In an era of hot takes and confirmation bias, Boris Chen proved that the most powerful tool in fantasy sports isn't a crystal ball—it's a well-designed grid. Trust the tiers. Start your studs. And thank the anonymous data artist in New Jersey who taught us that sometimes, the answer is simply "red over blue." [End of Feature]
The internet exploded. By 2015, the "Boris Chen tiers" were no longer a secret. Reddit’s r/fantasyfootball worshipped him as a demigod. Twitter analysts debated his methodology. Even casual players began screenshotting his grids and sharing them in group chats. boris chen
If you’ve ever Googled “fantasy football rankings” on a Wednesday morning, you’ve seen his work. A cascading wall of colored rectangles—red for "must-start," blue for "flex," green for "deep sleepers"—organized not by simple point projections, but by tiers . Chen’s visualizations have become the Rosetta Stone of fantasy football, and his story is a masterclass in how one person can use design and data to deconstruct an entire industry’s anxiety. Chen, a New Jersey-based technologist with a background in computational biology and web development, never set out to be a fantasy guru. In the early 2010s, he was just another obsessive manager frustrated by the status quo. In an era of hot takes and confirmation
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In the sprawling, chaotic ecosystem of fantasy football, information is currency. Every Sunday, millions of managers drown in a tsunami of stats: targets, air yards, rushing attempts, defensive matchups, and weather forecasts. The difference between a championship trophy and a last-place punishment often comes down to one question: Who do I start? And thank the anonymous data artist in New