JMToWin is a high-stakes tournament champion (Thunderdome, Luxury Box, Game Changer, Wildcat) who is focusing this year on single-entry/three-entry max
This is, instead, a look at the player pool I’ll be fishing.
:: covered in-depth in the Angles Pod (it’s highly recommended that you listen to the breakdown of the roster in order to see the thinking behind it, and in order to understand what we’re talking about when we look at a “bottom-up build”
:: these are my “Tier 1” plays: the plays I feel confident leaning into across different types of builds; players who have a high ceiling and a low likelihood of price-considered failure
:: these are games, offenses, situations, or scenarios I’ll be looking to build around across my rosters
:: these are players who don’t fit into the categories above — either Upside pieces who don’t have the floor to be Blue Chips (and are not being focused on within my game-focused builds) or players who may not have a strong shot at ceiling, but are worth keeping in mind from a “role” perspective
This will allow Angles to be delivered to your phone as soon as it’s live
Full breakdown (of what this is, and what the thinking is behind these players) can (and should) be found in the Angles Pod (above).
Tyrod Taylor
A.J. Dillon
Christian McCaffrey
Danny Amendola
Brandin Cooks
Marcus Johnson
Will Dissly
James Conner
Panthers
Find last week’s Bottom-Up Breakdown and join The Bottom-Up Build DraftKings Contest here!!
Last week, James Conner played 82% of the Cardinals’ running back snaps, and a similar workload should be expected this week, in what should be a different game environment // setup if Kyler Murray is under center. As discussed in the Angles Pod this week: there are advantages to knowing, ahead of time, what you will do if Kyler is inactive come Sunday afternoon (most people will simply stick with Conner, which you could say would make him over-owned for the setup in which he’ll find himself), but if Kyler plays, we basically have a rare, full-time running back, priced down in the range of a 60% to 65% running back. Not a whole lot really needs to be said beyond that. If you’ve been reading my content for any length of time, you know that I’ll always be happy to take an underpriced, work-secure running back who can run the ball, catch passes, and score touchdowns. Conner has plenty of floor and ceiling for his price tag this week.
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