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

How To Play Fantasy Baseball (Roto) Rotisserie Leagues (Overview)

Julio Rodriguez fantasy baseball rankings prospects rookies draft sleepers MLB injury news

Mark Kieffer gives an overview on how to play Fantasy Baseball (Roto) Rotisserie Leagues.

With the NFL blowing the season's final whistle this weekend with Super Bowl Sunday, the fantasy world is going to turn its attention to fantasy baseball.

Have you ever wondered what a roto league is and how to play in it? If you've never played before, it can be very intimidating to just jump in. Below is an overview of how to play the most challenging but also most rewarding fantasy game there is: Rotisserie Fantasy Baseball.

This will be part of our ongoing series for fantasy baseball draft strategies, overviews and how-to guides. Good luck RotoBallers!

Be sure to check all of our fantasy baseball lineup tools and resources:

 

5 x 5 Format

If you are looking around at public online leagues such as those on the NFBC, most of the roto formats are 5 x 5. What this means is that there are five hitting categories that are tracked and five pitching categories that are tracked.

The most common categories in a 5 x 5 league are: Batting Average (AVG), Runs (R), RBI, Home Runs (HR), Stolen Bases (SB), Wins (W), ERA, WHIP, Strikeouts (K), and Saves (SV).

Some sites have variations on the 5 x 5 format by replacing AVG with On-Base Percentage (OBP) and SV with Saves + Holds (SHOLDS).

As with any fantasy game, it's always essential to check the rules and settings before drafting. There would be nothing worse than assuming your 5 x 5 league had Saves and it was actually SHOLDS because you would be taking relief pitchers too early most likely.

Some home leagues will do a 6 x 6 format adding in various sabermetric stats and taking out some traditional ones. All it means is there are six hitting categories and six pitching categories but those specific categories are going to depend on whatever the league setup is.

 

Scoring

Now that we know the categories, it's important to know how to score and what determines a winner.

In a points league, if your player hits an HR, you get a certain number of points. If they steal a base, you get a certain number of points. Whoever has the most points wins.

In roto leagues, the points are based on how you are ranked in each category. For example, if you lead your league in home runs in a 12-team league, you'd get 12 points for that category. The second-most would get 11, the third-most 10, the fourth-most nine, etc, all the way to last in the league would get one point.

In theory, in a 12-team 5 x 5 league, if a team won every category (which is rare), they would have 120 points (12 x 10 categories = 120). On the flip side, if a team was last in every category, they would have 10 points (1 x 10 categories = 10).

Every team is going to have between 10 and 120 points, and whoever has the most points on the last day of the season wins the league.

 

A Jack Of All Trades A.K.A. A Balanced Mindset

In order to have a good roto team, you have to have a very balanced team. Although it is possible to win your roto league by finishing last in a single category, it's extremely difficult. Going into the season, I typically aim to be in the top three in each of the 10 categories. On draft day, I never want to completely blow off a category.

For example, in a points league, a slugger that bats .230 and hits 40 home runs is going to be pretty valuable. In a roto league, the batter that hits .270 with 20 home runs and 15 stolen bases is going to be more valuable because they are average or above average in every batting category (assume both hitters score 80+ runs and drive in 80+ runs for the sake of this example).

Generally, to win an NFBC format league with 14 hitters, you want your average batter to hit .260 with 25 home runs, 80 R, 80 RBI, and 10 SB or so. If you could draft 14 batters that did that, you'd be very competitive in your league.

The problem is roto puts you in conundrums because the players that average the thresholds you are looking for across all categories get drafted in the first couple of rounds.

For example, ATC has 96 players projected for 10 or more stolen bases, 49 players projected for 25 or more home runs, and just 18 guys projected for both 25 or more home runs and 10 or more steals. Most of those 18 guys are gone in the first two or three rounds. If you incorporate the list with 25+ HR, 10+SB, and .260+ average, that is just 11 batters.

According to ATC, there are only nine players that are projected for .260 with 25 HR, 80 R, 80 RBI, and 10 SB or more.

In short, you can't draft 14 guys that hit all those thresholds, so what do you do?

It's that conundrum which is how people get deep into various draft strategies and approaches. There is no one answer to solve it. In short, the more balanced you can be throughout the draft, the better position you are in to scoop up value and have a competitive team.

The same conundrums go with pitching. There are starting pitchers that strike out a lot of batters but are volatile with their ratios. There are pitchers that have elite ratios but do not strike out many batters.

Knowing where categories are aplenty and when they become scarce is important. Looking at ADPs can give a sense of where those category pockets are so you can know where to target after getting a stud or two early on.

 

Final Thoughts

Hopefully, you have a better sense of how roto leagues work and how they are different from points leagues. The key to winning a roto league is to place as high as possible across all categories. You do not have to win any specific category but being competitive in every category is the goal.

