LEAGUE PARAMETERS
- 12 teams
- 20 roster spots
- Starting Lineup
- 1 quarterback
- 2 running backs
- 2 wide receivers
- 1 tight end
- 2 flex (either a running back, wide receiver, or tight end)
- 1 team defense
- 1 Kicker
LEAGUE SCORING
- Offensive Players
- 4 points - passing touchdown
- 6 points - rushing/receiving touchdown
- 0.04 points - passing yard
- 0.1 points - rushing/receiving yard
- 1 point - reception
- Team Defense
- 6 points - touchdown
- 2 points - turnover recovered
- 2 points - safety
- 1 point - sack
- 10 points - Offensive points against: 0-0
- 7 points - Offensive points against: 1-6
- 3 points - Offensive points against: 7-14
- 0 point - Offensive points against: 15-20
- 0 points - Offensive points against: 21-99
- 6 points each - Number of Defensive and Special Teams Touchdowns
AUCTION DETAILS:
- $200 of auction dollars were available to all 12 teams
- Players were nominated in a rotation cycle beginning with team 1 through team 10 and back to team 1 repeating the rotation again until all 12 teams filled their 20-man roster.
- 15 second timer upon nomination was used to determine the winning bid. The timer was also 15 seconds for each subsequent bid
- Teams had 40 seconds to nominate a player when it was their turn in the rotation.
THE ROTATION ORDER
- Aaron Rudnicki
- Alex Miglio
- Andy Hicks
- Chad Parsons
- Danny Tuccitto
- Devin Knotts
- Jeff Haseley
- Jeff Tefertiller
- Matt Harmon
- Scott Bischoff
- Sigmund Bloom
- Dan Hindery
Starting with Team 1, we'll go over each team's winning bids
Aaron Rudnicki - TEAM 1
PLAYER | WINNING BID |
Johnson, David ARI RB | $60.00 |
Howard, Jordan CHI RB | $36.00 |
Crabtree, Michael OAK WR | $20.00 |
Adams, Davante GBP WR | $20.00 |
Wilson, Russell SEA QB | $13.00 |
Bennett, Martellus GBP TE | $13.00 |
Thielen, Adam MIN WR | $6.00 |
Matthews, Rishard TEN WR | $5.00 |
Rivers, Philip LAC QB | $4.00 |
Blount, LeGarrette PHI RB | $3.00 |
Jones, Zay BUF WR | $3.00 |
Washington, DeAndre OAK RB | $3.00 |
Kelley, Rob WAS RB | $3.00 |
Hogan, Chris NEP WR | $2.00 |
Golladay, Kenny DET WR | $2.00 |
Chiefs, Kansas City KCC Def | $2.00 |
Allen, Dwayne NEP TE | $2.00 |
Santos, Cairo KCC PK | $1.00 |
Seferian-Jenkins, Austin NYJ TE | $1.00 |
Cohen, Tarik CHI RB | $1.00 |
Overall Strategy:
Secure two stud runners – including the best one on Earth – and throw quantity at wide receiver
Best Pick(s)
Wide receiver value – Aaron really did the “grab plentiful value” movement right at wideout. After spending a combined $40 on two solid WR2 types, Aaron used the tail end of the auction to secure sneaky volume and dynamite upside to fill out his depth chart. He paid just $14 to secure Rishard Matthews, Adam Thielen, and Zay Jones – all dynamic options with better volume outlook than they’re given credit for – and tacked on two $2 guys at the bottom that both carry off-and-on WR3 ceilings.
Worst Pick(s)
Jordan Howard ($36) – I don’t hate Howard at all, but I don’t like spending so much on that second running back tier. Aaron bought in hard and early on him, money I feel would’ve been better steered toward an upgrade at WR2. In a toothless offense with shaky quarterbacking and unpredictable touchdown opportunity, Howard could wind up spinning his wheels a lot; he strikes me as carrying a similar floor as the much-cheaper Isaiah Crowell and Lamar Miller.
Evaluation
Aaron went with the opposite strategy I usually take – he chose quality at RB and quantity at WR – but he made it work nicely. I have no concerns over his WR depth, and he did well to secure both floor and ceiling everywhere.
post-draft questions
1. What was your strategy going into the auction and how did that turn out? Share any specific ups and downs that you had throughout the auction.
My typical auction strategy is to try and bid up players early and allow the aggressive owners to overpay while looking for any potential values that may emerge. Then, hopefully, when we get to the middle of the auction I’m one of the few owners with plenty of money left over to scoop up extra value and build a very deep roster. That works great in a best-ball type league, but I decided to switch things up a bit here and be more aggressive with the hope of building a starting lineup that can dominate. I got off to a great start there with the addition of David Johnson for $60 very early in the draft. I’m pretty sure the consensus #1 overall player in the draft is worth 30% of my overall budget. However, I followed that up with another aggressive move to land Jordan Howard ($36) as my RB2. That probably wasn’t a huge need and perhaps that money should have been saved to build a stronger WR group, but I felt it was a pretty fair price for a top-10 RB. Obviously, when you do that, you need to cut some corners so I had to be patient after landing those two players and wait for a lot of the WR prices to come down before I was active again. Despite that, I was pretty happy with the quality of WRs I was able to get in the end and believe this is a team that would contend for a title.
2. What advice would you give to someone participating in an auction draft?
It’s a fine line between playing it safe and waiting for everybody to deplete their resources, and waiting too long only to be left with plenty of cash and nobody to spend it on. Both types of mistakes can doom your chances, so you need to be flexible. If you want to grab a high priced player (or several) early, it can certainly help your team if you feel confident that those players will live up to expectations and help carry your team. You just need to dial it back soon to avoid being the guy who locks up 4 or 5 studs early and then has to fill out their roster with $1 players. If you decide to sit out the early part of the auction when most of the elite players are put up for bid, then you need to be active after most owners have picked up one or two of those guys when they start to get a little nervous about using up all their money too early. At that point, you should have a good idea of what the relative values are for each player and position so you can bid appropriately. Lastly, if you see 2 or 3 players left that you consider to then of a positional tier, it’s generally better to go after the first guy rather than waiting and potentially getting sucked into a bidding war with other desperate owners for the last player.
3. Give a few examples of tips, tricks, strategies or decisions that can improve your ability to have a successful auction.
Don’t panic, as there is plenty of talent available and more than one way to build a strong roster. If you skip out on the early players that would often go in the first round or two of a standard draft, you should have enough money to load up on players that would be considered 3rd to 5th round players. I often spend the early parts of auctions putting players I don’t really want up for bid. The hope there is obviously that my fellow owners will spend most of their money, and leave less competition for me to bid on players I really want later on. In general, I think it’s most important to be flexible and willing to adjust your strategy as you go. Also, don’t load up too early because then you won’t be able to take advantage of any mistakes that people make.
Alex Miglio - Team 2
PLAYER | WINNING BID |
Beckham, Odell NYG WR | $47.00 |
Elliott, Ezekiel DAL RB | $33.00 |
Rodgers, Aaron GBP QB | $26.00 |
Tate, Golden DET WR | $12.00 |
Anderson, C.J. DEN RB | $11.00 |
Powell, Bilal NYJ RB | $11.00 |
Rudolph, Kyle MIN TE | $11.00 |
Walker, Delanie TEN TE | $10.00 |
Matthews, Jordan BUF WR | $7.00 |
Britt, Kenny CLE WR | $6.00 |
Anderson, Robby NYJ WR | $4.00 |
Kupp, Cooper LAR WR | $3.00 |
Williams, Jonathan BUF RB | $3.00 |
Rawls, Thomas SEA RB | $3.00 |
Williams, Jamaal GBP RB | $2.00 |
Vinatieri, Adam IND PK | $2.00 |
Gates, Antonio LAC TE | $2.00 |
Goff, Jared LAR QB | $2.00 |
Cutler, Jay MIA QB | $2.00 |
Seahawks, Seattle SEA Def | $1.00 |
Overall Strategy:
Lock down Aaron Rodgers; spend up to the scoring format at tight end
Best Pick(s)
Kenny Britt ($6) – Alex didn’t prioritize WR quality much, spending up instead om the peripheral spots (QB and TE). As a result, he needs his cheap wideouts to hit value, and Britt is in perfect position to do that at just $6. The fact that he’s consistently coming so much cheaper than the likes of Cameron Meredith and DeSean Jackson is just baffling to me. Britt is the only receiver in Cleveland who’s even marginally proven, and he showed last year what he can do with 130-ish targets – pretty much what he projects to in this barren situation. You can wring your hands over the Browns factor all you like, but Britt finished as the PPR WR30 with Jared Goff’s Rams last year. Is he really in a worse situation now?
Worst Pick(s)
Aaron Rodgers ($26) – Alex spent big and early on Rodgers, but there’s massive QB value all over this auction season. Rodgers is Rodgers, of course, but this year’s quarterbacks are still just as tightly-clustered as they usually are. Alex could’ve had Drew Brees for significantly less – or any of the Cam Newton/Matt Ryan tier for less than $10 – and upgraded majorly elsewhere.
