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Commissioner Collusion - what say you? - Update - I’m playing the sketchy commish in the semi’s and Thomas is out (1 Viewer)

What should happen since the trade already went through?

  • Overturn the trade

    Votes: 35 16.1%
  • Fine both owners significantly but allow the trade

    Votes: 13 6.0%
  • Impeach the commissioner

    Votes: 23 10.6%
  • Let trade stand but fine and impeach

    Votes: 13 6.0%
  • Overturn trade, fine and impeach

    Votes: 26 12.0%
  • Nothing

    Votes: 107 49.3%

  • Total voters
    217
1000000% correct my ghostly friend. 
You are describing passing the smell test. If the goal was to get the asset on that specific guys team so he can beat your rival, you by definition aren’t getting a market rate deal. It’s some level of soft dealing to influence competitive balance

maybe since this is theoretical that it just so happens to be a market rate deal, but the reality is it’s probably about passing the smell test because frankly it isn’t about your roster anyways 

 
And your reasoning is...?

I'll tell you my reasoning why it is important: if he traded away a better player (for last week's purposes) than Mattison, and agreed to start Mattison, then he deliberately weakened himself for that week's game.  The trade might help his team win in the long run, but tanking a game still isn't OK, and doing so once you've wrapped up a playoff spot in return for a stud player is collusion.
No one would blink (or use the "C" word) if the trade were made exactly as it was and this was Thomas' bye week.  The deal would be done knowing the availability of the players and that factoring into the evaluation of the players.  The team would be accepting less chance of victory for one game in exchange for improving his team for the long haul.   Still playing to win; not colluding and not losing on purpose.

Funny that most complaints are against the team that sat Thomas... I would take more exception with the other owner who asked for those conditions to be met.

 
No one would blink (or use the "C" word) if the trade were made exactly as it was and this was Thomas' bye week.  The deal would be done knowing the availability of the players and that factoring into the evaluation of the players.  The team would be accepting less chance of victory for one game in exchange for improving his team for the long haul.   Still playing to win; not colluding and not losing on purpose.

Funny that most complaints are against the team that sat Thomas... I would take more exception with the other owner who asked for those conditions to be met.
The are equally to blame.  It take two to collude and these two colluded.

 
It also doesnt make it collusion.

It also doesnt make it unethical.  
Frankly soft dealing should ultimately bite you in the rear over time as whatever temporary influence you are trying to exert will overweighed by reducing roster value. So it probably falls into the bucket of unintended consequences more often than not 

 
I asked specifically about those rules and they have gone unanswered. 
 

Usually people don’t post a poll about a league rule that was broken if in fact a rule was broken. 
 

There are three obvious rules that this trade could have circumvented if they existed in the league. It is clear that those rules don’t exist or this thread wouldn’t exist other than a “hey, we are kicking these two lunkheads out of the league because...”
There is no specific rule about trade conditions. Maybe somebody could pm me with their league rules/constitution which covers all of this + the scenarios mentioned in this thread. Integrity of the league is understood. 

 
You are describing passing the smell test. If the goal was to get the asset on that specific guys team so he can beat your rival, you by definition aren’t getting a market rate deal. It’s some level of soft dealing to influence competitive balance

maybe since this is theoretical that it just so happens to be a market rate deal, but the reality is it’s probably about passing the smell test because frankly it isn’t about your roster anyways 
Frankly even if he took a lesser deal than he could have gotten, it still isnt collusion or unethical.  

Let's say you have an older 5th WR you dont need but will score well, and two teams make you offers that you like.

Team 1 is the guy you play this week, and you need to beat him.  He offers you a 2nd round pick from a team who will make the playoffs but not get a 1st round bye.

Team 2 offers you a 2nd rounder from a team who will get a bye.  

If you accept the "worse" offer from team 2 is that unethical?  

 
Two problems.

1, there was no condition.

