Look at their ADP. If the 1st round RB has a higher ADP than what you'd be giving up, it's a good value. If he doesn't, it isn't.woeisme said:Example: How do you value a 1st Rd RB kept as your 4th pick over a 4th or 5th ranked QB kept as your 9th pick?
Look at their ADP. If the 1st round RB has a higher ADP than what you'd be giving up, it's a good value. If he doesn't, it isn't.woeisme said:Example: How do you value a 1st Rd RB kept as your 4th pick over a 4th or 5th ranked QB kept as your 9th pick?
Look at their ADP. If the 1st round RB has a higher ADP than what you'd be giving up, it's a good value. If he doesn't, it isn't.Example: How do you value a 1st Rd RB kept as your 4th pick over a 4th or 5th ranked QB kept as your 9th pick?This is a good start, but I'd go further.I'd also look at the pick value calculator. Use the value of the potential keeper's draft pick and compare that to the value of the pick you'd give up to keep that player. That's another clue as to the value differences.In you example, a 1st Rd RB is going to have a high point value for the draft pick matching his ADP. That difference (between a 1st and a 4th) is likely to be much greater than the difference between a 4th or 5th pick in comparison to a 9th.To say it one last way - it is easier to replace the 9th round valued keeper QB with a pick after the 4th or 5th, keeping the same value, than it is to pick a 1st round type RB in Round 4.
This is generally the process I also follow, but I tend to do it in a case-by-case evaluation rather than with a standard pick calculator. The problem with standard pick calculators in keeper leagues is that late round keepers significantly alter where players will get picked and therefore alter expected pick values. For example, if a dozen players who are normally picked in early rounds are being kept in later rounds (players like Slaton, Forte, Chris Johnson, Avery, Ward, Roddy White, Royal, etc), the talent drops off much more quickly in the early rounds than it would in a normal redraft without keepers (Witten may go on the second-third round turn instead of mid-fourth for example). As a result, I tend to project out what effect different keepers would have on my eventual team and bypass the numeric calculator. The principle is the same, but I get a better feel for the likely effect of the keeper on my end roster that way.I'd also look at the pick value calculator. Use the value of the potential keeper's draft pick and compare that to the value of the pick you'd give up to keep that player. That's another clue as to the value differences.In you example, a 1st Rd RB is going to have a high point value for the draft pick matching his ADP. That difference (between a 1st and a 4th) is likely to be much greater than the difference between a 4th or 5th pick in comparison to a 9th.To say it one last way - it is easier to replace the 9th round valued keeper QB with a pick after the 4th or 5th, keeping the same value, than it is to pick a 1st round type RB in Round 4.
In this case I would just start with a later round - i.e. if there are 2 keepers per team, then the first pick is worth 3.01. Calculators are all relative to the first pick available anyway, but this should assist in lower value of players available.toxic said:This is generally the process I also follow, but I tend to do it in a case-by-case evaluation rather than with a standard pick calculator. The problem with standard pick calculators in keeper leagues is that late round keepers significantly alter where players will get picked and therefore alter expected pick values. For example, if a dozen players who are normally picked in early rounds are being kept in later rounds (players like Slaton, Forte, Chris Johnson, Avery, Ward, Roddy White, Royal, etc), the talent drops off much more quickly in the early rounds than it would in a normal redraft without keepers (Witten may go on the second-third round turn instead of mid-fourth for example). As a result, I tend to project out what effect different keepers would have on my eventual team and bypass the numeric calculator. The principle is the same, but I get a better feel for the likely effect of the keeper on my end roster that way.I'd also look at the pick value calculator. Use the value of the potential keeper's draft pick and compare that to the value of the pick you'd give up to keep that player. That's another clue as to the value differences.In you example, a 1st Rd RB is going to have a high point value for the draft pick matching his ADP. That difference (between a 1st and a 4th) is likely to be much greater than the difference between a 4th or 5th pick in comparison to a 9th.To say it one last way - it is easier to replace the 9th round valued keeper QB with a pick after the 4th or 5th, keeping the same value, than it is to pick a 1st round type RB in Round 4.
