Tips for the fantasy eraser

Do you want to be the average fantasy football player, caught in the middle of your division? Or do you want to be the one everyone is afraid to face? If you want to be the average guy, you can go now. But if you want to be the most indestructible, the most powerful, and the BEST, you might want to read this.

Most people will say, “No, I can’t pick that quarterback, I don’t have any of his WRs.” It’s okay to say that, but just because you have a QB-WR tandom, IT DOES NOT MEAN YOU WILL GET MORE FANTASY POINTS. The only two exceptions are P. Manning to R. Wayne and M. Schaub to A. Johnson. Here are a couple of scenarios:

1st scenario: Let’s say you want a QB-WR duo. You select Chad Ochocinco in the first round and Carson Palmer in the second. In the next two rounds, you pick Marques Colston and Chris (Beanie) Wells. Great choices … right? Let’s turn back the clock. You are back in the 1st round. You select Maurice Jones-Drew, and in the second round you select Reggie Wayne. Then, in the third round, you choose Chad Ochocinco, and in the fourth, Carson Palmer. That is the difference between about 15 points each week! And if you’ve played fantasy football before, you should now that every point is critical. Don’t pick players when they shouldn’t be selected so high!

Second scenario: you have the eighth pick in the draft. A. Peterson, C. Johnson, R. Rice, M. Jones-Drew, A. Johnson, R. Moss and R. Wayne were chosen for the first 7 selections. You pick Aaron Rodgers for your first pick, knowing that no one would pick Greg Jennings … In your next appearance, Jennings is still there, waiting to be cast, along with Matt Schaub, Jonathon Stewart, Shonn Greene, and Wes Welker. There are mainly two possibilities here:
– Draft Greg Jennings
gold
– recruit one of the others and someone else in later rounds to trade it for a better WR
Personally, I would take Matt Schaub and use Aaron Rodgers as a bat to land Andre Johnson, Reggie Wayne or Randy Moss.

Many people have different strategies for writing:
-separating the strong sides
-strong on WR
-strong on RB
-strong on QB (s)
One of my favorite strategies, that I haven’t tried, is picking five good quarterbacks in the first five rounds, and after the draft you have time to think about who you really want and then once you’ve decided what you’re going to do. to do. Get started trading to get the best possible options from your selections!

Remember, never go into the draft without looking at the players and seeing how they have done during spring training. Make sure you write who YOU ​​love and not who they say is best. And the most important rule, make the most of your choices!

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