Evaluation
While I don’t agree with his prioritizing of Rodgers, I still like what Alex put around him, especially at RB. He’s loaded with attractive rotational guys that came very cheaply – including Ezekiel Elliott for below market value – and he’s set up nicely for his TEs to carry him to glory in the FPC format.
post-draft questions
1. What was your strategy going into the auction and how did that turn out? Share any specific ups and downs that you had throughout the auction.
This was my first auction draft on MFL, and it has been quite a while since I've done one with staff. So preparation was difficult. I went into the draft trying to be aggressive without overdoing it. With no "expected" values on MFL, it felt like the Wild West. You could get a general sense of what players were going to cost, but values seemed wildly different than what I'm used to in many cases.
Quarterback was an adventure for me. First, I wound up with Aaron Rodgers for $26. That's not a bad price, but I generally like to save at the position. So I had to pivot. I was almost caught in an auction no-no, though, when Drew Brees nearly ended up on my team. I thought I was modestly price enforcing by bidding $14. Devin saved me at the last minute and wound up winning Brees at $15.
Never. Bid. On. Players. You. Can't. Afford.
2. What advice would you give to someone participating in an auction draft?
Well, I'd tell you, but then you'd be getting the cliffs notes version of my auction draft primer! You can also read the auction draft roundtable I hosted with some fantastic advice from other Footballguys.
3. Give a few examples of tips, tricks, strategies or decisions that can improve your ability to have a successful auction.
Same answer!
Andy Hicks - Team 3
PLAYER | WINNING BID |
Freeman, Devonta ATL RB | $41.00 |
Cooper, Amari OAK WR | $33.00 |
Landry, Jarvis MIA WR | $24.00 |
Reed, Jordan WAS TE | $21.00 |
Abdullah, Ameer DET RB | $15.00 |
Coleman, Tevin ATL RB | $12.00 |
Marshall, Brandon NYG WR | $8.00 |
Lacy, Eddie SEA RB | $7.00 |
Roethlisberger, Ben PIT QB | $6.00 |
Dalton, Andy CIN QB | $5.00 |
Fleener, Coby NOS TE | $5.00 |
Stafford, Matthew DET QB | $5.00 |
Cook, Jared OAK TE | $4.00 |
Coleman, Corey CLE WR | $3.00 |
Lee, Marqise JAC WR | $2.00 |
Smith-Schuster, JuJu PIT WR | $2.00 |
Gostkowski, Stephen NEP PK | $2.00 |
Prosise, C.J. SEA RB | $2.00 |
Texans, Houston HOU Def | $2.00 |
White, Kevin CHI WR | $1.00 |
Overall Strategy:
Ultra-balanced (only one dollar baby), with a focus on locking up whole backfields and chasing WR upside
Best Pick(s)
Jordan Reed ($21) – Yes, he’s a walking “questionable” tag, but the price tag was great for this format. Remember that FPC scoring places a premium on TE receptions, so the gap between an 80-catch TE and a 60-catch TE is amplified noticeably. And Andy landed Reed for virtually half of Rob Gronkowski’s $40 cost. Reed carries a scary injury floor, but the massive upside for volume and touchdowns is tantalizing if you’re not required to overpay for it. Andy wasn’t, and he didn’t.
Worst Pick(s)
Eddie Lacy ($7) – I get the concept of locking up an entire backfield, but the Seattle unit isn’t one I’m interested in this year. To me, Lacy is looking like little more than a $3 flier at this point – he’s a perpetually injured and out-of-shape question mark in a backfield that no longer feeds one back at a time. And Prosise carries massive injury risk of his own; I love the $2 cost, but Andy left his RB corps so thin that he’s relying on him more heavily than he should be.
Evaluation
Andy’s balanced approach worked nicely; he fielded solid starters and didn’t overpay on any big names. He did pay a little more for QBs than I’d like to see, and I’m not particularly keen on some of his upside choices at wideout. But it’s hard to argue with his projected starting lineup. It’s packed with proven, stable producers and a handful of volume-ceiling guys who could easily outdo my projections.
post-draft questions
1. What was your strategy going into the auction and how did that turn out? Share any specific ups and downs that you had throughout the auction.
My main strategy was to have money left at the end to snap up the players that others couldn't afford. This was obviously going to be reliant on quality players being available and others spending their budgets early. This strategy also relies on you keeping your eye on the ball and not letting other players go for under market values. I thought the strategy was heading for a major failure once I had 4 successful bids in about 5 minutes that shed $109 of my $200 early on, but for that price I had a stud running back in Devonta Freeman for considerably less than David Johnson and Le'veon Bell, 2 starting receivers in this format in Amari Cooper and Jarvis Landy and a stud Tight End in Jordan Reed. I knew quarterback would be relatively cheap to fill and getting another few quality running backs wasn't going to be an issue. Depth at WR and TE were my only concerns. Very quickly though most of the others were spending most of their reserves and there were only 2 or 3 of us with the cash to be the auction bullies. I could afford to tie up the running games in Atlanta and Seattle, as well as getting a solid prospect in Ameer Abdullah to add depth to the position. At QB, I had 3 of my top 12 at the position in Stafford, Roethlisberger and Dalton for $10 cheaper than Aaron Rodgers cost.
