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1Training camp is almost here! Think of training camp as a big practice session where real football players get ready for the season. Because it’s coming, it’s time to prepare for fantasy football drafts.
What is fantasy football?
It’s a fun game where you pick real players to be on your pretend team. You get points when those real players do good things in real games. A draft is when you and your friends take turns picking which players you want.
The author is looking at the four main jobs (positions) in fantasy football:
The author is making rankings (putting players in order from best to worst) and tiers (grouping players of similar skill) for each of these positions, starting with the QBs.
If you’re new, here’s a beginner-friendly plan that matches the author’s thinking:
The author has made a list of the top 32 quarterbacks. As you can see from their work, each team has a representative in this top 32. That means every team gets one QB in the ranking.
[!IMPORTANT]
Important Point: The author knows that the end result come January (when the season is over) will not be so clean—not every team’s QB will stay in that neat spot. But hey, it’s mid-July, so they say “let’s save the messiness for later” and keep things simple now.
Let’s recap what the author told us:
Q1: What is a “signal-caller”?
A: It’s just another name for the quarterback—the player who signals the start of the play and throws the ball.
Q2: What do “rankings” and “tiers” mean?
A: Rankings sort players from 1st to 32nd (or however many) by expected skill. Tiers group players who are roughly equal, so you can see which ones are similar.
Q3: Why are there exactly 32 quarterbacks in the list?
A: Because there are 32 football teams, and the author included one QB from each team in the top 32.
Q4: Why does the author talk about January?
A: January is when the football season ends. The author says the clean list now won’t match reality later, but it’s okay to enjoy the simple version in July.