
In today's Fantasy Life Newsletter, we're running through a Scott Fish Bowl draft in real-time, breaking down WR breakout analysis, auction leagues, and more.
In today's Fantasy Life Newsletter:
Iām still on a high from a Saturday afternoon spent in a downtown Los Angeles brewery participating in one of the worldwide Scott Fish Bowl 15 live drafts. When I say āworldwide,ā that same day there were drafts happening in Australia, Lithuania, Brazil, and Mexico City. Pick a major U.S. city, and theyāve had one over the past few weekends. Or will.
The Scott Fish Bowl is a charitable fantasy football tournament that pits over 4,000 players against one another in 12-team leagues. All in the name of Fantasy Cares, which raises funds for Toys For Tots and other charitable organizations. You name anyone in the fantasy industry, and theyāre participating. Yes, Matthew and a big chunk of the Fantasy Life crew are in it to win it. For charity. To say the scoring settings are chaos on steroids is an understatement. They change yearly, and this year all TDs are 6 points, while receptions are 2.5 per, with tight ends getting another point on top. All rush attempts are .5 of a point. This is just the tip of the iceberg.
Did I mention itās āultraflex?ā Yes, nine positions can be any of RB/WR/TE, while two more are QB/RB/WR/TE. So you donāt have to start a quarterback, and Kendall Valenzuela tried that strategy. Sheās still smarting over the QB she inadvertently autodrafted.Ā
Back to Saturday, there was all sorts of talk on what the right roster build would be. High-volume RBs would rule some teamsā rosters. And there was plenty of mention of waiting at QB. I was picking at the 1.12 in the Dodger divisionāall four of our drafts had LA team namesāso I knew that any plan I could make would be wrecked by the 11 experts picking in front of me. Be water, which Ian Hartitz likes to remind us.Ā
When the dam opened and players started flying off the board, it was fun and chaos all at once. I knew with ultraflex that roster construction would drive value all over. I did know one thing: I would take a QB in my first two picks at the turn. When Jayden Daniels fell into my lap, it was an easy pick. āFaith in 5!ā I yelled, and Matthew said weāre of like mind.
I really thought of picking Derrick Henry next, but CeeDee Lamb was there, and all I could think of was him getting 180+ targets like his WR1 season in 2023. I didnāt know I was starting something.
Round 3, thought about JT, clicked on Drake London. Round 4-5 Terry McLaurin to stack with Daniels and Tyreek Hill, because if heās still the Cheetah, this is a steal. Round 6-7, the RBs just werenāt enticing enough to pass on Zay Flowers and Xavier Worthy. Round 8-9, I clicked on Trevor Lawrenceāthis is still superflex, no matter what Kendall was trying to pullāand Chris Olave. By Round 10-11, when we took a break, Michael Pittman and Matthew Golden.Ā
My starting lineup, with nine rounds still to go, was nine WRs and a pair of QBs. Seven of the WRs are the top targets on their teams, and the other two are promising speedsters. Maybe Iāll take an RB later. Not intended, but just an example that while itās important to fill all the roster positions, whatever flexibility is to be had in roster construction, use it. Rookies picked later could pop. This yearās Sam Darnold could emerge. Be creative. Take shots. Talk some trash. Most of all, have fun. You might even bask in the glow of an accidental Zero RB build.

Fantasy HQ is your NEW fantasy football command center. Think Red Zone, but for fantasy football.
To get started, simply sync your league (it's free to sync). With Fantasy HQ, you'll be able to see, manage, and sweat all of your teams across all platforms, all in one place. You can even have Fantasy HQ manage your teams for you and reflect on your fantasy apps!

To absolutely nobodyās surprise, Dwain McFarland has spent the last week in a deep data hole.
No, no, heās not ready to release the next industry-leading fantasy football metric (yet ā¦). This time, we told him to pick one wide receiver to tab as his breakout for 2025.
Of course, when we ask Dwain for a (read: one) player, he presents a three-part deep dive on how to identify breakout candidates at wide receiver and not one, but two articlesā worth of WR breakout candidates that you should be targeting in drafts.
The first questions that need answering: When are wide receivers most likely to break out, and what types of receivers are most likely to break out? ⤵ļø

Auction fantasy football leagues are objectively awesome.
Why? Well, ask Ian Hartitz. His two favorite things about auction leagues:
Look, to each their own: heās not saying you need to replace your longtime redraft league or guillotine squad with an auction format, but hey, it's 2025! Why not join another fantasy league?! Why the hell not, man!
Whether youāre a first-time auction player or a seasoned vet, Ian and Ronis teamed up to offer strategy, tips, tricks, and players to target for the 2025 season. ā¬ļø
Letās get to work, people! Itās draft season!!
š Using āforced missed tacklesā to identify a sleeper RB. He could pop if things break right.
šÆ Trade targets for your dynasty team, no matter where your league stands.
š“āā ļø Bowers, Jeanty, Geno ⦠and what else in Las Vegas?
ā¬ļøā¬ļø Best and Worst Trade Values for 2025.
š Weāre picking 3 players to outdo their ADP.
𤯠Pickens in the 5th round?
š Remember Brenton Strange late in drafts.