2, there was only one person with a motive, not two
The other person had the motive to accept the trade to improve their team. The person offering the WR did not improve their team on balance. 
 

The sole purpose of the trade was to improve the other team in order to affect competitive balance. 
 

In fact it doesn’t even need to be called collusion to break the rules of the league but the only way we would ever know the motivation was to ask. Now I’m sure Hot Sauce Guy would straight up admit that he gave away the WR so that team A stood a good chance of beating Team B. 

 
No it doesn’t because they didn’t agree to circumvent the rules of the league. 
 

How was anyone deceived? Such deceit maintains that people are going to play the way that you hope or expect them to play. 
The owners lied about the unknown condition (sitting MT during their matchup).  I don't know how much clearer deceit there could be.  

 
Then why does this get discussed EVERY year if it is so clear cut? 
It doesn't. This is the 1st time I've ever heard this specific scenario discussed in all my time here, and in all my time at FFToday, and in all my time at NetSports (where I was a mod way way back in the day) 

And for a gosh darn 6k pot I’d have pages written about collusion and what the punishments should be. 
When it comes to universally understood ethical concepts like "cheating is bad" and the understanding that "collusion is cheating" I don't think you need to. And that wouldn't matter if it was a $6 pot or a $6K pot. Ethics are ethics.

"Don't cheat at FF" would seem to be one of those "unwritten rules". 

There is no universal law of fantasy sports so yes the league rules are relevant. Collusion can be defined in the rules as it relates to fair play and frankly, without actually addressing it as a league rule then you will get the Wild West at times. 
 

Again, your assumption is that people are obliged to play the game the same way that you would. 
 

An assumed understanding is no replacement for well written rules. You can’t collude to play within the rules. 
Again "Don't cheat at FF" would seem to be one of those "unwritten rules". I have nothing further to add to that. Either the people you play with are ethical or they are not. In my IDP league I had to remove two brothers because with one mathematically eliminated and the other on the cusp of a playoff appearance, they tried to make a deadline deal sending the bad team's best 4 players to the good team. 

We did not have a rule specifically written about tis action. The only rules about trades in our constitution were about timing, review period, trade deadline, voting & commish veto, etc. 

Yet what they attempted to do was so brazenly unethical that the league voted to kick them out and refund their season dues, immediately turning their rosters into "commish set" for the ROS and bringing in 2 new members the next year. 

Again - there wasn't a rule against it. But "don't cheat a FF" is an unwritten rule. :shrug:  

 
Frankly soft dealing should ultimately bite you in the rear over time as whatever temporary influence you are trying to exert will overweighed by reducing roster value. So it probably falls into the bucket of unintended consequences more often than not 
Perhaps, but it does not fall into the bucket of collusion or being unethical, which is the point.

 
Funny that most complaints are against the team that sat Thomas... I would take more exception with the other owner who asked for those conditions to be met.
I think the blame is equal on both sides. I'm actually more concerned about the team that might get an easier win, as they were described as still fighting for a playoff spot. 

 
Frankly even if he took a lesser deal than he could have gotten, it still isnt collusion or unethical.  

Let's say you have an older 5th WR you dont need but will score well, and two teams make you offers that you like.

Team 1 is the guy you play this week, and you need to beat him.  He offers you a 2nd round pick from a team who will make the playoffs but not get a 1st round bye.

Team 2 offers you a 2nd rounder from a team who will get a bye.  

If you accept the "worse" offer from team 2 is that unethical?  
Worse is in the eye of the beholder.  There is no for sure answer to which one is worse because it comes down to your point of view.  People evaluate players differently.  There is no right answer to what is worse and what is better.

 
The owners lied about the unknown condition (sitting MT during their matchup).  I don't know how much clearer deceit there could be.  
They shouldn’t have any expectation with how a owner will manage their roster. How is that possibly deceit?

 
The other person had the motive to accept the trade to improve their team. The person offering the WR did not improve their team on balance. 
 

