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Top Tips For Success In FPL Draft Leagues

As an avid Fantasy NBA and NFL player I have had plenty of experience of the draft format, which is why I was so excited to see that we will be getting the official Fantasy Premier League Draft game this year. I decided to dive straight in and detail some draft strategy advice that I believe will prove fruitful when it comes to draft day.

FPL Draft Format

FPL Draft’s standard public leagues will consist of eight  teams, each with 15 players; two goalkeepers, five defenders, five midfielders and three strikers with the same scoring system as the standard game. Each Premier League player can only be in one league squad.

With a little simple maths we can see that this means a total of 16 goalkeepers, 40 defenders, 40 midfielders and 24 strikers will be drafted in each eight team league.

The remaining players who are not drafted will become “free agents”. You can transfer a player from the free agent pool to your team using a “waiver request”. Any number of waiver requests can be made each week during the waiver period, which runs from the start of a Gameweek to 24 hours before the start of the next (think Saturday 11.30am to Friday 11.30am). If more than one person in the league requests the same player from the free agent pool during the waiver period, then whoever has priority will get that player. Waiver priority will start the season as the inverse of draft order. Once you successfully get a player from a waiver request you move to the back of the priority list.

The next 24 hours before the Gameweek deadline are a free-for-all where you can transfer players from the free agent pool in and out of your team without a waiver request.

How to ‘Stream’ Defenders

The first thing to point out is that a defender is the position with by far the largest pool of Fantasy-relevant players. ‘Real life’ top flight teams typically play four or five defenders in their starting line-up with only two to three-attacking midfielders and just one goalkeeper and a striker. All four or five defenders in a team would project to score roughly the same number of points in a given week assuming there is not one stand out goal threat or bonus point magnet among them.

This means that we should expect to see every nailed-on defender from the top defences in the league being drafted. I would not be surprised to see five defenders from Chelsea, Spurs and Arsenal (who might all play five at the back) being drafted with four defenders from teams like Manchester City, Manchester Utd, Liverpool, Everton and Southampton (the remaining top eight teams). This would represent 35 of the 40 drafted defenders. Throw in a few goal threats like Charlie Daniels, Gareth McCauley and Christian Fuchs and you have your 40 defenders right there.

What this means is that there is going to be a massive free agency pool of undrafted defenders from teams like Crystal Palace, Stoke, Leicester and West Ham who offer fantastic week-to-week value. My strategy proposes you leave drafting defenders until the very last five rounds and employ a strategy known as “streaming”. This is where you transfer in and out free agent defenders every week that have good fixtures to maximise your weekly potential points.

Lets imagine a draft where I pick my five defenders in rounds 11-15. According to my very rough prediction I could potentially end up with a defence like this:

11. Dejan Lovren

12. Michael Keane

13. Cedric Soares

14. Jonny Evans

15. Steve Cook

This seems like a well balanced defence in the standard FPL game, where we are often scraping the barrel with 4.0m defenders, but it can be made even better by “streaming” in and out free agents every week. Since I don’t have any “fixture-proof” defenders from teams like Chelsea or Spurs I will want to play the fixtures with what’s left.

For example I might transfer out Michael Keane in Gameweek 2 since Everton play Man City away and transfer in a free agent Leicester defender like Danny Simpson, who plays Brighton at home, which represents a much better chance at picking up a clean sheet. My number one waiver request would be Keane out for Simpson. If I am worried somebody with a higher waiver priority will snatch Simpson from me, I can set a second waiver request for Rob Huth as backup.

Let’s say I get Simpson off the waiver and he gets me a clean sheet. The following week Leicester travel to Man United, so I would transfer Simpson out and pick up a Watford defender like Sebastian Prodl as it his team’s turn to host Brighton.

The FPL Draft allows us the luxury of unlimited waiver requests each week, which mean we can play the fixtures when picking defenders almost like a weekly fantasy game since the position is so deep.

Ignore Premium Defenders

You might be reading this and thinking – everyone is just going to leave defenders until the end of the draft, we all know they score less points than midfielders and strikers.

