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The Flex Factor | Week 13

Figuring out your flex spots can be the difference between winning and losing your weekly matchup. In this weekly series presented by Flex Fantasy, we’ll look at sleeper running backs and wide receivers outside the consensus top 50 who should be locked in your lineups.

As we head into the final 2 weeks of the fantasy football regular season, I wanted to send a thank you to our sponsor, Flex Fantasy. Hopefully, you have navigated through the season with some of our flex calls. Let’s see what we have on tap this week…

Brian Robinson

BRob has been an RB1 this season in PPR (which confounds us all) but after putting up some of his best numbers over a 2 week stretch, Robinson fell flat against Dallas even though had 18 touches. The Commanders RB has a nice bounce back spot against Miami. His PPG numbers may not be great but he’s been the RB5 in PPR scoring this year and is a near lock for 15+ touches in a week where we’re short on running back options.

David Njoku

The Chief has been on a quiet tear this season, currently the TE6 overall since Week 7. Njoku has seen 56 targets over his last 6 games and ranks 4th among tight ends with 78 targets on the season despite playing with multiple QBs. During Byemageddon, the Browns star faces a weak Rams defense that has been generous to tight ends (allowed the 8th most fantasy points per game and the second-highest yards per reception to tight ends, per Fantasy Pros). Light it up with the Chief in Week 13.

Don’t forget to check out Flex Fantasy on Sleeper Minis and challenge anyone in any league or fantasy football platform using the teams you already have! Use promo code UDFLEX23 for an instant deposit match up to $25 on your first deposit!

Congrats to the winner of our Tournament of Champions – ________! Stay tuned for our next Tournament of Champions coming in a couple of weeks.

Shaping Your Roster | Fantasy Football Waiver Wire – Week 13

Support for Shaping Your Roster is brought to you by ​MANSCAPED™, the best in men’s below-the-waist grooming. MANSCAPED™ products are precision-engineered tools for your family jewels. In addition, MANSCAPED’s™ Performance Package is the ultimate men’s hygiene bundle! Join over 6 million men worldwide who trust MANSCAPED with this exclusive offer for you…. 20% off and free worldwide shipping with the code UND at manscaped.com. If my math is correct, that’s about 12 million balls.

As the season goes on, I am learning that not all of mine are hits. I got the Packer players right last week, but luckily, most of you ignored my Derrick Henry advice. I will keep trying to get better. Thanks for returning to The Undroppables for all your fantasy football advice!

QUARTERBACKS

Gardner Minshew (Indianapolis Colts)

Yahoo – 16% Rostered
ESPN – 7% Rostered
Sleeper – 19% Rostered

Back into the article this week, Gardner is just a volume play for anyone still streaming at the QB position. He is getting chances to throw the ball and has some excellent matchups in the coming weeks against the Tennessee Titans and Las Vegas Raiders. You hope the touchdowns will start with the number of passing attempts.

Matthew Stafford (Los Angeles Rams)

Yahoo – 48% Rostered
ESPN – 31% Rostered
Sleeper – 46% Rostered

Stafford, however, did not have an issue with touchdowns in Week 12.  Throwing for four touchdowns, he had his best week of the 2023 season so far.  He has some tough matchups, but the playoff schedule has him playing the Washington Commanders in Week 15 and New York Giants in Week 17.  I like that a lot!

RUNNING BACKS

Jeff Wilson Jr. (Miami Dolphins)

Yahoo – 17% Rostered
ESPN – 27% Rostered
Sleeper – 18% Rostered

With Devon Achane week to week with his latest knee injury, Jeff stepped up and took over that complimentary back role to Raheem Mostert. With 14 total opportunities and 73 total yards, it was a great day for Jeff in the limited role.  He is a primary handcuff at the position and still sees enough work in a high-octane offense that is worth starting in the FLEX.

