
Dwain McFarland puts together the last several months of research to unveil his perfect fantasy football draft strategy, including winning formulas for Yahoo, ESPN, and Sleeper.

Building the perfect fantasy football draft strategy is all about thinking multiple moves ahead. While your leaguemates are playing checkers, you should be playing chess. While your buddies are planning on a draft falling just right so they can select a dominant team, you will prepare for things going wrong and have contingency plans.
The fundamental idea of a perfect draft isn't getting every player you think you must have—it is about building the best roster given the circumstances. Mike Tyson once said, "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth." So why don't we plan on getting punched in the mouth and see what happens?
This my crescendo piece of the summer. Months of studying, tiering, and drafting (over 120 teams so far) to deliver this article to your eyes. Over the last two weeks, we have been specifically building up to this moment by working through the perfect draft strategy for each position.
Now, it is time to zoom out and reassemble everything into one easy-to-use format so you can adapt as the draft unfolds.
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We have hit on all these concepts below in the positional strategies, but went deep on No. 2. Today, we will hyper-focus on No. 1 and No. 3, with the context of knowing the answer to No. 2 for each position (which informs our strategy guidelines).
Below is a TLDR review of my findings for No. 2 based on consensus average draft position (ADP).
Quarterback
Running Back
Wide Receiver
Tight End
By using the guidelines below, you will be ready for anything.
At the end of this article, we will zoom back in and walk through strategies for ESPN, Yahoo, and Sleeper based on draft position.

These guidelines are based on half- and full-PPR scoring. The standard setup for the majority of leagues (ESPN, Sleeper, Yahoo, etc.) is 1 QB, 2 RB, 2 WR, 1 TE, 1 FLEX. The strategies below also apply to 3WR and 2FLEX, but there are a few strategies (italics) that may be more challenging to implement.
How to use this table:
Think of this table as a simplified "if-then" analysis. The left-hand column has the four different high-level strategies you might deploy. I am not using the exact technical definitions some in the industry use, so here are the definitions for how I am using them in 2025:
There are two viable ways you could go Hero RB (one RB) in the first three rounds in 2025:
Based on the path you choose, you then have multiple options on how to handle rounds 4 to 6. Once you finish Round 6, you know your attack plan for Rounds 7 to 9.
Example:
Notice the notes at the bottom of the columns. If you have a large tier of QBs or TEs in Rounds 7 to 9, you could decide to push one to Round 10 or 11. These are guidelines, not etched-in-stone rules. The thesis: squeeze as much value as possible out of every pick while building a well-rounded roster.
You don't have to predetermine which strategy you will use. While it is good to understand the ramifications of each path in future rounds, you can let the draft come to you. This approach keeps you open to unique value combinations early.
While I am a willing Zero RB drafter in best ball formats, my favorite two strategies in managed leagues for 2025 are Hero RB and Super Hero RB.
There are two reasons:
When going Zero RB, I wasn't crazy about my backfield—I was leaving value on the board later at WR as I had to pivot to potentially overpriced RBs.
Of course, you know your league far better than I do. If you play in a league where WRs fly off the board, then Super Hero RB might not be for you, but Hero RB is in play. The framework above allows you to adapt based on your unique insights about your league.
Tip: You can use Draft Champion and select your draft strategy to practice different builds.









Note: Yahoo is the platform where zero RB is in play. You could start with three WRs from almost any draft position and still get two good RBs in Rounds 4 and 5.
