
Now that we're in Week 7, how should your FAAB strategy change? Plus, what should your bench look like if you're a top 4 team every week?
Hey Guillotine Leaguers! After a quick in-season vacation, I’m back answering questions from you, the readers. If you have a specific Guillotine-related question you want answered in this column, shoot me a tweet @jakenagy98 on the former Twitter. If you have questions about my trip to Munich, Germany, for Oktoberfest, the answers are yes, the beer was really good and yes, I accidentally ripped a hole in the crotch area of my rented lederhosen and the nice ladies at the rental store laughed at me. What, you weren’t asking about that? Oh, my bad. Anyway…
Great question, overly aggressive reader! Bring that energy to the league chat. In fact, I have adjusted my FAAB habits. While I was away, I spent over 40% of my FAAB on Josh Jacobs in my home league for my team that was a consistent bottom feeder due to the loss of Malik Nabers. Why? Jacobs has already had his bye! I now have a rock solid RB1 for the rest of the season, barring injury (**furiously knocks on wood**).
Charch often reduces his bid recommendations for certain players based upon their bye week, especially if it’s within the next four weeks. The inverse is also true for us here at Fantasy Life. I will inflate my bids and get aggressive for top-tier guys that have already had their byes, even at this point in the season if it makes sense for my team. Matthew Freedman penned a concise summary of endgame Guillotine strategy a couple weeks back, summating that you need eight of the top 32 players in fantasy football at the end of the season to win your league. The bottom ~25% of that pool usually doesn’t become clear until season end, but guys like Bijan Robinson, Josh Jacobs, and Justin Jefferson will obviously be in that pool come Weeks 14-17. If they’re available in your league and you want or need them real bad, go get them.
If you’re playing in a standard 18-team Guillotine League, there are now 12 teams remaining. If you would not feel comfortable bringing your starting lineup into your regular old 12-team home league, you should open up the FAAB budget and spend some to shore up your soft spots. This is also a nice even number that can help you put your team into one of three buckets based upon your scoring average relative to your leaguemates:
Great question, astute, forward-thinking reader! There are six teams on bye next week, and three of them deploy a tight end that’s likely been a fixture of your starting lineup: Arizona (Trey McBride); Detroit (Sam LaPorta); and Las Vegas (Brock Bowers). Now, the Bowers drafters and scoopers among us that have miraculously navigated their way to Week 8 are used to working the waiver wire. For the rest of us, it can’t hurt to be prepared. Looking ahead to next week, here are some bargain bin tight ends you should pick up this week, based upon the Fantasy Life DVP Tool (which uses PPR, by the way).
Great question, Definitely Not Dwain! If you want the full utilization breakdown, check out Dwain’s musings over at the full Utilization Report. In my opinion, it’s the best mid-week breakdown in fantasy football. We’re focused on how to apply Dwain’s points to our Guillotine Leagues.
This week, I’d like to circle back to Freedman’s point on that 32-player endgame pool. In terms of Utilization Score, you’re going to want as many players at 80 or higher for the Guillotine League endgame. Coincidentally, around 25-30 players finish the season at or above the 80 mark, so that’s a great place to start identifying endgame talent, especially players that can be snagged for cheap right now, such as: