the next level
Footballguy
I "invented" a blended auction/serpentine draft scheme two years ago that has withstood the test of two years use and I feel compelled to share about it because it has proven for all parties to be their best fantasy football experience bar none. I know we're not the only ones out there using a blend, but I think some of the details are unique.
I manage a 16-team league and we have a live draft every year with 100% attendance for 6 years running. To open the draft, we auction off 32-players. We all draw numbers out of a hat from which an order is established for team owners to nominate players to be auctioned. Each nomination must be accompanied by an established minimum bid (to encourage nomination of "blue chip" players in our limited auction and avoid auctioning 'worthless' players such as kickers and/or Dallas Cowboys). Every team owner thus gets two nomination opportunities but we do the nomination and subsequent auction one at a time. There is strategy involved in who to nominate, particularly as we get close to the 32nd player. Each team owner starts with $200 of pretend money. All of them are cognizant of two reasons to save some money: 1) The remaining balance will be their blind bid money for free agent acquisitions for the entire fantasy season. 2) At the end of the auction, whoever has the most money remaining gets the first pick of the serpentine and the rest of the serpentine order is likewise established from most to least auction money remaining. We then move on to 14 rounds of standard serpentine drafting.
I was terrified the first time we tried this that I had overlooked some hole in the rules (and they are much more detailed than the paragraph above) and that the draft would be a mess. On the contrary, it works brilliantly and my veteran group of fantasy players rave about the experience. It combines the best of both worlds: now everyone has a shot at the best players and conversely we don't waste so much time as a typical straight auction-draft does on the bidding process for the middle and lower-tiered players. Plus, the various angles of our auction scheme make for an incredibly intense experience. There's just so many variables to manage and scenarios to scheme for - especially in the environment where the auctioneer is about to bang the gavel on a star player and you're trying to process all the implications of continuing the bidding. Finally, there's no magazine or website to coach you through preparing for this kind of draft. It's one of the key reasons it's proven so popular: we all recognize just how much we are on our own when it comes to assessing player values and predicting how it's all going to play out. That's a very appealing challenge to a bunch of self-professed hardcore fantasy addicts.
There are, however, two major drawbacks. First, live attendance is practically compulsory. There's no way I know of short of online teleconferencing to pull off this system. And that leads to the second drawback - it compels me to do a lot of manual entries after the draft. There's no "Blended" draft option that I know of on any of the fantasy websites. And therein lies the selfish motive for this post: I'd love to see this scheme grow into an option used widely enough that perhaps someday there can be an online option with automatic tracking.
I look forward to your critique, commentary, and questions. No apologies for the Cowboys dig, I just can't resist.
I manage a 16-team league and we have a live draft every year with 100% attendance for 6 years running. To open the draft, we auction off 32-players. We all draw numbers out of a hat from which an order is established for team owners to nominate players to be auctioned. Each nomination must be accompanied by an established minimum bid (to encourage nomination of "blue chip" players in our limited auction and avoid auctioning 'worthless' players such as kickers and/or Dallas Cowboys). Every team owner thus gets two nomination opportunities but we do the nomination and subsequent auction one at a time. There is strategy involved in who to nominate, particularly as we get close to the 32nd player. Each team owner starts with $200 of pretend money. All of them are cognizant of two reasons to save some money: 1) The remaining balance will be their blind bid money for free agent acquisitions for the entire fantasy season. 2) At the end of the auction, whoever has the most money remaining gets the first pick of the serpentine and the rest of the serpentine order is likewise established from most to least auction money remaining. We then move on to 14 rounds of standard serpentine drafting.
I was terrified the first time we tried this that I had overlooked some hole in the rules (and they are much more detailed than the paragraph above) and that the draft would be a mess. On the contrary, it works brilliantly and my veteran group of fantasy players rave about the experience. It combines the best of both worlds: now everyone has a shot at the best players and conversely we don't waste so much time as a typical straight auction-draft does on the bidding process for the middle and lower-tiered players. Plus, the various angles of our auction scheme make for an incredibly intense experience. There's just so many variables to manage and scenarios to scheme for - especially in the environment where the auctioneer is about to bang the gavel on a star player and you're trying to process all the implications of continuing the bidding. Finally, there's no magazine or website to coach you through preparing for this kind of draft. It's one of the key reasons it's proven so popular: we all recognize just how much we are on our own when it comes to assessing player values and predicting how it's all going to play out. That's a very appealing challenge to a bunch of self-professed hardcore fantasy addicts.
There are, however, two major drawbacks. First, live attendance is practically compulsory. There's no way I know of short of online teleconferencing to pull off this system. And that leads to the second drawback - it compels me to do a lot of manual entries after the draft. There's no "Blended" draft option that I know of on any of the fantasy websites. And therein lies the selfish motive for this post: I'd love to see this scheme grow into an option used widely enough that perhaps someday there can be an online option with automatic tracking.
I look forward to your critique, commentary, and questions. No apologies for the Cowboys dig, I just can't resist.
