I always avoid overpaying where possible so don't consider myself in the camp of SCers who are willing to start the dearest players on each line, but I am always happy to pontificate on this subject as it is one of my favouites.
I think an example like 2014 Danger is pretty much a wash. I wouldn't start him if I knew that was the result, but it was perfectly ok if you did. When the rookies are good and cash is flowing then we are all able to finish teams and it doesn't make a huge difference in the end.
I am expecting (and hoping) that next year cash is hard to come by and things play out a little differently than we are used to, so hopefully getting the most out of every dollar at the start is rewarded.
I predict Danger to go 100ish with a pretty high variance and be available cheap at some point. Lloyd is so consistent that he seems less likely to reward you for not picking him but I am still unlikely to start anyone at that price who I don't regularly captain. Those picks are more about who else is available on the line and if you have cash spare but I am always grumpy if I back myself into the corner of picking them.
Rucks are the obvious ones where there has to be a viable option to be able to successfully avoid the expensive guys but there is no way I will shell out for Gawn. Or Neale. Those two are the ones who normally paying up is worth it (rucks and C choices) but I just think this year was too strange and they outperformed their normal best by too much to make them viable.
I think an example like 2014 Danger is pretty much a wash. I wouldn't start him if I knew that was the result, but it was perfectly ok if you did. When the rookies are good and cash is flowing then we are all able to finish teams and it doesn't make a huge difference in the end.
I am expecting (and hoping) that next year cash is hard to come by and things play out a little differently than we are used to, so hopefully getting the most out of every dollar at the start is rewarded.
I predict Danger to go 100ish with a pretty high variance and be available cheap at some point. Lloyd is so consistent that he seems less likely to reward you for not picking him but I am still unlikely to start anyone at that price who I don't regularly captain. Those picks are more about who else is available on the line and if you have cash spare but I am always grumpy if I back myself into the corner of picking them.
Rucks are the obvious ones where there has to be a viable option to be able to successfully avoid the expensive guys but there is no way I will shell out for Gawn. Or Neale. Those two are the ones who normally paying up is worth it (rucks and C choices) but I just think this year was too strange and they outperformed their normal best by too much to make them viable.
I generally have the same thoughts but I think I'm applying this policy too stringently and it's hurting me. I know that starting all the highest priced players can't be a good thing but I'm trying to work out when to stick to the plan and when to bend. My first thought is no way will I start Neale, Gawn and Lloyd and most of the top 10 are overpriced because of the unusual year but there is also no way you're going to trade them all in if they are good picks again.