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Yahoo Fantasy guillotine-style leagues: In-season strategies and differences

Yahoo Fantasy guillotine-style leagues: In-season strategies and differences

Yahoo04-08-2025
We're thrilled to announce the launch of Yahoo Fantasy guillotine-style leagues presented by Liquid Death for this season. In this killer fantasy football game, fans compete for survival every week.
To get you ready to compete in guillotine-style leagues this year, we covered the basic overview of the format in our guillotine 101 article and went further into the specific draft strategies that could give you an edge.
Now, let's dive deeper into the approaches that can help you manage your team during the season and how they might differ from traditional fantasy leagues.
Continue to focus on the short-term
This was a strategy we discussed for drafts, but it also carries over into the season. The last thing you want to do is overlook your lineup in a given week because you're planning ahead.
Keep a close eye on your roster, including upcoming matchups and bye weeks that might be problematic, while also pouring over the waiver wire with that same diligence.
[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy guillotine-style football league]
Even if you have to write it down somewhere, constantly remind yourself that you don't need to finish first every week — you just have to avoid last.
And don't get caught up on trying to optimize your lineup for a late-season push until you actually advance closer to that point in the calendar.
Maintain your focus on the present and steadily chip away at a championship by surviving week after week until you're the only team left.
Be prepared for unpredictable FAB bids
If you think blind waiver bids are hard to gauge in regular redraft leagues, you better prepare yourself for the chaos that occurs when waivers process in guillotine.
Remember, the entire roster of the team that was eliminated the previous week is released into the free-agent pool. That alone creates a strange visual when you see high-end talent available if you're willing to spend up to get them.
As you can imagine, desperate managers who were close to being cut the week before often feel the pressure to use their free agent budget (FAB) to improve their squad — resulting in massive overbids for stars who just got dropped.
Meanwhile, managers with strong rosters are enticed by the idea of securing high-end talent who could aid them in their quest for a fantasy title. At worst, they feel compelled to enter a bid to ensure those stars don't get picked up by another manager at a discounted cost.
In the end, we see some of the wildest bids in both directions — with some managers significantly overpaying to guarantee access to the player they want and others being rewarded with a value pickup for simply attempting to price enforce.
No one wants to become the waiver wire sheriff, who's using their budget to police bids — but sometimes that can land you a player at a surprisingly reasonable amount in guillotine-style leagues. I say that from experience.
Throughout the season, check in on your leaguemates' rosters and remaining budgets to get a better feel for what they're thinking and how they might approach free-agent bids that week.
Don't spend your FAB budget too soon
While I'm normally very aggressive with my FAB budget in redraft leagues, it's important to keep your spending in check in the early going of a guillotine-style league.
Seeing those big names land on the waiver wire is such a different experience and leads you to want to go all-in for them, but that isn't usually the best approach.
Though it feels good to get a superstar on your roster in the moment, if it took most of your budget (you'll start the season with $1,000) to acquire them — it might leave you empty-handed later in the year when you're making the run towards a title.
The feeling of reaching the final few weeks of a guillotine season and not having any FAB to use — while your opponents are scooping up week-winning starters thanks to small bids — is a frustrating one. It's another area I've lived through and learned from.
Later in the season, the teams that get knocked out will be full of quality players, so having FAB to spend for that stretch is critical.
Finding the balance between conserving your budget for as long as you can or throwing down the necessary amount when required is where your skill as a manager comes into play.
Make adjustments on the fly
As the season goes on, you'll start to get a feel for how your team is performing week-to-week and how it compares to other rosters in the league. It's important to use this information and adapt.
If you're posting one of the best scores every time out, then you might be able to coast with the roster you drafted and sit on your FAB budget a bit longer than most. Let your opponents bid outrageous amounts on waiver wire adds, while you just tweak your lineup and stay safely out of harm's way.
However, if your team is consistently flirting with elimination, you have to figure out what your weaknesses are and make moves to get yourself out of the danger zone.
Being able to diagnose your own roster and plan accordingly is crucial to your survival in this format.
Lean into matchups later in the year
Using matchups to your advantage is something you can lean on all year long, but it's most useful at the beginning and the end of the campaign.
Early in the season, your team won't have as much high-end talent and, therefore, you'll benefit greatly if you can identify players who will overperform or underperform based on the caliber of their opponent that week.
Later in the season, when the remaining managers have built up their teams with the early-round players from the eliminated rosters, starting lineups will be filled with elite producers. Once you get to that point, you could just hope your team is good enough and see where things go, but that's not the best strategy. Instead, you should be digging into the matchups and seeing which of your stars has the cleanest path to a huge fantasy performance.
This might even lead you to sit one of your premier starters if you think another player is better positioned to find success that week.
The road to fantasy glory will eventually come down to whether you can navigate that home stretch and having a good grasp on matchups might be the element that puts you over the top.
Other strategies to consider
Don't be afraid to use your IR slot — Whenever your league has an injured reserve spot, you should use it. If there's a player on the waiver wire who could be stashed away on your IR, pick them up, move them into that position and then add someone else to your main roster. Any time your IR slot is empty, it's a wasted opportunity.
Grab insurance for your RBs — Even if you didn't draft the backup for your starting running backs, there will be opportunities to add them off the waiver wire throughout the season. Insulating your star RBs with their real-life backups can prevent your lineup from getting destroyed if an injury strikes.
Be on the lookout for injury replacements — This was a strategy I proposed for draft day, but it also works as the season goes along. Be proactive about picking up lesser-known backups who are about to see increased usage due to injuries ahead of them on the depth chart. While they might not be household names, they could be the very piece you need to make it to the following week.
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