The sole purpose of the trade was to improve the other team in order to affect competitive balance. 
 

In fact it doesn’t even need to be called collusion to break the rules of the league but the only way we would ever know the motivation was to ask. Now I’m sure Hot Sauce Guy would straight up admit that he gave away the WR so that team A stood a good chance of beating Team B. 
He could shout his motive from the rooftops and it still wouldn't be unethical or collusion.  

No idea what rule you think it breaks.

 
The other person had the motive to accept the trade to improve their team. The person offering the WR did not improve their team on balance. 
 

The sole purpose of the trade was to improve the other team in order to affect competitive balance. 
 

In fact it doesn’t even need to be called collusion to break the rules of the league but the only way we would ever know the motivation was to ask. Now I’m sure Hot Sauce Guy would straight up admit that he gave away the WR so that team A stood a good chance of beating Team B. 
In my hypothetical I didn't "give away" anyone.  As framed, that's collusion or a form of roster dumping. I took great caution to specify that I traded for fair value, and needed depth at TE. 

It improved both teams equally. My motivations here are only known in the hypothetical because I made them known as an example of how one could potentially influence someone else's roster without being unethical. 

And to the contrary - I would have nothing to hide here. If this happened, and anyone asked me why I'd trade my WR4 for a backup TE, I'd tell them straight up, "because I saw an opportunity for a fair deal that may also improve my playoff chances". 

That's the beauty of making an ethically correct, above board trade: you never have to lie about it. 

 
Worse is in the eye of the beholder.  There is no for sure answer to which one is worse because it comes down to your point of view.  People evaluate players differently.  There is no right answer to what is worse and what is better.
That is why I used the example of draft picks.  I think it is obvious that a future 2nd from a team who will get a 1st round bye is WORSE than a future 2nd from a playoff team who will not get a bye.

Anything can happen in the playoffs, but barring some sort of weird instance where that better team has injuries or something, the value of his 2nd is OBVIOUSLY lower than that of the other team prior to the playoffs.

Say he took a 3rd from the team who will finish dead last instead of a 2nd from the team who is the #1 seed

 
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They shouldn’t have any expectation with how a owner will manage their roster. How is that possibly deceit?
In this case the owner was not managing their roster.  The other owner required him to sit MT.  The owner that received MT said specifically that if it were up to him (the owner managing their own roster) he would have played MT.  That is the entire crux of this collusion situation and where the deceit rears it's ugly head.  

 
 Integrity of the league is understood. 
and that is the everloving point. Integrity should be assumed. If it has to be written in the rules that you shouldn't commit collusion, then you should probably find better quality people to play with, or every loophole imaginable will eventually be exploited. 

While those types of FF players help stress test your league rules, they're a gigantic PITA to play with. We had one in a league many moons ago. They were not invited back. 

 
That is why I used the example of draft picks.  I think it is obvious that a future 2nd from a team who will get a 1st round bye is WORSE than a future 2nd from a playoff team who will not get a bye.

Anything can happen in the playoffs, but barring some sort of weird instance where that better team has injuries or something, the value of his 2nd is OBVIOUSLY lower than that of the other team prior to the playoffs.
But that is not the entirety of the value of the trade - which I think is the point you are trying to make.  There are other factors that come into play when evaluating the trade offers to see which is better or worse.  I think we are on the same side here.  

 
Worse is in the eye of the beholder.  There is no for sure answer to which one is worse because it comes down to your point of view.  People evaluate players differently.  There is no right answer to what is worse and what is better.
yep - this is why I answer trade concernsfrom league members (as commish) with "a deal doesn't have to be 100% fair to be accepted. people are allowed to make crappy deals. Making a crappy deal may just mean a better one wasn't available, or that manager valued that player differently."

In the event of a completely lopsided deal, my approach is obviously different. 

 
In this case the owner was not managing their roster.  The other owner required him to sit MT.  The owner that received MT said specifically that if it were up to him (the owner managing their own roster) he would have played MT.  That is the entire crux of this collusion situation and where the deceit rears it's ugly head.  
They managed their roster in as much as they took sitting MT into consideration. They could have said no to the deal. In managing his own roster he felt he could play an acceptable lineup while sitting MT. Yes, that is managing the roster. 
 

He wasn’t told to do so after the fact. He made decision on his own. 

 
In this case the owner was not managing their roster.  The other owner required him to sit MT.  The owner that received MT said specifically that if it were up to him (the owner managing their own roster) he would have played MT.  That is the entire crux of this collusion situation and where the deceit rears it's ugly head.  
I'm not sure why folks struggle with this. This is the heart of the collusion that occurred. 

The secret agreement to bench a trade acquisition, assumed to be a top asset, to improve the chances of the team who dealt that asset of winning without him because he doesn't have to face him. 

That's it. That's the whole ball of wax right there. Team MT acquisition is, in essence, agreeing to throw the game. Whether it worked out that way or not is totally irrelevant to the collusion that took place.  

 
It’s roster dumping 
Not in the slightest. Two assets of fair value were exchanged. Each team dealt from a position of strength, the league voted on it, it passed. There were no hidden terms or conditions.  Both teams received value for value and both teams had the intention of winning their next game. 

Zero evidence of "roster dumping". 

 
I'm not sure why folks struggle with this. This is the heart of the collusion that occurred. 

The secret agreement to bench a trade acquisition, assumed to be a top asset, to improve the chances of the team who dealt that asset of winning without him because he doesn't have to face him. 

That's it. That's the whole ball of wax right there. Team MT acquisition is, in essence, agreeing to throw the game. Whether it worked out that way or not is totally irrelevant to the collusion that took place.  
You are making Olympic size long jump leaps here on throwing the game not starting WR132. But I agree that there was an attempt to conceal the condition, which is the issue, not necessarily the condition itself. Had it come out before and sour grapes came up he could argue to the league to pound sand and change the rules in the off-season 

 
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They managed their roster in as much as they took sitting MT into consideration. They could have said no to the deal. In managing his own roster he felt he could play an acceptable lineup while sitting MT. Yes, that is managing the roster. 
 

He wasn’t told to do so after the fact. He made decision on his own. 
Not when both teams agreed to managing his roster to that desirable outcome it's not. It's collusion. You can put it in a box, gift wrap it & put a bow on it, that doesn't make it a birthday present. It's still collusion. Two parties entered into a secret agreement that one party would get MT on the condition that he benched him in their game. 

Collusion. 

Add to that two other factors of 1. lying about it, and 2. team MT having nothing to lose by benching him & team that dealt MT having everything to gain by not having to face him, and it couldn't be more obvious, box, paper or bow. 

 
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You are making Olympic size long jump leaps here on throwing the game not starting WR132. But I agree that there was an attempt to conceal the condition, which is the issue, not necessarily the condition itself. Had it come out before and sour grapes came up he could argue to the league to pound sand and change the rules in the off-season 
His ranking is irrelevant. He's missed a ton of time. That doesn't make him Danny Amendola. He's still Michael Thomas. Talk about making "Olympic sized long jump leaps". 

:rolleyes:  

 
Not in the slightest. Two assets of fair value were exchanged. Each team dealt from a position of strength, the league voted on it, it passed. There were no hidden terms or conditions.  Both teams received value for value and both teams had the intention of winning their next game. 

Zero evidence of "roster dumping". 
It comes down to Motivation and intent.
 

Did you Intend to do a fair deal that also happened to strategically benefit you. Great. 
 

did you intend to soft deal to influence the outcomes of other games but cover your tracks? That’s a form of roster dumping 

that line is awfully thin when it’s about influencing other games 

 
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Seems like it's also better allocating your assets
As I said, it is more precise but it is still a level of roster dumping. The purpose was to affect the competitive balance and nothing more. He solicited the trade in fact in this hypothetical. 
 

Trades like this would get vetoed in leagues that allow votes. 

 
Not in the slightest. Two assets of fair value were exchanged. Each team dealt from a position of strength, the league voted on it, it passed. There were no hidden terms or conditions.  Both teams received value for value and both teams had the intention of winning their next game. 

Zero evidence of "roster dumping". 
If they are of equal value then how does it improve the other team so dramatically that they earn a win from it? 

 
Because you’ve crafted it in a way that isn’t realistic. 
The hypothetical is the hypothetical.

I didn’t “craft” it. It’s an example of how a trade could be made ethically that has ulterior motives while not being unethical. 

you’re just trying hard, and failing, to counter it rather than comparing it to the subject of this topic, which is clearly collusion. 

 
If they are of equal value then how does it improve the other team so dramatically that they earn a win from it? 
It’s called “trading from depth for depth”.

team A needs a WR3. They get one. They happened to have a TE2 that’s better than my TE2, or maybe I don’t have a TE2. Irrelevant.

I get a bench player, they get a starting player.

no outcome is guaranteed. Unlike say, someone benching Michael Thomas to give another team an easy win. 

 
That's all it is. My hypothetical doesn't remotely fit the definition of "roster dumping". 
Without actual player names it is hard to determine if it is roster dumping or not. 
 

I find it hard to believe that such a trade exists that would push another team to victory and maintain market value. 
 

But I suppose hypothetically it could but the argument proves the point that while you believe you have affected the competitive balance without collusion you have to clear the smell test of roster dumping which is a rule and is pretty generally enforced via “can’t cut” players. 

 
It’s called “trading from depth for depth”.

team A needs a WR3. They get one. They happened to have a TE2 that’s better than my TE2, or maybe I don’t have a TE2. Irrelevant.

I get a bench player, they get a starting player.

no outcome is guaranteed. Unlike say, someone benching Michael Thomas to give another team an easy win. 
A WR 3 is equal value to a TE 2. And not just any WR3 but one that will bring a win. 
 

lol

 
The hypothetical is the hypothetical.

I didn’t “craft” it. It’s an example of how a trade could be made ethically that has ulterior motives while not being unethical. 

you’re just trying hard, and failing, to counter it rather than comparing it to the subject of this topic, which is clearly collusion. 
I enjoy the back and forth with you. And yes you did craft it in an unrealistic way. If the motivation was as stated and let’s not pretend value is an exact term, it’s a range based on the universe of opinion. You are hugging that range to your chest like a shield while the intent of the trade had nothing to do with your roster as absent the competitive balance you have no motivation to make the trade

I can quote Aldo again if you want

 
The collusion of the OP wasn’t the condition itself, it was hiding it from the league. Given the league rules as they exist I think they could have been transparent about it

 
The collusion of the OP wasn’t the condition itself, it was hiding it from the league. Given the league rules as they exist I think they could have been transparent about it
It was both. 

by definition a conditional trade that requires a team to bench an asset for the game they will be playing against them is 100% collusion.

lying about it definitely makes it worse. But it would be collusion regardless of whether they lied or not. 

 
As I said, it is more precise but it is still a level of roster dumping. The purpose was to affect the competitive balance and nothing more. He solicited the trade in fact in this hypothetical. 
 

Trades like this would get vetoed in leagues that allow votes. 
Lol, no it would not.  So ridiculous

 
If I may throw in two cents, perhaps another standard to judge such actions by besides ethics is quite simply:  fun.  What makes the league fun and enjoyable for all involved?

I am commissioner of two competitive but ultimately easy-going leagues, and while being commissioner isn't really a lot of work, usually one or two items arise each season that require some adjudication.

Applying this standard, the backroom deal of this trade fails to pass muster since it clearly impacted the league's playoff race, which detracts from the competitive nature of the league.

Having played fantasy for long enough, I know by now that the margins of making the playoffs vs. not are often extremely thin.  In my main league this year, I'm 3-7.  The current playoff cohort includes two 5-5 teams.  I lost a game by 2 when Saquon was injured in the second quarter, and lost a second by 3 when Tevin Coleman was injured at the start of a game.  Every little bit counts - that's what makes the game fascinating.  Don't mess with it!

 
I enjoy the back and forth with you. And yes you did craft it in an unrealistic way. If the motivation was as stated and let’s not pretend value is an exact term, it’s a range based on the universe of opinion. You are hugging that range to your chest like a shield while the intent of the trade had nothing to do with your roster as absent the competitive balance you have no motivation to make the trade

I can quote Aldo again if you want
And again, as I and others have clearly told you: my motivation of making that trade is not remotely 

1. roster dumping

Or

2. collusion

you've attempted to claim its both. It is neither. 

What happened in the hypothetical is simply a fair trade that happens all the time. Two teams trading from depth to improve their rosters.

anything else is 100% interpretation on your part in effort to absurdly claim that it’s unethical. 

But on its face it’s just a trade that helps both teams, both of whom are trying to win, and with no secretive conditions.

Aldo has zip to do with this because everyone is watching in my scenario. It is an above board scenario with no collusion, no roster dumping and helps both teams.

For the 4th time: the *only* reason you know my ulterior motive in this hypothetical is because I told you. Otherwise noting about this deal is untoward, and frankly even the potential benefit upside isn’t unethical and I wouldn’t be shy about telling anyone why I made the deal.

it’s merely an example of a fair trade that happened to have an “equal” reaction, a downstream peripheral effect that may benefit my team.

which isn’t in any way unethical. Sorry. I know you really really want it to be. It’s not. 

 
It was both. 

by definition a conditional trade that requires a team to bench an asset for the game they will be playing against them is 100% collusion.

lying about it definitely makes it worse. But it would be collusion regardless of whether they lied or not. 
I disagree with that, it’s just a condition of the trade to be factored into the analysis of overall value unless it is prohibited by league rules. Take it or leave it. Wait a week and see if they still want to do the trade. Maybe MT blows up and the value equation changes in the trade 

If I traded someone MT right now I’d sure as hell want them starting him against me. 

 
I disagree with that, it’s just a condition of the trade to be factored into the analysis of overall value unless it is prohibited by league rules. Take it or leave it. Wait a week and see if they still want to do the trade. Maybe MT blows up and the value equation changes in the trade 

If I traded someone MT right now I’d sure as hell want them starting him against me. 
:doh:  

your opinion on MT’s potential to score is irrelevant to the shady condition imposed on the trade involving two teams about to face each other & one of them benching a player they just traded for. 

:deadhorse:
 

the lie is the cherry on top. 

 
And again, as I and others have clearly told you: my motivation of making that trade is not remotely 

1. roster dumping

Or

2. collusion

you've attempted to claim its both. It is neither. 

What happened in the hypothetical is simply a fair trade that happens all the time. Two teams trading from depth to improve their rosters.

anything else is 100% interpretation on your part in effort to absurdly claim that it’s unethical. 

But on its face it’s just a trade that helps both teams, both of whom are trying to win, and with no secretive conditions.

Aldo has zip to do with this because everyone is watching in my scenario. It is an above board scenario with no collusion, no roster dumping and helps both teams.

For the 4th time: the *only* reason you know my ulterior motive in this hypothetical is because I told you. Otherwise noting about this deal is untoward, and frankly even the potential benefit upside isn’t unethical and I wouldn’t be shy about telling anyone why I made the deal.

it’s merely an example of a fair trade that happened to have an “equal” reaction, a downstream peripheral effect that may benefit my team.

which isn’t in any way unethical. Sorry. I know you really really want it to be. It’s not. 
This is why you write down rules and bylaws instead of listening to self proclaimed ethics experts talking out both sides of their mouths 

 

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