apalmer
Footballguy
You can do the same thing he did. Open PD. Import your DD league file and set the weights. (If you don't yet have a DD file, import your VBD spreadsheet into DD and save it as one. ) Save the PD file. Open DD and import the PD file. Now open your league DD file. Voila.This makes sense, but why are FBG VBD projections and cheatsheets not based on this same principle? It seems like a good way to go.Is this possible for us "little guys" to do this on our own? If so can you walk us through it? Like I said earlier, I don't have a ton of time to do my own projections and cheat sheets which is why I come here and pay for them and get a nice edge on the competition.ThanksDavid Dodds said:Adding a little bit more to using composite projections (created in Projections Dominator and then imported to the Draft Dominator).It was my idea to create the Projections Dominator because I knew there were many talented guys on staff creating great numbers. I feel we have four outstanding people doing offensive projections. Each set of numbers is a tad different. Most notably:Mine - Anti-rookie bias generally. I do a lot of work with statistical norms both on teams and within the NFL. Usually very conservative top ends to all players.Bob Henry - Either #1 or #2 all-time in the Fantasy Index Master poll lifetime ratings. He manages our depth charts and writes all of the camp updates. He also does our forward projections for the Lineup Dominator. He uses a similar baseline when creating numbers. He projects the deepest of all of us.Jason Wood - Generally likes the rookies more than the rest of us. He writes or manages all of the Spotlights and also edits all of the training camp reports. He creates our Training Camp watchlists and also pens the Offseason Coaching and Philosophy Changes article. These tasks form strong opinions on players. Jason usually has higher top ends of the true studs in the league.Maurile Tremblay - He takes a very pessimistic approach to players staying healthy. He also projects a lot of players because of this (usually expects people to play 15 games or less). He invokes his own complex modeling system to assist with the numbers creation.Four different approaches to the same data. I think we all do a great job independently, but together the data usually drafts the strongest teams. It's an approach I have been using the last few years to great success.