Let’s say you’re on vacation. You’re staying at a lovely resort with some picturesque mountains on one side and the open ocean with a pristine, white sand beach on the other.
You and your significant other want an image to preserve that beauty. Do you take a selfie with your phone or camera, capturing the beautiful landscape around you? Or do you carve the image into a potato?
Since you can’t take the topography with you, a picture is the closest you can get to bringing that reality home with you. Why would you settle for a potato carving?
Similarly, if you were to take a selfie with the stats that best reflect real-world player impact on the outcome of a football game, which stats would be in your photo? Probably the same ones you would use to score fantasy football, right?
Because it only makes sense that fantasy football scoring reflects real-world impact, correct? How else would you do it? You wouldn’t try to squeeze meaningless stats into your fantasy football selfie. That would be silly.
If doing that, you might as well just randomly pick a stat category and give it undue weight. Of course, now it is more like a potato-carving version of fantasy football.
For example, why would anyone put a different scoring weight based on how yards are gained? They are either gained or not, the “how” doesn’t matter — because a catch on the football field makes no more real-world impact in the game than does a rushing attempt. The real game doesn’t care how yards are gained, why should fantasy formats care?
So it makes perfect sense for fantasy leagues to abandon scoring for receptions. But everyone likes points, so how would you replace the PPR bonus? Easy; you instead score for first downs converted (FDC). This will give you a more accurate representation of real-world impact.
In terms of how it impacts players’ performances, the top players basically just swap some positions, but there are meaningful changes elsewhere.
Betting on the NFL?
Read our expert guide on how to bet on the NFL
Check out the best NFL betting sites
Get the BetMGM Bonus Code
Take Jonathan Taylor. He jumps from the 28th-ranked Flex player in PPR to eighth overall in FDC. That certainly is a much better representation of his impact, as one of the few bell-cow RBs in the league. Derrick Henry, Saquon Barkley and Kyren Williams have their fantasy impacts corrected under this format, and Lamar Jackson, Jayden Daniels and other rushing QBs get a boost as well.
If you’re in an FDC league this season, the draft value for Bucky Irving, Chuba Hubbard and David Montgomery rises, and players like Trey McBride, Garrett Wilson and Brock Bowers take a hit.
PPR was invented in the early 2000s specifically to artificially increase value for WRs, since RBs dominated the first couple rounds of fantasy drafts. That disparity doesn’t exist anymore, so why should PPR?
Its importance was always imaginary, only existing literally in the fantasy sense. It is the potato carving of fantasy scoring formats.
Take a real fantasy photo. Join a first downs scoring league and toss the PPR potato in the garbage bin.
Related News
13 Apr, 2025
Osasuna vs Girona Prediction and Betting . . .
17 Jul, 2025
Adam Scott shares his ‘final preparation . . .
05 Apr, 2025
F1 legend reacts to Fernando Alonso clai . . .
20 Apr, 2025
South African rugby team spotted enjoyin . . .
19 Jun, 2025
Hosts England face SL in 2026 Women’s T2 . . .
13 Apr, 2025
White House Releases Results of Trump’s . . .
15 Mar, 2025
Top 15 Weekly Sport News Roundup For Lat . . .
03 Apr, 2025
Is Musk's political career descending to . . .