Fantasy Football Advice and Cheat Sheets
As we creep up on Fantasy Football Season, you are bound to be bombarded by everyone under the sun with fantasy football advice and their opinion of who is going to be a great pick this season. Because of the enormous popularity of fantasy football in the last few years, it has lead to an uncountable number of services fantasy football cheat sheets and prognosticators telling you how to win your league. So the question is how to you judge the cream from the crap? Well let’s start with fantasy football cheat sheets.
Fantasy Football Cheat Sheets
The first telltale sign of whether a fantasy football cheat sheet is worth its salt is the date it was published. During the football preseason, the balance of power in training camp position battles can change from hour to hour, let alone day to day. If a cheat sheet that you are looking at was published more than a week ago, it is probably not that accurate. If you subscribe to a fantasy football cheat sheet service, like our UberRank system, they should be update every week minimum. This ensures that any developments in training camp, like a coach deciding to go to a runningback by commitee system, is taken into consideration. The other big issue in training camp that needs to be updated frequently and greatly affects the fantasy value of a player is injury. If your football player ranking is published once a season or even once a month, you might end up picking a player in your draft that recently suffered a season ending injury, which means in turn that you just suffered a potentially season ending injury. Remember when it comes to fantasy football player rankings no one source is good enough. Cheat sheets are wrought with bias so you should consult as many sources as possible to make sure you don’t base your whole season on a fantasy cheat sheet that ranked Brian Westbrook as the number one player just because the writer loves the Eagles. For this reason, composite ratings like our UberRank Fantasy Football Cheat Sheet will always give you the best chance to win.
Fantasy Football Advice
Now let’s talk about fantasy football advice. Like all things in life, information is only as good as its source. When reading football blogs and fantasy football blogs or articles specifically, there are some easy ways to quickly discern whether the author is an insightful well informed asset to your fantasy football arsenal or just a blow hard who likes to hear his/her own voice. References!!!! If the author expresses opinion, it is expected, but look for the line of thought that brought them to their assumptions. At the end of the day, an opinion is just that but if they let you know the steps in their thought process you at least have the information to decide whether you agree with the path they took to get to their opinion. Chances are if they are quoting situational statistics and interviews with coaches, they are either reprinting what they read on ESPN or they know their stuff. Either way you are probably safe. If the are just spouting venom or summations without any back up or footnotes, they probably haven’t won many league because they don’t do research!!!
The next temperature test for fantasy football advice is the tone. If the writer is overly opinionated or critical without reason be aware. If the writer is overly complimentary to a certain player or team….their a HOMER, again be aware.
Fantasy football is an imperfect science. There are so many variables that you are always going to need a kiss from lady luck to make a great run, but if you can get a line on some consistently good information and fantasy football advice, you will be able to make informed decisions. If you can get your hands on an accurate and frequently updated fantasy football cheat sheet, you will start the season with the best draft possible.
Good Luck fantasy football diehards.


Don't Just Play, Win! Have you ever walked into your fantasy football draft unprepared? Carrying a
Jul 28, 2009 at 15:07:02
I was offered LT for Boldin straight up. This is for this year only. Thoughts? Already keeping MBarber, Wayne and Winslow. This is a PPR league. I draft 10th with Turner, Forte, DeAngelo, Chris Johnson, Slaton, Jacobs, Calvin, Steve Smith, Westbrook, Kevin Smith, Roddie White, Bowe, Ronnie Brown, Jennings, Bush as the probable top 15. Would love some feedback.
Jul 28, 2009 at 20:22:07
AJ,
Thanks for the comment!
LT for Boldin is a no brainer. Even if LT is at 80% he is an RB1. Boldin is the second option WR in good offense but he no RB1. Jump on that deal Post-Haste
DoyaDoya