What type of scoring is rotisserie




















Points are used for quick visual aid, but your stats are what count. Your rank, out of the total number of managers, in a stat category earns you the inverse number of points.

Example with a league containing 10 managers:. Unlike other scoring formats, where your points are accumulated over time, the total available points are static and don't change in a Rotisserie league. Your standing within that set of points is what changes from day to day based on your accumulated stats. As your rank per stat category rises or falls, your total points adjust accordingly each day and any difference from your standings in previous day is tracked with positive and negative numbers in the "Pts Change" column.

The maximum number of points a manager can earn is the number of tracked stat categories multiplied by the number of managers in a league.

In a 10 manager league tracking 10 stat categories, a manager who earns 1st place in every stat category would have points. When 2 or more teams tie for a stat category, each manager involved gets an average of the total points due. Examples with a league containing 10 managers:.

The team with the best score in a category would get 12 points, the second-place team 11, the third-place team 10, and so on until the team with the worst score in that category would get one solitary point. In the early days, there were eight categories, four hitting Avg.

Luckily for you, Fantrax can handle an almost endless combination of categories and the scoring is all automated with real-time standings any time you want them.

Many leagues still use the player rosters that Okrent decided upon back in Each team consisted of 14 hitters 2 catchers, 1 first baseman, 1 second baseman, 1 third baseman, 1 shortstop, 1 middle infielder, 1 corner infielder, 5 outfielders, and 1 utility player and 9 pitchers any combination of starters or relievers.

Other leagues have added a 24th player allowing each team to use it for a pitcher or hitter. Many other leagues only use three outfielders.

Your rosters should fit the needs and wants of the owners in your league. Leagues hosted on Fantrax have complete control of their rosters. You can decide which positions to use and how many players can be active. Maybe you want something close to a standard league so that the great analysis from FantraxHQ and other sites is directly applicable. Easy enough. Maybe you donned the tools of ignorance in Little League and you want an all-catcher league. You probably have issues, but hey, we can fix you right up.

Fantrax makes it easy to customize every aspect of your Rotisserie Baseball league. During the first few years of Rotisserie Baseball, each league used players from only the National League or only the American League. These 8- to team leagues used a very high percentage of the players within their given player pool. This meant that even backup middle infielders and quite a few middle relievers were drafted. Many people still play in AL- or NL-Only leagues, but probably the majority of leagues now allow you to roster players from any Major League team.

These are known as mixed leagues. All of these league settings are available on Fantrax. Heck, you can even select individual teams from around MLB and use your own custom player pool. When deciding how many teams to have in your league, the important aspect to consider is how deep you want to go into the player pool.

If you want to stick to everyday starters and names that even casual fans know, you probably want to stick to 12 teams or less. Fantrax actually allows a league to have an incredible teams in the same league. Based on your ranking in each category — you receive roto points. The higher you are — the more roto points you get. If you were second — you get 9 points and so forth. So the minimum score across all categories is 8 points 8 stats x 1 point and the highest is 80 points 8 stats x 10 points.

The catch and the main difference compared to head-to-head scoring is that rotisserie standings reflect cumulative stats in a season. If you would like to play Roto — you should be ready to spend quite some time analyzing the data. This scoring system encourages you to have a balanced roster which will be able to eke out a win even by a minimal margin, but in as many as possible categories. Whether you win steals by 1 or by — you get the same number of roto points, so overkills are not your friend here.

Paying close attention to your roster may sound like a drag, but I promise you — it is fun if you have proper tools. And hopefully this is where we come in. As you can see above — roto scoring is fairly complicated even more if you play in a 9-cat setup where turnovers are added to scoring categories and that means there is no easy and straightforward strategy to be used. Below is a transcript of a discussion in one of the leagues we had played in. In quite unusual circumstances.



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