Sonic is a Milly Maker winner and large-field tournament mastermind who focuses on mass-multi-entry play
There’s a fine line between chaos and control — and that line is usually drawn by whoever’s holding the mouse. Every week, the field chases comfort: projections, matchups, and the illusion of certainty. But that’s not where the edge lives. The edge lives in the noise — in the moments where we build something that looks reckless but is actually rooted in correlation, leverage, and ownership math. This isn’t blind aggression; it’s intentional risk wrapped in DFS zen. Find the angles that make people nervous, pair them with the plays that make sense, and suddenly the madness starts to look like strategy.
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.
Plenty of guys from this game carry double-digit ownership, so this pairing provides tasty leverage if both realize the potential in their big-play archetype. It’s cheap, correlated volatility in a game everyone else thinks they’ve already solved.
Johnston (8.3%), Pierce (3.1%)
Ultimate leverage. Pure speed. Rashee Rice will be on a third of the field’s rosters, but what if he’s just the 7/70/0 chain-mover while Worthy turns Arrowhead into a track meet? Tucker brings matching big-play juice from the other sideline, and if he connects once, the fireworks start. Two human spark plugs and a perfect bet against the comfort zone. Leapfrog City, baby. Let’s go.
Worthy (6.1%), Tucker (3.4%)