I am confused. How is the team who owns the defense losing ground? If I have Antonio Brown and my opponent in fantasy has the Steeler defense and Brown returns a punt for a TD we both get 6 points. Not unlike if I have Eli Manning and my opponent has Victor Cruz and Eli throws a TD to Cruz we both get the 6 points for the same TD.Sandman62 wrote:IMO, what it comes down to is this: Is it really fair that anyone who owns the DST of a team whose returner runs a TD back is essentially losing ground if the individual player were also rewarded (especially evident if that individual player is playing against another NFFC team who has that DST)?
There is one regular circumstance where we all root AGAINST our own fantasy players. That is when a viable starting offensive player (Welker, Brown, Harvin, and others) is returning a kick. If your player performs the most successful play possible in real football (ie, scores a TD) it HURTS the owner who has that player. Plus, this player is at risk for injury on every return with zero chance for reward.
I cannot see why this can't be changed. How often it (a return TD) occurs isn't really the point. It does occur and more importantly. How often viable starting fantasy players return punts pretty regularly is the point. The point is if this rule were changed, fantasy owners would not have to cringe as much watching punt returns and would actually have something to root for.