X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

Fantasy Basketball Draft Strategy: Head-to-Head (H2H) vs. Roto

 

Roto vs. H2H - The Basics for Fantasy Basketball

By Keith Allison from Baltimore, USA (LeBron James) [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia CommonsI’m sure anyone reading this site probably knows the difference between the two types of category-based fantasy basketball leagues – roto and head-to-head. However, if anyone has just emerged from under a rock, here is a quick overview. Go ahead and skip the next two paragraphs if you already know the basics – I am just covering my bases here.

Rotisserie, or roto, leagues count up how well each team does in each category (points, rebounds, assists, etc) scored in your league, ranks every team and gives them a point value based on where the team ranks in that category. So if your team is ranked first out of 12 teams in field-goal percentage, you receive 12 points, second and you get 11 points, and so on. The point totals awarded for each category scored is added up and the league is won by whoever has the most total points at the end of the season.

One important restriction in a true roto league is that you will be limited to a set number of games (usually 82) for each roster spot, so you cannot run away with the counting stats by adding and dropping players to get as many games played as possible in each spot.

Head-to-head, or H2H, meanwhile, may take the same set of categories as a roto league, but each week you will face off against a specific opponent. If you beat them in a specific category you get one “win”. The wins and losses in each category will determine the “score” of your matchup that week. It does not matter where you rank in the league in each category, it only matters what you do compared to your opponent in a given week.

Normally, the regular season standings will be determined by the total of your weekly category “wins” and “losses” – so the “score” each week does not actually matter for the regular season (unless you are playing “H2H – one win” where the person with the best score is credited with a win in the standings, while the person with the worst gets hit with a loss). At the end of the year in a H2H league, there are playoffs, where the team with the best score in each matchup advances to the next round.

Okay, that is out of the way now.

So what is really the difference? How should you play each one differently? Does it matter when you are putting a team together?

Stop asking so many questions, imaginary person! Can you not see that I am getting there? There is a monstrous difference in roster construction between a winning roto team and a winning H2H team. Here is what I like to consider in each system.

 

Roto Strategy for Fantasy Basketball

In roto, efficiency is king. Every player should be considered for how much they help and how much they hurt relative to average in each category. If someone is 50 percent better than the league in field-goal percentage, but 50 percent worse than the league in free-throw percentage, that tends to even them out to an average player.

Balanced players who do a little bit of everything without hurting you – like San Antonio's Kawhi Leonard or Portland's Nicolas Batum – are as good as guys who do a few core things really well while providing below average production in other areas – like, say, the Kings' DeMarcus Cousins or the Clippers' Blake Griffin.

I go out of my way in roto to find guys who will not cripple me in a category. I am looking to compete and earn points in every category, even if it means giving up the chance at dominating any one statistic. I would rather earn nine points in rebounds and eight in free-throw percentage with a team built around Serge Ibaka, than earn 12 in rebounds and one in free-throw percentage due to having Dwight Howard on my roster.

I am going try to meet my cap of games played at every position, which should provide an edge in counting categories over anyone who gets lazy and does not do so (which will always be some portion of the teams at the bottom of the league).  This means I will get an artificial boost there.  Two categories where I want to compete that cannot be helped with more games, though, are field-goal and free-throw percentage.

 

Roto - Protect the Percentages, Manage Up the Other Stats

I am always trying to get guys who help both percentages in a roto league, or at least do not hurt one.  That is the reason I am always the guy who ends up with Chris Bosh.  I protect my percentages to a fault.  If I can finish with a strong total in both percentages, it is much easier to squeeze out enough points in the other categories by maxing out my games played and playing things by ear at the end of the season (for example, if things are tight in three-pointers while other categories are more set in the rankings there, I can play a few long-range specialists off the waiver wire).

In other words -- you can improve your results in threes or blocks or steals midseason with some good management, while it is much more difficult to do that for the ratio categories.  And being strong in the percentages from the start of the year gives you some cushion later in the year -- you know where you can take a hit in one of the percentages compared to your competition, so you know which flawed players you can take a chance on late in the year to give you a boost where you need it.  Give me a bunch of solid percentage guys in my draft, and I will figure out the rest from there.

I even pay attention to turnovers in roto leagues where they are scored.  My strategy does involve hitting the cap in games played at each position, which will invariably give me more turnovers than the lazy owners who do not.  However, it is a key difference maker when it comes to the teams at the top who are usually also maxing out their games played. If you can be the team to finish with three or four points in the turnover category, while the other top teams sit at one or two points, that can end up the being the difference between winning your league and finishing as the runner-up.

 

H2H Draft Strategy for Fantasy Basketball

Throw all that out the window when it comes to head-to-head. In H2H leagues, your main goal is to make the playoffs and put yourself in a position to beat any team you face in a majority of categories. In a nine category league, that means winning 5 categories. Since 6-of-9 categories are a good kind of counting statistic – points, rebounds, assists, threes, steals, blocks – and you can always get more of them by using all your add/drops to maximize your team’s games played in a week, I like to completely ignore turnovers.

Even if you have several high turnover guys and that costs you the category every week, if it earns you even more domination in the positive counting categories over other owners who are maxing out their games played, it is worth the cost. Additionally, on a week-to-week basis, if you have 4 categories locked up early and still lead in turnovers somehow, you can always just bench your whole team the rest of the week to win the category.

Finally, sometimes your roster construction can lead you to being competitive in turnovers even if you do not pay attention to them pick-to-pick. For these reasons, I completely ignore turnovers in my draft process for a head-to-head league.

So you still have eight other categories. Ideally, you will create a roster that is very strong in a couple categories and reasonably competitive in all across-the-board (a well-rounded team), or a team that is dominant in five areas and barely or not at all competitive in the other three (a “punt category” team).

The process for building a well-rounded team is finding draft values and balance the same way you would in a roto league. Basically you are going by the standard rankings and looking to build the best overall roster.  You probably will not win every category every week, but you should be good enough to compete a little bit every where and take advantage of other teams' weaknesses.

 

H2H - Punting

It is in the “punt category” style of team building where the real interesting strategies happen. Remember how in roto you do not want to cripple yourself in any one category? Well, if you were to decide not to care about a category – say, free-throw percentage -- suddenly an unusable category killer like Dwight Howard or Andre Drummond turns into an unstoppable rebounding / scoring / field-goal percentage / blocking juggernaut. You can throw balance out the window – sorry, Kawhi – and go all out on guys who just crush it a handful of categories.

There is two tried and trusted ways of running a punt team in a H2H league – going big, or playing small ball.

 

H2H - Going Big

A "big" team punts free-throw percentage and is usually mostly lost in assists. You stack your team with poor free-throw shooting big men – fill in your C spots, PF, F, Util with them – to build an extremely strong base in field-goal percentage, rebounds, blocks and scoring. For your guard spots focus on three-point shooters who do not hurt your field-goal percentage much, and who can pick up steals.

Golden State's Stephen Curry makes an unexpectedly good core piece on a free-throw percentage punt team because he can do so much to make you competitive in steals and threes without hurting your shooting from the field.  However, if you do not end up getting the fantasy god that is Steph Curry, you can aim for guys like Kyle Korver, Trevor Ariza and the vastly underappreciated Jodie Meeks.

A bonus on big teams is that if you mostly avoid point guards, you mostly avoid the biggest turnover culprits in the NBA. You are not really punting turnovers anymore if you go big.

 

H2H - Small Ball

A "small-ball" team goes the opposite approach, and is a bit trickier. Going small ball means loading up on star point guards, with the intention of crushing the league in assists, free-throw percentage, three points, scoring and steals. The reason this is tricky is because of how hard it is to find a sixth category where your team can ever compete – which means your margin for error is extremely thin. By playing so many guards, you are punting turnovers. And you are mostly not winning rebounds or field-goal percentage against anyone with a normal amount of big men on their roster.

One idea is to build your "small-ball" team around a couple of centers who can keep you competitive in blocks without hurting your efficiency from the charity stripe in the process. Serge Ibaka and Anthony Davis are strong cores to an otherwise small-ball team.

 

Wrapping Up Fantasy Basketball Draft Strategy

I hope that this have given you some food for thought in how to go about drafting in your particular style of league. The best way to approach your draft is not to marry yourself to any one strategy, though. Instead, you should educate yourself on different strategies and see which one the draft best plays into.

Obviously focusing on value should still trump strategy. In roto, you want to be thinking about value, balance and avoiding weaknesses. In head-to-head, you want to be thinking about value and building a core of strong categories. Keep these things in mind and you will be crushing your league in no time.

 

POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

James Proche II

Impressing in Titans Camp
Kyle Williams

"Up and Down" in Training Camp Practices
Dallas Cowboys

Micah Parsons Requests Trade Out of Dallas
Kenny Pickett

Returns to Practice in Limited Capacity
JoJo Romero

the Top Candidate for Saves in St. Louis
Braelon Allen

Returns to Jets Practice
Xavier Worthy

Avoids Concussion
Nolan Arenado

Going on Injured List With Shoulder Injury
DeVonta Smith

Misses Fourth Practice
Dontayvion Wicks

Takes Part in Friday's Practice
Jayden Reed

Practicing on Friday
Conor McGregor

Enters UFC Testing Pool
Emanuel Wilson

Suffers Leg Injury on Friday
Bryce Young

and Starters Will Play First Two Preseason Games
Ja'Tavion Sanders

"Shining" in Practice
New York Jets

Quinnen Williams is Week-to-Week with Calf Injury
Dallas Cowboys

Micah Parson Considering Drastic Measures Amid Contract Negotiations
Grayson Rodriguez

Considering Having Surgery
Cam Skattebo

Missing Team Drills, Being Managed by Giants
Calvin Ridley

Won't Practice on Friday
Los Angeles Rams

Kam Curl is Considered Week-to-Week with an Ankle Injury
Terry McLaurin

Commanders Not Interested in Trading Terry McLaurin
Drake Maye

Has Yet to Throw an Interception in Training Camp
Detroit Lions

Dan Campbell Not Happy with Lions Performance in HOF Game
Cole Kmet

Works With First-Team Offense on Thursday
Devin Williams

Yankees Plan to Keep Devin Williams in Closer's Role
HyunSung Park

Looks To Remain Undefeated
Tatsuro Taira

Set For UFC Vegas 108 Main Event
Mateusz Rębecki

Mateusz Rebecki Looks For His Second Consecutive Win
Chris Duncan

Looks To Extend His Win Streak
Elves Brener

Looks For His Fourth UFC Win
Esteban Ribovics

Set For UFC Vegas 108 Main Card Bout
Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos

Elizeu Zaleski Dos Santos Aims To Bounce Back
Karol Rosa

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Nora Cornolle

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Neil Magny

Returns At UFC Vegas 108
Kevin Vallejos

Set To Open Up UFC Vegas 108 Main Card
Danny Silva

Set For His Third UFC Fight
Mikal Bridges

Signs Extension with Knicks
Jackson Chourio

Expected to Go on Injured List With Hamstring Strain
Jonathan Aranda

Rays Hope Jonathan Aranda Can Return in September
Shelby Miller

Brewers Acquire Shelby Miller
José Caballero

Jose Caballero Shipped to the Bronx
Bailey Falter

Traded to Royals
Charlie Morton

Headed to Detroit
Camilo Doval

Yankees Acquire Camilo Doval
Griffin Jax

Traded to Tampa Bay
Connor McDavid

Oilers Hope to Finalize Connor McDavid's Contract Extension Soon
Willi Castro

Joining Cubs
BUF

Devon Levi Re-Signs With Sabres for Two Years
Merrill Kelly

Rangers to Acquire Merrill Kelly
Martin Pospisil

Signs Three-Year Extension
Ramón Laureano

Ramon Laureano Heading to San Diego
Ryan O'Hearn

Padres Acquire Ryan O'Hearn From Orioles
Jesús Sánchez

Jesus Sanchez Traded to the Astros
Carlos Correa

Astros Acquire Carlos Correa From the Twins
Cedric Mullins

Mets Acquiring Cedric Mullins
Jonathan Aranda

Exits Thursday With Apparent Wrist Injury
David Bednar

Yankees to Acquire David Bednar
Dario Šarić

Dario Saric Hoping to Have Meaningful Role with Kings
Donte DiVincenzo

to Skip EuroBasket Due to Injury
Ayo Dosunmu

Set to Remain in Chicago
Malevy Leons

Signs Exhibit 10 Deal With Thunder
Daeqwon Plowden

Kings Pick Up Daeqwon Plowden on Two-Way Deal
Bryce McGowens

Signs Two-Way Deal with Pelicans
Jonathan Kuminga

Declines Latest Offers from Golden State
Gary Woodland

Eyeing Strong Finish to Reach Playoffs
Max McGreevy

Chasing a Miracle at Wyndham
Stephan Jaeger

a Solid Value Play at Wyndham Championship
Max Homa

Fighting to Salvage Disappointing Season
Nicolai Hojgaard

a Sleeper at Wyndham Championship
Rickie Fowler

Riding Quiet Momentum Into Wyndham
Brian Campbell

a Wild Card at Wyndham Championship
Akshay Bhatia

Looking to Flip the Script at Wyndham Championship
Aaron Rai

Finishes Tied For 34th at Open Championship
Andrew Novak

Finishes Tied For 63rd at Open Championship
Hideki Matsuyama

Finishes Tied For 16th at Open Championship
Kurt Kitayama

Wins 3M Open
Tom Kim

Finishes Tied For 28th at 3M Open
PGA

Sungjae Im Misses Cut at 3M Open
Max Greyserman

Misses Cut at 3M Open
Jordan Spieth

Looks to End Regular Season on a High Note at Wyndham Championship
Matt Fitzpatrick

Finishes Tied For Fourth at Open Championship
Eric Cole

Misses Cut at 3M Open
Keith Mitchell

Needs a Big Week at Wyndham Championship
Robert MacIntyre

is the Perfect Kind of Ball-Striker for Wyndham Championship
Charlie McAvoy

Ready to Go for Next Season
Dylan Samberg

Agrees to Three-Year Contract with Jets
Michael Kim

Needs More Solid Finishes
NBA

Thanasis Antetokounmpo Added to Greece Training Camp Roster for EuroBasket 2025
Los Angeles Clippers

Patrick Baldwin Jr. Waived by Clippers
Josh Green

May Not be Ready for Start of Hornets Training Camp
NBA

Thomas Bryant Set to Move to Greece
Cam Thomas

Nets Far Apart in Contract Talks
Kristaps Porzingis

Feeling "Great" Ahead of New Season
Chris Paul

Hints He Could Extend His Career Beyond the 2025-26 Season
Brandon Miller

Close to 100 Percent
Jayden Struble

Canadiens Lock Up Jayden Struble for Two Years
Robert Whittaker

Loses Back-To-Back Fights
Reinier de Ridder

Gets Split-Decision Win
Conor Timmins

Avoids Salary Arbitration with Two-Year Deal
Marcus McGhee

Drops Decision At UFC Abu Dhabi
Toronto Raptors

Colin Castleton Waived by Raptors on Monday
Petr Yan

Extends Win Streak
Marc-Andre Barriault

Suffers Decision Loss
Shara Magomedov

Gets Back In The Win Column
Jose Ochoa

Dominated At UFC Abu Dhabi
MMA

Asu Almbayev Dominates At UFC Abu Dhabi
Kyle Larson

Falls Short of Back-To-Back Victories at Indianapolis
Denny Hamlin

Rallies Into Third Place At Indianapolis
Chase Briscoe

Pit Strategies End up Failing Chase Briscoe at Indianapolis
Ty Gibbs

Wins NASCAR's Inaugural In-Season Challenge Tournament
Ryan Preece

Finishes Fourth but Loses Ground to Playoff Cutline
Brad Keselowski

Has Good Strategy, but Not Enough to Win
Ryan Blaney

Bails from Hail Mary Strategy Attempt but Recovers to Finish Seventh
Tyler Reddick

Eliminated from Brickyard 400 in Crash After Top Five Run
Chicago Bulls

Billy Donovan Agrees to Contract Extension with Chicago
Erik Jones

Is Erik Jones Worth Rostering At Indianapolis This Week?
Carson Hocevar

Is Carson Hocevar Worth Rostering For Indianapolis DFS Lineups?
NASCAR

Could A.J. Allmendinger be A Solid Tournament DFS Option?
Zane Smith

Is a Respectable Value Option for Indianapolis Despite Low Experience
Cole Custer

Is A Solid Value Option for Indianapolis DFS Lineups
Riley Herbst

Is an Unfavorable DFS Option for Indianapolis Lineups
Zeev Buium

Aims for Big Role Next Season
NHL

Conor Sheary Signs Tryout Deal with Rangers
Denny Hamlin

an Easy DFS Target After Wreck in Qualifying
Arvid Soderblom

Agrees to Two-Year Deal with Blackhawks
Kyle Larson

Will Start 13th to Defend Brickyard 400 Crown
Chase Briscoe

on Pole for Brickyard as Momentum Continues to Build
Ryan Blaney

Learned a Lot in Practice at Indianapolis
Brad Keselowski

Should Be Very Strong at Indianapolis
NASCAR

Could Bubba Wallace Challenge for a Brickyard 400 Win on Sunday?
Ryan Preece

Don't Forget About Ryan Preece at Indianapolis
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF