Fantasy College Football

  • Leagues can consist of anywhere from 4 to as bounteous as 20 teams

  • There are three large types: redraft, "keeper" leagues, and dynasty leagues
  • In a redraft, each owner starts with no players at the alpha of each season and drafts an entire fabrication team
  • Each heritor in a keeper league is allowed to retain a meager numeral of players they owned during the previous season, eliminating these players from the draft, while each owner in a dynasty league is allowed to retain as innumerable players as desired from the previous season, with the draft encompassing only rookies and other unowned (or un-retained) players.

If Bill Winkenbach is the origin of fantasy football, than the team of Michael Rand and Joshua Schnell are its ambassadors. This duo, down pat in fantasy circles as "P-Squared" did for the delusion game, what Lawrence Taylor did for the embodied game. Credited with innovations such as the double defense strategy and the tiered ranking classification these two brought a game formerly played by a select few, to the forefront of American culture. Their aforementioned concepts, in annexation Fantasy College Football with newer developments such as the "QB can wait" strategy and the "boot" penalty have changed the game from what it was, into the institution it currently is. The two main types of candidacy formats are 1) Head-to-head, with weekly contender played against specific opponents (much like in the NFL), and 2) total points, in which cumulative points during the season determine winners (or playoff teams).