but the odds of 2 random players tying, then the average points of your top 3 active roster scores tying, then the number of TD's scored tying, then the total points of all your bench players BEFORE you even get to a coin flip has to be pretty high odds.
Oh FYI - NFL goes to a coin flip eventually also