The Ultimate Draft Strategy
Mastering the "Punt" Strategy for H2H Leagues.
Published on October 12, 2023
Welcome to the ultimate primer on dominating your fantasy basketball draft. The draft is the absolute most critical day of the fantasy season. It is where foundations are laid, championships are envisioned, and catastrophic mistakes are made. If you walk into your draft room without a meticulously crafted plan, you are simply preparing to fail. In this guide, we will explore advanced drafting concepts that separate the casual fans from the elite fantasy general managers.
The 'Punt' Strategy Explained
The concept of "punting" is perhaps the most misunderstood strategy in fantasy basketball, yet it is arguably the most powerful tool in a manager's arsenal. Punting does not mean deliberately drafting bad players. Punting means intentionally ignoring one or two specific statistical categories (for example, Free Throw Percentage and Turnovers) in order to become absolutely overwhelmingly dominant in the remaining seven or eight categories.
For instance, if you draft a superstar forward known for incredible scoring, elite rebounding, and massive block numbers, but who famously shoots 45% from the free-throw line, you are already severely disadvantaged in the FT% category. Instead of wasting mid-round draft picks trying to acquire elite free-throw shooters to drag that percentage back up to mediocrity, you simply "punt" the category. You embrace the terrible free-throw shooting and instead focus entirely on acquiring more players who dominate in points, rebounds, and blocks. By sacrificing one category, you virtually guarantee victory in three others.
Maximizing Middle Round Value
Everyone knows who the top 10 superstars in the NBA are. You don't need a guide to tell you to draft a generational talent in the first round. Fantasy leagues are won and lost in the crucial middle rounds (Rounds 5 through 9). This is where you must identify "sleepers"—players who are primed for a massive breakout season due to a change in coaching staff, a trade that opened up playing time, or a dramatic improvement in their skill set during the offseason.
When navigating the middle rounds, prioritize players who have a clearly defined path to 30+ minutes per game. In fantasy basketball, volume is king. A player with average efficiency who plays 35 minutes a night will almost always outscore a highly efficient player who only sees the floor for 18 minutes. Look for established veterans on bad teams who are forced to carry the offensive load, or second-year players stepping into a starting role.
Positional Scarcity
Understanding positional scarcity is critical. In most standard leagues, elite Point Guards and dominant Centers are off the board extremely quickly. There is a massive drop-off in talent at the Center position after the top tier is gone. Conversely, the Shooting Guard and Small Forward positions are usually very deep, meaning you can find serviceable wing players in the later rounds of the draft. Do not get caught at the end of a draft without a reliable Center, or you will be forced to scour the waiver wire for backups.
Popular Punting Builds
- Punt Assists: Focus heavily on scoring wings and big men. You'll dominate Rebounds, Blocks, FG%, and Turnovers (since high-assist players usually have high turnovers).
- Punt Free Throw Percentage: Draft dominant centers who struggle at the line. You will crush your opponents in Rebounds, Blocks, and FG%, while willingly conceding FT%.
- Punt Points: A contrarian approach. Draft players who fill the stat sheet with Rebounds, Assists, and defensive stats (Steals/Blocks) but aren't the primary scorers on their NBA teams.
Draft Execution
Once you commit to a punt strategy, stick to it! Value players based on how they fit your specific build, not their overall average rank. A player who is ranked #50 overall might be a top-20 value for your specific punt build.