Season starts tomorrow... for anyone confused about our scoring system, you may want to refer to my end-of-season wrapup from last year:
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showth...ootball-2013&p=5357054&viewfull=1#post5357054
Some general tips for the rest of the teams, especially those with low (<150) projected point totals:
- Don't leave empty spots in your roster! This effectively gives your opponent extra players relative to your own team.
- If a player is projected to score zero points in a game, they will not be playing in the game. This is the functional equivalent of playing with an empty roster slot.
- If their projection is zero points over the whole season, chances are they are no longer on an NFL roster, or are injured and out for the whole season. Drop these players.
- Don't worry about bye weeks. If you have to suck up one bad week in order to get the best overall season roster, do it.
- FLEX spots should have a WR in there, unless your 3rd RB or 2nd TE is significantly better than your 4th WR, which won't be the case for most teams.
- Projected point totals when not zero are a rough guide. Actual results do vary quite a bit, which makes steady, reliable players a bit more valuable than one which will score the same overall point total but in spikes.
- DO NOT ignore IDP slots. Having your IDP in order against opponents who don't gives you a massive advantage. If you don't understand IDP, read up on it. At the very least check projected stats.
- Understand waivers vs. free agency: When you make a waiver claim, you go to the bottom of the waiver order. Waiver claims are prioritized by the waiver order. Several teams may claim the same player via waivers and if that happens then the one with the lowest waiver order number is the one who is processed first. Consider whether a player you want might be gotten as a free agent instead (when the waiver period ends for the week), which doesn't upset your current waiver priority. Priority starts out in reverse order of the draft (last pick in draft gets #1 waiver spot to start the season). If you are near the top of the waiver priority, don't give that up for a player you aren't that keen on.