People who are good at fantasy football are good at finding value. Those who are able to exploit the gaps between expected performance and the going rate are often provided a leg up among their respective competition.
In the real football world, quarterbacks are the saints of the gridiron. They’re the guys who get the blame for a 53-man roster’s loss and the credit for their wins. But in the fantasy community, many have come to accept that the difference in expected production between top-tier and mid-tier quarterbacks is not that huge of a gap, so waiting on a quarterback has become more common.