Drew Loftis

Drew Loftis

Betting

It’s time to end the fantasy football madness that is PPR

No one likes weeds. Once they appear, they take over the arཧea and are difficult to remove. Next thing you know, the weeds have taken over the yard, and now you have to resod your whole lawn.

Fantasy football scoring formats need a good resodding. The weed that is PPR has infested the entire fantasy landscape.

What a terrible idea this was at the outset. It was born out of desperation, to break up running back-dominated fantasy drafts of the ear𝔍ly 2000s. Instead of, say, tinkering with roster construction — like adding a wide receiver or removing a running back — someone decided to pretend that catching a pass was of more value than taking a𓄧 handoff.

Alvin Kamara #41 of the New Orleans Saints catches the ball during the first quarter against the Cleveland Browns.
Alvin Kamara of the New Orleans Saints catches the ball during the first quarter against the Cleveland Browns. Getty Images

It didn’t seem to matter that in the game of football, how you gain the yards is irrelevan▨t. There is no rational reason to weigh a catch as mo𓆏re important than a carry. But that’s what we, the fantasy community, did.

For some reason, PPR got popular. The only reason we can think of as to why is because, “Points! Fun!” And we, the fantasy com🌞munity, have let it overtake virtually every corner of fantasy football.

Pretty much everyone is aware of the most obvious hypocrisy: A catch for zero yards is worth the same as a rush for 10 yards. That backward notion alone should be enough to disqualify PPR as a scoring system for any serious fantasy league. But it is worse than that. It can actually significantly change the fantasy vaꦿlue of players.

Take▨ the 2020 season. Alvin Kamara had a fantastic year. He tallied nearly 1,700 total yards from scri🌱mmage and scored 21 times. So it should be no surprise that he was the top fantasy RB and scored more fantasy points than any non-quarterback in PPR.

Only … Derrick Henry had a top-five 🍨all-time NFL season that same year. Henry topped 2,000 rushing yards, had nearly 500 more rushing yards than the nextꦦ best RB, was 223 scrimmage yards better than the next best Flex player, and he scored 17 touchdowns.

Fantasy Football DVQ Explainer

Hop out of the 🎃pool, unpack your vacation suitcase, boot up your laptop and get ready, because fantasy football season is back.

The 🥃Fantasy Madman has returned with the latest iteration of🐠 his DVQ.

The Draft Value Quotient is a player rating system that assigns one universal number for every player. This value projects the point in the draft at which a player’s pꦛrojꦅected production will match the estimated draft pick value.

Since there is a wider separation among p🐭roduction at the top, so too is there a wider gap between DVQ values at the top of the rankings.

The player projections takes into account playing time, expected use/touches, coaching tendencies, part performance and injury history. The DVQ measures these projections against a player’s schedule and factors in pos💦itional depth and value above replacement.

These ratings are updated regularly.

By any reasonable measure, they both had great seasons, though Henry’s was a bit better. But PPR isn’t reasonable. Kamara caught 83 passes that season, Henry jus꧒t 19. That artificial 64-point boost was enough to vault Kamara to the top for RBs. In fact, Dalvin Cook got a 25-point PPR bump to push him into second.

So Henry’s all-time great football season was just th𓆉e third-best amon🔥g fantasy RBs that year. Because … PPR.

Can we stop this madness? Please?! Somebody??

Titans running back Derrick Henry (22) rushes for a touchdown with Seattle Seahawks
Derrick Henry’s all-time great season wasn’t enough to place among the top-two scoring running backs in 2020. AP

We know everyone likes points, because, “Points! Fun!” And yes🦩, we understand removing PPR and re🎃turning to old-school standard scoring creates too much reliance on touchdowns — which are notoriously volatile from week to week and season to season.

There is a solution: Replace PPR with what we will call FDC — first downs converted. Instead of scoring for a sta꧑t that has no real-world impact, why not score for s♕omething that reflects actual performance and contribution on the field?

First downs keep drives alive. Players who convert them help their real-life team in a real-♒life game. FDC doesn’t discriminate based on how you obtained the ball, it sc𝐆ores fairly for both rushing and receiving.


Betting on the NFL?


It is clearly a superior format. More fantasy leagu❀e websites should offer it. More commissioners should employ it. More fantasy players should demand it. We, the fantasy community, should get to work making this happen.

So jump𝓡 aboar🅷d our campaign. Start the push to get your leagues converted to first-downs-converted scoring.