Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Fantasy Olympics 2020 Overview


Welcome to the 2020 Fantasy Olympics! We're using the same format as previous years with the same emphasis on allowing participants to spend as much or as little time as they see fit. As a benefit to all of us (myself included) here is a review of how it all works:

Fantasy Olympics consists of two main activities, a draft before the Olympics and a daily choice during the Olympics.

  • The Country Draft (Pre-Olympics) - During the month of July leading up to the Olympics, there will be a 60 country draft where each player will select between 6 and 8 countries based on the initial draft order. The countries you draft will become your roster and you score points for their medal success in events.
  • The Event Selection (During the Olympics) - During the Olympics, each player will independently choose an event for each day from a list of 3 pre-selected Olympic events. The player will score for all of their drafted countries who medal in that event.

The event selection is essentially a curated sampling of about 1/6th of the entire Tokyo Olympic Games schedule and it is recommended to take into consideration the Fantasy Olympics schedule while drafting countries.

The Details

The Country Draft:

  • There will be six rounds of the draft, everyone will select at least six countries.
  • First round draft order will be generated via random number generator.
  • It is a snake-style draft (it will reverse order for the second round).
  • With historical Olympic medal dominance from top countries (US, China, Russia, etc.), additional compensatory draft picks will be given to players who don't end up with the #1 overall draft pick.
  • No trading of draft picks between players.

The Event Selection:

  • Each day of the Olympics will have three events available to select from.
  • Each player will independently select one of the three events for that day.
  • Each player will score for any and all of their countries that medal in the event they select.
    • Gold medal Gold = 6 points
    • Silver medal Silver = 4 points
    • Bronze medal Bronze = 2 points
  • In the instance that a single country earns multiple medals in an event, only the most valuable medal will count.
Let's look at some scoring examples from past Olympics:
2012 Men's 200m (T&F) Olympic Medalists:
Gold medal   Jamaica
Silver medal   Jamaica
Bronze medal   Jamaica

In 2012, if a player drafted Jamaica and selected this event, only Usain Bolt's Gold medal (6 points) would count. No points would be scored for the additional medals for Jamaica.

Now let's say you were building a strategy around distance events on the schedule and decided to draft the countries of Kenya & Ethiopia specifically for their historically dominant distance athletes:

2016 Women's 10km (T&F) Olympic Medalists:
Gold medal   Ethiopia
Silver medal   Kenya
Bronze medal   Ethiopia
Assuming you drafted both Ethiopia/Kenya and selected this event on the schedule, you would earn a total of 10 points, Ethiopia's Gold Medal (6 points) and Kenya's Silver Medal (4 points). The Bronze medal is disregarded as Ethiopia has already scored for one medal this event (Gold).


Team Events:

The event schedule focuses on a lot of events that take place over the course of a single day. This leaves out many events that take place over the course of the Olympics like Basketball, Volleyball or Water Polo. Six of these events were also selected, all from the men's side this time:
  • Rugby Sevens
  • 3x3 Basketball
  • Field Hockey
  • Beach Volleyball
  • Baseball
  • Water Polo
These events are also scored during Fantasy Olympics and at a premium. You don't need to do anything for these events (other than draft countries that have medal winning potential) and they reward slightly more points to countries that medal:
  • Gold medal Team Gold = 10 points
  • Silver medal Team Silver = 6 points
  • Bronze medal Team Bronze = 3 points

A Note on Russia:

Some of you may remember that mid way into our Country Draft during the 2016 Fantasy Olympics news came out that Russia might be banned from the 2016 Olympics due to repeated doping violations. As a result (and this has been true for the last few years) Russia isn't going to be participating under its own flag, but Russian athletes will be competing at the Olympics under the ROC (Russian Olympic Committee) name and flag. This ultimately won't affect anything for us, when someone drafts Russia, we'll know they're talking about the ROC, and there aren't any "gotcha" moments for someone who wants to draft the Olympic athletes of Russia or any other country. So draft with confidence.

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