Anyone ever try out Fan Duel or Draft Kings (or anything like it)??

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college football is the craziest

some guys get hurt 1st quarter and don't comeback and other guys go 270 yards and 4 touchdowns

Although they don't have the big $ tourneys for CFB like NFL/MLB
 

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I tried CF and I am just out gunned and over matched by the sharps. A lot easier to hang with these guys in the NFL. I can hold my own in the NBA as well.
 

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I started trying it last week on FanDuel. Very misleading with the "100% match" promos as you don't actually get 100% right away, it's released fractionally as you play.

It's definitely full of dorks though, the kind that pour over stats and are probably huge sports fans but mostly don't bet at all on the actual games.
 

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I like the lay out and they always pay me quick. I think its easy pickings if you know your stuff. I dont get into the big dollar rooms with experienced players. I go down into the smaller rooms and pound the guys who just draft their fav players or big name players in bad matchups.


They would vet him pretty much the same way.
 
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Play at both Fanduel and at Draftkings as well as couple of others. One reason to use Draftkings over Fanduel is that DK allows for late changes, Fanduel does not. In other words, once the first set of games go off on fanduel your lineup is locked and you are stuck if there is a late scratch, you have the opportunity to swap out at Draftkings until your particular player's game goes off. My one complaint is that these sites get way too much of the "rake". You are often playing an average of a line equivalent to -125 or higher in some instances.
 
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Also, target most of your funds on the h2h and/or 50/50 games. DK usually has much larger number of entries in the 50/50 games so I tend to play there more often, but easier to pick out your opponents in Fanduel h2h games as want to avoid the sharps. Just put a small percentage of funds towards the large prize tournaments.
 

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Play at both Fanduel and at Draftkings as well as couple of others. One reason to use Draftkings over Fanduel is that DK allows for late changes, Fanduel does not. In other words, once the first set of games go off on fanduel your lineup is locked and you are stuck if there is a late scratch, you have the opportunity to swap out at Draftkings until your particular player's game goes off. My one complaint is that these sites get way too much of the "rake". You are often playing an average of a line equivalent to -125 or higher in some instances.

Late swap is a disadvantage to the casual player though. Adds a ton of time commitment. Unless you wanna have your phone/tablet etc glued to NBA news for the next 3 hrs then lineup lock at 7pm is usually better for the avg player.
 
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I play FD and enjoy it. I dont play for big $$ and its just a fun way to have some "action" on something w/out losing my shirt
 
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Late swap is a disadvantage to the casual player though. Adds a ton of time commitment. Unless you wanna have your phone/tablet etc glued to NBA news for the next 3 hrs then lineup lock at 7pm is usually better for the avg player.

True - more often than not I like having the option. You targeting any Pats in your lineup(s) this week?
 

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True - more often than not I like having the option. You targeting any Pats in your lineup(s) this week?

maybe Brady on DK since he is only 7k and Minnesota was terrible vs the pass last year (Brady historically great in domes as well) DK softened up their pricing this week because of that $27 million dollar tourney and they want to make the game easier for the new players for that.

Cam being out screwed me on DK last week. I pivoted off of Benjamin (4200) who I had ready to roll for a monster year and I went onto Buccs D vs Derek Anderson and it killed me. Tate's injury was rough too, on his way to a big game...

On FD nah no Pats...

I hate how FD doesn't black out who you are going on Thursday and then show it on Sunday but I hear they are gonna change that around week 4 or 5.
 
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I mostly stay away from Thursdays, but I'll probably throw one lineup together as I like a couple of Steelers. GL this week-end.
 

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I mostly stay away from Thursdays, but I'll probably throw one lineup together as I like a couple of Steelers. GL this week-end.

I don't think it applied week 1 because Seattle D is just so good but in general people overplay guys from the Thurs games even if they aren't great values. Also on FD with people able to see who people go, I think the cat is out of the bag on who the good plays are by the time Sunday rolls around.
 