At Tight End I added Coby Fleener and Jared Cook combined for less than it cost for 11 Tight Ends. Wide Receiver depth is where I probably paid the biggest price in draft quality. So many of the depth options went for $1 or $2 more than I was prepared to pay and in keeping a disciplined budget I had to be patient. While Brandon Marshall, Corey Coleman, Kevin White and Marqise Lee are value, I would have liked a guy like Kelvin Benjamin, Willie Snead, Alshon Jeffrey, Emmanuel Sanders, Desean Jackson or Tyrell Williams to have been a value buffer from WR2 to WR4.
2. What advice would you give to someone participating in an auction draft?
Don't get carried away or fall in love with any particular player. Set a market value for every player and be disciplined. If your aim is to get a stud at every position and fill the roster with cheap players, do not overpay for your studs. If you have set a value of $60 for David Johnson and he is at $62 drop out. For $60 you will be able to get 3 or 4 RB2s later on. If your aim is to target the players that are in round 2 or 3 of normal drafts and a player like eg Julio Jones is $10 under your budget estimate, bid on him.
3. Give a few examples of tips, tricks, strategies or decisions that can improve your ability to have a successful auction.
One of my favorite tips is to nominate your players carefully. This is your chance to get others in your league to go crazy with their cash. Eg if you know there are 4 guys who are head over heels for a player like Dalvin Cook, nominate him and hope for a bidding war that causes him to sell for way over your estimated budget. Your first 4 or 5 nominations should be guys you think will go for considerably more than you think they are worth. This eats into other peoples budget, allowing you to get value for players you like. In the middle stages consider nominating players that others have filled their position with or have overspent on. This limits your competition for certain players and gives you value to get a deeper roster.
Chad Parsons - Team 4
PLAYER | WINNING BID |
Murray, DeMarco TEN RB | $36.00 |
Crowell, Isaiah CLE RB | $28.00 |
Mixon, Joe CIN RB | $23.00 |
Jeffery, Alshon PHI WR | $18.00 |
Benjamin, Kelvin CAR WR | $18.00 |
Fitzgerald, Larry ARI WR | $16.00 |
Gore, Frank IND RB | $12.00 |
West, Terrance BAL RB | $7.00 |
Hooper, Austin ATL TE | $6.00 |
Manning, Eli NYG QB | $5.00 |
Prescott, Dak DAL QB | $5.00 |
Wallace, Mike BAL WR | $5.00 |
Maclin, Jeremy BAL WR | $5.00 |
Hill, Jeremy CIN RB | $4.00 |
Perriman, Breshad BAL WR | $3.00 |
Witten, Jason DAL TE | $3.00 |
Fiedorowicz, C.J. HOU TE | $2.00 |
Clay, Charles BUF TE | $2.00 |
Janikowski, Sebastian OAK PK | $1.00 |
Cardinals, Arizona ARI Def | $1.00 |
Overall Strategy:
Pay up at RB to field a handful of stable second- and third-tier guys; TE-by-committee
Best Pick(s)
Jeremy Maclin ($5) & Mike Wallace ($5) – Chad allocated most (55%) of his salary to RB, so he needed more than anyone to land strong value at wideout. That he did by locking up both Maclin and Wallace for a criminal $10 combined. Yeesh. I have Maclin valued around there on his own. It’s hard to say which will be Joe Flacco’s top option, but it doesn’t really matter – the Ravens have thrown more passes over the last two years than any other team. Both project to threaten 70-75 receptions as the clear-cut foci of an ultra-voluminous passing game. Considering Chad’s top three receivers have some durability/consistency concerns, he paved nicely over any risk they carry by absolutely stealing Maclin and Wallace. He also added the Ravens’ No. 3 receiver, Breshad Perriman, as a $3 insurance policy.
Worst Pick(s)
DeMarco Murray ($36) – It’s hard to quibble with Chad’s draft, which was strategically focused on RBs and didn’t really feature any standout overpays. But I probably would’ve devoted a little more to my wideout budget by insisting less on the aging Murray. There are a handful of stronger, more consistent options than Kelvin Benjamin that Chad could’ve landed with just a few extra dollars on hand. DeAndre Hopkins, Tyreek Hill, and Stefon Diggs were all had within $6 of Benjamin; all feature similar floors and markedly stronger ceilings.
