To improve your understanding of the overall league spending, you need to get the market set at QB early because the Superflex setting will inflate the QB market. But if your league is going gaga over QBs, then be ready for some “deals” at those other skill positions. If your league’s spending on QBs appears to be low, then you can rest assured the prices for RBs and/or WRs will be inflated. As I pointed out in the Budget Builder article there is a finite amount of money for a specific number of players. You need to know where the market on QBs is in the league because it will drive everything else. In Superflex, that means you must be focused on QBs. The goal is to get baseline spending within the league and keep pushing the QBs into the bidding war. Your early nominations should be focused on “mini-reaches” – not nominating the top available QB, but the 2nd or 3rd one on the best available list. You want big names and big salaries on the board to see where the market for the positional players is going to be. The early part of the auction is not the time to get cute. No one wants to be the manager who overspends way above everyone else early on. Everyone is excited for the draft to have started, they all have money to spend and yet some are unsure of how high the salaries might go. The early part of the auction is always a tumultuous time. To dominate your draft, you need to be focused on the QB position during your nomination phase. While both settings are becoming more popular, combining them makes for a very interesting draft day. A Superflex auction draft might be one of the most niche league formats to play in.
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