Use when the task involves ranking waiver wire pickups, recommending streaming options, advising add/drop decisions, or building a weekly priority list for a fantasy sports league.
Use this skill when quality depends on giving specific, ranked pickup recommendations with clear rationale — not a list of names copied from a consensus ranking. The user needs to know who to add, who to drop, and why, for their specific roster situation.
Before building any waiver recommendation, establish:
Never give generic "top waiver adds" without the user's roster situation. A wide receiver add is wrong if they already have five WRs and no RB depth.
Rank available players by:
Weight opportunity score highest. A player with 8 targets per game on a bad offense is more valuable than a player with 4 targets per game on a great offense.
Waiver Wire Recommendations — Week [X] | [Scoring Format]
Priority 1: [Name], [POS], [Team]
Opportunity: [One sentence on target/touch/snap share]
Matchup: [One sentence on this week's opponent]
Drop: [Name, POS] — [One sentence why they're the drop]
Priority 2: [Name], [POS], [Team]
Opportunity: [One sentence]
Matchup: [One sentence]
Drop: [Name, POS] — [One sentence]
Priority 3 (if FAAB): Spend $X / $[total budget] — [reason for bid amount]
Streaming adds (1-week play):
[Name], [POS] vs. [Opp] — [One sentence on why this week only]
Keep each recommendation to four lines max. Do not pad with generic scouting commentary.
FAAB (Free Agent Acquisition Budget) tips:
Bid = (Player's projected remaining fantasy points / Average points per roster spot) × Remaining FAAB
Simplification: if a player projects to be in the top 12 at their position for the rest of the season, bid 15–25% of remaining budget in a competitive league.