Within a tier everyone is equal to you as far as potential impact. Once you've determined your tier ranking, then you do a secondary ranking within each tier, according to your team's need. So let's say you have your 6-9 players in the same tier. The 6th and 7th are PFs, the 8th is a SF, and #9 is a PG.
Your team desperately needs a PG first and then a PF. Your within tier ranking now goes 9PG, 6PF, 7PF and 8SF. So if everyone in that tier is available when you choose, you take #9, instead of #6. On the other hand, if, when you choose, 6, 7 and 9 are gone, you take #8. You do not drop to the next tier to get a PG or a PF, because at that point you think the SF at #8 is the BPA. You ranked him as a better player than anyone you could get in the next tier.
OK, but it still doesn't make any sense.
In that case, I would just put the players in the proper order instead of the srcrewed up one they started with.

You are still ranking by ability and need. The original ranking should be 6PG, 7PF, 8PF, 9SF instead of the screwed up mess they started with. Arranging them in the way they did originally is just counterproductive.
Maybe I am missing something, but I don't see the point or advantage.
List the players you want in order and just go down the list. Put your "group" breaks in there for trade purposes, maybe, but still put them in order.
Or is there just some basic concept here I am mising????
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