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DFS Golf: Chalk Donkey – Northern Trust

Welcome to this weeks Chalk Donkey article for DFS PGA Golf. It’s the first week of the FedEx Cup Playoffs and the first event is the Northern Trust Open! 

My name is Josh Thomas, and I write the Chalk Donkey article for VIP’s every week here at DFS Army looking at who the chalk plays are in DFS Golf and who you can pivot to. We’ll look at if you need to eat the chalk especially in cash games, and take a deep dive into some pivots using our Research Station and the Domination Station.

CT Pan – Remember a few weeks ago when everyone thought it was CT Pan week and then he punked us and missed the cut? Yeah well this IS CT Pan week. I’m a believer and his current form is fantastic. Hasn’t missed a cut since CT Pan week and crushes these par 70’s that are shorter. His approach game is one of the best in the field and he’s a fantastic driver of the golf ball. Sign me up for all the CT Pan this week.

Boy, we got this one right! I actually ended up dropping him about 5% when I found out his wife was on the bag for him this week which ended up being a mistake as he just absolutely crushed this course. He carried his own bag the whole time too. Maybe that was the key to his success?  I love Pan at these shorter courses and I’m looking forward to firing him up here again in the near future.

Overall a mediocre week with Steve Stricker and Tyler Duncan missing the cut which hurt my cash lineup. No real shares of that Brandt Snedeker 59 either. Rafa Cabrera-Bello ended up having a solid weekend but was too far back to do any real damage.

This week we are on to the Northern Trust Open at the Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey. This is the first event of the FedEx Cup Playoffs and its also the Fantasy Golf World Championship on DraftKings this weekend and DFSArmy member Kngof9ex has a spot in the field with a chance to win $250,000!!

Course Preview:

Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey, is a A.W. Tillinghast design from 1929 with a Gil Hanse redesign in 2015. The Tillinghast Championship course is a combination of the 18 best holes from the Center, West and East courses. The course is a par 71 playing at 7385 yards.

The greens are a mix of bentgrass and poa which mean that as the day goes on they will tend to get a bit bumpy. They are actually 90% poa and 10% bent. A lot of sites are reporting that its mostly bent but we have the inside info from people on course that they are actually poa and we will use poa splits for our research station. They have traditionally played pretty fast, rolling over 12 on the stimp meter. This should help out some of the poorer putters on tour as fast greens tend to neutralize good putters advantage.

The course as a hole plays under par and if we look at past tournaments held here we get a pretty good idea of how this will play out. Hunter Mahan won here in 2014 with a score of -14 with 8 guys finishing in double digits under par. While it will be by no means a birdie fest, scores are out there. In 2014 only one player had 4 rounds under 70 and that was Matt Kuchar, he also did that when he won here in 2010.

The three par 5’s all measure over 575 yards and would be considered long by our standards, so targeting good par 5 scorers will be huge this week as they play as three of the easiest 6 holes on the course.

The course has had some extensive remodeling done by architect Gil Hanse since Mahan’s win in 2014.

“Through a long-term golf course master plan, architect Gil Hanse, who has been working with Ridgewood since 1995, helped us restore the course back to its original A.W. Tillinghast roots,” said Todd Raisch, golf course superintendent at Ridgewood. “Nearly 15,000 square feet of greens were recovered, fairways were expanded approximately six acres and bunkers were reshaped back to their Golden Age design with state-of-the-art construction methods. Several fescue areas now line the course and a few new tees have been added bringing the course to 7,385 yards.”

I don’t think it will play much different than it did in 2014 as these changes appear to be aesthetic in nature but it will be interesting to see what players like Kuchar, Phil Mickelson, and others have to say in their pressers this week.

As a whole, this course looks like a ballstriker’s course and one that is going to require you to be accurate off the tee and into the greens. Length is a benefit, but not required and I’m going to look more at driving accuracy than distance this week.

Players not only need to avoid the out of bounds in the tree lined fairways, but also place their tee shots in position to attack these greens and sometimes that means flirting with those OB areas. No particular shot type is going to be at an advantage here as right to left and left to right tee shots are required.

Once a player puts himself into position in the fairway he will also need to make a superb approach shot that avoids the deep bunkers that surround a lot of the greens. He will also need to get the ball to stop on greens that slope away from him, which is not an easy thing to do.