And you would of course be right in general terms. But I’m talking about completely ignoring some of the highest scoring players in Fantasy Football, who I’m sure will be drafted inside the first five or six rounds of an average FPL Draft, and instead waiting until the very end of your draft.

Take for example the case of Gary Cahill, who finished the 2016/17 season with the 12th most fantasy points (178) of any player. I think most would agree that Gary Cahill is going to be one of the premium defenders in FPL this year and he will be drafted as one of the first five defenders off the board in the FPL Draft game. I would not be surprised to see casual players pick Gary Cahill, the 12th best player in Fantasy last year, with one of the top 50 picks in Fantasy drafts this summer, which would represent a seventh round pick. Defenders with a goal threat like Marcos Alonso and Danny Rose would probably be drafted even higher.

Prioritise Strikers…

The problem is that by using an earlier round pick on a premium defender like Cahill means you give up drafting another premium midfielder or striker, positions which have far more “scarcity”. Remember that there are going to be 24 strikers drafted in every league and I would argue that there are not even 20 fantasy-relevant strikers in the league at any one time. The 24th best striker last year by total points was Andy Carroll with a paltry 69 points. Meanwhile the 40th best defender was Ryan Shawcross with 94 points. You are really going to want to target strikers with your early picks because the position is so shallow, especially compared to defenders.

You’re not going to be able to stream strikers on a week-to-week basis when 24 of them are already taken and only about 20 even start every week (one for each team).

…as well as Midfielders and Goalkeepers

The pool of midfielders is larger than strikers but still significantly smaller than defenders. Each team usually deploys around two midfielders, who offer an attacking threat. For every team like Arsenal who have Alexis Sanchez, Mesut Ozil, Theo Walcott and Aaron Ramsey you have a team like Sunderland or Burnley who last year had no midfielder with more than 100 points. Those premium midfielders are all going to be taken in the draft, so you’re not going to be left with a very promising free agent pool to “stream” every week like you can in defence. However, I don’t think it will be impossible and I would like to do some research into a strategy of playing a 3-5-2 formation where you stream the fifth midfielder every week looking for a set piece taking midfielder from a weaker team with a good fixture.

The scarcity of good strikers and midfielders means I would suggest spending your first 10 picks on eight attacking players and two goalkeepers. 16 goalkeepers are going to be taken off the board in eight team leagues, so if you don’t draft good ones you’ve only got four other starting keepers to replace them with. The good thing is that goalkeeper is easily the lowest scoring position and also has the smallest range of outcomes. The difference between Tom Heaton and Wayne Hennessey, the number 1 and number 16th ranked goalkeeper was just 57 points last year, the same difference at the striker position was 128 points.

VORP is key

I believe the key decision to make when deciding where to draft a player is to consider their Value Over Replacement Player (VORP). If you were to draft Gary Cahill with a seventh round pick, his VORP would represent the difference between his expected Fantasy points and the expected Fantasy points of the best available free agent. We have already seen how there is going to be great value in the free agent defender pool by streaming defenders with a good home fixture every week, so Cahill’s VORP is going to be relatively lower.

Now consider you draft someone like Nathan Redmond with that pick instead. Redmond’s VORP is going to be significantly higher than Cahill’s because the best available free agent midfielder is going to be so much worse than the best available defender. Even though Cahill’s Points per Game last year was 4.8 compared to Redmond’s 3.4, this strategy suggests you get more value out of drafting Redmond since the midfielder position is so much more scarce.

Conclusion

By not drafting a defender in the first 10 rounds I expect to miss out on premium defenders like Marcos Alonso, Antonio Valencia and Hector Bellerin. But the depth of the free agent defender pool means I can make up the points by streaming week to week and picking up defenders from slightly lesser teams who have good clean sheet potential in a particular week.

You’ve really got to make your goalkeeper, midfielder and striker draft picks count because the available free agents are not going to offer as much support. The best way to do this is to spend all of your early picks at these positions. The defender position contrasts completely, to the point where you should be utilising the free agents multiple times every week.

An ideal formation should be 3-4-3 or 3-5-2 depending on who you hit on with your draft picks

If this article generates enough interest I’d love to make this a regular series and provide more advice on draft strategies in the FPL Draft game.

Pav A Nice Day Years of experience have taught me that the golden rule of fantasy football is that all my players hate me and deliberately do not score points in order to spite me.

64 Comments Post a Comment
  1. J0E
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • Has Moderation Rights
    • 14 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    This is excellent advice. I have limited draft experience but have done well with Dugout FC over the last two seasons by deploying alot of this - especailly streaming defenders. I looked at fixture blocks (eg Bou have a strong next six - get in a defender - then ship on for another team with a strong next 4-6)

    This also works for a fifth mid too. The pool is far more limited but there are real gems there. It is this aspect of Draft that I really like. So it means really hunting those fantasy island picks - in fact I often drafted in my Scoutcast fantasy risks in Dugout which meant I had the likes of Ndidi for a while.

    Thanks for submitting. Hope this is a regular article. 🙂

    1. Pav A Nice Day
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 10 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Thanks a lot! Really love that there's some positive feedback. I'll be looking to write a few more as the summer rolls on towards everybody's draft days.

      One thing I should note to edit:
      "Successful draft teams typically play four or five defenders in their starting line-up with only two to three-attacking midfielders and just one goalkeeper and a striker"

      That's meant to say that real-life premier league teams play 4-5 defenders. I think your fantasy draft team should still be aiming to play a 3-4-3 or 3-5-2 depending on who you hit on with your draft picks

      1. J0E
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • Has Moderation Rights
        • 14 Years
        6 years, 9 months ago

        Will make that change re formation now.

        1. Pav A Nice Day
          • Fantasy Football Scout Member
          • 10 Years
          6 years, 9 months ago

          Thanks. I can definitely see there being a lot of fluidity necessary with formation decisions in the Draft game.

          Like I've said, there are always going to be lots of good defenders available so if your drafed mids and strikers go down it could be better to play 442, 451, 532 for a while until you hit on a worthwile free agent replacement.

          But the ideal situation is you hit on attackers and get to play as many as possible

      2. ScotDougie
        • 8 Years
        6 years, 9 months ago

        Great article keep em coming thank you

  2. Speédy
    • 7 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article mate,thanks alot. Nice strategy with defenders.

  3. QPRUTD
    • 7 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Nice Article. Hopefully this is a regular feature here. Gonna need it.

  4. Boris Bodega
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 8 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Fantastic article, my understanding of the draft game just went through the roof. Thanks

  5. Twisted Saltergater
    • 14 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Thanks for this!

    As an avid follower of the NFL and *cough* the 49ers *cough* , I'm familiar with a draft and know how exciting yet frustrating in equal measure it can be.

    In rolling this out to my mates, I'm wondering if I should do a practice draft event. Otherwise I can see people switching off if they feel they haven't drafted well. After all, we want season long commitment and the banter that results.

    1. Pav A Nice Day
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 10 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Hey, 49ers fan here too!

      I hope the FPL site rolls out a Mock Draft feature but this seems like the kind of thing they'd add in Year 2 or 3.

      The thing that's going to be so incredibly useful if it becomes available is Average Draft Position (ADP) for each player. As you see I've made a rough guess at some defenders who will be left in rounds 11-15 but if FPL allow smart tech-people to grab their data and produce an ADP list we'll be able to easily see which players we can get at which round on average.

      1. Twisted Saltergater
        • 14 Years
        6 years, 9 months ago

        Unlucky! Still, hopefully we've hit rock bottom, cleaned out the bad blood and will improve this season. I'm off to Wembley later in the year to see the Saints, Dolphins, Jags and Ravens.. can't wait!

        ADP sounds a really helpful indicator. I thought we might have to rely on price, but maybe a seperate ADP value based on price and last season's points will make it easier for many.

        I hope these articles keep coming. Great stuff!

        1. Pav A Nice Day
          • Fantasy Football Scout Member
          • 10 Years
          6 years, 9 months ago

          Yeah I started really following them just after the Super Bowl against the Ravens. So it's been nothing but a miserable decline ever since, only one to go now though!

          I never even thought of using "price" as a make-shift ADP but it makes total sense. Casual players are gonna see the player list sorted by price and probably veer towards picking the most expensive player on average. My early prediction is once the midfielder and strikers above 8.0m are gone, people are gonna start taking those 6.0-7.0m defenders since they'll be attracted to the guaranteed starts and occasional attacking threats of an Alonso or Rose.

          1. Twisted Saltergater
            • 14 Years
            6 years, 9 months ago

            I was a proper glory supporter; started following the 49ers as a kid in the late eighties when it was on channel 4 here (we only had 4 channels back then 😀 ).

            There was a game on the Amiga computer called TV Sports Football where you could edit the roster, so soon I was adding Montana, Rice, Craig, Rathman, Lott .. what an era that was!

            I agree that the expensive players will go first. I just hope people will have the vision to want to captain someone out of the ordinary rather than complain they don't have Kane, Aguero, Sanchez etc. The success of the game in this format hangs on this.

            1. Pav A Nice Day
              • Fantasy Football Scout Member
              • 10 Years
              6 years, 9 months ago

              There are no captains in the FPL draft game

  6. Donnylad
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 14 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great insight into amaking a successful draft. Cheers.

  7. PDM TOP 1,000 any Season Le…
    • 14 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article ....
    Hopefully this season will be an improvement in the draft ranks ...
    I have to admit the excitement of draft night is fantastic and can throw up some surprise signings .

  8. AA33
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 7 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    This is simply awesome! Thanks! 🙂

    I have a doubt - in a Gameweek do you start with 15 players or 11 players with the standard FPL formations?

    1. Pav A Nice Day
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 10 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Just like regular FPL. Squad of 15, but you play 11 every week.

      Only difference is that there's no captain/vice-captain. I guess this would be to minimise the benefit of whoever is lucky enough to pick Harry Kane or Sanchez

      1. AA33
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • 7 Years
        6 years, 9 months ago

        So if I get 7 attackers of my choice, should I shift over my focus to the defence or first try to draft my 8th attacker?

        1. Pav A Nice Day
          • Fantasy Football Scout Member
          • 10 Years
          6 years, 9 months ago

          I can think there's a debate to both sides on this question. Something I might look more at later.

          Your initial feeling might be "why do I need the 8th attacker", I'll just leave it like I do in regular FPL when I pick a 4.5m midfielder.
          But with the draft it's going to be so unlikely that you absolutely nail all 7 of your attacking players. You've got to give yourself as good a chance as possible, so I would say draft that 8th attacker in the 8th round. There's a chance you hit this year's Deli Alli or Mahrez who make up for your mistake of picking Diego Costa in the 2nd round and he leaves Chelsea on deadline day.

          Then I'd go pick up 2 goalkeepers since the position is so scarce.

          1. AA33
            • Fantasy Football Scout Member
            • 7 Years
            6 years, 9 months ago

            Thanks a lot! 🙂

  9. FrankieTheGent
    • 9 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Thanks for this.

    Significant differences to DUGOUT FC where they aren't so prescriptive as to numbers per position drafted so long as you field a valid team.

    Do you know if you can build and sort a player shortlist to make drafting easier?

    Also do you know whether you can do team transfers within the league?

    1. Pav A Nice Day
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 10 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Hopefully FPL brings over the "watchlist" function from the standard game and we can use it as a player shortlist. No confirmation yet though.

      You can't trade players within the league. Bit of shame really; this adds lot of strategy all season-long, especially when a player gets injured and their value drastically changes.

  10. Trading Bear
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 10 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article, many thanks.

    I'm the admin (or ''commissioner'') of our work league of 8 and been bombarded with questions. My only experience of a draft is watching the American comedy show 'The League' so this helped alot.