Elijah Mitchell (Miami Dolphins)

Yahoo – 17% Rostered
ESPN – 17% Rostered
Sleeper – 25% Rostered

Similar thinking in this is a nice stash for the playoffs in Fantasy. Elijah Mitchell would be the immediate workhorse RB for the 49ers if anything happened to Christian McCaffrey.  He is getting some snaps and touches in relief, which might occur more as they approach the NFL Playoffs.  The championship schedule is Arizona Cardinals, Baltimore Ravens, and Washington Commanders. He could easily see 10+ touches in each of those weeks. I like him as a sleeper FLEX start for the playoffs.

WIDE RECEIVERS

Josh Downs (Indianapolis Colts)

Yahoo – 58% Rostered
ESPN – 47% Rostered
Sleeper – 66% Rostered

Barely meeting the criteria for this article, it looks like people gave up on Josh Downs during his injury. This is your time to capitalize on their mistake! He had 13 targets in Week 12; it is hard to pass up that volume. Michael Pittman had the same amount of targets but turned that into much better production. It’s the same reason we like Minshew; we want Downs to benefit from that volume.

Curtis Samuel (Washington Commanders)

Yahoo – 28% Rostered
ESPN – 35% Rostered
Sleeper – 39% Rostered

A risky add and an even riskier start; Curtis Samuel should be picked up in most leagues.  Coming off his best week of the season, and they play the Miami Dolphins in Week 13. Points will be scored in this game, or at least catches, with the Commanders projected to be way behind.  The issue is a Week 14 bye for the Commanders and an atrocious schedule afterward. If you need to, he might be an add for the Week 13 byes, and then drop him.

TIGHT ENDS

Pat Freiermuth (Pittsburgh Steelers)

Yahoo – 48% Rostered
ESPN – 42% Rostered
Sleeper – 48% Rostered

The Muth is back, baby! It was his best game of the season, right after the OC change in Pittsburgh.  He should be picked up and started in all formats. There’s not much else to say; I’m surprised people quickly gave up on him.

Cade Otton (Tampa Bay Buccaneers)

Yahoo – 29% Rostered
ESPN – 29% Rostered
Sleeper – 34% Rostered

Consistency is nice sometimes, and if you need a TE for your Week 13 bye woes, Cade might be an excellent plug-in. Back-to-back weeks with four catches and 45+ yards, he is a solid 8-10 points without a touchdown.

BUZZCUTS

Aaron Jones (Green Bay Packers)

You might be holding on that he gets healthy and returns to form.  I am one of those people as well, but it’s time to face reality.  He runs too high of a risk of re-injury, and it’s too late in the season to risk that. Every game and point counts, but you don’t have the confidence to start Jones like you used to.

The Art of Dynasty | Chapter 15 (Game Theory)

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Building a dynasty fantasy football team requires strategic thinking and football acumen similar to planning a long military campaign. You must intimately understand your leaguemates’ rosters and tendencies, diligently prepare for the rookie draft and waiver wire, and thoughtfully craft a balanced yet versatile roster aligned to your vision. Knowing when to push all chips to the table for a title run or temporarily rebuild for sustained excellence is equally critical. The finest dynasty owners combine sharp situational analysis with statistical rigor and old-fashioned football study to construct juggernauts that dominate their leagues for years.

This guide outlines core tenets to help you architect a formidable roster poised for both immediate and enduring success. By internalizing essential dynasty strategies around planning, preparation, roster construction, and pivoting between competing goals, you too can rule over your leaguemates year after year like a battle-tested emperor of old.

  1. Startup Drafts
  2. Roster Construction
  3. Ideal Archetypes
  4. Ship Chasing
  5. Iron Bank
  6. Rookie Pick Values
  7. Rookie Drafts
  8. Trading
  9. Roster Management
  10. Bayesian Inference
  11. Startup Supreme
  12. Roster Crunch
  13. Trade Assessment
  14. Productive Struggle
  15. Game Theory
  16. Startup Trades & Pick Swaps
  17. Winning the Offseason
  18. Rebuild Roadmap
  19. Revanche
  20. Kingdom Come