This is an old school thinker’s course with players having to think about the approach shot when they are on the tee, and the putt when they are hitting the approach. The Tillinghast design and Gil Hanse reworking have made it so that a golfer won’t be able to overpower this course and that really evens the playing field in my opinion.

Ridgewood Country Club’s Tillinghast Championship Course is a course design worthy of a major and is a test that will truly identify a worthy winner. This is a ballstriker’s paradise and I wouldn’t be surprised to see the leaderboard littered with guys who are traditionally kill it tee to green.

What is a Chalk Donkey?

First let’s breakdown what I consider to be ‘chalk’.  Let’s look at each each price range and what is considered chalk there. (DK pricing is used for a guide)

Over 10K: >25% Anything over 25% in this range is considered chalk, and could even go down to 20%. Some weeks ownership is pretty evenly spread in this range, and some weeks one player gathers all the ownership and becomes a Chalk Donkey.

9K: >20% Again, any time over 20% of the field is on a player in this price range we would consider them a chalk donkey.

8K to 7.5K: 15%-20% This is a little trickier in this range, but I consider anyone over 15% chalk. DK has been jamming a bunch of guys in around 7.5k lately and we’ve seen guys get up there in ownership.

Below 7.5K: >10%  Players are priced here for a reason, and oftentimes one or two become what I call DFS Darlings and garner a ton of ownership While you usually have to eat this chalk in cash, you want to swerve it any chance you can in GPP’s.

One thing to remember as you construct lineups, players are ‘Chalk Donkeys’ for a reason, they are perceived to be good plays. Don’t fade the ‘Chalk Donkeys’ just because they are going to be highly owned. Very rarely does no chalk hit, and often times you find some of these ‘Chalk Donkeys’ in GPP winning lineups. Fading the chalk is strictly a leverage play, in that if that player plays poorly you are in much better shape not playing them. 

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Key Stats this Week:

In this section, I’ll cover what I feel are some of the key stats this week. We get lots of questions in slack about what to look for in the RS and here are some of the things that I’ll be focusing on this week for the Northern Trust.

Before we get into the stats this week, I wanted to provide you guys with a link to some info about Strokes Gained Data. Strokes Gained is a confusing topic and DFS Army member (And Milly Maker winner) @redkacheek has put out a great article explaining how they work better than I ever could over at his site Fantasy Golf Bag. I normally don’t link other sites but this is just too good not to share. Give it a look here! How Do Strokes Gained Stats Work?

Value Tab: 

The first thing I look at every week when I open up the RS is the Value tab and at a major it is no different. Who is popping as a value this week. This is pretty easy to find as the better the value, the darker the green box. The value tab looks at Vegas odds and our projections, versus the salary FanDuel or DraftKings have assigned to that player.

Justin Rose is  just always criminally underpriced at events like this and presents a huge value here. Jason Day has had some great course history here with finishes of 2nd, 5th, and 31st at this course in particular and really plays well in this tournament regardless of where it is. He’s on of my favorite plays this week, especially since he is priced up.

While I think that the course is not a bomb and gouge course, I think DJ and Brooks are both in play. Both are fairly accurate off the tee and hit lots of greens in regulation. Tommy Fleetwood has had a bit of a weird summer where he’s back doored a couple top tens after playing just mediocre through rounds 1-3. I’m not sure I’m on him this week, but he is one of the best ball strikers in the field.

Strokes Gained: Around the Green, Last 25

With a long par 71 and small greens, I think SG: Around the Green will be very important this week.

If we look in our Research Station at what Strokes Gained matter towards finishing position you can see that ARG is huge this week and leads to more fantasy points than any other stat. Mostly from saving pars and avoiding bogeys.

If we look over the last 25 rounds here are the leaders in this field.

Lovemark is a surprising name up here as I don’t always think of him as a solid around the green player but it makes sense when you see that he is really struggling with his approach game lately. Jason Day pops here again and his approach game has improved drastically in the last few rounds.

I’m not going to dip and play Alex Cejka but Louis Oosthuizen is interesting as a lower owned punt here. Typically shows up in these events and while he missed the cut in 2014 this appears to possibly be an interesting GPP play.

Justin Rose is going to pop in every sort of stat model. He hasn’t finished below t25 since the Houston Open…in April!

Projected Course Score:

As always, I love using projected course score to identify a player pool. I’ll look at the top ten here (11 because I love Leishman). Projected course score takes the fantasy points players gain on each type of hole on the course over the last year and sums them to find who the best course fit is.

Justin Thomas leads the way here after a solid performance at the PGA championship. He is such a good par 4 scorer, but he tops this list because of how he scores on long par 5’s. He’s number one in the field on long par 5 scoring.

Tiger Woods is priced up here this week and that should lead to lower ownership. I like him this week if he is able to club down. He should lead the field in greens in regulation and if his putter is hot he has a legit chance to win this week.

Of the rest, my favorite play this week is probably Patrick Cantlay. Great course fit and he is so good off the tee. He avoids big numbers and if he gets that putter rolling, watch out.

All of the guys in this range are live though and should be a part of your player pool.

Simulation Results:

This week, we have added a new tab to our RS and its a simulation tool. Taco used round by round strokes gained to the field data to simulate 2 rounds, a cut, and a final 2 rounds thousands of times. It uses the same methodology as the NBA sim. It’s a good way to see which guys are more of a safe option to make the cut and which guys have more GPP top 5/winning upside compared to guys around them. It looks at each golfers average strokes gained to the field and standard deviation between rounds to determine a possible range of outcomes and it randomizes based on that.

This is the top ten based on our thousands of simulations. Obviously its golf, and there will be a ton of randomness involved because crazy things can happen, but I love the simulation and how it shows us some value, especially among players that should be low owned.

Francesco Molinari appears to show some really good value here. He doesn’t have a ton of win equity but pops in the top 5 more than anyone else even Justin Thomas. I really like Molinari’s game for here and people should be off him following a PGA where even though he finished 6th, didn’t get a lot of TV time. Being priced around Justin Rose and Tommy Fleetwood helps.

Cantlay and Patrick Reed come in the top ten here as well and should be in contention this week as well at a lower price point.

Other key stats to consider this week, that I’ll get into in my breakdown of the chalk donkeys:

Driving Accuracy, SG: Tee to Green, SG: Approach, SG: Putting, Fantasy Points/Hole, Double Bogey or Worse % and Birdies Gained. I’ll specifically look at any changes in the Strokes gained categories in the last 5 as opposed to the season for players. 

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Who are this week’s DFS Chalk Donkeys?

In this section, each price range’s Chalk Donkey will be identified, and a few pivots will be offered. I use DraftKings pricing since that is where I usually play, but their pricing is usually similar to FanDuel and when a player pops as a value on one site but not another I’ll make sure to mention it.

Above 10

K:

We have a small 5 player range here this week with all the favorites and a priced up Tiger Woods. 

Jason Day: DK $10700/FD$11900 

Day is one of my favorite plays this week, and apparently is everyone elses as well as he is looking to be the highest owned golfer in this range.

Has two solid finishes here in the past with a second and a fifth the last two times the tournament has been played here and has four top 6’s in a row at this tournament in general. It should be noted that this tournament is played on a course rotation, but they are all pretty similar.

When we look at Day’s stats as a whole, the only real issue is his off the tee game, which at times has been VERY wayward, but that has also been the case for the majority of his career and it hasn’t hurt his performances here.

One thing that I love about our research station is that we can go back and look at historical performances and see how players performed. Above you can see how Day performed in 2014 and while he did gain a bit off the tee, it wasn’t fantastic and in fact his driving accuracy was pretty poor. He got super hot with the putter and made everything he looked at on the last 3 days of the tournament, which he has been known to do.

I really like Day here this week and I think I’ll be eating the cash in GPP. I’m also considering him in cash. While I don’t typically go above 10k for cash, I will this week because of the soft pricing.

The rest of the ownership in this range should go as follows:

Dustin Johnson, Tiger Woods, Justin Thomas, and Brooks Koepka. 

Wait, what? Koepka is going to be the lowest owned up here? The guy who won a major on his last start? Thats the way its looking.

Koepka has gotten a reputation as a ‘big game hunter’ and someone who doesn’t show up at these events. If thats what the rest of the DFS community is going to put out there I’ll gladly be double the field in ownership on Brooks this week.

Thats a lot of green. Brooks has just been killing it this year statistically. His Around the Green numbers cause me a bit of concern but when you consider that he hits 70% of his greens in regulation, that’s not going to be as big of a deal.

The number that really sticks out for me is the difference between his average strokes gained putting on any surface and his strokes gained putting on Poa Annua. Thats a huge split, meaning that he putts MUCH better on Poa and should be very comfortable on these greens this week.

Here’s how I’m going to split my ownership among the top this week.

  1. Jason Day – 30%
  2. Brooks Koepka 25%
  3. Justin Thomas 20%
  4. Tiger Woods 20%
  5. Dustin Johnson 5%

I’ll be plenty underweight on DJ this week, theres nothing that really sticks out about him that makes me want to be underweight other than I just like the other’s around him better.  He could come in and crush this course as he has the ability to do that anywhere anytime, but at his price and ownership he basically has to win to hit value and I’ll bet on him not doing that this week.

9K:

We get 7 players here this week with some great value and some players on heaters that are priced up but don’t present good odds value based on their salary.

There are two players here who are garnering the most buzz one who ‘ll be playing and one who I’m looking at fading. Right off the bat though I think that Webb Simpson and Brandt Snedeker are too high of priced, particularly Snedeker and I’ll have zero shares of him. You could convince me to take a piece of Webb, especially in MME, but I’d rather spread my shares out here to others.

Jordan Spieth: DK 9600/11700 

I’m a Jordan Spieth truther. Lets get that out of the way at the start. I think he’s on his way back to being a top 5 player in the OWGR. That being said, he’s projecting as the highest or 2nd highest owned player here, and I can’t quite seem to figure out why.

His odds value is second worst in this range. He’s horribly inaccurate off the tee. His approach game which was fantastic at the beginning of the year has faltered, and the only thing really saving him right now is his putter.

His iron game has just been awful recently, and its mostly because he’s putting himself in such bad positions off the tee. Even when he’s hitting fairways at a high clip though (which isn’t often) he’s still struggled with his irons and wedges over the last month.

As you can see above, he’s basically just getting it done with his putter. And we know how bad that putter was earlier in the year. If that flips (which we know it can) he can be in real big trouble.

I really hope that Spieth continues to get buzz and gets chalky, because at anything around 20% I’ll be full fading him.

Justin Rose $9900/$12000 

Not sure why Rose isn’t priced above Tiger Woods but for some reason we get him at a discount this week. All Rose has done this summer is finish in the top 25 eight times in a row and 13 times overall. He’s also climbed to 4th in the OWGR.

I know he will be chalky but here is all you need to know about Justin Rose…he’s finished in the top 10 in 54% of his events this year. 54%!!!!!

One of the best Long Par 4 scorers in the field, Rose should be able to tear this course apart. His adjusted field rank for hard courses is 97%, meaning that he beats 97% of the field on courses that are considered ‘hard’. Thats a crazy number.

I think Rose is a smash play regardless of ownership. Cash, GPP, Doesn’t matter. Fire him up in all formats. I know there has been some concern about an injury, but it didn’t stop him from getting a top 20 finish at the PGA Championship, and unless we hear something at his press conference this week, he should be a go.

I have a ton of interest in a player like Francesco Molinari, especially at depressed ownership. He’s never played at this course, but I don’t think that matters. He has been killing it everywhere but on the putting surface, yet when he wins he putts out of his gourd. (see Travelers Championship). I think his overall game is enough to make him an interesting play here. Hit the fairway, hit it close, knock it in. that’s Molinari’s game. A bit of a plodder and I think that will be what it takes to win here.

Like I stated earlier, Tommy Fleetwood is a bit of an enigma for me. He has a hard time putting four solid rounds together. Usually its one really good round and three mediocre ones. If he has a poor round on Thursday/Friday he could find himself sitting out the weekend. I want consistency here for the most part. He’s in play for GPP for me, but I’ll be underweight.

Jon Rahm will be underowned and should be given a look for GPP. He can’t putt though and this might turn into a putting contests as it has in the past.

8K:

This is my favorite range, and I think the winner actually comes from here this week. The ownership should be fairly spread out here with most garnering from 10-15% and a few coming in single digits. I one player I love here and two fades.

Paul Casey: DK $8300/FD $10700

Casey will be a fade for me this week given the current form he has coming in. Finishes of 137, 31, and 51 are NOT ideal for Paul coming into this event.

It’s clear that the issue he has been having is off the tee and around the green. His short game is always troublesome and traditionally he hits a lot of greens and it shouldn’t be too big of an issue, but at this course with the long, thick rough the combination of losing strokes off the tee and around the green could spell disaster.

At the PGA Championship we had concerns about his par 4 scoring and how he struggles on long par 4’s. Those concerns were warranted and he missed the cut badly. We have another par 4 heavy course this week and I think he could continue to struggle. Casey is actually the worst medium par 4 scorer in the field. That’s saying something.

I need consistency in my 8K players and I would rather not be worried they miss the cut. Casey use to be just that Mr. Consistency, making long strings of cuts and never really contending, but in the last few months that just hasn’t been him.

The other concern I have is that he is 16th in the FedEx Cup standings. He doesn’t need to play well here this week to move on, or next week for that matter. I’m just not sure how in it he will be if he gets off to a slow start.

Bubba Watson: DK $8000/FD $10000

Ol Bubba Watson has a pretty good course history here and I think this course is comparable to Riviera where Bubbsy won earlier this year, but I just don’t like his current form enough to back him, even at this price.

3 out of Bubba’s last 4 events have been missed cuts, and not close ones either. The one where he didn’t miss the cut was a no cut event, where he did perform well, but not outstanding by any means.

A return to Poa Annua grass may be beneficial to Bubba as it is traditionally one of his better putting surfaces, but the rest of his game is pretty much a shell of what it was earlier this year.

Bubba is still gaining strokes off the tee which is a staple of his game but the rest is pretty poor. As a guy who anecdotally you think of as a ballstriker, sure is kind of poor with his approach game.

That adjusted field rank is concerning as well. I like that we get a world class player at a discounted price, but his current form is pretty poor and I’d rather play someone else in this range, or right below who is coming in playing better.

Those are my two fades in this range, so who am I playing?

Patrick Cantlay: DK $8600/FD $9800

I have a love affair with Cantlay. I’m not afraid to admit it. He’s just so dang consistent. (except for that one tournament we told you to go all in on him and missed the cut…besides that…)

He just does everything really well. From off the tee, to greens in regulation, to birdies, to bogey avoidance. He’s even fairly aggressive on Par 5’s which is a good sign here with two REALLY long par 5’s, we may need to have golfers who aren’t afraid to get the ball up there to give themselves a chance at eagle.

My big concern, as always with Cantlay, is his putting. If you’ve ever watched him, he appears VERY uncomfortable over the ball. Traditionally he’s not a great poa putter either, which is some cause for concern. That being said, he’s had more positive putting performances over he last 15 rounds than negative.

Cantlay, similar to Bubba played well at Riviera at the Genesis Open. The difference being that Cantlay is coming in with a string of really solid performances, not missing a cut since Fort Worth (where we told you to go all in).

I love Cantlay this week and he should garner some ownership, but I think he has the game to win here and at his price, makes a solid core play. He’s also had some positive line movement, with bettors hammering his number from 40-1 down to 35-1. That could continue to drop as the week goes on as well.

The rest of this range are all playable and really interesting in terms of how you want to construct your roster.

Zach Johnson is massively priced up compared to his odds this week but he is just the definition of consistency. Two top 25 finishes in the last two times he’s played here and he’s coming in with a string of 6 top 20 finishes in a row, which includes three majors! He’s a cash game lock for me this week, and depending on how I’m building GPP lineups, I like him as a consistent core play to go with some more risky plays.

Hideki Matsuyama should be fairly popular and his odds have been hit hard as well, seeing the most movement so far this week. His short game is fantastic around the green, but he’s still not great on the putting surface. Poa is one of his better surfaces though and if he can putt, he can contend. I’m not sure how much I’ll end up on him in my builds, but he certainly can win.

Tyrell Hatton is my favorite play on Fanduel at his depressed price. He’s been top ten in two of the last three majors, and made the cut in all of them. He’ll be massively underowned on both sites given his talent level. He’s frustrating to own sometimes because he’s not the worlds best putter, but he does putt better on Poa than bermuda, which should help him here.

Patrick Reed is finally not being talked up as a potential winner here and I like him as an under the radar play. Was 9th here in 2014. Recent results have been mediocre. Strictly a gpp play.

I think that Tony Finau and Matt Kuchar are both fine plays, but most of my ownership in this range will be concentrated on ZJ, Deki, Cantlay, and Hatton.

7K:

Wow. Similar to a major, we have TONS of options down here and I think that you can build a core in this range and have really solid team. No real chalk donkeys, but lots of solid plays and a couple of fades that I’ll be employing down here this week.

Alex Noren will be virtually unowned here coming off a missed cut at the PGA Championship. He’s been struggling with his approach game, but he is one of the best putters in the world and his around the green game is solid as well. T16 at Genesis and 3rd at the Honda which are two tournaments I like as a comparison. If he can control the ball off the tee, he should be in good shape. Low owned GPP play that has all the tools to win here if he can put it together.

Gary Woodland is playing some great golf right now. Spurred on by his excellent tee to green game, if he can putt just a little bit he should find himself towards the top of the leaderboard. Was 13th here in 2014 at this course. Typically a very good player in the FedEx Cup. Excellent play in GPP and I think he is cash safe as well.

A couple weeks ago we made a late move onto Marc Leishman because he was going to be criminally underowned and it appears the same thing is going to happen again this year. Not a great poa putter, and really statistics don’t look great other than his projected course score being solid. These types of plays are what this article is about. Marc is a world class talent and can win here. I love him in GPP.

Stewart Cink is getting a ton of buzz and rightfully so as he has been playing great golf. He has two top 15’s here to boot. Anytime a player of Cink’s age is getting a ton of buzz its usually a +EV move to fade them. Struggles on long par 3’s of which there are 3 here and not a great long par 5 scorer either. Cink is a fade for me this week in cash and gpp.

Billy Horschel has just gained an absurd amount of strokes approach recently but he has been putting like he’s closing his eyes and using a left handed putter. Some guys are going to talk him up but he MC’d here in 2014 and while the last two weeks have been good, I’ll bank on him reverting back to his normal self in his approach game. Fade for me this week.

Aaron Wise is absurdly priced on Fanduel at 7100. Thats a free square. He’s actually had a positive odds drift as well.

Charles Howell III is a name we haven’t heard from in a while but is a solid poa putter and someone who I like a lot this week as an underowned play in both cash and gpp.

CT Pan was so good last week and that tee shot on 18 was unfortunate. I like him, but think this course might be a little long for him and he is getting a lot of buzz. Hasn’t really been here before. Should be fine regardless of how he does this week in terms of moving on in the FedEx Cup playoffs though a good performance would go a long way.

Its easy for me to fad Pan when you have Keegan Bradley sitting right there for the same price. Keegan crushes it tee to green and if he putts well he can crush value here. We head back to the northeast and he seems to always play better here.

Others I’m interested in: Kyle Stanley, Ian Poulter, Emiliano Grillo, Rory Sabbatini. 

Fades: Kevin Kisner, Pat Perez, Jimmy Walker, Phil Mickelson, Bryson Dechambeau. 

Below 7K 

No real chalk down here but a ton of viable options if you are trying to go stars and scrubs.

The big chalk/narrative that I’m fading is the Kevin Streelman’s grandparents are buried near here narrative. He’s been so bad lately. Not worth it for me.

Viable GPP options for me here:

Chris Kirk, Joel Dahmen, Martin Laird (my favorite), Chez Reavie, Charley Hoffman, Beau Hossler, Brian Harman (2nd favorite even though form is mediocre) Killa Keith Mitchell. 

I don’t think you need to come down here much, and if you do it might make sense to go with someone consistent like Joel Dahmen, Charley Hoffman, or Beau Hossler.

Weather:

Weather looks great for the tournament, but its going to rain Tuesday night, and Wednesday which should do a couple of things. It’s going to soften the course making it longer and its going to thicken up the rough and make it longer. It’s possible they won’t be able to cut the rough on Wednesday which could make conditions difficult on Thursday.

Soft conditions benefit the bombers, but the longer rough will hurt them because they cant afford to miss the fairway. The rain will also make the greens receptive and a little easier to hold. Make sure to check into slack tomorrow after we hear from the players after their pro am rounds so we can see what they are saying about the course as it may help us make some decisions about lineups.

Final Thoughts: 

As ownership trends start to finalize this week, I’ll post some updates in slack and make sure to join in and ask any questions. This is going to be a great week and I can’t wait to see some of those green screens and winning lineups!

Join us in Slack Chat this week and lets win some money! I’ll be there off and on all week, but will  be in helping build lineups from 9:00 to 10:00 PM CST on Wednesday night getting you guys ready to take down some huge GPP’s!

Also, give me a follow on twitter @dfsupnorth as I’ll be posting updates there as well as useful retweets leading up to this weeks event!

Do you play DFS NFL?  If so, get a head start on your friends by reading —> Position Rankings and Breakdowns for 2018