Lets be real for a second can we? While the home and work fantasy football leagues are fine and dandy wouldn’t it be great to win some real cash playing fantasy football? If that’s the case then let me introduce you to Real Time Fantasy Sports. Real Time Fantasy Sports offers both seasonal and daily fantasy football leagues of all types with entry fees as low as $9.95 all the way to $1,999.95. Real Time Fantasy Sports offers a bunch of different variations of fantasy football to meet your needs from head-to-head, points and best ball. If you enjoy playing in auction leagues they have them. If you are a fan of snake drafts well they have those too. Real Time Fantasy Sports IS the place to play to fill your fantasy football needs.
This season I will be partaking in four different fantasy football leagues sponsored by Fantasy Alarm and Real Time Fantasy Sports. So lets take a look at just what type of leagues Real Time Fantasy Sports has to offer.
All-American Fantasy Football
- 12 team leagues
- Head-to-Head format
- Live scoring
- Online draft
- 4 teams make the playoffs
- Champion wins $200, 2nd place with $50
- $29.95 per team or buy three teams for $74.95
All-Pro Fantasy Football
- 12 team leagues
- Head-to-head w/divisions
- Live scoring
- Online draft
- Multiple levels of play
- Play from $49.95 to $1999.95
- 1st place payouts range from $350 to $12,000.
This is your traditional fantasy football league. The 12 team H2H that you likely play with your friends, family and co-workers so if you constantly find yourself winning those leagues and want to put your fantasy football skills to the test for a chance to win some dough then this league format is for you.
Draft Masters
- Best ball scoring
- Both PPR and SuperFlex rosters
- All you do is draft the team, RTS takes care of the rest
- No roster management
- RTS automatically sets your roster for you based on best matchup
- Drafts can be live online or slow drafts
There are three are three buy-in levels for this type of format, $19.95, $49.95 and $99.95. The top payouts for those three buy-ins are $100, $300 and $600 respectively.
This format is for those who LOVE to draft rosters but when it comes to in season management who really has the time? With the Draft Masters format all you have to do is just that. Draft your team and then let the RST computer system set your lineup each week based off the best possible matchup. With this format gone are the days you forget to set your lineup because life gets in the way.
King of the Mountain
- Pick one lineup per week
- 1 QB, 1 RB, 1 WR/TE
- Use a player once per season
- Last one left wins
- Guaranteed winner
- 1 entry $9.95, 2 for $14.95
This format is your classic elimination or survivor type league. To advance each week your team must finish among the Top 2/3s in scoring with the bottom 1/3 of teams getting eliminated each week. If at the end of the season you are the last team standing you can win the grand prize of $25,000.
These are just a taste of the leagues I will be playing in this season on Real Time Fantasy Sports but they have plenty of other league formats. I will be writing a weekly article giving you an update on how my team’s are performing as well as giving updates on what it is like to play on Real Time Fantasy Sports. If you are interested in joining them click the following link http://www.Rtsports.com/alarm, sign up and starting winning real cash this season while playing fantasy football.
Player News
Free agent Gabe Davis will visit the New York Giants.
Cut by the Jaguars after one season last week, Davis visited the 49ers on Monday. New York would be a reunion of sorts, as he played for Giants coach Brian Daboll in Buffalo. The G-Men already have several wideouts capable of stretching the field, but 26-year-old Davis could still be a decent role player in a strong offense. The problem, of course, is that the Giants profile as anything but, but rookie QB Jaxson Dart is comfortable throwing down the field.
Ravens S Ar’Darius Washington has been diagnosed with a torn achilles suffered during offseason training.
The fifth-year pro became a weekly starter for the first time last season, earning elite PFF marks in the process. He was a restricted free agent this spring but had yet to sign his $3.26 million tender. That’s a tough break, to put it mildly. Achilles timelines have shortened significantly in recent years, but Washington will probably still miss the entire 2025 campaign. The Ravens are protected in part by their first-round selection of fellow S Malaki Starks, but May is not the month you already want to be dipping into your depth. Going on 26, Washington’s career future is murky after he worked so hard to finally become a regular contributor last season.
Chiefs signed fourth-round WR Jalen Royals to a four-year contract.
Royals doesn’t have an obvious and open spot in the receiving corps to build short-term fantasy value with Xavier Worthy, Hollywood Brown, and Rashee Rice operating in the opening 11-personnel package. He may or may not play his way into WR4 duties depending on how the team feels about JuJu Smith-Schuster. Royals has plenty of talent and Brown is on a one-year deal, so there is a future where Royals is more than a bit player for the Chiefs. It likely won’t happen in his first season without injuries in front of him.
Matthew Judon said he “probably” won’t return to the Falcons in 2025.
The Falcons, of course, drafted both Jalon Walker and James Pearce in the first round. In an exclusive interview with CardPlayer.com — not to be confused with our PokerNews.com James Cook scoop a few days ago — Judon said that his sack total was down because “I dropped (into coverage) on 60 percent of the plays. It’s hard to get a pick and a sack on the same play.” Judon also told Kyle Odegard that “a couple” teams had expressed interest in him but he was in no rush to sign.
Jets released P Thomas Morstead.
Austin McNamara and Kai Kroeger will compete for the Jets punter job this year. The 39-year-old former Saint was the league’s oldest punter last season. If he wants to keep punting, he can absolutely join the tryout circuit or a competition elsewhere. But this is probably a sign that the Morstead’s 16-year career is close to an end at this point.
Lions offensive coordinator John Morton said it’s “going to be a breakout year” for Jameson Williams.
Morton said he’d never “been around someone that fast,” then quickly corrected himself to note that Jhamyr Gibbs is also that fast. Williams came on strong last year with a 58/1001/7 receiving line, but offensive coordinator praise could mean even more targets are coming. It would likely come at the expense of Amon-Ra St. Brown’s production if Williams were to truly break out, though there’s plenty for St. Brown to give and still be a top-flight fantasy wideout. It’s risky to read too much into statements like this in the offseason, but the new offensive coordinator telling you he thinks it’ll be a breakout year for Williams is certainly noteworthy.