Evaluation
Chad is known for his RB-heavy tendencies, which really help to limit the fragility we often experience with our backs. It’s wise on his part to load up heavily, then pluck a handful of wideouts from the tightly-clustered WR2 ranks. And he kept his QB and TE spending minimal – while still rostering good quantity with notable upside. It’s hard to not to like what he put together here.
post-draft quesitons
1. What was your strategy going into the auction and how did that turn out? Share any specific ups and downs that you had throughout the auction.
I typically go with stronger depth and a more balanced approach in auctions. However, with only 18 positional players and lower starting requirements, I boosted the top 2-3 spots in allocated funds in my auction plan. I had to pivot some during the auction as prices were higher than I expected early on - when I projected to get a top running back and potentially a top quarterback or tight end as part of my plan. Deciding not to go well beyond my budget, I scaled back to more of a balanced approach and typically quarterback-by-committee. I still paid plenty for two top running backs ($36 for DeMarco Murray, $28 for Isaiah Crowell) with the bidding aggressive for much longer into the draft than I expected. Plus, later I had to bow out on Jordy Nelson - my typical WR1 target - with soaring bids. Instead, I settled for a balanced top-3 receiver set, all in the $15-20 range, with Alshon Jeffery, Larry Fitzgerald, and Kelvin Benjamin.
2. What advice would you give to someone participating in an auction draft?
As mentioned in my strategy segment, preparing a plan and then keeping your eyes wide open during the early part of the auction for pivot moments are key attributes. Going 'all in' for players early is something I recommend folks avoid as half your roster can quickly turn into low-level $1 players and consistently losing small bidding 'wars' later in the auction. Build an auction list with your projected layout of QB1, QB2, RB1, etc. values next to it before the auction. Ensure it totals are $200 (or whatever the team budget). Use it as a roadmap to determine if you are over/under budget quickly as the auction is in the early stages. It is easy to over or under spend without a plan in an auction and lose before your team has even hit the field, more than a draft.
3. Give a few examples of tips, tricks, strategies or decisions that can improve your ability to have a successful auction.
I side with the 'nominate players of low self-interest' most of the auction. Where I 'win' in auction is generally between say 20 players already nominated and 120 players off the board. To control the target players in this cross-section of the auction, extracting dollars from other owners early is key. Therefore, nominating big name players early is a natural sidecar approach. One caveat is waiting too long to get 'your guys' in the middle of the auction and being left with too much money compared to the remaining talent. In the past year or two, I have improved greatly in this inherent weakness area of the outlined strategy. This does not mean there is not potential values early on. However, I rarely have found value plays when bidding on the top, say, 5-10 players overall in a given auction.
Danny Tuccitto - Team 5
PLAYER | WINNING BID |
Nelson, Jordy GBP WR | $39.00 |
Gordon, Melvin LAC RB | $37.00 |
Bryant, Dez DAL WR | $34.00 |
Diggs, Stefon MIN WR | $24.00 |
Ware, Spencer KCC RB | $14.00 |
Henry, Hunter LAC TE | $11.00 |
Crowder, Jamison WAS WR | $10.00 |
Meredith, Cameron CHI WR | $10.00 |
Mariota, Marcus TEN QB | $9.00 |
James, Jesse PIT TE | $2.00 |
Nelson, J.J. ARI WR | $1.00 |
Williams, Joe SFO RB | $1.00 |
Hoyer, Brian SFO QB | $1.00 |
Williams, Maxx BAL TE | $1.00 |
Gano, Graham CAR PK | $1.00 |
McNichols, Jeremy TBB RB | $1.00 |
Agholor, Nelson PHI WR | $1.00 |
Stewart, Jonathan CAR RB | $1.00 |
Williams, Damien MIA RB | $1.00 |
Eagles, Philadelphia PHI Def | $1.00 |
Overall Strategy:
Ultra-balanced in bidding, with a premium placed on WRs; cobble together a RB corps with upside plays
Best Pick(s)
Jamison Crowder ($10) – How Danny landed PPR darling Crowder for just $10 is mystifying. Here’s a guy with a 70-catch floor – and a 90-catch ceiling – who generates touchdowns on the upper level of slot specialists. Danny benefited mightily from Crowder falling to the latest segment of the auction, and few other teams still had the budget and/or roster space to push his price tag to market value. Danny had left himself in solid shape to make a run at the falling Crowder, and he struck gold. His WR-dominant approach, which was already in outstanding shape, got even sexier with this steal.
