NFL Showdown $4M Super Bowl LIV Millionaire · KC vs SF

NFL 2019 | Week 22 | Sun, Feb 02, 2020 | SUPER_BOWL

NFL Showdown $4M Super Bowl LIV Millionaire · KC vs SF
NFL Showdown $4M Super Bowl LIV Millionaire · KC vs SF

Winning lineup

POS PLAYER OWN SAL PTS
CAPTAIN
Damien Williams
KC RB
5.4% 14700 48.45
FLEX
Patrick Mahomes
KC QB
77.6% 12600 26.34
FLEX
Tyreek Hill
KC WR
33.4% 11000 22.5
FLEX
Sammy Watkins
KC WR
26.3% 7000 14.8
FLEX
Kendrick Bourne
SF WR
15.3% 3400 6.2
FLEX
Kyle Juszczyk
SF RB
7.6% 1200 12.9

Analysis

Stack summary
This lineup won through a very specific read on how Kansas City scoring would concentrate after the field spent most of its captain allocation elsewhere. Damien Williams at captain carried only 5.4 percent captain ownership and ended up absorbing the slate’s most valuable scoring package through rushing volume, a receiving score, and the 100 yard rushing bonus. Once Williams became the multiplier, the rest of the build no longer needed to chase fringe Kansas City outcomes. Patrick Mahomes, Tyreek Hill, and Sammy Watkins covered the central Chiefs passing production while keeping the lineup attached to every major Kansas City touchdown path. The two San Francisco bring backs were where the construction separated from a more common Chiefs onslaught build. Kendrick Bourne and Kyle Juszczyk were not volume anchors. They were salary relief pieces tied to narrow touchdown and role based paths, which gave the lineup access to differentiated 4 2 construction without paying for the more duplicated San Francisco responses. Juszczyk mattered more than Bourne because he turned a low salary roster spot into a touchdown outcome while preserving access to the expensive Chiefs core. From a diagnostic angle, the lineup captured the game’s scoring concentration correctly. Kansas City supplied four of six roster spots and all three expensive flex pieces came from the same passing environment. San Francisco exposure stayed thin and selective. The lineup did not attempt to spread across too many secondary game branches. It chose one primary thesis, then used two cheap 49ers to complete it.
Uniqueness notes
The main leverage point was Damien Williams captain at 5.4 percent. That decision created immediate separation from Patrick Mahomes captain builds and from Tyreek Hill captain builds while still allowing both Mahomes and Hill in flex. This is an important distinction because the lineup did not fade Kansas City concentration. It changed where the multiplier sat. The second separator was the double cheap San Francisco bring back. Kendrick Bourne at 15.3 percent and Kyle Juszczyk at 7.6 percent gave the lineup two roster spots under 20 percent ownership, plus a captain under 10 percent. Those were not random low owned clicks. They matched a game where San Francisco produced enough secondary scoring to support two salary savers without requiring George Kittle or Raheem Mostert. The final grade lands at B. The captain choice was sharp, the ownership curve stayed healthy, and the lineup used a low salary accessory path from the losing side instead of a more duplicated star response. It stops short of A range because duplication was still heavy at 23 entries in a contest this large. The structure was good enough to win, though not rare enough to keep a larger share of first place equity.
Build details
Team split: 4-2 Build type: Low-owned running back captain with Patrick Mahomes plus two Kansas City pass catchers and two cheap San Francisco bring backs Includes QBs: Yes Primary lever: Damien Williams captain created the slate’s main leverage point through a 5.4 percent captain outcome Secondary lever: Kyle Juszczyk and Kendrick Bourne completed the 4-2 build through low-owned San Francisco salary relief instead of a more duplicated star bring back