This article is all about decision-making and avoiding all the biases that can lead you to make bad ones, ideally. One aspect I haven’t addressed yet is when you make a good decision and bad things result. The official response to this situation is the infuriating “process over results.
” It does literally nothing to alleviate my rage at Russell Wilson , even two days later. I’ve been working on my short-term memory though, so hopefully by Thursday night I’ll have forgotten all about how he spectacularly failed in the absolute best situation for fantasy QBs. Advertisement But I do hope I’m modeling good decision-making here, through outlining the reasons I’m not overthinking a star in a bad matchup, or why I think it’s a good week to tinker with a new waiver pickup or perennial bench warmer.
The process does matter. Full stop. How you weight the statistics you consume in search of the right answer to a sit/start decision is crucial.
Using the best information you have, while recognizing that no predictive model is perfect, leads to the most consistently good results. Even when we get it wrong – occasionally spectacularly wrong, Russell Wilson – we don’t throw the process out the window. GO DEEPER Fantasy football rankings Week 12: Sleepers, projections, starts, Bo Nix, Rome Odunze We also don’t stop searching for meaning.
For instance, even though Baltimore ’s pass defense has been absolutely non-existent all season up until Week 11, that was not the .