Worst Pick(s)
Dez Bryant ($34) – Bryant is always a strong upside play, and this wasn’t an objectively bad bid. But Danny spent nearly what the slam-dunk WR1s went for, despite Bryant’s relatively hefty risk factor. I think he would’ve been better served buying Doug Baldwin, T.Y. Hilton, or Brandin Cooks for markedly less and rerouting those funds to his RB stable. He could’ve turned two of his dollar-baby RBs into a late-auction steal like Terrance West, Theo Riddick, or Duke Johnson.
Evaluation
Danny clearly wanted to secure all the volume he could manage – and he made quite a run at it. With Melvin Gordon anchoring his RB and three true 90-reception threats at wideout, he boasts a rock-solid floor with plenty of touchdown upside to boot. That’s how you diversify upside. I do feel his RB stable was left pretty barren, but he scooped enough bodies to piece together a suitable two-man crew every week.
post-draft questions
1. What was your strategy going into the auction and how did that turn out? Share any specific ups and downs that you had throughout the auction.
My strategy was based on what happened early on in our staff auction mock three weeks ago. Namely, the best players were nominated early and went for far more than the value I had assigned to them. Part of this was because I didn't anticipated RB1 going for $59 one year after RB1 went for $40 in the same mock. But the other, far more structural reason why this happened was because, in the early going, everyone has most (if not all) of their salary cap left. (This "spend it if you got it" dynamic may or may not manifest itself in day-to-day life in the real world, but I digress.) Therefore, I decided to focus on acquiring second-tier players as my No. 1 at each position, third-tier players as my No. 2 at each position, and so on, thereby leaving me more salary cap to outbid others -- primarily Matt -- for breakout players further down my depth chart.
I didn't pull this strategy off perfectly, as I seem to have slightly overpaid for Melvin Gordon at RB1, Jordy Nelson at WR1, and Dez Bryant at WR2. That said, by paying less for the top of my depth chart, I was indeed able to acquire a whole host of breakout players for cheaper than they should have gone. For instance, I got Hunter Henry for $11, which was $2 below what he went for in our prior mock, as well as getting Jesse James for $1 less this time around. This was especially helpful given the tight end premium scoring system. I also got Jamison Crowder for $10, whereas he went for $18 previously.
In terms of ups and downs during the draft, this has to be where I mention my seven-round grudge match with the aforementioned Matt Harmon:
- Michael Thomas -- He bid $34, I bid $35, he bid $36, I bid $37, he bid $38, I bid $39, then he won at $40.
- Dez Bryant -- I bid $32, he bid $33, then I won at $34.
- Stefon Diggs -- I bid $20, he bid $21, I bid $22, he bid $23, then I won at $24.
- Spencer Ware -- I bid $3, he bid $7, I bid $9, he bid $10 and then bowed out. I ended up winning at $14.
- Cameron Meredith -- He bid $7, I bid $8, he bid $9, then I won at $10.
- Kirk Cousins -- He bid $4, I bid $5, then he won at $6.
- Nelson Agholor -- I nominated Agholor for $1 and won because Matt couldn't bid $2.
2. What advice would you give to someone participating in an auction draft?
There are two crucial things to understand in auction drafts. First and foremost, the fundamental difference between an auction draft and a snake draft is that, for all intents and purposes, every player is available for you to draft onto your team. If you're at 1.07 in a snake draft, it's literally impossible for you to draft David Johnson, Antonio Brown, etc. In auction, the only constraint on your desire for a player is your available salary cap. Therefore, Tip No. 1 is to go through all the players, pare your draft list down to only those players that you want, don't worry about overbidding for them (within reason), and never bid on players not on your list. The worst feeling coming out of an auction draft is looking at your roster and seeing a bunch of players you didn't want, but got stuck with because, for example, "I can't let Jordan Matthews go for only $9!"
Tip No. 2 is kind of implied in Tip No. 1: Just like you have a list of ADPs for players in snake drafts, you must have a list of dollar values for players in auction drafts. Ideally, this isn't your first auction league, so you have historical data (i.e., previous draft results) you can pull from to calculate how much, say, QB5 should go for, QB 13 should go for, RB5 should go for, and so on. As we had an auction mock among the staff a few weeks ago, this is precisely what I did to establish player values for this draft (with some tweaking for projection differences between then and now). But even if you've never participated in an auction league before, David Dodds, who crushed the competition in our previous staff auction mock, provides a great resource for auction values.
In short, if you don't have dollar values assigned to players, you're going to be flying blind.
3. Give a few examples of tips, tricks, strategies or decisions that can improve your ability to have a successful auction.
One trick I used repeatedly in this auction regards nominating players. Say I either have a need at a position or there's a player still out there that I really want (or especially both). What I'll do is nominate a player that I don't want at the same position who is in the same ADP tier. The goal is to effectively eliminate another team from being able to afford my player when he comes up for bid.
Here's a concrete example. In this draft, I wanted Spencer Ware as my RB2, and had a $20 value on him. So what did I do? I nominated Ty Montgomery, who is in a Ware-esque tier, but whom I don't think is worth his ADP. He went for $19. Then, on my next turn to nominate, I chose Derrick Henry, who's also in that Ware-esque tier. He went for $17. So finally, a few nominations later, Ware comes up for bid, and I got him for $14, $6 below value.
Bottom line: If you want a player and he's still available, nominate a player in the same position tier to drain another team's ability to make you pay.
Devin Knotts - Team 6
PLAYER | WINNING BID |
Green, A.J. CIN WR | $42.00 |
McCoy, LeSean BUF RB | $40.00 |
Gurley, Todd LAR RB | $39.00 |
Kelce, Travis KCC TE | $29.00 |
Brees, Drew NOS QB | $15.00 |
Snead, Willie NOS WR | $11.00 |
Carr, Derek OAK QB | $6.00 |
Hunt, Kareem KCC RB | $5.00 |
Stills, Kenny MIA WR | $2.00 |
Gabriel, Taylor ATL WR | $1.00 |
Crosby, Mason GBP PK | $1.00 |
Gallman, Wayne NYG RB | $1.00 |
Holmes, Andre BUF WR | $1.00 |
Sanu, Mohamed ATL WR | $1.00 |
Murray, Latavius MIN RB | $1.00 |
Strong, Jaelen HOU WR | $1.00 |
Samuel, Curtis CAR WR | $1.00 |
Panthers, Carolina CAR Def | $1.00 |
Hurns, Allen JAC WR | $1.00 |
Turbin, Robert IND RB | $1.00 |
Overall Strategy:
Cobble together a WR stable with dollar babies; spend up for studs at QB and TE; chase handcuff RBs
Best Pick(s)
Travis Kelce ($29) & Willie Snead ($11) – Devin’s goal was to spend highly at QB and secure two premium RBs, meaning he’d need to hit hard at WR and TE (considering the format). I love that he was able to supplement a bare-bones WR group with Snead for just $11 – to me, he’s a superior option than at least 5-6 guys that cost more. As the No. 2 in a bonkers offense, his floor is stable and his ceiling is very high; his 2016 indicators suggest a boost in touchdown potential. Snead makes for a dynamite WR2 in any format. But the rock star of this draft was Kelce. In the FPC format, Kelce arguably carries stronger value than Rob Gronkowski – who went for 38% more. Kelce doesn’t miss games, and his volume range of 85-90 receptions goes an exceptionally long way when they’re weighted 1.5x. He looks like a lock to post some degree WR1 value while filling a less plentiful position, and Devin didn’t have to pay Dez Bryant or Amari Cooper prices. It could be argued that, in the $25-40 range, there’s simply no better combination of floor and ceiling.
Worst Pick(s)
Derek Carr ($6) – I’m no fan of Carr as a fantasy target this year. Devin already boasted a clear-cut top-three QB and didn’t need to spend more than $1-3 on a backup; Joe Flacco or Carson Palmer would’ve done just fine here. That would’ve freed Devin to upgrade one of his $1 receivers; say, from Andre Holmes to Kenny Britt or Rishard Matthews. Besides, I don’t see Carr as a particularly superior option to those $1-3 passers. He doesn’t produce rushing numbers, and he doesn’t project to the kind of yardage or touchdown upside that prices him where he is.
Evaluation
Devin went into this auction with a clear plan, and he wasn’t deterred. He ultimately walked out with two rock-solid RB1s, two dynamic weekly starters at WR, and elite peripheral options at QB and TE. You can quibble with his depth choices all you want, but he threw enough quantity at the wall to feel confident he’ll boast strong injury/bye fill-ins. This is a top-heavy roster, but a smart and well-constructed one.
post-draft questions
1. What was your strategy going into the auction and how did that turn out? Share any specific ups and downs that you had throughout the auction.
My strategy was similar to most of my auctions and go into it without a solid game plan with the exception of getting a top end tight end in the FPC format. What I typically do in most auctions is establish where the values are and bid on the inefficient players rather than the actual names of the player to attempt to maximize my points per dollar. In this draft, I quickly realized that there was an inefficiency early with some of the top players in Gurley, McCoy and A.J. Green all around $40. The one thing I probably should not have done was go big at the quarterback position as while Brees at $15 was a tremendous bargain it left me with very little in terms of depth in this league which could end up costing me down the road.
What advice would you give to someone participating in an auction draft?