    Shame we can't make trades with the other managers though.

    Lastly, definitely like to see more articles like this, keep it up.

  11. Sconeaus - The Dude Abides
    • 9 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article very interesting would love to see it as a regular

  12. tm245
    • 12 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    This is really well done, nice work looking at the pool of defenders in particular.

    Agreed that position scarcity is key but I wonder if the Cahill v Redmond straight on VORP is the way to approach it -- might it be Cahill + Replacement Midfielder vs Redmond + Replacement Defender in terms of PPG?

  13. ElTorro
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    AMAZING ARTICLE!!

    I have a question though. Would the draft leagues occupy league positions in the regular game? I would like to join a lot of cash leagues (i think it's only 15 leagues that you can join)

    1. harvard
      • 8 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      No. It will be different

  14. firetog
    • 7 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    I've never played draft football, but I've been playing fantasy NFL for 20 years and very familiar with streaming defenses. I always use that strategy. However I'm not convinced yet that the streaming Defense will work in this format. (may have to run some numbers). In fantasy NFL there is a Team defense. Generally most managers keep 1. In a 12 team league that leaves 20 of 32 defensive teams on the waiver wire. This means that you can pick up a pretty decent Defense ranked 13 to 24 which is playing in a good Home fixture. In a draft FPL since you have to pick individual players the dynamics must be slightly different. If its a 12 team league and you have to select 5 defenders then that's the top 60 defenders selected. Assuming most real teams play 4 defenders that 80 available, say 90 to take into account teams that play 5 at the back. That means for streaming purposes you're picking players from rank 61-90, or players playing for the worst 5 to 6 defenses (bottom 30%) . Compare that to NFL, where the worst 12 Defenses (bottom 30%) never have to be selected for streaming.

    1. harvard
      • 8 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      I see your point. But then 12 in a league is much. 6-8 is perfect and it gives you defenders 41-90. The 20 between 41 and 60 are good value too.

  15. Uncle_Sams_Army
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 13 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article. This has completely shaped my thinking going into drafting. I had been trying to figure this out by myself, and was struggling with how to prioritize the different positions. Many thanks!

  16. firetog
    • 7 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    There's a draft strategy in NFL call VBD value based drafting. It enables managers to compare players of different positions on an equal basis. In NFL quarterbacks score a lot more than the other positions but it doesn't necessarily mean they are more valuable and should be draft early. The same might apply to FPL with Forwards.

    VBD works as follows: Its based on player point projections for the upcoming season either overall or on a weekly basis. For each position you need to know the number of starters that there will be for that position. To keep the example easy I'll assume its a 10 team league, starting 1 GK , 4 defenders (on average), 4 mids (on average) and 2 forwards. Given the flexible line ups that might be better tweaked to 3.5 Def, 4 mids and 2.5 fwds, but for ease of explaining I'll stick to 442. With 10 teams we know there are 10 GK, 40D, 40M and 20F that will be starting.

    Lets assume that GK are all pretty similar and the top guy score 150 points whereas the 10th one scores 120 points. For defenders the top one scores 180 points and the 40th one scores 80 points, for Mids the top one scores 260 and the 40th 120 and for forwards the top one scores 300 and the 20th scores 230.

    You now take the points of the worst starter from each position and take those points off all the players scores for the same position.
    So if the 10 GK were 150, 140, 135, 134, 127, 125 124, 122, 121, 120 then their adjusted points would be 30, 20, 15, 14, 7, 5 4, 2, 1, 0

    You adjust all the positions in the same way and now you can compare the adjusted points to determine which position is the most valuable.

    In this example the top GK is worth 30, top Def 100, top Mid 140 and top Forward 70. They're made up numbers but it explains the principle of how to determine the overall rankings of all the players.

    1. Rihanovic
      • 6 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Excellent point.
      I'll give it a thought before drafting for sure.
      Thank you so much.

    2. harvard
      • 8 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Seems I might have to spend more time doing the predictions. Nice tip

  17. Witty Pun: Not good at this…
    • 7 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Thanks very much, Pav! Excellent article, would love to see more in the future.

  18. Rihanovic
    • 6 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article.
    Thanks for sharing the experience.

  19. 32chickens
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 13 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    good introduction article
    -fantrax vetran
    Interesting on how they manage the draft timings..we'll see

  20. SembadaFPL
    • 7 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    How about the case of 16 drafters on a league mate. Is that 11-15 rounds defenders pick could be applied?

    1. harvard
      • 8 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      I'm no expert but I think you could just look at what's left during the draft and judge.

      E.g if all Chelsea and spurs defenders are getting picked, it will be wise to take your premium def before continuing on attack hunt. Repeat it when others seems to be picking the mid performing defenders.

  21. Baz
    • 14 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    To play every week:
    A) Lacazette + Loftus-Cheek (or other 4.5)
    B) Benteke + Ramsey

  22. Torreslove
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 12 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Looking to fill a few spots in my fantrax draft league. Going in to my fourth season playing with other FFS managers, we can honestly say fantrax is the best platform out there to play draft on.

    Shoot me an email at tl.fantrax.draft@hotmail.com if you are interested or want to know more about draft!

    1. Heels_Over_Head
      • 10 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Y'all should e-mail TL. Fantrax experience is way better than what's on offer from this game.

      FPL Draft is not well conceived from the point of view of things that make a draft league the most enjoyable. It's not even worth detailing as there's plenty of folks on this website with draft experience who could have had an established weekly draft league commentary in the community section which would have been instructive on how to do this better... not that FPL gets ideas from this site or anything...

      1. Torreslove
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • 12 Years
        6 years, 9 months ago

        Hear! hear!

        Joined your never 10k league. Got 12k once, would have missed out on the fun.

  23. Unsuccessful
    • 10 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article. I've never played draft fantasy sports before so I will take your advice and run with it

  24. Motto1
    • 6 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    As someone who has no knowledge of draft leagues, superb article. Just 1 question though, is there still a budget of £100m as I cannot teams reaching the £100m mark. Thanks

  25. Tacalabala
    • 13 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Excellent, thank you!

  26. Eh, just one more thing ...
    • 12 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article and looking forward to the draft game. One question though, that will have most of you rolling your eyes probably. Having never played the draft before, do we literally have the opportunity to list every available player in order of priority? Then when the draft runs it will fill your team based on the available players on your priority list?

  27. MajesticWok
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 11 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    The key to a successful draft is having a tier system and not being tempted when you see others drafting premium defenders in the first couple of rounds.

    I played an NFL draft league for the first time last year using a tier system based on point projections, position and average points per game. I'll be looking to device something like this based on the players ratings in the members section and I'd love to share it with any who are interested.

    The idea is you put all of the players into tiers and you keep picking your tier 1 players until they're all gone, then move onto tier 2. Under this, and using the above, defenders will be well down the list. You probably want to look at this over the course of a full season and then stream your bench as and when you see fit based on 3-4 week projections

    1. MajesticWok
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 11 Years
      6 years, 9 months ago

      Also, you probably want to try and limit any leagues to 12 if you're planning on doing this with your mates, rather than scrap the barrel to find 4 more players. 16 and the quality of teams can get a bit thin.

  28. Gorky
    • 9 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    We did our draft league on paper all sat round a table, think I've done alright:

    De Gea/Heaton
    Kolscielny/Keane/Bailly/Moses/Mendy (if he goes)
    Eriksen Sane Mkhitaryan Klassen Snodgrass
    Kane Morata Vardy

  29. Manyu.gupta
    • 6 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Thanks for the insights, great article!

    Would you have any additional insights if I play AUCTION format instead of snake draft?

  30. Telly
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 13 Years
    6 years, 9 months ago

    Great article Pav! Nice work. If you are in an 8 -team fantasy draft league, would it be worth also "streaming" with goalkeepers?