Now, this is where most people fall off. The registration, the talking it up, and the draft are exciting, but the actual game play can seem rather boring. Basically, your team gets points based on how well each player on your team does in comparison to how well players on other teams do. This brings out the big difference on whether you’ll win or not: The adjustment of your fantasy team players.
It doesn't take long to adjust your roster for each game; you just need to click the player you want to trade in, and their gone. But it would be hard to give them up or exchange them for other players, especially if they are your favorite players on the real world. Your loyalty to them will be gone. But such adjustment and changes on your fantasy sports is needed if you really like to win. Speaking of giving up fantasy sports players, here are two reasons why people give up their fantasy sports players.
1. The Change to Fight. You change and trade players because even though you are losing, you still want to fight. You look for good trades and important players that would bring you on top. If you want to do this, then I really salute you. Just remember these few tips. In baseball, once the player has begun their game for that day, they are locked in their position for that day and cannot be moved until the following day. With football, you only have to adjust it once a week. Since some games have been on Thursdays the past few years, those players will lock then, but the rest will wait until Sunday or Monday, depending on when they play. If you are not able to check it every day, or week, you can plan ahead, adjusting your roster for the upcoming games rather than trusting yourself to check it prior to each one.
2. Tanking. Giving up on a once-promising season once you've realized there is no hope to capture the championship. Letting your team fade away into the darkness, and in doing so, possibly compromising the integrity of the league.
Everyone that's played fantasy sports has had a team that on draft day looked unstoppable, only to be riddled with injuries and sub-par performance leaving you, the owner/GM, scraping the bottom of the league's barrel. I have a football team right now, in fact, that is consistently inconsistent and frustrating me week in and week out. After a loss this past week, my 4th in a row, I have mathematically been eliminated from playoff contention. It's disappointing, I can't lie. Then this is what happens, tell me if you've seen this scenario before. An owner in your league, whose team currently resides in last place with no chance of a comeback, proposes a trade to a team close to the top of the standings. Looking at the trade offer, you immediately sense something fishy going on. The team in last place has offered up their best 3 players to the team in contention for a handful of injured backups. Obviously the last place team has given up and instead of just disregarding his team, he has elected to help a team with playoff possibilities by giving them his best players and therefore creating one super team that is virtually unstoppable. This affects the league in the same way as giving up because it unfairly creates a dominant team leaving the rest of the league fighting for second place.
It doesn't take long to adjust your roster for each game; you just need to click the player you want to trade in, and their gone. But it would be hard to give them up or exchange them for other players, especially if they are your favorite players on the real world. Your loyalty to them will be gone. But such adjustment and changes on your fantasy sports is needed if you really like to win. Speaking of giving up fantasy sports players, here are two reasons why people give up their fantasy sports players.
1. The Change to Fight. You change and trade players because even though you are losing, you still want to fight. You look for good trades and important players that would bring you on top. If you want to do this, then I really salute you. Just remember these few tips. In baseball, once the player has begun their game for that day, they are locked in their position for that day and cannot be moved until the following day. With football, you only have to adjust it once a week. Since some games have been on Thursdays the past few years, those players will lock then, but the rest will wait until Sunday or Monday, depending on when they play. If you are not able to check it every day, or week, you can plan ahead, adjusting your roster for the upcoming games rather than trusting yourself to check it prior to each one.
2. Tanking. Giving up on a once-promising season once you've realized there is no hope to capture the championship. Letting your team fade away into the darkness, and in doing so, possibly compromising the integrity of the league.
Everyone that's played fantasy sports has had a team that on draft day looked unstoppable, only to be riddled with injuries and sub-par performance leaving you, the owner/GM, scraping the bottom of the league's barrel. I have a football team right now, in fact, that is consistently inconsistent and frustrating me week in and week out. After a loss this past week, my 4th in a row, I have mathematically been eliminated from playoff contention. It's disappointing, I can't lie. Then this is what happens, tell me if you've seen this scenario before. An owner in your league, whose team currently resides in last place with no chance of a comeback, proposes a trade to a team close to the top of the standings. Looking at the trade offer, you immediately sense something fishy going on. The team in last place has offered up their best 3 players to the team in contention for a handful of injured backups. Obviously the last place team has given up and instead of just disregarding his team, he has elected to help a team with playoff possibilities by giving them his best players and therefore creating one super team that is virtually unstoppable. This affects the league in the same way as giving up because it unfairly creates a dominant team leaving the rest of the league fighting for second place.
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