DropKick
Footballguy
What do Peyton Manning, Ladainian Tomlinson, Shaun Alexander, Reggie Bush, Laurence Maroney, Stephen Jackson, Kevin Jones, Edgerrin James, Torry Holt and Larry Fitzgerald have in common? Here’s a hint: Soon you will be able to add Adrian Peterson and Calvin Johnson to that list. No idea? They are NOT on my fantasy football team.
Not that I wouldn’t take any of those guys. I just never get the chance to draft them. Aside from one injury plagued season in the past dozen years, I’ve been very successful and typically make a run at least into the second round of our play-offs. This translates to somewhere between pick 9 and 12 in the rookie/free agent draft,
Frankly, it’s getting on my nerves. You almost want a “Celtics” type season to get a high pick and that one RB “stud” to rebuild upon. A couple years ago I was on the cusp of that type of season and with one more loss would have seriously considered tanking. As luck would have it, I won 4 of 5 to squeak into the playoffs; got hot at the right time; and won a championship. OK, I’ll take it... but it meant another twelve pick.
I’ll admit I’m lucky. Head to head format and a generous play-off format help (6 of 12 teams qualify). But I can’t help but wonder why I’ve been able to win consistently while some teams, with almost perennial high picks, come up short.
Here is what I believe are contributing factors. Feel free to comment or add your own strategy for remaining competitive without a high draft pick.
Draft the Best Player Available. Seems obvious but I’ve seen some real “flyer” RB picks in the middle of the first round only to have some blue chip receivers fall to the bottom of the round. My goal is to find one “keeper” each year in both the draft and free agency.
Make every pick count. I see guys draft their grandmother late in the draft. Every roster spot is valuable. Treat them that way.
Work the waiver wire. Again, this sounds easy but to act quickly and get a guy a week before anyone knows who he is your assignment. Be careful though, just because Frisman Jackson opened the ’05 season with 8 catches for 128 yards doesn’t make him the next Jerry Rice.
Be patient. This may sound inconsistent with working the waiver wire actively but I see guys draft promising players and then promptly release them when they don’t produce in week one. If there were sound reasons for drafting the guy, give the season a chance to develop.
Find a schmuck to trade with. OK, that’s tongue in cheek. There are very few trades in my league. It has not been an avenue to success. I find, due to the track record, everyone thinks you have inside information and is reluctant to deal.
Don’t be afraid to “reach” for a player. One guy in my league is far too “value” conscious. He absolutely won’t take a guy earlier than he is projected. I understand his reasoning but he consistently misses out on the guys he really wants.
Take aim and fire away.
Not that I wouldn’t take any of those guys. I just never get the chance to draft them. Aside from one injury plagued season in the past dozen years, I’ve been very successful and typically make a run at least into the second round of our play-offs. This translates to somewhere between pick 9 and 12 in the rookie/free agent draft,
Frankly, it’s getting on my nerves. You almost want a “Celtics” type season to get a high pick and that one RB “stud” to rebuild upon. A couple years ago I was on the cusp of that type of season and with one more loss would have seriously considered tanking. As luck would have it, I won 4 of 5 to squeak into the playoffs; got hot at the right time; and won a championship. OK, I’ll take it... but it meant another twelve pick.
I’ll admit I’m lucky. Head to head format and a generous play-off format help (6 of 12 teams qualify). But I can’t help but wonder why I’ve been able to win consistently while some teams, with almost perennial high picks, come up short.
Here is what I believe are contributing factors. Feel free to comment or add your own strategy for remaining competitive without a high draft pick.
Draft the Best Player Available. Seems obvious but I’ve seen some real “flyer” RB picks in the middle of the first round only to have some blue chip receivers fall to the bottom of the round. My goal is to find one “keeper” each year in both the draft and free agency.
Make every pick count. I see guys draft their grandmother late in the draft. Every roster spot is valuable. Treat them that way.
Work the waiver wire. Again, this sounds easy but to act quickly and get a guy a week before anyone knows who he is your assignment. Be careful though, just because Frisman Jackson opened the ’05 season with 8 catches for 128 yards doesn’t make him the next Jerry Rice.
Be patient. This may sound inconsistent with working the waiver wire actively but I see guys draft promising players and then promptly release them when they don’t produce in week one. If there were sound reasons for drafting the guy, give the season a chance to develop.
Find a schmuck to trade with. OK, that’s tongue in cheek. There are very few trades in my league. It has not been an avenue to success. I find, due to the track record, everyone thinks you have inside information and is reluctant to deal.
Don’t be afraid to “reach” for a player. One guy in my league is far too “value” conscious. He absolutely won’t take a guy earlier than he is projected. I understand his reasoning but he consistently misses out on the guys he really wants.
Take aim and fire away.