Draft checklist
Fantasy Football Research Checklist
A good fantasy football decision is easier when the same checks happen every time. This checklist gives managers a repeatable process for researching players before drafts, trades, waiver claims, and lineup decisions. SnapStats supports the workflow with player pages, stat leaderboards, comparison pages, and the live fantasy workspace.
Player links
Related Player Pages
Use these related player pages to stay inside the same position group while comparing production profiles.
Stat links
Related Stat Leaderboards
Use these related leaderboards to move from one stat question into the next without returning to search.
Internal links
Popular Player Comparisons
Use these related pages to compare other high-interest fantasy players without returning to search.
Start With The Decision
Fantasy research changes based on the decision in front of you. A draft pick needs season-long role and roster fit. A trade needs relative value and risk. A waiver claim needs opportunity and timing. A lineup call needs current context. Naming the decision first keeps the research from turning into a random stat hunt.
- Draft: compare role, floor, ceiling, and roster construction fit.
- Trade: compare player value, risk, schedule context, and team needs.
- Waivers: check why the opportunity changed and whether it can last.
- Lineup: use current injury, team, and matchup context before locking a starter.
Check Role Before Ranking
A player can rank highly because of one spike week, unusual touchdown efficiency, or a short stretch of volume that may not repeat. Role checks are the part of research that keep a ranking from becoming a blind answer.
- Quarterbacks: passing volume, rushing role, turnover risk, and offensive environment.
- Running backs: carries, targets, receptions, goal-line work, and backfield competition.
- Wide receivers: targets, receptions, teammate target competition, and touchdown path.
- Tight ends: route involvement, weekly targets, and whether value depends only on touchdowns.
Use Comparisons As A Final Pass
The final question is often not whether a player is good. It is whether that player is better than a nearby option at the same cost. SnapStats comparison pages are useful at this stage because they push the research into a side-by-side decision instead of another isolated profile.
- Compare players inside the same position tier first.
- Use scoring format as a tiebreaker, especially in full PPR.
- Prefer repeatable involvement over one unsustainable stat spike.
- Save uncertain names to revisit when injuries, depth charts, or team news changes.
Copyable Checklist
Before making the decision, ask: What is the player role? What stat supports the case? What stat weakens the case? What changes in PPR? What team or injury context matters? Who is the closest alternative? What would make me change my mind before kickoff or draft day?