If you like bigger NBA DFS slate, then Tuesday is for you. The DraftKings main slate offers six games, which is a nice upgrade from yesterday’s 4-gamer. The NBA DFS Core Plays were mostly solid yesterday, as Evan Mobley was fine, while Schroder/Huerter smashed. Wemby died and Paul Reed wasn’t good enough, so it wasn’t a perfect slate.
Our Discord was filled with people cashing, though, both from NBA DFS and MLB DFS. If you want free advice, head there now. You can tap into all of our write ups for one low price as well. Today we’ll go over the top NBA DFS picks you need in most of your lineups, as well as some elite GPP pivots and the best game stacking spots. Let’s build!
- Know what contest you’re entering before you pick a single player. Cash games (50/50s, head-to-head) pay out the top half of the field. Your goal is a safe, reliable lineup. GPP tournaments pay out the top 15-20%, with most of the prize pool at the very top. Your goal there is the ceiling. These two goals require completely different lineups.
- Shorthanded teams are your best friend. When a team is missing rotation players, the guys left get more minutes, more shots, and more fantasy opportunities than their salaries reflect. That’s the formula. Check every team’s injury report before building — not as an afterthought, but as step one.
- Avoid blowout games unless you’re on the right side. High game totals tell you where the points are — the total is the sportsbook’s projected combined score. Higher total = more points on the floor = more fantasy points available.
- Minutes are the currency of DFS. Always ask: how many minutes is this guy going to play? A player can’t score if he’s on the bench. Before you add anyone to your lineup, ask yourself: is his role clearly defined tonight? Does he have a path to 28+ minutes? Then that guy is probably viable.
- Understand floor vs. ceiling before you decide who to play. Floor is the minimum you can reasonably expect from a player. The ceiling is the maximum upside if everything goes right. In cash games, you want floor guys who almost certainly hit their value. In tournaments, you want ceiling — guys who can go nuclear.
- Ownership can be your edge — use it. In GPPs, the field chases names or super-owned options. We can leverage that by playing comparable plays with lower ownership.
- Don’t pay for a big name if the context is bad. Salary doesn’t equal value. A star in a tough spot is often worse than a role player in a great one.
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