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http://fortune.com/2015/09/30/nflpa-draftkings-ads/

gronkdraftkingsfor-web.jpg


<figcaption class="article-image-figcaption">Rob Gronkowski of the New England Patriots poses for an advertisement for DraftKingsPhotography by Danny Hastings/Courtesy of DraftKings</figcaption>[h=2]The NFLPA’s deal with DraftKings adds legitimacy to the suddenly-ubiquitous fantasy sports startup.
[/h]Since the start of the current NFL season earlier this month, two companies have dominated the football-related airwaves, conversation, and controversy: DraftKings and FanDuel.
Both daily-fantasy-sports startups have spent big to plaster television networks with advertisements; DraftKings spent $80 million just in Week One of the season, FanDuel $20 million in that time. (ESPN is at times showing back-to-back ads for the two rivals.) Both have been gobbling up exclusive marketing partnerships with NFL teams; FanDuel has 16 teams to DraftKings’s 12. Both have added new users like gangbusters, ramping up customer acquisition during the start of the football season, the biggest time of the year for fantasy sports.

Now one of them, DraftKings, has notched a major score: a deal with the NFL Players’ Association (NFLPA) that allows the company to use players in their advertising, even if they do not have any individual deal with the player.
The NFLPA and DraftKings announced the licensing partnership this week. As part of the deal, the NFLPA allows DraftKings the right to use player images in campaigns across television, print media, social media, and on digital properties—everywhere, basically. What will change for a football viewer already tired of the volume of advertisements? Not much, apart from seeing more football faces in those advertisements and in other promotional photographs and screens (like the one below).
DraftKings was not permitted to have screens like this one until now.
Previously, DraftKings was only allowed to use the images of players it had signed to direct, individual sponsorships. And it only had one in place: with New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski. It had been working on adding more, but there is a threshold at which the NFLPA limits the number of such deals that a brand can have. So DraftKings made the move to get an official deal with the NFLPA, which erases that limit.
This also “legitimizes us,” if you ask DraftKings VP of business development Jeremy Elbaum, who came to DraftKings one year ago when it acquired his own daily fantasy company, DraftStreet. (For some reason all of the companies in the fantasy sports space have the same name; DraftKings has made two acquisitions, of DraftStreet and StarStreet; the StarStreet founder has moved on to create a daily app called Draft; meanwhile, daily platform Victiv, acquired this year by Amaya Gaming, has rebranded to StarsDraft.) “I think this will make new people to the industry more comfortable since they will see players they love and relate to in the ads,” says Elbaum. “That’s what excites us most. It makes new players more comfortable and existing players feel better about the product.”
It is important to note that DraftKings does not have a deal with the NFL, and neither does FanDuel or any other daily-fantasy platform.
The league, known to be extremely cautious about its partners, has held off. Its teams are permitted to have individual marketing deals with DraftKings or FanDuel—and every single one of them does, except for those in the five states where the companies do not operate. But the NFL is quite strict about the rules of these partnerships: teams can run advertising promotions within their own controlled media properties, but the league does not allow any official league or team marks (meaning logos) to appear in such advertisements. For example: the New England Patriots are partnered with DraftKings, and there is even a large DraftKings Fantasy Sports Zone inside Gillette Stadium, but any promotions involving the Patriots and DraftKings cannot use the Patriots logo or the official NFL shield.
The extent to which the NFL has stayed away, while the NBA has partnered with FanDuel and MLB with DraftKings, is a reminder that in the most important sport for fantasy, these companies have some ground to gain. But this NFLPA helps get DraftKings a lot closer.
Elbaum describes it as a two-part deal: “One part is using players collectively, which we can do now and you’ll see many appear in our marketing immediately, and then second, we love our relationship with Gronk and we want to work with more players on an individual level. And it’s actually easier now for us to make those direct deals. The NFLPA deal allows us to talk to players quicker and brings more legitimacy to it.”
Gronkowski himself, of course, agrees: “Adding players into the marketing of DraftKings makes daily fantasy gaming more real,” he said in a statement. “Fans get to see more of our personality and not just our stats.”
As for the many football fans that have railed about the DraftKings and FanDuel ads? Elbaum has seen the hue and cry, but says the exposure is worth it for DraftKings. “We don’t want to get to a point where there’s too much—I think there’s a line and we don’t want to cross it—but with the seasonality of our product and NFL season being so important, it was really important for our business to do this,” he says. “As the seasonality changes, we won’t be as prevalent. It won’t be something that ends up hurting us.”
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