That would provide a better approximation, but it is still a bit messy. The number of slots you need to shift a pick to get an accurate value changes as you proceed through the draft (some of the keepers would have been first round picks, some second, some ninth). As a result, you cannot really adjust by a constant because the early round picks are "off" much more than the late round picks. If there are 12 players kept in rounds 5 through 8 that would have been otherwise picked in the first three rounds, a player who would have been picked at 4.01 will now likely go at 3.01. However, a player who is normally drafted at 9.01 will still be drafted at 9.01 since the draft picks used for the keepers "catch up" to the draft. All that complexity aside, it is certainly true that you could approximate the adjusted pick number for any situation with enough effort. However, if you are going to go to that much effort, why not just project out the players you are likely to pick at different spots and assess the final composition of the team and its projected value (especially since you can then account for your scoring-specific expected ADP)?In this case I would just start with a later round - i.e. if there are 2 keepers per team, then the first pick is worth 3.01. Calculators are all relative to the first pick available anyway, but this should assist in lower value of players available.This is generally the process I also follow, but I tend to do it in a case-by-case evaluation rather than with a standard pick calculator. The problem with standard pick calculators in keeper leagues is that late round keepers significantly alter where players will get picked and therefore alter expected pick values. For example, if a dozen players who are normally picked in early rounds are being kept in later rounds (players like Slaton, Forte, Chris Johnson, Avery, Ward, Roddy White, Royal, etc), the talent drops off much more quickly in the early rounds than it would in a normal redraft without keepers (Witten may go on the second-third round turn instead of mid-fourth for example). As a result, I tend to project out what effect different keepers would have on my eventual team and bypass the numeric calculator. The principle is the same, but I get a better feel for the likely effect of the keeper on my end roster that way.I'd also look at the pick value calculator. Use the value of the potential keeper's draft pick and compare that to the value of the pick you'd give up to keep that player. That's another clue as to the value differences.In you example, a 1st Rd RB is going to have a high point value for the draft pick matching his ADP. That difference (between a 1st and a 4th) is likely to be much greater than the difference between a 4th or 5th pick in comparison to a 9th.To say it one last way - it is easier to replace the 9th round valued keeper QB with a pick after the 4th or 5th, keeping the same value, than it is to pick a 1st round type RB in Round 4.
That would provide a better approximation, but it is still a bit messy. The number of slots you need to shift a pick to get an accurate value changes as you proceed through the draft (some of the keepers would have been first round picks, some second, some ninth). As a result, you cannot really adjust by a constant because the early round picks are "off" much more than the late round picks. If there are 12 players kept in rounds 5 through 8 that would have been otherwise picked in the first three rounds, a player who would have been picked at 4.01 will now likely go at 3.01. However, a player who is normally drafted at 9.01 will still be drafted at 9.01 since the draft picks used for the keepers "catch up" to the draft. All that complexity aside, it is certainly true that you could approximate the adjusted pick number for any situation with enough effort. However, if you are going to go to that much effort, why not just project out the players you are likely to pick at different spots and assess the final composition of the team and its projected value (especially since you can then account for your scoring-specific expected ADP)?In this case I would just start with a later round - i.e. if there are 2 keepers per team, then the first pick is worth 3.01. Calculators are all relative to the first pick available anyway, but this should assist in lower value of players available.This is generally the process I also follow, but I tend to do it in a case-by-case evaluation rather than with a standard pick calculator. The problem with standard pick calculators in keeper leagues is that late round keepers significantly alter where players will get picked and therefore alter expected pick values. For example, if a dozen players who are normally picked in early rounds are being kept in later rounds (players like Slaton, Forte, Chris Johnson, Avery, Ward, Roddy White, Royal, etc), the talent drops off much more quickly in the early rounds than it would in a normal redraft without keepers (Witten may go on the second-third round turn instead of mid-fourth for example). As a result, I tend to project out what effect different keepers would have on my eventual team and bypass the numeric calculator. The principle is the same, but I get a better feel for the likely effect of the keeper on my end roster that way.I'd also look at the pick value calculator. Use the value of the potential keeper's draft pick and compare that to the value of the pick you'd give up to keep that player. That's another clue as to the value differences.In you example, a 1st Rd RB is going to have a high point value for the draft pick matching his ADP. That difference (between a 1st and a 4th) is likely to be much greater than the difference between a 4th or 5th pick in comparison to a 9th.To say it one last way - it is easier to replace the 9th round valued keeper QB with a pick after the 4th or 5th, keeping the same value, than it is to pick a 1st round type RB in Round 4.