Mike Johnson (MJohnson86) has racked up nearly $500,000 in DFS profit as an NFL tournament player with success in all styles of contests
The whole idea behind this piece of content is that it is unique. Specific content and strategies for the “non-main slate” contests are very rare in the DFS industry, and most players who enter them are casual players or doing so on a whim after their main slate entries have had things go wrong and they want something to root for or to chase their losses during the late games. Edges are getting harder and harder to find in DFS as information gets better, projections get sharper, and the field gets more experienced. These smaller slates present a clear opportunity for an advantage for those that focus on them, as most players will just take their thoughts from the main slate and approach these lineups the same way – without considering how much having seven to nine fewer games (depending on the week) changes the strategy. The biggest win of my career came on an “Afternoon Only” slate in January of 2021 and I hope to share some of my insights on the format to help you attack this niche corner of NFL DFS.
This week’s Afternoon Only slate has three games and two of them are clearly better game environments than the third. One of the teams from the better scoring environments has a team (Rams) with a ton of value available. These situations are going to cause A LOT of duplicated or very similar lineups. Finding one or two low owned and/or low salary players will be critical to finding a way to the top of the leaderboard. It’s really hard to see the PIT/DEN game taking off as a whole but there’s likely going to be at least two or three total offensive touchdowns in the game and some volume stats as well. This means that somewhere in that game could be the gem that unlocks the slate. The only issue on a slate like this is that the Rams situation could make it so you don’t actually need that player if their value pieces hit as well. Just an interesting slate altogether.
Quarterback is always an important position but that importance goes to another level on these small slates. There are two main reasons for this. First, on average, quarterbacks obviously score the most points of any position and we can only start one of them. Second, as noted above, correlation is even more important as the slates get smaller and there are fewer scoring opportunities to go around. By choosing the right quarterback, you are also increasing the chances that you are right at two other positions. Again, the shorter slate condenses the scoring across all lineups, making each position more vital to separating and giving yourself a chance to win. This is why quarterback strategy has its own section: