Early DraftKings Best Ball Strategy For 2026: How To Win The Draft Before The Draft

Early DraftKings Best Ball Strategy For 2026: How To Win The Draft Before The Draft

Adam Kaufman breaks down how to approach early-offseason best ball contests on DraftKings and how the strategy differs from what you may be accustomed to on Underdog.

If the NFL is king, fantasy football is the kingdom. And, across the land, there are endless ways to invest.

Season-long. DFS. Dynasty. Guillotine. Pirate leagues.

In most formats, the job never ends. You’re managing lineups, working the waiver wire, negotiating trades like you’re Sonny Weaver Jr., demanding David G-D Putney just because you feel like it.

Unless you play best ball.

Then? Once you leave the war room, you’re done.

No trades. No waivers. No lineup decisions at all. Just sit back and let your highest scorers fill in automatically each week while you live and die with the roster you built.

You’re powerless to the process. It’s exhilarating. Just ask our resident best ball buff, Pete Overzet.

And if you’re playing early bird best ball on DraftKings, it’s something else entirely.

You may be thinking, “Okay, cool, but why are you blabbering about this in early-April? We’re still weeks from the NFL Draft, guy!”

Exactly. That’s the point.

This is the draft before the draft.

Uncertainty isn’t the problem. It’s the edge.

DraftKings Best Ball Strategy For Pre-NFL Draft Contests

You’re Drafting A Thesis, Not A Team 

In August, you’re drafting what you know.

In April, you’re drafting what you believe will happen.

Rookies don’t have teams yet. Free agents are still moving. Roles are fragile. Depth charts are placeholders. Minicamps haven’t even started, let alone training camps and preseason action. The injuries that will pile up between now and Week 1? Total mystery.

This is where you exploit conservative opponents by targeting ambiguous backfields, receivers in fluid hierarchies and quarterbacks who could gain weapons overnight.

Don’t stress over what a player is now. Consider who he may be in September and beyond.

Safety Doesn’t Win Here–Ceiling Does 

In traditional leagues, consistency matters.

Best ball is geared more toward spike weeks.

That backup running back who inherits a job in October? The rookie receiver who lands in the right offense? What about the No. 2 wideout who suddenly becomes the guy?

Those are the players who swing weeks. And weeks win tournaments.

So, if you’re choosing between someone reliable but capped versus the volatile guy with upside?

Volatility is where value lives. 

Draft The Market, Not Just The Player 

This is where early DraftKings drafts separate sharp players from the field.

With rosters still taking shape, a player’s average draft position now is softer than it will be all year.

Your job is to peer into your crystal ball and target players who will be more expensive in August. If there’s one thing my kids’ coaches drill into them, it’s the adage, “If you’re not early, you’re late.” The same applies here. Early-bird best ball is about being early on talent, early roles and early situations that haven’t happened yet.

If you’re drafting strictly at ADP, you’re not gaining leverage.

Optimal Roster Construction

Even in chaos, you still need a plan.

On DraftKings, that plan leans heavily toward wide receiver.

  • QB: 2-3
  • RB: 5-6
  • WR: 7-10
  • TE: 2-3 

Receivers provide more consistent scoring, spike weeks and fill flex spots efficiently.

Running backs? Those roles are more fragile due to injury and backfield timeshares.

The sharp approach early is to start wideout-heavy and let ball-carrier value come to you.

You’re building flexibility before bedlam.

How To Attack Early DraftKings Best Ball Drafts 

Rounds 1-3: Don’t Get Cute

You have two smart options here: WR/WR/WR or WR/WR/RB.

Alpha wide receivers are high-volume difference-makers and, barring injury, their roles aren’t disappearing anytime soon. Target the strong offenses.

From there, grab one anchor running back near the top, then hammer the receiver position and upside backs, unless you’d prefer the Zero/Fragile RB approach, which is to skip that position early and embrace volatility. This is where you lean hardest into uncertainty and where you can separate in large-field tournaments.

Build a foundation that won’t collapse with one offseason move. Avoid low-ceiling veterans and fragile circumstances. Don’t chase value for the sake of it.

Rounds 4-8: This Is The Draft

Focus on your core.

Target WR2s with WR1 upside, players one move away from a major role and early stacking opportunities

At quarterback and tight end, either pay up for an elite option or wait and build depth later.

The middle tier is where rosters stall out.

Rounds 9-14: Go With Your Gut

This is where early bird best ball gets fun.

Hammer:

  • Backup RBs with real paths to volume
  • Rookie WRs before landing spots are known
  • Year 2/3 breakout candidates
  • Players primed to climb the depth chart 

If a guy could be going a few rounds earlier after the NFL Draft, you want him now.

Late Rounds: The Wild West

At this point, depth charts are irrelevant.

You’re drafting upside, athletic traits and “what if” outcomes.

Cheap stacks. Handcuffs. Flyers tied to good offenses.

As someone who bought way too many DVDs before the streaming revolution, you’re in the bargain bin here, just hoping to stumble upon a best picture winner in a sea of Steven Seagal movies.

If your late-round picks feel safe, you’re doing it wrong.

Rookies: Don’t Overthink It

The NFL Draft commences on April 23. Fernando Mendoza is the overwhelming favorite to go first overall to the rebuilding Raiders, and from there, embrace the unknown.

You don’t need to be Matthew Freedman to get this right.

You’re not trying to predict exact landing spots. You’re contemplating what a player looks like in a good outcome and how many paths exist for him to get there.

Draft talent profiles, not situations.

It’s okay to reach for someone with game-breaking potential in case he lands a high-value role on a club with positional needs. Those same players will peak closer to the playoffs as they get more comfortable with the pro game.

Suppose you’d beaten the market last spring on mid/late round picks like Jacory Croskey-Merritt, Kyle Monangai, Oronde Gadsden or Chimere Dike? Any of those players could have propelled you to long-term success. Take some swings!

Rookies are currently mispriced. Once the NFL Draft happens, the discount is gone.

Stacking Still Wins–You’re Just Early

Correlation matters. It always does.

But, at this moment, stacking is about anticipation, not precision.

You’re looking for offenses that should improve, QBs who could gain playmakers and combinations that will be expensive later.

Again, you don’t need it to be perfect. You just need to be early.

DraftKings Best Ball Strategy vs. Underdog Best Ball Strategy 

If you’re bouncing between platforms, let’s pretend you’re comparing items on your Amazon wish list.

  • DraftKings Full PPR, softer early ADP, more flexibility (20 players)
  • Underdog Half PPR, sharper market, tighter builds (18 players)

With the full PPR (point per reception) advantage on DraftKings, volume and reception upside are paramount, whether you’re talking about receivers, tight ends or pass-catching running backs. The deeper the bench, the more speculative dart throws. Skill-position depth is the differentiator.

You’ll also receive bonuses for players who rack up 300 passing yards or 100 rush/receiving yards.

Underdog rewards more running back viability in the form of big plays and touchdown equity, which can be an advantage for mobile quarterbacks as well. But with smaller rosters, less room for error.

Quick-Hit Strategy Checklist

  • Draft variability, not certainty
  • Target ADP risers, particularly at receiver
  • Bet on talent over situation
  • Build WR-heavy, upside-driven rosters
  • Be early, not safe 

The Bottom Line

Early Bird Best Ball isn’t about being right. It’s about being early.

You’re not drafting the best team today. You’re drafting the version of a team that exists following free agency and the NFL Draft and after ADP corrects.

Win by drafting what the league is about to become.