Interesting points about sports being so meritocratic; I never thought about it that way.
Mandated by work?!
What have your experiences been like with fantasy football? Sorry to be so negative but I’ve been appalled at the way people approach it. I had an argument with someone once that ended up reducing to the fact that he was valuing a player by how many points they produce (Aaron Rodgers) and I was valuing him less because I was valuing him based on how many points he scores relative to what the alternative would be (I even linked him to the article, which didn’t change his mind; it was an ego thing; I’m playing him in the championship now, yay competition!).
I’ve also been disappointed to see that people heavily reach for players in the draft, effectively saying “I disagree with all of the experts”. Maybe they are just trying to have fun and don’t actually think it’s the best strategy? That isn’t my impression, my impression is that it’s genuine. Personally, I largely stick to the rankings (experts know more than me), but I do adjust based on the strategy I’m taking, and I do disagree with the experts sometimes. This year, for example, I valued the elite wide receivers very highly compared to the experts (because I liked the receivers and because I didn’t like many running backs this year).
I actually never heard the expression of “rooting for a jersey”, but I’m very glad to learn of it! Personally, I’m one of the few people I’ve encountered who doesn’t root for a jersey; I root for the teams that I think play the game the right way. In basketball this means I change a lot year to year. In football, I’ve been a big Steeler fan for a while. Admittedly, I do “root for the jersey” to a nontrivial extent with the Steelers, but at the same time I like the way they approach things and would stop rooting for them it they stopped doing the things I like.
Sorry to hear that you haven’t found people to play with whom your skills are matched well with :(
I’d be interested to see a sport (re)designed to encourage drama and fun. Leagues have taken steps to do this, but I think that they are marginal steps as opposed to a fundamental restructuring. Ex. NHL (and soccer too?) made the goals bigger, NBA and NFL penalize hand checking more which benefits the offense and makes for a higher scoring and more fast paced game.
I’ve also been disappointed to see that people heavily reach for players in the draft, effectively saying “I disagree with all of the experts”.
This can be a good strategy. I’ve played in leagues where the winners have won largely because they chose players before the experts projected they should go.
Following the consensus will likely yield the highest average performance over a span of several seasons, but the experts get it wrong sometimes. If you can pick the overachievers in any given season, it can yield a championship.
We have mandatory ‘fun days’ where we grill hot dogs and play ultimate football.
Thanks for the link, I’ll definitely attempting to implement some of the lessons from it to my draft next year. Incidentally, drafting is where I’ve always failed- I kind of just picked players without any knowledge or analysis, and then figured out what I could do with them during the season. The waiver wire helped, of course. Mine is an extremely blue collar league, so there’s not much in the way of strategy besides ‘I follow my gut’.
Interesting points about sports being so meritocratic; I never thought about it that way.
Mandated by work?!
What have your experiences been like with fantasy football? Sorry to be so negative but I’ve been appalled at the way people approach it. I had an argument with someone once that ended up reducing to the fact that he was valuing a player by how many points they produce (Aaron Rodgers) and I was valuing him less because I was valuing him based on how many points he scores relative to what the alternative would be (I even linked him to the article, which didn’t change his mind; it was an ego thing; I’m playing him in the championship now, yay competition!).
I’ve also been disappointed to see that people heavily reach for players in the draft, effectively saying “I disagree with all of the experts”. Maybe they are just trying to have fun and don’t actually think it’s the best strategy? That isn’t my impression, my impression is that it’s genuine. Personally, I largely stick to the rankings (experts know more than me), but I do adjust based on the strategy I’m taking, and I do disagree with the experts sometimes. This year, for example, I valued the elite wide receivers very highly compared to the experts (because I liked the receivers and because I didn’t like many running backs this year).
I actually never heard the expression of “rooting for a jersey”, but I’m very glad to learn of it! Personally, I’m one of the few people I’ve encountered who doesn’t root for a jersey; I root for the teams that I think play the game the right way. In basketball this means I change a lot year to year. In football, I’ve been a big Steeler fan for a while. Admittedly, I do “root for the jersey” to a nontrivial extent with the Steelers, but at the same time I like the way they approach things and would stop rooting for them it they stopped doing the things I like.
Sorry to hear that you haven’t found people to play with whom your skills are matched well with :(
I’d be interested to see a sport (re)designed to encourage drama and fun. Leagues have taken steps to do this, but I think that they are marginal steps as opposed to a fundamental restructuring. Ex. NHL (and soccer too?) made the goals bigger, NBA and NFL penalize hand checking more which benefits the offense and makes for a higher scoring and more fast paced game.
This can be a good strategy. I’ve played in leagues where the winners have won largely because they chose players before the experts projected they should go.
Following the consensus will likely yield the highest average performance over a span of several seasons, but the experts get it wrong sometimes. If you can pick the overachievers in any given season, it can yield a championship.
Good point.
We have mandatory ‘fun days’ where we grill hot dogs and play ultimate football.
Thanks for the link, I’ll definitely attempting to implement some of the lessons from it to my draft next year. Incidentally, drafting is where I’ve always failed- I kind of just picked players without any knowledge or analysis, and then figured out what I could do with them during the season. The waiver wire helped, of course. Mine is an extremely blue collar league, so there’s not much in the way of strategy besides ‘I follow my gut’.