ADP Analysis - Introduction
Last season, Aaron Rodgers
was the highest scoring player in many fantasy football leagues
which leads many people to believe that he was the most valuable
player in fantasy football. Unfortunately for those managers, there
is little truth to that. One of the most important things to know
when you draft a fantasy football team is that the total number of
points a player earns is not important; the important thing is
how many points a player earns compared to others at his position.
Let me give you a very simplified example of this:
Assume you are in a league
with only two teams where both managers only draft one QB and one RB.
Say you predict QB1 to score 400 points, QB2 - 350, RB1 - 300 and
RB2 - 200. If you were selecting first you would draft RB1 since he
earns 100 more points than the other RB, the other manager would
then select QB1 and RB2 and you would finally pick QB2. Now if your
projections are correct you would win your league by 50 points
because you chose the player who is better compared to the other at
his position instead of the one who scores the highest total number
of points. This is a very simplified example but the same principle
applies with 12 managers selecting a full team. In the early rounds,
you will want players that are better than the other starters at
that position. That is the reason that running backs are so
valuable: there are so few of them that are dominant that you cannot
afford to wait too long before drafting them.
It may be a very basic
principle but you would be surprised to see how many fantasy
football players do not understand it or do not apply it. However,
there is another important part to this. A few websites (including
Football Guys in their very famous Value Based Drafting) explain
what I just explained but there is one problem with it. If you look
at the number of points that team defenses earned in your league
last year, you will likely notice that the Eagles and Saints were
quite dominant. Many predict the Jets to be the best defense this
year and in many leagues, they will score a lot of fantasy points.
According to value based drafting you would select them relatively
early in your draft. However, the problem with defenses is that they
are very inconsistent from year to year so many will wait until the
later rounds to select them. If that principle applies for defenses,
should it not also apply to other positions?
In the following article, I
will look at average draft position (ADP) and fantasy points scored
since 2005 for players at each position. This article will not only
explain which players earn more points than others at their position
but also which position is easier to predict before the season
starts. This article will tell you in which rounds there is value at
each position and will give you a large strategic advantage over
your opponents.
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