The key thing with AFL fantasy is the focus on value selections. At a premium level, a 5-10 pt expected improvement would be a minimum before you picked them. The higher mid price would need a minimum of 20 and a lower mid pricer 30. the priced at versus expected output is key. For SC we often look more at whether the mid pricer can become a keeper. Not so much for fantasy.
Starting teams have less rookies on field. This year the discussion is whether it should be 3, 4 or 5.
Short term price gains are enough for a selection. Bonner was a good selection for Fantasy last year. Cerra is a real option this year.
With prices moving after one game, a 2-3 week window might be enough.
Interestingly, rucks are causing the same dilemma for AFL Fantasy. There is a strong focus on Xerris first 6 games as a reason not to start him. But for SC we tend to think about the whole season.
Knowing that you have trades every week means you can have many luxury trades in the last 6-8 weeks. So, again, you are not as focused on the season as a whole with starting selections. This also gives the room for a few riskier injury prone selections. Day seems more viable in Fantasy than SC.
SC is still not fully in the AFL Fantasy strategy space, but it feels like it is getting closer. I think we can take some of the thinking from Fantasy to SC. I am going to try to incorporate more of it into my SC year to see.
Starting teams have less rookies on field. This year the discussion is whether it should be 3, 4 or 5.
Short term price gains are enough for a selection. Bonner was a good selection for Fantasy last year. Cerra is a real option this year.
With prices moving after one game, a 2-3 week window might be enough.
Interestingly, rucks are causing the same dilemma for AFL Fantasy. There is a strong focus on Xerris first 6 games as a reason not to start him. But for SC we tend to think about the whole season.
Knowing that you have trades every week means you can have many luxury trades in the last 6-8 weeks. So, again, you are not as focused on the season as a whole with starting selections. This also gives the room for a few riskier injury prone selections. Day seems more viable in Fantasy than SC.
SC is still not fully in the AFL Fantasy strategy space, but it feels like it is getting closer. I think we can take some of the thinking from Fantasy to SC. I am going to try to incorporate more of it into my SC year to see.
The number of trades seems to be a key change in SC in recent years, and the key difference to AF (but not the only one).
Is it still 2 trades per week for AF, c. 46 for the season? Given SC used to be 30 but is now 40, it has closed most of the gap if so.
Your point about pricing is a good one. I was thinking recently that, number of trades aside, the optimal strategy should depend on:
(1) how generous the initial cap is (which you’ve given a good flavour of - it sounds like it buys you more premiums in AF … assuming the lower rookie count isn’t just due to a lot more mid pricers?),
(2) how quickly prices adjust to players outscoring their priced-at levels (I think this depends on the price change multiplier, relative to the MN - eg in SC it would be $440 relative to the c. $5,400, or c. 8%), and
(3) how early those price changes start (price changes starting immediately in AF is good in that it facilitates earlier cash generation, but also bad in that it presumably leads to a higher number of failed picks, because you’re picking with a smaller sample size*).
There may also be some differences in rules regarding the byes (eg best 18 or not), but I assume they are likely the same (?).
Are there any other differences? Eg does AF have the flex position? I seem to recall a utility position in that format the last year I tried to navigate the platform.
*I am also not entirely clear on whether the SC price trajectory “catches up”, and even potentially overtakes, the one used in AF. Eg if a player is priced at 50 in both, and scores flat 100s repeatedly, presumably he gets to a level where he’s priced at 60 earlier in AF, because price changes start earlier - but does the big initial price move (albeit a delayed in) in SC mean that they are priced at 80 at around the same time? Is it possible that they even reach a level where they’re priced at 90 earlier in SC? You get the idea.