| 8/14/10
 
 Everything from seemingly harmless trash-talk to underhanded 
                collusion can cause hard feelings among owners… and even 
                divide an entire league. Whether you’ve been the accused, 
                the betrayed, or just an innocent bystander wondering which side 
                to take, this column is for you. E-mail 
                the Devil's Advocate with a description of the controversy 
                brewing in your league (or a potentially unpopular move you’re 
                about to make), and I’ll give one of those emails an outsider’s 
                viewpoint in a future column. Maybe you’re right, maybe 
                you’re wrong; there are always two sides to a controversy. 
                Both sides will be explored in hopes of finding some middle ground 
                that helps you, and that any league can use to bolster its rules 
                and maintain that rogue ownership that makes fantasy sports all 
                the more entertaining.
 
 
 The Big Hoard
 
 After a trio of rough articles, where I’m sure I got a little 
              preachy, it’s time to get back to basics—something based 
              on logic rather than morality. As fantasy drafts get closer and 
              closer, a discussion on draft picks seems only appropriate. This 
              article’s controversy comes to us from a reader who was able 
              to bolster his team’s future by trading away some of its present:
 
 Teams that have been able to build up a strong 
              core in the previous season have extra valuable players…which 
              allow them to [trade/hoard draft picks] …Many in the league 
              are attempting this, though some not successfully, which has added 
              to the tension…There are of course both sides to this, one 
              saying, “all extra players should go back into the draft pool 
              so talent is evenly distributed next season.” The other is 
              “why give up the advantage, if you have it, keep it”?
 
 The Guardian Angel
 Whether redraft or franchise, the league you’re in drafts 
              in a particular way and a particular order so that it’s fair 
              for everyone. Messing with that method not only brings scrutiny 
              upon you, it makes for a lopsided league and can cause chaos. Just 
              as parity has brought fortune to the NFL, it also makes the best 
              fantasy leagues worth playing in. A franchise that abuses the system 
              in order to found a dynasty will undoubtedly harm a league. After 
              all, who wants to lay down the cash and involvement when they suspect 
              there is little chance of a fair return?
 
 The Fallen Angel
 Parity, schmarity. Isn’t the point to form the best team you 
              can? In redraft leagues, that means drafting a solid foundation 
              and following up with some superb free-agent signings. In franchise 
              leagues, it means building a core that will last and can be further 
              built upon year by year. There’s nothing wrong with getting 
              all you can from your investment. If you aren’t choosing a 
              free agent or drafting a pick with an eye to his future worth, you’re 
              not getting his true value. That future worth includes his worth 
              as trade bait. To trade a player you no longer need for a future 
              pick takes not just savvy, it takes some guts as well. If a player 
              is worth a pick, it’s going to be risky letting him go.
 
 Here on Earth…
 Most of us will admit it can sometimes take a lot of work to trade 
              players. Anyone who doesn’t believe that is probably not worth 
              trading with. Sure, you can easily offer a trade tilted in your 
              favor. Maybe some owner will even take you up on it, but by doing 
              so—unless some great act of fortune befalls the player you’re 
              trading away—that trade partner may be lost for future dealings. 
              Make a trade that looks bad on paper and you yourself will look 
              bad. At the very least, owners will not think of spending their 
              time offering you anything close to a fair trade if they think you’ll 
              come back with some bad barter. That can easily kill your season 
              if you find yourself scrambling for a fill-in with a depleted free-agent 
              market and no one to deal with.
 
 Making a fair trade, however, will cultivate future dealings with 
              others in your league. Owners will notice when you’ve offered 
              a potential bargain, even if it’s with a different owner. 
              And the better owners will notice when you present a trade with 
              some forethought involved. Better owners usually have better players, 
              and more of them. Those owners will come to you first in their time 
              of need, and they’ll be the first to come to you in your time 
              of need—usually with a good deal, no less.
 
 It takes even more work to trade for picks, and the profit of cultivating 
              trade relationships is not as distinct since the value of your perfect 
              trade gets blurred by the length of the offseason. Owners are willing 
              to trade player for player, in the present, because they can envision 
              the effect immediately. But very few owners want to trade their 
              precarious fantasy future away. After all, good football players 
              are young; good football players make a lot of money; nightclubs 
              exist. Also, bones break and tendons tear. In order to pull off 
              a solid trade for a pick, you need the perfect combination of the 
              player who’s just the right fit for a needful team, along 
              with the fill-in for your own team after the trade is complete. 
              You also need a thick skin when dealing with other owners trying 
              to push your offers in their favor along the way. It’s exhausting. 
              Now balance those factors against a run you may be making at a playoff 
              spot. It’s very difficult to come up with that combo often 
              enough throughout a season, or offseason, to create anything even 
              resembling a hoard (or horde, if you’re in an IDP league).
 
 The amount of work that goes into making good trades is the main 
              reason I see little to no ethical problem with gathering as many 
              good draft picks as you can. If you’re willing to do the work 
              while others are not, those others should have no complaints. But 
              complaints or not, the thoughtful owner can still feel hot eyes 
              at his back as he walks up to claim his second pick in a single 
              round.
 
 So the question remains: Does hoarding disrupt the draft? The answer, 
              based on logic this time: No. There are a finite number of picks 
              in each draft. They are given to each team equally, usually based 
              on a serpentine system, a team’s finish in the prior season, 
              or a lottery (okay, change that to “kind of equally”). 
              No matter how they are spread out, each pick has a value, and each 
              owner recognizes at least some of that value as they trade picks 
              for players. Some trades are bad, some are absolute perfection. 
              But they are all sound in that an owner gets what he believes a 
              pick is worth.
 
 If one owner is able to sell all his players for future picks, he 
              does not disrupt the draft. Someone would have picked in those spots 
              anyway; no one is jumping in line and bumping another owner back 
              a spot. Does the owner with better picks have a better team that 
              coming year? Possibly. But in dealing for that team, he has spread 
              out some quality players to other teams the year prior. Oddly enough, 
              an owner hoarding picks may actually be creating some parity.
 
 In redraft leagues, things may turn out a little differently. But 
              each pick and each player has value either way. If both teams are 
              returning next season and no mafia members toting brass knuckles 
              are spotted in the immediate vicinity, all should be good. A player’s 
              value encompasses more than his immediate worth. And you paid for 
              your players in some way or another. Reap their true value while 
              you still can. If you drafted well enough to spread the wealth across 
              two or more seasons, take what’s rightfully yours, and take 
              it without qualms.
 
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