Can the bruski 150 list help you in H2H format in any way? even though its ordained to roto.
It definitely can! I am personally using it as a reference in a lot of my H2H leagues this season. It's based on pure value, so it helps me focus on which players provide a good bang for their draft spots.
I often find myself checking it in the later-middle rounds of deep league drafts to validate who I have on queue during the draft or help break ties when I am torn between two or more players to pick.
Oh it definitely can, for sure. When it says it's for roto, that just means it's tabulating full season value. You can then take that and apply whatever h2h-specific strategies you desire, such as playoff calendars, injury assessments, etc.
Is it possible to get the B150 without doing a whole subscription? Money is a bit tight for my family right now but I would definitely love to take advantage of it n
The draft guide is 17.99 right now, but I've been giving out $3 coupon codes on my podcast so it's really more like $15. That's pretty low, but in the future if you get a draft guide the day it's released (usually late August), it's closer to $11 around then.
I paid for access to draft guide and B150 and I don't have access to either through my account. Please help! I have the email confirmation of payment...
Hey Chris,
Sent you this via email, too, but you show active in the system and here are the links ...
Draft Guide: https://sportsethos.com/category/draft-guide-2018/
B150: https://sportsethos.com/top-posts/the-2018-bruski-150/
question: the b150 is counting totals, but in a roto league, per game is even more important because of the games played limit. is there a b150 who ranks per game? just for example- you say that player x finished 60, but per game he was only 110, where I would rather own a player who finished 80 in totals but was also 80 in per game (I can pick up from the waiver wire some streamers for the games he missed)
@the big honey, you have it the other way around. In Roto, totals matter more.
For example, last season, would you have rather had KD and his 68 games played then filled his missed games with a pickup or KAT's 82 games?
The answer there is KAT because of the likelihood of finding value on the wire matching a high-value player is simply not there. The player you will be slotting in for those remaining games in the KD slot will not match the slot occupied by KAT, who did not miss any games.
thanks for the reply. your example works when we talk about studs, but as we pass the top 50 or top 75, I would rather own a guy who is 60 per game and misses let's say 10-15 games than own the guy ranked 85 who plays 82. as you go deeper the per games stat means more, I feel.
While that is true, you can't draft your team that way because you don't know what players will be injured, you don't know when they will be injured, nor what players will be available at the time they are injured. Unless you're clairvoyant 😉 So you might as well draft as well as you can and then use the list to help you replace players if you do have injuries. And player values will vary greatly throughout the season.
this is exactly why you need per game stats. player x can finish in 2017 50th and with the same stats the next year, finish 60th' only do to injuries of other players.
That's the point. the B150 imputes for games played. So, the multiplier factor of per game value with games played is factored in, making it the go-to reference for Roto. It takes what you're looking for (per game) and already projects X number of games played.
I understand that. I would still rather have the per game stats prediction. this brings me to my intial question - is there a per game rank for the b150?
if the b150 is also projecting the x number of games played, then I am interested in the stat before it was multiplied by the x number 🙂