FanDuel Week 13 GPP Breakdown

Dec 04, 2015
FanDuel Week 13 GPP Breakdown

Selecting a pool of players to target in GPPs is only half the battle; you also have to put them all together. With that in mind, I’ve revamped the format of this column. With an eye toward lineup construction, I’ve grouped players to target by lineup slot.

I’ve also created a “profile” for each lineup slot, specifically the salary range and ownership level that will generally give you the best odds. These profiles reflect data I have compiled from each of the 12 lineups of this year’s Sunday Million, FanDuel’s largest GPP. You will see the information reflected in the profiles, but I want to point out some important trends from the winning lineups (which will be updated weekly if anything changes going forward) before we get into the plays.

  • Go contrarian at QB: QBs in winning lineups have an average ownership of 4.7%, the lowest of any position group by far.
  • Pay up at WR: On average, the most expensive WR in a winning lineup costs $8,800, roughly $1,000 higher than the next three most expensive positions: WR2, QB, and RB1.
  • One chalk play at RB, WR is OK: The average highest owned RB in a winning lineup was 24% owned and the average highest owned WR in a winning lineup was 22% owned. Those represent huge drop-offs from the other RB (6%) and WRs (7%).
  • Salary Allocation: The average salary allocation per lineup slot, from highest to lowest is WR1, RB1, QB, WR2, RB2, WR3, TE, K, D.
  • Make the chalk work for you; also know where to go contrarian: The average ownership per lineup slot, from highest to lowest is RB1, WR1, TE, WR2, D, RB2, K, WR3, QB.

When a player is listed under a heading with multiple lineup slots, i.e. "WR 1/2", it means that player can be used to fill any of the slots listed.

I also list the (projected) chalk plays -- defined as the highest owned player at a position or any player projected to push 20% owned -- at each slot, drawn from my Tournament Ownership Outlook column. For every position but QB, listed chalk plays are still recommended plays unless otherwise noted. However, you should generally limit yourself to one chalk play apiece at RB and WR and generally not have more than three chalk plays total in a lineup.

My hope is that casual readers will now have more direction as far as how to actually construct a winning GPP lineup, rather than just identify players to target. On the other hand, more advanced readers who prefer to do further independent research can still use the profiles as a lineup construction template even if they do not agree with some of the listed plays.

A note on pairing up players from the same team/game: In general, players from opposing passing games should be paired up whenever possible. Obviously, QBs and WRs should be stacked whenever possible, as should RBs and defenses. QBs and RBs on the same team have a slightly positive correlation and should not be avoided. RB and WR has a slight negative correlation, but it's so small that the pairing should not be avoided either.

Editor's Note: 4for4 has an ALL-NEW DFS SUBSCRIPTION! It includes our revolutionary Lineup Generator, Stack Value Reports, Ceiling & Floor Projections, GPP-Specific Articles, Ownership Outlooks, DFS Theory Articles, Lineup Construction Articles, a Downloadable .csv with Projections and Salary Data, and much more! DETAILS HERE! Previous subscribers don't worry, you'll get the same DFS content you got last season, but we think you'll want to UPGRADE to our DFS subscription because it takes our DFS content to the next level!

Quarterback

QB Profile: Median salary $7,900, average ownership 4%. QBs in winning lineups have always been under $9,000, most often falling in the $7,000s. Every QB in a winning lineup has been under 10% owned.

Chalk (You generally want little or no exposure to chalk at QB, with any exceptions noted below): Cam Newton, Ben Roethlisberger

Jay Cutler $7,000 vs. SF - He has accounted for 65% of Chicago's offensive TDs and the Bears' Vegas implied total (25.3) is 4.3 points higher than their season average of points scored. San Francisco ranks 22nd in QB aFPA and has allowed 9.5 yards per attempt, a 72% completion rate, and a 12:2 TD-to-INT ratio on in road games this season.

You’re Missing Out
Get access to this article and all our DFS and season-long tools and rankings:
  • DFS & Season-Long Content
  • Lineup Generator
  • Optimal Cash & GPP Lineups
  • Floor & Ceiling Projections
  • -Leverage Scores
  • -...and much much more!
Already a subscriber? Log in?
Latest Articles
Most Popular