So are we arguing semantics here?
Is the ability to "be good" at FF an actual skill? I see people keep writing it off as just "hard work" or "research". Those aren't skills? It's there that many of us disagree.
Since I used to work in a field that relied heavily on research, you'll never convince me that "research" or the work involved in gathering it is not a skill. It is. I've seen countless people who don't know where to focus their efforts and end up getting less done in a longer amount of time. They worked as hard as anyone else yet ended up with less information that they could use. Further more - using that information towards improving your goal is absolutely a skill - and directly related to the problem solving skills of the individual using the data.
Imagine for a moment that no FF sites existed. No FBG, no ESPN, Yahoo, etc. Would you consider it a skill then? The massive amounts of interpretation needed to unravel what the stats actually mean (player situation, quality of opponent, coaching philosophies, injuries, game situations, etc, etc) - that would obviously be a skill that would require huge amounts of information and knowledge of how the game works and player/coach motivations.
Now, because there are sites (like this one) that do a lot of that work for us - it's no longer a skill?? That's what I don't get - there are true "experts" out there that teach others how to interpret certain things (in it's simplest form - a "cheat sheet") and some people want to devalue the entire hobby because this information is readily available.
And even with all this info out there - I still see tons of owners make bone headed moves on a weekly basis.
Again - researching intelligently and using it towards your goal effectively is a skill. Just because there are great sites out there that do a lot of the work for us doesn't mean that the "skill" aspect is gone. The deeper leagues, IDP leagues, larger rosters and more intricate scoring all ramp up the skill required exponentially.
For those of you arguing against, especially the OP (and his alias) - if you don't understand this then you are lacking a skill of your own - comprehension.
*Edited to add*
...The closer the skill level of the players, the greater the influence of luck (variance).
This is also very true. Notice that [icon] uses the word "skill" in there. When people with similar skill levels compete it is
always more difficult to succeed. In FF, sports, science, etc. Just because people of similar skill are relying on "that big break" to push them ahead doesn't negate the skill involved that got them to that level in the first place.