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Reality Sports Online Fantasy Writers League Overview

June 11, 2015 By Draft Buddy Leave a Comment

The player mentioned in this article more than any other is now Oakland Raiders RB Trent Richardson. Just like the Indianapolis Colts cut bait on T-Rich, so did I in my Reality Sports Online league. I've got the dead cap to prove it.

The player mentioned in this article more than any other is now Oakland Raiders RB Trent Richardson. Just like the Indianapolis Colts cut bait on T-Rich, so did I in my Reality Sports Online league. I’ve got the dead cap to prove it.

Reality Sports Online is a very unique fantasy football league that tries to – and does a great job – simulating the actual rules and concepts managing a National Football League team.

It uses a salary cap. Players not under contract (veteran free agents) are bid on through an auction process in which owners can offer multi-year contracts. There is a separate rookie draft, franchise tags, and cap penalties for cutting a player prior to the expiration of his contract. Trades need to account for the salary cap at all times. In-season free agent acquisitions charge a prorated portion of the player’s salary for the remaining season to that team’s cap.

The guys behind RSO, Matt and Stephen, previously worked in the Philadelphia Eagles organization helping manage the Eagles salary cap. That background, and their love for fantasy football, spawned RSO.

They’ve done a great job designing their game, and the developers did an excellent job executing the design. This is the best online live auction experience I’ve ever encountered, and that is with the extra complexity of multi-year deals, so that is really saying something.

In 2013, I was invited by buddy Matt Waldman of Rookie Scouting Portfolio fame to join a start-up Reality Sports Online league along with some very well-known names in the fantasy community from various websites. Bob Harris, Sigmund Bloom, Ryan McDowell, Mike Clay, Evan Silva and Jim Day, and others, are owners in this 14-team league.

Inaugural Train Wreck 2013 Season

I’ll be the first to admit, my inaugural season was not particularly good. I finished in 13th with a 4-9 record, 10th in points. Signing Trent Richardson to a 4-year $97 million mega contract was a disaster, and overall the team was way too heavy at RB, especially considering it is PPR scoring, start 1 QB, 2 RB, 3 WR, 1 TE, 1 Flex WR/TE.

To give some perspective on Trent’s contract, he counted $21.3 million (17.3%) on a $123 million team cap in 2013. I would have almost been better off giving up my 1st round pick, a la the Indianapolis Colts that year.

Tom Brady was on a nicely priced 3-year contract but had his worst statistical season in 2013 since his injury shortened 2008 campaign. My receivers consisted of Vincent Jackson, Tony Gonzalez and then a bunch of names I’d really rather not repeat.

The Comeback Kid 2014 Season

Last season was a complete turnaround. I still had that albatross of a contract for Trent Richardson tying up a ton of my cap, but given it was Year 2 of a 4-year deal, cap ramifications for cutting him were severe so I decided to suffer and kept him on my roster, approaching the season simply accepting the fact I had less money to spend than the other teams.

Heading into the 2014 rookie draft, I managed a minor miracle by shedding another big money RB contract to free up some much needed cap space. I traded Alfred Morris (2013: $47 million, 3-years) for the 1.04 rookie pick. I already owned 1.02 of course. Those picks turned into Sammy Watkins and Carlos Hyde, fortunately avoiding the consensus top rookie RB Bishop Sankey.

I was too passive in the inaugural auction. I played the waiting game for good values to present themselves, but with this group of aggressive owners, it never happened. Last season I wanted to take the bull by the horns. I had limited funds, but specific player targets to form a more well-rounded team I more or less refused to get outbid on, even if I had to sign them to a longer term than I preferred. And little to no money to be spent at running back.

Those targets panned out nicely. I bought Julian Edelman ($25.5 million, 3-years), Emmanuel Sanders ($36.5 million, 4-years), Greg Olsen ($14 million, 2-years) and I did drop a little at RB on Mark Ingram ($9 million, 2-years).

These acquisitions left me with a core roster heading into 2014 of Brady, Le’Veon Bell (2013 rookie draft), Lamar Miller (2013 auction – did I say I had too many RB?!?), Ingram, Jackson, Sanders, Edelman, Watkins, Olsen, plus “T-gettin’ Rich off me”, who it turned out was useless, and Hyde, who wasn’t necessary to make an impact last season, given the other RB starters and depth.

The end result was 1st overall regular season finish in record at 10-3 and points by over 100 from the 2nd place point-getter, and 240 more than 3rd. Ah, but you know what is coming next, right? This is still a head-to-head fantasy football league. That’s right, I lost the championship game to Bob Harris. I can’t remember the details, but pretty sure it was one of those, his players found the end zone, mine did not weeks.

Black Cloud of Suspensions to Open 2015 Season

Now on to this year, things look a lot brighter heading into it. Mind you, starters Le’Veon Bell and Tom Brady are both serving suspensions to start the season. Hope the other owners are happy I’m taking one for the “team” here waiting out both of those key players to return.

The first decision is what to do with Trent. He counts $25.2 in 2015 (on a $143.3 salary cap, or 17.6%) and $27.2 in 2016. If I cut him now, the cap charge is $12.6 in 2015 and $13.6 in 2016. No brainer, right? Goodbye Trent.

Key players I’m losing because their contract is expiring are Lamar Miller and Vincent Jackson. I could franchise tag one of them, but just like the NFL, the 1-year franchise charge is hefty. It is the average salary of the Top 5 highest paid players at their position.

In Miller’s case, that is $23.7 million. For Jackson, $24 million. I’m not against overpaying for one year of service for a player if he is going to help me win now, but am I going to pay that to Miller when I already have Bell, Hyde and Ingram? Or for Jackson when I already have Edelman, Sanders, Watkins? Probably not. It would be best to look at the available players first before completely discounting the idea, but they likely go back into the auction.

That still leaves me with a projected lineup of Brady (backup Derek Carr, 2014 rookie draft), Bell, Hyde (backup Ingram), Sanders, Edelman, Watkins, (backup Kenny Stills, 2013 rookie draft), Olsen (backup Dwayne Allen, 2014 auction). Not a bad start! And leaves me with a fair bit of flexibility to acquire talent at any of the positions, although I will put the most emphasis at wide receiver.

My rookie pick is next to last, so expectations for that pick making an impact this season will be low. That is probably a good general rule on expectations for all rookie drafts, no matter where you are picking. For every Mike Evans there are a handful of Cody Latimers or Carlos Hydes.

My cap is in decent shape. Carr, Bell, Hyde, Watkins, Stills are all on their initial rookie deals of three years. The teams that are going to do the best in this league are the ones who get production out of their (cheap) rookie contracts. Bell could be a consideration for the franchise tag next offseason. Brady, Ingram and Olsen are all on good to great money terms. Richardson is eating into the cap.

We are working with a $143.3 million cap for 2015, and I’ve got $85.3 under contract plus dead cap, plus another $5.5 committed for five rookie draft picks. That is $90.8 for 19 roster spots, and $52.5 remaining for 11 roster spots. Take off 2 DEF and 2 K at minimum cost of $500,000 each, leaves $50.5 million for 7 players.

That’s not bad. A quick rundown of the UFA list, some who admittedly could be tagged still, indicates Peyton Manning, Ryan Tannehill, Drew Brees, Jamaal Charles, Adrian Peterson, DeMarco Murray, Arian Foster, Frank Gore, Lamar Miller, Jonathan Stewart, Alshon Jeffery, Vincent Jackson, Pierre Garcon, Andre Johnson, Roddy White, Victor Cruz and Julius Thomas are available.

Good thing I’ve got some money to play with to be an active participant in the auction. Or maybe I can use that flexibility, depth and available cheap contracts to try to trade for a stud WR. Decisions, decisions. Regardless, it should be another great season playing at Reality Sports Online!

Filed Under: Dynasty Fantasy Football, Fantasy Football

Getting Acclimated Joining an Existing Contract Dynasty Fantasy Football League

April 13, 2015 By Draft Buddy Leave a Comment

Given the opportunity to acquire this guy - New York Giants WR Odell Beckham, Jr. - in an ongoing contract dynasty league I recently joined, I took it.

Given the opportunity to acquire this guy – New York Giants WR Odell Beckham, Jr. – in an ongoing contract dynasty league I recently joined, I took it, even at a hefty price.

A month ago I noticed tweets from Ryan McDowell (@RyanMc23) and Jarrett Behar (@EyeoftheGator), each of Dynasty League Football (DLF) fame who I have known (via the Internet) for some time, looking for owners for an existing dynasty league.

Do I have room to add another fantasy football league to my stable? That is a recurring question every season due to concern taking on too many teams to manage. I’ve done well the past few seasons keeping things under control. Five to six leagues is a good number for me (down from over a dozen in my heyday, B.K. – before kids).

I was certainly intrigued by the prospects of playing in a private league against guys who write for and frequent DLF. This would be a league of strong, keen owners. Okay, I’m in.

The league welcomed three new owners this season, myself included, so instead of each newbie taking an existing team as-is, we participated in a dispersal auction draft. Cool.

League Overview

Let me back up a second and give an overview of the league. It is a contract dynasty league. In my opinion, when teams keep every player year over year and the league holds a rookie draft or rookie plus very limited free agent pool draft once a year, I consider that a, “true dynasty”.

Contract leagues, where players are held for a certain number of years, whether salaried under a cap or not, I think of as more of a hybrid dynasty-keeper league. The contracts run out and, even with the inclusion of franchise and restricted free agent tags, there is a relatively deep veteran free agent pool each off-season.

This league is the latter, the hybrid. There is an annual auction for veteran free agents, but post-auction the dollar amounts are not relevant. Players can be signed to one-year or multi-year contracts (maximum 4 years) and each owner must keep the total contract years of their roster within a range, otherwise suffering penalties for failing to meet those guidelines. This is a 12-team league with 24 roster spots, and the total contract years assigned to those 24 players must be between 35 and 52 years.

Players are also acquired via a rookie draft, which is a rather unique auction format in that teams are assigned available dollars based on their rookie picks. The league also has a 1-round development player draft to acquire a player in college. There is a restricted free agent draft, as each team has two RFA tags they can use.

There is a lot to keep track of in this league, but all very interesting and unique rules which further attracted me to join. In terms of basic rules, the starters are 1 QB, 2 RB, 3 WR, 1 TE, 1 Flex RB/WR/TE and 1 DEF. Performance scoring, 4 points per passing TD and +1 points-per-reception except TE receive 1.5 PPR, so TE is particularly valuable.

Dispersal Auction Draft

On to the dispersal draft. There were certainly some impressive assets available from the three abandoned teams to form the dispersal. Here are the highlights:

WR Odell Beckham Jr. – 3 year contract
WR A.J. Green – 1 year
WR Martavis Bryant – 3 years
WR Jarvis Landry – 2 years
WR Marqise Lee – 3 years
WR Terrance Williams – 2 years
WR Emmanuel Sanders – 0 years (eligible to franchise or RFA)
RB DeMarco Murray – 1 year
TE Zach Ertz – 2 years
TE Eric Ebron – 3 years

RB Melvin Gordon – development player; can be signed for up to 4 years in 2015
RB T.J. Yeldon – same as Gordon
1.01 development draft pick
1.03 development draft pick
1.04 development draft pick
1.04 rookie draft pick
1.06 rookie draft pick

In recent years I’ve had good results in auction drafts following a general strategy of being aggressive early, securing top available players, and then being patient (forced patience, due to early spending spree) and picking spots later. This works much better for me than being passive early and watching too many top performers go to other teams, settling for perhaps better “value” players but ones inevitably with some warts.

An auction involving only three teams is a little strange to guess what to expect, but it still only takes two owners keen for the same player to drive the price up. Maybe the other two owners ultimately had little interest in Odell Beckham Jr. if it meant paying what was surely going to be the highest winning bid in the entire auction. Regardless, premium players deserve a premium price, so even at 50% of my budget (he went for $499 of $1,000), I was willing to take the plunge.

Similarly, I was keen to acquire Melvin Gordon – another $211. When DeMarco Murray was just a shade over $100, I thought that was a bargain price and won him at $103.

As you can guess, having spent $813 or 81% of my cap on those three players did not allow me to get too many other quality players. Heck, from the above list, those are the only three I own.

My roster depth is questionable, as I filled out my running backs with Charles Sims (1 year) and Shane Vereen (free agent, requiring a tag to keep) and the WR position with Kenny Britt (1 year), Percy Harvin (1), Charles Johnson (1), Riley Cooper (2) and free agents Marques Colston and Roddy White. At the important TE position I acquired Charles Clay and at QB, Matthew Stafford, each on 1-year deals.

No doubt the development picks, and to a lesser degree the available rookie draft picks have some value, but I didn’t put a lot of emphasis on acquiring those. I am in another fantasy football league involving development players and it really is a bit of a crapshoot acquiring college players a year or more out from their NFL eligibility to hope they pan out as a valuable fantasy player.

Plus, the presence of development players still detracts from the value of rookie draft picks, since it is a smaller than normal rookie pool. I was happy to see the other two owners compete aggressively for these picks which shot the prices up on those assets.

As with any auction, it is easy to step away with hindsight and wish you had placed higher bids on certain players (Eli Manning, Eric Ebron, Emmanuel Sanders for example) and wish you hadn’t been so trigger happy on others (Harvin). Overall though, I am fairly happy with the results because I know I have the most valuable asset amongst the three teams in Beckham, and arguably the second most valuable in Gordon. We’ll see where he lands at the end of this month.

This is my full roster post-dispersal draft:

Player 2014 Pts Bye Salary Year
3.06, Rookie Pick FA QB (R) – – $33.00 1
Stafford, Matthew DET QB 310.0 9 $18.00 1
Gordon, Melvin FA RB – – $211.00 0
Dunbar, Lance DAL RB 50.0 11 $1.00 3
Murray, DeMarco PHI RB 356.1 7 $103.00 1
Sims, Charles TBB RB 62.0 7 $27.00 1
Vereen, Shane NYG RB 165.8 8 $2.00 0
Beckham, Odell NYG WR (P) 296.2 8 $499.00 3
Britt, Kenny STL WR 142.2 4 $1.00 1
Colston, Marques NOS WR 178.2 6 $1.00 0
Cooper, Riley PHI WR 129.7 7 $1.00 2
Hartline, Brian CLE WR 98.4 4 $1.00 1
Harvin, Percy BUF WR 130.6 9 $30.00 1
Johnson, Charles MIN WR 92.5 10 $27.00 1
White, Roddy ATL WR 213.1 9 $1.00 0
Clay, Charles BUF TE 165.5 9 $11.00 1
Pitta, Dennis BAL TE (Q) 36.5 11 $1.00 -1
Seahawks, Seattle SEA Def 183.0 4 $1.00 0
18 Total Players
Total Salary: $969.00 16

Next Steps

I still have opportunity to acquire players via the RFA and free agent auctions. The next thing I need to do for this league is figure out who I am going to franchise tag and RFA, plus assess what players will be available through free agency. Oh, and I still need a decent team name. Can’t forget that!

There is still plenty of time to alter this roster prior to the start of the season so it is ready to compete Week 1. I look forward to competing against all of these guys in what is surely going to be a challenging league.