The complex dynamics of dynasty fantasy football are fertile ground to deploy key concepts from game theory. By studying fundamental game theory principles around rational choice, competitor incentives, and strategic decision-making, dynasty owners can gain a tactical edge in critical league interactions like trade negotiations and waiver wire bidding. Becoming fluent in game theory principles allows you to more accurately model leaguemate behavior, unearth subtle market inefficiencies, and make shrewd moves that outsiders may view as counterintuitive yet possess hidden wisdom. Master strategists like Jax Falcone deftly apply game theory precepts, contemplating not only their own incentives and roster needs but also those of their competitors. Internalizing these game theory best practices, both in preparing for events like the rookie draft and more routine decisions like free agent pickups, can help separate you from less strategic opponents and guide your team to sustained dynasty dominance.

Analyze Your Competitors

A core tenet of applying game theory to dynasty fantasy football is deeply understanding your opponents’ strategic profiles. Carefully observe your leaguemates’ draft philosophies, trade preferences, and waiver wire moves over time. Analyze their decision-making patterns, risk preferences, and biases – do they pursue high-variance selections or favor reliable production? Some owners may perennially reach for flashy rookie running backs, while others target proven wide receivers in contract years. My friend and mentor, Leo (@Ciga_FF), has talked about keeping journals on your opponents. By deducing these tendencies through rigorous analysis of their past moves, you gain invaluable foresight into future decisions. You can then anticipate their bidding on breakout tight ends or assess the premium they will pay in a blockbuster trade.

Armed with insights into their preferences and psychology, you can strategically adjust your actions to capitalize on suboptimal decisions rooted in bias rather than reason. Game theory ultimately rewards those who comprehend opponents as thoroughly as their own team needs when plotting moves on the dynasty chessboard.

  1. Pattern Recognition: Maintain a detailed log of each leaguemate’s past trades, draft picks, and waiver claims. Identify recurring patterns in their behavior.
  2. Risk Profiles: Categorize leaguemates based on their risk tolerance. Some may consistently target high-upside rookies, while others prefer established veterans.
  3. Exploit Biases: Use knowledge of their biases to your advantage. If an opponent overvalues rookie running backs, consider trading them a high-potential RB for a more balanced return.

Identify Dominant Strategies

A hallmark of masterful dynasty strategy is crafting enduring roster advantages by targeting systematic market inefficiencies. Rather than chasing ephemeral trends, study historical data and current league dynamics to unearth areas of enduring value. Perhaps your league chronically underprices quarterbacks during startup drafts or uses primitive trade calculators that misprice future picks. Savvy owners construct analytical models pinpointing these distortions and exploit them before the market self-corrects.

Another font of advantage is identifying classes of predictable yet underappreciated players, such as unheralded slot receivers in high-volume passing attacks. By perpetually seeking these pockets of opportunity through research and statistical analysis, you sustainably acquire the building blocks of a dynasty juggernaut at below-market costs. The path to dynasty glory passes on flashy quick hits for (recurring) edges accumulated across years of trades, drafts, and waiver pickups.

  1. Market Analysis: Regularly review historical league data to identify undervalued positions or player types.
  2. Analytical Models: Develop models to predict player performance and market inefficiencies. Use these models to inform your draft and trade strategies.
  3. Sustained Value: Focus on acquiring assets that provide consistent value over time, rather than chasing fleeting trends.

Understand Interdependencies

A key dynamic in dynasty fantasy is recognizing how your decisions intertwine with and influence those of other owners. No move occurs in a vacuum – if you trade for an emerging young wide receiver, it may compel a win-now competitor to overpay for a veteran pass-catcher. Every roster addition sends ripples across your fantasy football league, incrementally changing evaluated tiers and team needs.

Consider both immediate and downstream implications of trades, FAAB bids, and lineup decisions. Understanding these complex interdependencies allows you to strategically steer leaguemates towards choices benefitting your squad. Your moves do not just improve your team in a silo but actively reshape the decision matrix of the entire league to your advantage.

