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Raybon's 8 Tips To Crushing NFL Preseason DFS In 2021


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Positivity     41.20%   
   Negativity   58.80%
The New York Times
SOURCE: https://www.fantasylabs.com/articles/nfl-preseason-dfs-tips-strategy-advice/
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Summary

In particular, Day 3 picks — often considered developmental prospects that may or may not be worth keeping around long term — tend to do well, making up over half of all top-10 QB preseasons since 2016, while not accounting for more than one-third of top-10 scores at any other position.Undrafted Players Reign Supreme at RB, WR & TESome DFS players realize that rostering starters is -EV, and will instead gravitate to highly drafted players in hopes that their talent translates into on-field production. This is because teams generally keep only two QBs these days, which often pits a veteran signal caller against a younger passer, a battle which tends to stack the odds in favor of the more experienced player due to the inherent mental nature of the position.The Less Experience, The Better At RB & WRRookies comprise nearly half of all top-10 scores at RB and WR, with players in Years 1-2 combining to account for roughly two-thirds of top-10 RBs and WRs. Again, these generally aren’t high draft picks who are already guaranteed to make the roster, but instead the cream of the late-round and undrafted crop who can serve as cheap solutions to the teams final few roster spots.Generally speaking, if a RB or WR hasn’t earned their way out of substantial preseason standing on the roster by Year 3, odds are they’re not a player you want to count on in your DFS lineups, either. They’re essentially getting the most snaps of anyone you can roster, and since the preseason features less talented and experienced offensive players that tend to make more mistakes.Stacking is not quite as effective as in the regular season because the players you stack aren’t guaranteed to see the field together.Given limited snaps, it’s tougher for stacks with multiple pas catchers can hit, and it can be futile trying to nail down the right one, so I usually limit my QB stacks to one pass catcher and aim to fill my other pass-catching slots with other teams’ leading receivers.Even on one-game slates this can hold true; I’d rather take a stab at a QB-RB-WR/TE stack than going with two pass catchers in certain instances, though some of the two-pass catcher risk is mitigate because having the highest-scoring QB along with the highest-scoring pass-catchers is all that matters, regardless of who else was involved.This is one of my favorite preseason DFS tactics.

As said here by https://www.fantasylabs.com/articles/nfl-preseason-dfs-tips-strategy-advice/