The fun part is you could take 10 different fantasy baseball players who are successful and they will all have a different approach as to how they build teams. There is no set formula to build a team. Experienced roto players understand the need for balance while beginner roto players often get fixated on top 300 lists or overall rankings. Often taking the "lower ranked' player that actually fits your roster better because they contribute to the stats you need makes the most sense.

If you build your roto team as balanced as possible, you will give yourself the best chance to win.



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy baseball app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, sleepers, prospects & more. All free!



More Fantasy Baseball Analysis




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

Texas Rangers

Rangers, Bruce Bochy Mutually Agree to Part Ways
Darren Waller

Catches Two Touchdowns in First Game Back
Minnesota Twins

Rocco Baldelli Fired as Twins Manager
San Francisco Giants

Giants Fire Manager Bob Melvin
Francisco Alvarez

to Have Thumb Surgery in the Coming Days
Bo Bichette

Blue Jays Optimistic Bo Bichette Can Return for Division Series
Tyreek Hill

Believed to Have Suffered Dislocated Knee
Tyreek Hill

Carted Off in Week 4 With Knee Injury, Headed to Local Hospital
Lucas Giolito

Won't be on Wild-Card Roster With Elbow Issue
Alex Bregman

Should be Good for Game 1 of Wild-Card Series
Malik Nabers

Giants Officially Place Malik Nabers on Injured Reserve
Coby White

Limited to Start Training Camp
Lukas Dostal

Day-to-Day With Lower-Body Injury
Mattias Samuelsson

Out Week-to-Week
De'Aaron Fox

Likely Out For Season Opener
Bowen Byram

Considered Day-to-Day
Dylan Samberg

Ruled Out for 6-8 Weeks
J.T. Miller

Suffers Apparent Lower-Body Injury at Practice
Anthony Davis

Available For Training Camp
Tyson Foerster

Makes Preseason Debut Monday
Jalen Williams

Not Ready to Return
Alex Ovechkin

Logs Full Practice Monday
Ayo Dosunmu

Good to Go For Training Camp
Amen Thompson

Set to Lead Rockets' Offense With VanVleet Out
Nikola Jokić

Nuggets Eye Twin Towers With Nikola Jokic at the Helm
Bucky Irving

Comes Out of Week 4 With Injury
Bub Carrington

Reshapes Body, Ready for 2025-26 Season
Jauan Jennings

' Week 5 Status Up in the Air
Calvin Ridley

Dealing With Undisclosed Injury
Kenrich Williams

to Miss Time Following Knee Surgery
Cedric Tillman

to Miss Multiple Weeks
Brock Purdy

Toe Still Causing him Pain After Week 4 Loss
Chase Elliott

Steals the Win at Kansas and Locks Into the Round of 8
Chase Briscoe

Earns Another Top-Five Finish at Kansas
Christopher Bell

Finishes Third at Kansas Speedway on Sunday
Kyle Larson

Strong Kansas Performance Positions Him to Advance in the 2025 Playoffs
Joey Logano

Kansas Struggles End In Disappointment
Joe Mixon

Not Ready to Return
Kyrie Irving

Recovering "Quite Well," But Not Ahead of Schedule
Moritz Wagner

Without a Firm Timetable for Return
Jalen Suggs

Magic Targeting Opening Night for Jalen Suggs Return
Brandon Miller

is Healthy, Ready for Training Camp
Tyler Herro

Out for 8-12 Weeks
Malik Nabers

to Miss Remainder of 2025 With Torn ACL
Dominick Reyes

Suffers First-Round Knockout Loss
Carlos Ulberg

Gets First-Round Knockout
Romeo Doubs

has a Career Night, Scores Three Touchdowns
Ivan Erslan

Loses Third Fight in a Row
Ramon Taveras

Drops Decision At UFC Perth
Jack Jenkins

Gets Back In The Win Column
Jake Matthews

Suffers Third-Round Submission Loss
Neil Magny

Pulls Off Comeback Win
Noel Acciari

to Remain Out Monday
Vasily Podkolzin

Returning to Edmonton Tuesday
Mats Zuccarello

Without Timeline for Return
Charlie Campbell

Suffers First-Round Submission Loss
Tom Nolan

Gets First-Round Submission Win
Jonas Brodin

Returns to Full Practice
Alex Vlasic

Hurt on Sunday
Macklin Celebrini

Expects to Be Ready for Season Opener
Denny Hamlin

Despite Power-Steering Failure, Denny Hamlin Dominates and Finishes Second at Kansas
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace's Playoff Bid Likely Ends After Scrape With Boss at Kansas
William Byron

Runs Poorly, Still Finishes in the Top 10
Tyler Reddick

Finishes Seventh at Kansas Despite Distractions
Shane Van Gisbergen

Earns First Cup Series Top-10 Finish on an Oval
Puka Nacua

Injures Thumb Sunday, X-Rays Come Back Clean
George Pickens

Explodes as Top Receiver With Teammate Sidelined
Dak Prescott

Totals Four Touchdowns as Shootout Ends in Tie
Josh Jacobs

at the Center of Packers' Offense Again in High-Scoring Tie
Dallas Goedert

Leads Team in Receiving, Visits End Zone Twice
Gary Payton II

Staying with the Warriors
De'Anthony Melton

Returning to Golden State
Emeka Egbuka

Records Fourth Touchdown of 2025 in Week 4
James Cook

Tops 100 Rushing Yards for Third Straight Week
Pete Alonso

to Opt Out of Contract and Enter Free Agency
Travis Etienne Jr.

Dominates in Week 4 Win
Clayton Kershaw

Not Available for Wild-Card Series
Lamar Jackson

Suffers Hamstring Strain in Week 4, Set for Further Evaluation on Monday
Max Muncy

Expected to be Ready for Game 1 of Wild-Card Series
Bo Bichette

Without a Timeline, Unlikely to Return in Postseason?
Jared McCann

on Track to Be Available for Opening Night
Brandon Montour

Expected to be Available for Season Opener
Mason Marchment

Returns to Practice
Evan Rodrigues

Exits Practice Early Sunday
Anthony Stolarz

Signs Four-Year Extension With Maple Leafs
Cam Fowler

Blues Extend Cam Fowler for Three Years
Al Horford

Agrees to Join the Warriors
Noah Gragson

May Be A Sneaky DFS Option For Kansas Lineups
Todd Gilliland

Is A Quality Value Option for Kansas Lineups
Kyle Larson

the Favorite to Win at Kansas
Ryan Blaney

the Chalk DFS Play at Kansas
Denny Hamlin

Has Struggled at 1.5-Mile Tracks This Season
William Byron

a Solid DFS Pivot at Kansas
Alex Bowman

Will Alex Bowman's Top-10 Streak at Kansas Continue?
Ryan Preece

Should Have Speed at Kansas
Christopher Bell

Has Been Consistent at Kansas Despite Rarely Contending to Win
Joey Logano

Miserable Qualifying Result Makes Joey Logano a Top DFS Contender
Chase Elliott

Likely to Make Round of 8, but Has Hardly Been Inspiring
Ranger Suárez

Ranger Suarez Exits Early With Thigh Contusion in Loss
Trea Turner

to Return on Sunday
Ramón Laureano

Ramon Laureano Lands on 10-Day Injured List
Georges Niang

Set to Miss at Least Two Weeks
Jared McCain

to Miss 4-6 Weeks
Gradey Dick

Cleared for Training Camp
Brandon Ingram

Good to Go for Training Camp
JJ Peterka

Nursing Undisclosed Injury
Kirill Kaprizov

Dealing With Eye Infection
Brett Baty

Lands on 10-Day Injured List With Oblique Strain
Cade Horton

Goes on 15-Day Injured List With Fractured Rib
Jazz Chisholm Jr.

Exits After Hit by Pitch, X-Rays Negative
Josh Naylor

Suffering from "Minor Groin Tightness"
Pete Crow-Armstrong

Locks Up 30-30 Season
Giancarlo Stanton

Crushes Two Homers in Five-RBI Night
Josh Naylor

Exits With Apparent Injury on Friday
CFB

Caden Durham Doubtful for Saturday at Mississippi
Dominick Reyes

Looks For His Fourth Consecutive Win
Carlos Ulberg

Set For UFC Perth Main Event
Ivan Erslan

Looks For His First UFC Win
Jimmy Crute

A Favorite At UFC Perth
Jack Jenkins

Aims To Get Back In The Win Column
Ramon Taveras

An Underdog At UFC Perth
Neil Magny

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Jake Matthews

Looks To Extend His Win Streak
Louie Sutherland

Set For His UFC Debut
Justin Tafa

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Charlie Campbell

Looks To Remain Undefeated In The UFC
Tom Nolan

Set To Open Up UFC Perth Main Card
Viktor Hovland

Representing Team Europe at the Ryder Cup
Tommy Fleetwood

Representing Team Europe at the Ryder Cup
Scottie Scheffler

Representing Team USA at the Ryder Cup
CFB

Horatio Fields to Undergo Surgery on Broken Foot
CFB

Ole Miss To Start Trinidad Chambliss Against LSU
Sam Burns

Representing Team USA at the Ryder Cup
Matt Fitzpatrick

Representing Team Europe at the Ryder Cup
Bryson DeChambeau

Representing Team USA at the Ryder Cup
Shane Lowry

Representing Team Europe at Ryder Cup
Russell Henley

Representing Team USA at Ryder Cup
Robert MacIntyre

Robert Macintyre Representing Team Europe at the Ryder Cup
Patrick Cantlay

Representing Team USA at the Ryder Cup
Justin Rose

Representing Team Europe at the Ryder Cup

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP