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Creating a Fantasy
League?
Ever wanted to create a Fantasy
Football League of your own? Well your in luck, here's Soccer All
Stars advice on how to get started and what you need to survive and
keep successful!
There are around 3-4
free leagues in existence at this point in time on the Internet.
That's to my knowledge. There is no true right way to run a footy
league, so what you will read on is simply what I believe is the
best way to get things done based on experience. I've been in the
fantasy football world for well over a year now. I have worked with
the the best and done most ways of running sites. From that I will
give you my advice to making the best possible free fantasy football
site you can. I am the originator of free fantasy football leagues
of this kind, so I hope I can give you good advice and help point
you in the right direction.
Running a fantasy
football site is not an easy job. It's extremely stressful. You make
decisions that affect people's opinions, you have to write up
matches and reports, constantly and get complained to A LOT. The
first key to a good fantasy football league is to spread
out your power. The goal here is not to be the boss of something,
rather for everyone to have as much fun as possible. So before you
even get your league started, find 2-4 people that you can trust who
are interested in fantasy football, divide positions up and jobs up,
and create something similar to the Football Association, Football
League or FIFA. You can then vote on major problems and keep the
league running smoothly, working as fallbacks for one another. The
best fantasy football leagues were never run by one man. You must
remember this. If you choose a board to help with a voting system
you must stick by it. You may be sitting there and wondering that
your site was a one-man band... well is it still standing? Are you
still doing it? The chances are that you've already packed it in due
to the work load. Yeah it may have been good and good for some time
but you can't sustain the work over long periods by yourself,
remember that!
The second thing to do is to decide how you're league is going to be
run. Perhaps your Board should vote on this, if you choose to use
one. Should you use a program or simulator of some kind to generate
results? Or perhaps you should hand type matches? My advice is to
start your league up using a simulator if you can find one or make
one. Most leagues hand type now, but that's because they either have
not got access to a simulator or they've got the staff capable of
managing. The second key to a
good fantasy league is your match quality. Let the people read what
happens, don't just give out winners and losers. It's boring and
unimaginative that way. The more members you have writing quality
cards the more variety and entertainment you are giving your
managers. Seeing as they'll be putting a lot of effort into their role-playing
then they will be expected to see something back in return.
Third on your agenda
should be deciding how role-playing should take place. I've role-played
on message boards, e-mail, and newsgroups. From experience, I seem
to prefer role-playing. Role-playing is fun as you get to see
everyone's replies and feel an atmosphere for the site. However role-playing
via email is probably the most effective. They tend to be longer and
more well thought out, and it's easy to communicate that way. Add in
that you don't get distractions from other leagues or jerks, and
you've got yourself ready in this respect. Either use Address Books
to keep your role-play List together, or use a mass mailing program
like Listbot. I prefer the role-play lists, they're easier to
manage. However the only down side here is that new members and
people wanting to join can't see the quality of role-playing. You
could provide samples of it on your sites for people to view but
it's not the same kind of thing. The third
key is to decide how role-plays will take place. 99+% of
leagues use message boards, but this is perhaps the least efficient
way and poorest quality. You usually get odd and silly messages
there and sometimes questions when it's supposed to be for role-plays
only. It's your decision on how to run things but on experience I've
witnessed too much trouble on message boards for my own liking.
The
fourth key is to now get a web site started. One of your
Board members (or yourself) should have experience in a graphic
design tool and with web pages. Create something that will catch a
person's eye. Something that didn't take you 5 minutes. The better
the web page, the more interested a person will be in your fantasy
league. You must work hard on this aspect. Throwing a page together
in a couple of hours won't get you anywhere. TAKE YOUR TIME and only
release the site when it's COMPLETE! A half complete site will fall
at the first hurdle! There were 8,000 hits tallied for Soccer All
Stars in just a couple of weeks, but had no more than 20 members in
it's league since it's roots in March 1998. Football Mania managed
an astonishing 7,000+ in just 14 days! It's extremely important that
you get a top notch web site, for this is what will keep a person's
attention. Graphical tools to look out for are Adobe Photoshop,
Paint Shop Pro or Corel Draw. Whilst HTML editors, Netscape
Communicator, Dreamweaver 2 and Microsoft Frontpage are the best.
Other elements you should consider and navigation and screen
resolutions.
Now comes the fun part. The
fifth key is to come up with an original name. 'FA', 'FIFA',
'Premiership', and other copyrighted names should always be avoided.
Using these types of professional names on the web doesn't prove to
a person that you're a good league. It's also highly illegal. Come
up with an original name that will catch the person's eye. My
personal favorites (all taken, sorry) are Football Mania, Top Flight
Manager, Dream Teams, Euro League, Footiwarp and of course Soccer
All Stars. The choice is up to you for a good fantasy league name.
Once you've done this, come up with names (in advance) for all your
board members, leagues divisions, titles and cup titles. It's
important to be prepared with this stuff. Again, be original about
it. Don't call your league the Premiership or Serie A. Most fantasy
leagues seem to have 'soccer', 'league' or 'manager' somewhere in
the title... I suggest avoiding this path as it will soon become too
common.
There are many little
details that you should attend to now. Small decisions that may
affect the popularity of your site. Perhaps consider joining a
football web ring. These often result in more people visiting your
site. New leagues should consider joining one. Also
decide if your going to run your league through role-playing or just
picking winners yourself. Role-playing is probably more fun, but
you'll have less troubles in the long run without it. Typing up
match reports is really time consuming. Another thing to look
out for is original managers or not? The best role-players are
usually the original ones. Anybody can copy Alex Ferguson or Cesere
Maldini off TV.....so I suggest you try original managers. However,
again, this may result in people turning away from your league. Key
Number Six is to make all the minor decisions for your
league like the ones I've mentioned above. Ask other sites to place
a link of yours from theirs. Make exchanges and be nice. Don't worry
about people leaving/switching between sites. It's healthy for
competition and helps get the word around to attract more potential
managers. You'll also have to decide on the type of league you'll be
running. Will it be based with teams from one country, a mixture of
two or all around the world. Through experience I've found that the
English Leagues are the best to use. However Euro League have so far
proved everyone wrong with teams from all around Europe pitted into
one league. They are at the moment the most successful site in the
history of Free fantasy league football. They've got over 8,000 hits
in two months and are still growing in strength.
Ok, you've got all this
done?! Great! Well, now start accepting applications to your league.
Things will NOT work like a dream at first though.... People
applying for your site will be scarce due to the lack of recognition
at the present moment. Hopefully though you will have submitted to
join the Soccer All Stars Network right now and we will attempt to
traffic customers in your direction. This may not be the case for
you. Get a nice little friendly Tournament started before the season
(and declare a winner ASAP.) From here on it gets to be a little
easier. There are only a few things I suggest you look out for.
In order to keep your
league stable, I suggest you never give your opinion about who's
winning to your managers. Don't tell them who's winning, who's going
to win, who's the better role-player, anything. Keep it between you
and your Board (if you have one). In this way, people can't whine to
you throughout the week, and you can go on with life. From time to
time you will get the occasional jerk or jerks in your league.
Somebody who believes that he's better than you, that he should win
every time, that he's the best, etc, etc. These are the people that
will cause problems. Fire them from your league, don't take BS from
them. If they say they think you're a horrible Chairman, live with
it. Which would you rather be, a horrible Chairman or an Ex-Chairman
of your league? If you let him have his way, it will lead to the
downfall of your league. In order to please the rest of your league,
kill him off in the next news report... some fatal car crash or
something amusing. I enjoy the fact that we can be unrealistic about
this at times, simply because we feel those that try and bring us
down deserve to have it put up on the Internet for all to see. Plus
it's a great stress reliever..... :) Also being fair and reasonable
will earn your league and board with respect. This ends up usually
with more people joining via word of mouth from managers.
Never let friendship
affect your winners. People you know should not have the advantage
over people you don't. Treat them as if you don't know them. If
people kiss up to you constantly in an effort to look better, just
judge them lower...give them less a chance of winning, or ignore
them completely. These people are the kinda people who are your best
friend in front of your face, and your worst enemy behind your back.
Don't let it bother you, just completely ignore them. It's pointless
being biased... because if you do, your not only cheating your
managers who are making your league work, but also yourself.
If you follow the above
steps, your chances for having a successful league should be greatly
improved. Remember, having YourOwnName.Com only means something if
you're league has really gotten itself up. SAS, FM, Dream Teams and
TFM go back a long way. In SAS's case as far back as March
'98. They never got their own domains and were highly successful.
Don't think Geocities or Angelfire is bad, use whatever you can to
bring yourself to the top of the fantasy football world charts... we
hope that come the millennium you'll be competing against the best
for the Free Fantasy Football Website of the Year Award!
Finally I'd like to say
a few words. Soccer All Stars is here to help and assist you. We
will do all we can to help you but you must remember. When you do
the work yourself you feel proud of it, and almost attach yourself
to it. When it's your work you'll work to keep it up and better it.
When it's someone else's and it goes wrong there's a feeling of 'Oh
well'. Don't rely on others. Push yourself all the way. We'll do our
best to get customers to your site but you've also got to do a lot
of work. Inform all your internet friends, pass the word around, get
managers to pass the word around and get banners put on other sites,
not just football ones, friends too... Be sure to submit your sites
to as many search engines as possible to really give yourself that
chance. Advertising in chat rooms also helps...
Apart from all of this
just remember one thing, have fun!!!
If you don't know how to
code in HTML then you can start by visiting www.phpgoodies.com.
HTML coding is very easy to learn. I have only been online just over
a year and have created some smashing sites. Before that I knew
absolutely nothing about HTML coding or graphical stuff.
ScreamKing

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