  1. Ripple Effects: Consider the broader impact of each move. How will your trade affect the competitive balance of the league?
  2. Strategic Steering: Use trades to subtly influence your opponents’ decisions. For example, acquiring a player they covet might prompt them to overpay for an alternative.
  3. Long-Term Planning: Plan trades with both immediate and long-term impacts in mind. Aim to create a ripple effect that benefits your team’s future.

Consider Risk & Reward

At the core of strategic dynasty management lies calibrating risk and reward when acquiring talent. Assess each roster move not solely by best-case return but the entire range of outcomes. Game theory sharpens this process by quantifying (and rewarding those who can flourish in) uncertainty. It is easier said than done but striking the optimal balance between volatile high-upside picks and steady production will create a perpetual championship window.

Upside can break any week but depth breeds resilience. Successful dynasties meld the two approaches over multiple cycles of acquiring, developing, and cashing in assets. Make each decision after carefully weighing upside vs. floor at that moment in time. There are some dynasty experts who chase pure upside and decry 12 PPG floors but in Weeks 11-13 when you’re pushing for a potential first round bye and dealing with injuries you’ll be thankful to have some flex options (while playing keep away from your opponents). Following this risk-reward calculus over years assembles a juggernaut balanced to not just weather but thrive amid the turbulence of conditions outside our control (e.g., injuries).

  1. Risk Assessment: Evaluate each player acquisition in terms of potential risk and reward. Consider the worst-case scenario as well as the upside.
  2. Balanced Roster: Build a roster that combines high-upside players with steady producers. This approach provides both explosive potential and consistent scoring.
  3. Flexibility: Maintain flexibility in your roster to adapt to injuries and other unforeseen events. This ensures resilience during critical playoff runs.

Diversify Your Player Portfolio

Astute dynasty owners apply the investing maxim of diversification to roster construction, distributing assets to minimize concentrated risk. The principles behind Modern Portfolio Theory have rich implications for fantasy – a balanced portfolio of players and teams insulates against random shocks like injuries or bye weeks cratering a given week. However, diversity alone fails to capture the full strategic picture.

Reflect on whether your quarterback shares a bye with two starting wide receivers, magnifying volatility. Diversify across player archetypes (see Chapter 3), teams, health histories, and bye weeks. Hedge against uncertainty through disciplined diversification to yield more consistent, optimized scoring immune to unpredictable shocks.

  1. Diversification Strategy: Distribute your assets across different teams, positions, and player archetypes to minimize risk.
  2. Bye Week Management: Ensure that your key players don’t share the same bye week, which can create a single point of failure.
  3. Health Histories: Factor in players’ injury histories when constructing your roster. Diversify to mitigate the impact of potential injuries.

Exploit Public Perception

Target struggling players with histories of strong production at nadir value, recognizing that short-term struggles create recency biases that are exasperated by the herd. Study historical trends and leading indicators pointing to an impending positive regression. Conversely, put outlier performers on the trade block while the iron is hot, cashing in spikes unlikely to persist. There is profit to be made in the calm appraisal of players detached from the emotive swings of public opinion and narratives. Lean against these cognitive currents rather than being swept away by a fickle crowd. Wins accumulate through many subtle arbitrages identifying the delta between actual and perceived value. Maintain an independent and probabilistic estimate of player projections, anchored in data instead of biases. By coolly capitalizing when misperceptions crescendo, you reap substantial dynasty profits.

  1. Buy Low: Identify underperforming players with strong track records. Acquire them at a discount, anticipating a rebound.
  2. Sell High: Trade players performing above their expected value. Capitalize on their peak value before regression occurs.
  3. Market Sentiment: Stay informed about public perception and use it to your advantage. Exploit the gaps between perception and reality.

Information Asymmetry

Asymmetric information represents a critical edge in dynasty fantasy football. As in financial markets, owners privy to injury developments, coaching changes, or role shifts ahead of the public possess a valuable timing advantage to exploit. Sophisticated dynasty managers architect rigorous information funnels around breaking news, beat reports, film study, and advanced metrics. However, insight without action seeds little advantage. You need to turn this knowledge into forward-looking projections which will help you identify actionable roster or trade opportunities. Move aggressively upon new data while less informed owners sleep.

Mastery of game theory in dynasty football requires relentless applied learning rather than grasping abstract concepts. Continually update notes of leaguemates, refresh projections as roles change and injuries pile up, and shed assumptions invalidated by hard truths. Sustained edge accrues through flexibility, creativity, and desire for growth even at the pinnacle.

  1. Information Networks: Build a network of reliable information sources, including beat reporters, injury analysts, and advanced metric sites.
  2. Proactive Moves: Act quickly on new information. Secure advantageous trades or waiver claims before the rest of the league catches on.
  3. Forward Projections: Use your insights to make forward-looking projections and identify undervalued assets.

Continuous Learning & Adaptation

Mastery of game theory in dynasty football requires relentless applied learning rather than grasping abstract concepts. Continually update notes of leaguemates, refresh projections as roles change and injuries pile up, and shed assumptions invalidated by hard truths. Sustained edge accrues through flexibility, creativity, and desire for growth even at the pinnacle.

  1. Regular Updates: Keep your knowledge current with regular updates on player roles, injuries, and league trends.
  2. Flexible Strategies: Be willing to adapt your strategies based on new information and changing circumstances.
  3. Growth Mindset: Continuously seek to improve your understanding of game theory and dynasty strategies. Stay ahead of the competition by embracing a mindset of perpetual learning.

By strategically applying game theory principles, you can gain a significant edge in dynasty fantasy football. This approach allows you to anticipate competitor behavior, exploit market inefficiencies, and make data-driven decisions that lead to sustained success. Embrace the complexity of dynasty leagues, and use these advanced strategies to build a dynasty juggernaut.

The Flex Factor | Week 12

Figuring out your flex spots can be the difference between winning and losing your weekly matchup. In this weekly series presented by Flex Fantasy, we’ll look at sleeper running backs and wide receivers outside the consensus top 50 who should be locked in your lineups.

Diontae Johnson

Fantasy Twitter let out a collective sigh of relief when news of Matt Canada’s firing came out of Pittsburgh this week. The hope is that the entire offense can turn things around, particularly in the passing game. Johnson has been in a slump over the past 2 weeks with only a disappointing 3 receptions in that span. In his first 3 back from injury, Johnson saw 20 targets so there’s recent history that he can produce even if he’s tied to Kenny Pickett. The matchup is poor but midseason coaching changes can spark a team, including yours.

Josh Downs

A follower asked me to choose between Josh Downs or Keaton Mitchell this week. It was a difficult choice because Mitchell is riding a wave right now, taking up market share in Baltimore, while Downs is having a downturn after a really strong 4 game stretch. All things considered, I want Downs for his PPR floor and ability to match, if not surpass, Mitchell’s ceiling. Fire up the Colts slot WR in a favorable matchup against the Bucs.

Demario Douglas

29 targets and 20 receptions over the past 4 weeks aren’t week winners but a double-digit floor for a late-season injury/bye week flex play can’t be ignored in PPR, even if it’s dependent on Mac Jones/Bailey Zappe. Right?

Don’t forget to check out Flex Fantasy on Sleeper Minis and challenge anyone in any league or fantasy football platform using the teams you already have! Use promo code UDFLEX23 for an instant deposit match up to $25 on your first deposit!

And check out our Tournament of Champions, now in the final round! Congrats to both amateurs who made it through the pros gauntlet to battle it out for supremacy. Pick a side to back in our matchups and win cash!

 

Shaping Your Roster | Fantasy Football Waiver Wire – Week 12

Support for Shaping Your Roster is brought to you by ​MANSCAPED™, the best in men’s below-the-waist grooming. MANSCAPED™ products are precision-engineered tools for your family jewels. In addition, MANSCAPED’s™ Performance Package is the ultimate men’s hygiene bundle! Join over 6 million men worldwide who trust MANSCAPED with this exclusive offer for you…. 20% off and free worldwide shipping with the code UND at manscaped.com. If my math is correct, that’s about 12 million balls.

