As a pure hypothetical, let's assume one does their projections and, based on their projected fantasy points per player and their respective baselines, comes up with the following overall VBD rankings (FYI: these aren't my real rankings - so save the criticisms):
1. Ladainian Tomlinson
2. Steven Jackson
3. Adrian Peterson
4. Brian Westbrook
5. Joseph Addai
6. Randy Moss
7. Frank Gore
8. Tom Brady
9. Marion Barber
10. Peyton Manning
According to VBD theory, I should draft Tomlinson, Jackson, Peterson, Westbrook, and Addai ahead of Moss because I project them to have a greater positive point differential relative to other players at the RB position than Moss would have relative to other players at the WR position. Position depth at RB and WR is also a factor, but you get the general idea. My projections will, of course, be my best guess given the information that I have to work with, but given numerous factors (e.g. LT's age, Jackson's down year last season, ADP's lack of history in the league, etc.) I might have a low level of confidence about how those five will rank at the end of the year relative to one another and relative to other players at the RB position. On the other hand, what if I have a relatively high level of confidence that Moss will finish as the #1 WR and I am convinced that barring injury, Moss will have the best WR stats at the end of the season. Shouldn't there be a way to weight those different levels of confidence and factor that into my my VBD rankings? Also, should "more confidence" necessarily translate into just adding more yards and TDs to a player's projected stats even though using that approach may lead to some unrealistic projections? I'm curious as to whether people see any value in doing this and how to best approach it.
note: I am using "confidence" in the general sense. I am not talking about "confidence intervals" commonly used in statistics.
1. Ladainian Tomlinson
2. Steven Jackson
3. Adrian Peterson
4. Brian Westbrook
5. Joseph Addai
6. Randy Moss
7. Frank Gore
8. Tom Brady
9. Marion Barber
10. Peyton Manning
According to VBD theory, I should draft Tomlinson, Jackson, Peterson, Westbrook, and Addai ahead of Moss because I project them to have a greater positive point differential relative to other players at the RB position than Moss would have relative to other players at the WR position. Position depth at RB and WR is also a factor, but you get the general idea. My projections will, of course, be my best guess given the information that I have to work with, but given numerous factors (e.g. LT's age, Jackson's down year last season, ADP's lack of history in the league, etc.) I might have a low level of confidence about how those five will rank at the end of the year relative to one another and relative to other players at the RB position. On the other hand, what if I have a relatively high level of confidence that Moss will finish as the #1 WR and I am convinced that barring injury, Moss will have the best WR stats at the end of the season. Shouldn't there be a way to weight those different levels of confidence and factor that into my my VBD rankings? Also, should "more confidence" necessarily translate into just adding more yards and TDs to a player's projected stats even though using that approach may lead to some unrealistic projections? I'm curious as to whether people see any value in doing this and how to best approach it.
note: I am using "confidence" in the general sense. I am not talking about "confidence intervals" commonly used in statistics.
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