Biggest High Score fantasy basketball lessons at the one-quarter mark of the NBA season

Six weeks into the High Score fantasy basketball season — about one quarter of the NBA regular season — certain patterns are emerging that continue to shape how I manage my roster. The scoring format is simple but demands a balance of strategy, consistency and thoughtful decision-making throughout the week.

After tracking trends, adjusting lineups daily, and navigating injuries across multiple teams, here are the four biggest lessons I’ve taken away so far.

1. Use lineup flexibility to raise your weekly ceiling

Why lineup flexibility matters in High Score

My first takeaway is obvious, but still needs to be said. Don’t get stagnant, setting and forgetting your lineup like it’s the showtime rotisserie oven. Throughout the week, I regularly adjust my starters based on performance, matchups, and availability. I’m not trying to bench players unnecessarily — I’m simply trying to replace my lowest score with someone who has the potential to post a higher one.

The UTIL spot is central to this strategy because of its positional freedom. If my lowest score comes from a guard, I can replace it with a frontcourt player, and vice versa. This structure allows you to stay proactive, maximize your weekly total, and avoid wasting potential points on your bench.

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2. Move players interchangeably to maximize upside

A simple lineup adjustment that expands your options

To piggyback off the first takeaway, another technique that’s been especially effective is rearranging players to widen your replacement pool. The goal is to ensure your lowest score occupies the position that can be upgraded by either position group.

Here’s an example:

  • G: Tyrese Maxey — 54

  • G: Ryan Rollins — 34

  • FC: Alex Sarr — 46

  • FC: Julius Randle — 51

  • FC: Nic Claxton — 49

  • UTIL: Cade Cunningham — 53

Rollins’ 34 fantasy points is the score you want to improve. But with Cunningham sitting in UTIL, your only option is to swap in another guard.

By moving Cunningham into the G slot and shifting Rollins to UTIL, you free up the most flexible position. Now you can replace that 34 with either a guard or a frontcourt player from your bench, depending on who has the better matchup projection or opportunity. Having players with dual eligibility makes this action easier, as they can be swapped into any position in the starting lineup.

This small adjustment consistently increases your chances of upgrading your lowest-performing output and helps you squeeze more value from the schedule and lineup. 

3. Daily management isn’t necessary, but it can help

How early-week decisions shape your total score

While you can simply start your best players and rely on their predictable production, High Score rewards managers who pay attention to opportunity. Early in the week, lighter slates create windows where your top players might not be on the floor, and that’s where your bench becomes useful.

If a role player draws a favorable matchup, gets a spot start, or sees an uptick in minutes due to injuries, that early-week opportunity can produce a valuable spike in performance. This could be a chance to mine the waiver wire to start the week or going with an already rostered player you might typically debate starting. 

Banking one of those surprise performances before your stars play later in the week gives you a better foundation for your total score. Also, if you’re losing heading into Sunday, you may have to bench an underperforming star with no games left to sub in another option to achieve the win. It doesn’t always work out, but it gives you a chance at a clutch, outlier performance.

Your stars will provide stability. Your bench provides variance — and variance is often how you create separation in High Score.

4. Roster percentage shouldn’t dictate drop decisions

Don’t be afraid to cut ties

If a player consistently scores under 30 fantasy points per game and isn’t showing signs of improvement, it becomes difficult to justify the roster spot — even if the name is significant. Jakob Poeltl, Matas Buzelis and Devin Vassell are all over 88% rostered, and fall into the highly-rostered underachieving bucket that fantasy managers can safely drop for a better waiver option.

From an injury perspective, the limited bench space often presents some tough business decisions. For example, my IL spots are tied up, and Zion Williamson’s latest adductor injury will sideline him for at least three weeks (and likely more). I need to keep pace with my league mates, so I’m likely going to drop him, since there are viable replacement-level options in a default 10-team High Score waiver pool. Cutting a well-known player is uncomfortable, but the goal here is to maximize points week over week — not to hold players based on their draft value.

High Score demands that you react to what players are doing right now, not what you hoped they’d be.

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