I love that Tommy Devito came through after writing about picking him up. You have to ignore the name sometimes and enjoy the points that you get. Keep coming back to The Undroppables for all your fantasy football advice!

QUARTERBACKS

Jordan Love (Green Bay Packers)

Yahoo – 46% Rostered
ESPN – 44% Rostered
Sleeper – 47% Rostered

Despite the up-and-down season Jordan Love has had from a factual football standpoint, he has been pretty good for fantasy. With six QB1 performances on the season, he has been excellent for people streaming at the position. With back-to-back weeks with two touchdowns and 40 passing attempts, he has some excellent matchups with the Detroit Lions and New York Giants. Continue to stream when you can!

Russell Wilson (Denver Broncos)

Yahoo – 54% Rostered
ESPN – 57% Rostered
Sleeper – 51% Rostered

Russ is cooking again. The Broncos will have a tough matchup in Week 12 against the Cleveland Browns, but after that, they face the Lions, Chargers, and Texans. These lovely matchups for your playoff run might help you get to your championship. Stash if you can, or if you lost Joe Burrow, this is the QB you should target if available.

RUNNING BACKS

Ty Chandler (Minnesota Vikings)

Yahoo – 44% Rostered
ESPN – 52% Rostered
Sleeper – 48% Rostered

With big runs against the Denver Broncos and getting the receiving work, Ty Chandler is becoming more of a FLEX play in this offense. A late season Week 13 bye, but after that, they face the Raiders, Bengals, and Packers. All of them are great matchups for the running back position.

Zach Charbonnet (Seattle Seahawks)

Yahoo – 44% Rostered
ESPN – 32% Rostered
Sleeper – 51% Rostered

We hope for a speedy recovery for Kenneth Walker, but Zach Charbonnet is the next man up in this offense. They have very tough matchups, so this isn’t a league-winning addition, but if you need someone to play in your RB slow, Charbonnet is a good add based on available opportunities now.

WIDE RECEIVERS

Jayden Reed (Green Bay Packers)

Yahoo – 36% Rostered
ESPN – 19% Rostered
Sleeper – 43% Rostered

We keep writing about him, and people are nervous about starting him. Jordan Love has been good this season, and Reed has been a significant benefactor of his success. With back-to-back weeks of 19 PPR points, he has the upside you need to win the playoff games you need.

Elijah Moore (Cleveland Browns)

Yahoo – 42% Rostered
ESPN – 36% Rostered
Sleeper – 46% Rostered

Elijah has had a quiet season once again, but with two weeks of seven targets in a row, he might be starting to get into a rhythm with this offense. More QB changes potentially with the Browns. I feel Joe Flacco would help increase that target total, and I love the stash of Elijah if possible.

TIGHT ENDS

Tanner Hudson (Cincinnati Bengals)

Yahoo – 4% Rostered
ESPN – 0% Rostered
Sleeper – 8% Rostered

Even with Joe Burrow getting injured, Tanner found a third straight week of 9 PPR points. He still doesn’t have a touchdown, but that is an excellent floor for anyone streaming at the position.

Michael Mayer (Las Vegas Raiders)

Yahoo – 11% Rostered
ESPN – 6% Rostered
Sleeper – 18% Rostered

It’s simple: Las Vegas. Michael makes an impact in weeks when he has gotten more than five targets. He’s been a top TE in the weeks he makes that mark. How about we continue to target your rookie TE so you know what you have for next year??

BUZZCUTS

Derrick Henry (Tennessee Titans)

You probably aren’t cutting him, but we are approaching the benchable territory. King Henry just hasn’t been good recently, and this offense is starting to play catch up, which is more Tyjae Spears territory now. He has some excellent matchups in the next two weeks, but I would not want him to be starting during the playoffs from looking at their schedule.