Sonic is a Milly Maker winner and large-field tournament mastermind who focuses on mass-multi-entry play
Grinding all week. Landing the perfect stack. Gracefully mixing in a secondary stack. Skillfully plucking two pieces from an alternate game environment. Choosing the right combo of workhorse running backs… only to fall 29 points shy of first place because your DST didn’t hit the lottery. WTF.

This is why my campaign platform remains simple: abolish DST.
Until that glorious day, we fight the good fight — embracing correlation, punting quarterback vanity, and attacking leverage spots the field is too scared (or too rational) to touch.
Some of these are not for the faint of heart. These are players I’ll be mixing into my rosters to differentiate from the masses while adding correlation. Keep this stuff out of your cash games for god’s sake.
*Ownership projections are subject to change before lock. Check OWS projections on Sunday morning.
Most of my practice builds this week keep pulling me into this game. Even the “popular” pieces here are still in single-digit ownership, and the environment has real upside without requiring you to drag either quarterback along for the ride. Grab a piece from either side, pair it with the über-cheap QBs or with Josh Allen — who we know can drop a 40-burger out of nowhere — and suddenly your little bargain-bin quarterback becomes completely irrelevant.
Colts Players:
Tyler Warren — $5,000 (12.1%), Jonathan Taylor — $9,300 (11.2%), Alec Pierce — $5,100 (8.8%), Michael Pittman Jr. — $5,400 (7.2%)
Jaguars Players:
Brenton Strange — $3,900 (7.5%), Jakobi Meyers — $5,700 (7.2%), Brian Thomas Jr. — $5,900 (2.7%)
At a glance, this looks gross and totally lacking ceiling. A peek into their roles and pre-touchdown production — and then a hard stare at what you can do with your roster with the savings and the complete disregard for ownership going forward — gives me a protrusion in my nethers.
Fannin — $3,700 (6.9%), Helm — $2,900 (1.5%)