Filed Under: Fantasy Football

Salary Cap Woes—Five NHL Teams Destined To Struggle in 2010-11

April 9, 2010 By John Leave a Comment

With the NHL regular season quickly drawing to a close, we begin to consider how the 2010-11 season could shape up. If the current top-heavy payrolls are any indication of how teams will fare next year, these five franchises could be in for long seasons.


5. Toronto Maple Leafs

As of right now, the Toronto Maple Leafs will pay defensemen $26.3 million in 2010-11—a whopping 46 percent of the entire salary cap. While it’s all but certainty that General Manager Brian Burke will find a suitable trading partner for Tomas Kaberle this offseason, the Leafs will still be left with three to five forward signings to make, not to mention the re-signing of rookie goaltender Jonas Gustavsson.

Simply put, Burkie may not have the cap freedom to effectively operate this summer. Looking ahead to next season, even if the Leafs are in the playoff hunt down the stretch in March 2011, they may not have the cap space to acquire a needed player at the deadline.


4. New York Rangers

Any team that pays a 32-point forward over $7 million will find themselves with cap trouble. That player is the Rangers’ second-line pivot, Chris Drury, but the issues don’t end there. Former offensive-defensemen Wade Redden and Michal Rozsival will collectively chew up $11.5 million next season.

To no one’s surprise, Marc Staal is posting career-highs in a contract year and will likely get a raise to somewhere in the $4 million range next season, which will severely cripple the Rangers’ abilities to go out and acquire some secondary scoring in the offseason.

However, the Rangers have a plethora of talented (and more importantly, cheap) young prospects in Evgeny Grachev, Derek Stepan and Bobby Sanguinetti, so the Rangers may rely on their youth.


3. Montreal Canadiens

When the who’s-the-most-overpaid-player discussion comes up regarding the NHL, Scott Gomez often find himself at the top of the list. He’s a great second line center at best, yet he’s being paid like a franchise superstar. The $7.4 million he’ll get next year is a cap killer, and the $5.5 million that defenseman Roman Hamrlik will get does not lighten the burden any.

Now add that the Habs’ best player this season, Tomas Plekanec, is leaving to free agency and that goaltenders’ Jaroslav Halak and Carey Price are each restricted free agents looking for a pay increase and you begin to understand why Bob Gainey relinquished his managing duties.


2. Boston Bruins

The Bruins cap troubles stem from the six forwards who are earning $3.5 million or more next season. While Marc Savard and David Krejci are worth their moderately hefty salaries, Patrice Bergeron, Michael Ryder, Marco Sturm and Milan Lucic have not played consistently well enough to warrant their current price tags. With Phil Kessel’s departure, they also lack a pure sniper.

Another problem area is between the pipes. With the emergence of Tuuka Rask as a prominent NHL goaltender, the Bruins have to pay last year’s Vezina Trophy winner Tim Thomas $5 million per year for the next three seasons, unless they can find a trading partner for Thomas’ services.

GM Peter Chiarelli will be busy this offseason trying to re-sign restricted free agents Blake Wheeler and Daniel Paille, among others. He’ll also need to find suitable replacements for veterans Mark Recchi, Miroslav Satan and Dennis Seidenberg—all this with just over $9 million in cap space.


1. Calgary Flames

GM Darryl Sutter has set the Flames up for a world of hurt next season. With approximately $53.4 million already tied up for 2010-11, Sutter will have very little operating room this offseason. With Vesa Toskala leaving through free agency this summer, Sutter will need to seek out a backup goaltender willing to play for the league minimum, while also finding several cheap forward options to replace unrestricted free agents Chris Higgins and Craig Conroy.

Ian White, arguably the most valuable player the Flames acquired in the “Dion Phaneuf trade” is a restricted free agent, but will command a pay raise from the $850,000 he made this year. Aside from Mikael Backlund, the Flames don’t have any top tier young talent that figure to make an impact at the NHL level next season, so Sutter may end up having to deal team captain and fan favorite, Jarome Iginla, just to make ends meet.

Filed Under: Fantasy Hockey

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