I would say to go in the opposite direction of where your opponents are going. An auction draft is a perfect time to be contrarian and if everyone is going stars and scrubs, then there will be an inefficiency for the balanced lineups. Know your league, understand the dynamics of your draft and pay attention to what is going on. Preparation is key to know what you believe players should be going for and if there is an inefficiency then take advantage of it.
3. Give a few examples of tips, tricks, strategies or decisions that can improve your ability to have a successful auction.
- Here are a few tips that have worked for a lot of different people. A lot of people tier players and say that they have to get one player from each tier to fill their roster so when the tier is running out they know that they need to start bidding on that player to ensure that they get someone in that tier.
- Another tip is to build out a range as far as what you would be willing to go up to if you're paying for a player. Everyone would love to have David Johnson on their team, but the reality is that only one team gets him and there typically is one team that is willing to pay whatever it takes to get him, so setting a stopping point for yourself can pay big dividends.
- The final tip that I have is to save some money towards the end so you get your choice of players. I was stuck with $1 as my maximum bid pretty early in the draft so you are really stuck with what is given to you at that point as it becomes somewhat luck that you have to nominate a player and hope no one else bids on that player in order to get him. If you save a few dollars throughout the draft the quality of your bench can be significantly improved with $2-$5 players instead of the $1 players.
Jeff Haseley - Team 7
PLAYER | WINNING BID |
McCaffrey, Christian CAR RB | $31.00 |
Hopkins, DeAndre HOU WR | $23.00 |
Miller, Lamar HOU RB | $20.00 |
Watkins, Sammy LAR WR | $19.00 |
Pryor, Terrelle WAS WR | $17.00 |
Ingram, Mark NOS RB | $16.00 |
Graham, Jimmy SEA TE | $15.00 |
Edelman, Julian NEP WR | $14.00 |
Sanders, Emmanuel DEN WR | $13.00 |
Ryan, Matt ATL QB | $8.00 |
Davis, Corey TEN WR | $6.00 |
Brate, Cameron TBB TE | $5.00 |
White, James NEP RB | $5.00 |
Tucker, Justin BAL PK | $2.00 |
Pumphrey, Donnel PHI RB | $1.00 |
Beasley, Cole DAL WR | $1.00 |
Thompson, Chris WAS RB | $1.00 |
Patriots, New England NEP Def | $1.00 |
Sproles, Darren PHI RB | $1.00 |
Bradford, Sam MIN QB | $1.00 |
Overall Strategy:
Load up majorly at WR to win the flex; fill in RB depth with cheap, rotational PPR warriors
Best Pick(s)
James White ($5), Darren Sproles ($1), & Chris Thompson ($1) – This was a masterstroke by Jeff, who clearly recognizes the fantasy value of passing-down backs. To land these three PPR specialists for a combined $7 is almost criminal; Jeff used that paltry sum to secure three guys with locked-in offensive roles. It wouldn’t be a bit surprising to see them each challenge 60 receptions while their NFL teammates bobble and trade-off rushing opportunity. I love White’s outlook in a breakneck offense, but Sproles is the true steal here. He’s not only the most stable name in the Eagles’ backfield; he also benefits from runoff rushing volume as the team struggles to piece together a running game. Think of him as the arbitrage Danny Woodhead – only he came a whopping $16 cheaper. For Jeff, that discount alone proved the difference between rostering the sizeable upside of Terrelle Pryor and taking a $1 flier in the hopes of landing sporadic WR3 production.
Worst Pick(s)
Julian Edelman ($14) – This one could easily pan out, of course, as Edelman is a trusted Tom Brady target with three 90-catch seasons on his resume. But my projections absolutely hate him this year. For one, he’ll be sharing opportunity with both Rob Gronkowski and Brandin Cooks, the Patriots’ best wideout in years and a true wild card. Cooks is so talented and versatile it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him eat majorly into Edelman’s stranglehold. And Edelman never produces the yardage or touchdown rates to provide much upside. Even in a best-case scenario, with both Gronkowski and Cooks on the field, I can’t see Edelman topping a line around 75 catches, 800 yards, and 4-5 touchdowns. He’ll need an injury to one of them to produce anything more.
Evaluation
I love Jeff’s objective – to win the flex spot week after week on the backs of high-impact WRs. I think he allocated his money wisely, focusing on WR upside and paying down for high-volume RBs. With a stout TE duo and a generally reliable QB1 in the fold, his lineup looks simultaneously balanced and dynamic, which is a relatively rare combination. This looks like one of the better-constructed rosters, all told.
post-draft questions
1. What was your strategy going into the auction and how did that turn out? Share any specific ups and downs that you had throughout the auction.
I have tried a few different strategies in auction drafts, but I find I do better when I use I balanced approach. By balanced, I tend to spend big at running back and wide receiver (close to 80%) and the remaining 20% on quarte