Here's what I did, with help from ESPN's Matt Berry:
1. Point guards who make threes - People like Gilbert Arenas, Steve Nash, Raymond Felton. Get three guys like that and you lock up the assists category and you're pretty good with threes.
2. Center/Power Forwards who get blocks and rebounds - Blocks are a category not many people concentrate on, but its worth as much as points. get at least 3 of these too... I have five (Marcus Camby, Brendan Haywood, Desagana Diop, Emeka Okafor, Sean Williams).
3. SF who hits threes and gets steals - I have Rashard Lewis. This helps threes and, along with the three or four PGs, should go a long way toward winning steals.
This way, you'll end up with great numbers in assists, rebounds, blocks, steals, and threes (5 of the 8 categories). You will get good FT% numbers from the PGs and good FG% numbers from the big men. You may not win the points category, but you'll win a lot of others.
I tried this strategy this year, and I've literally had the best numbers in my league every week so far in rebounds, assists, and blocks, and I've been in the top three all year in steals and threes.
For more of the logic behind this, see: http://sports.espn.go.com/fantasy/basketball/fba/story?id=3058918
2007-12-11 07:45:21
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answer #1
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answered by schmogden 2
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You win whatever reward you a have agreed on with the other owners in your league. The best strategy is to snatch up free agents early as they're getting hot, and making trades that pay off in the long run. Also, you wan to diversify your team, but don't be afraid to sacrifice one category to dominate a few others.
2007-12-11 07:15:04
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answer #2
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answered by tdubya86 3
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i preferr to go for certain stats to control cause al you need is a 5-4 split to win the championship you can lose certain stats but as long as you win more you win i try to win rebounds points, assit, fg% steals and or blk's i try to draft more big guys so that helps with rebounds fg% and blk and most top rebounders are scorers
2007-12-11 08:38:19
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answer #3
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answered by jim b 2
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