Sunday, March 08, 2009
Alex Rodriguez Surgery to Cost at Least 10 weeks
I can not be the only one getting the feeling the Yankees and Alex Rodriguez are not on the same page. After a couple days of insisting that A-Rod would attempt rest and rehab before pursuing surgery as an option, it turns out that the initial reports attributed to A-Rod's brother were very accurate. On Monday A-Rod will have arthroscopic hip surgery. Reports are that A-Rod will miss six to nine weeks and will require further surgery after the season.
I do not usually report on individual injuries like this but this is something that every fantasy owner needs to know. A-Rod will not miss just six to nine weeks. After this rehab period A-Rod will probably have a couple weeks of spring training in the minor leagues before re-joining the New York Yankees. As a renowned wuss, Rodriguez can be expected to come back from this very slowly. The problem is not being fixed, it is being patched. He will still have to play through pain. He could very well make the problem worse. Then he will endure the more serious version of the surgery at the end of the season.
Any fantasy owner with a serious chance at winning this season should avoid playing even 50 percent of A-Rod's usual cost. In re-draft leagues I would not bother selecting A-Rod before the 12th round and he is certain to be taken by a fearless (or stupid) owner before that point. I was leaning toward predicting a bad season for A-Rod because of the pressure on him to perform under the close eye of the media while enduring the boos of fans. He has responded poorly to this in the past and it will be increased by a factor of at least ten this season. Add "playing through pain" to the list of obstacles placed in the path of A-Rod having a strong season. This is the recipe for disaster. Even those owners who are choosing to re-build this season should be wary of bidding on A-Rod as next season will also begin slowly as he'll still be rehabing from surgery. If it is enough to keep a gamers like Chase Utley, and Mike Lowell from making opening day, surely Alex Rodriguez can't be expected to do any better.
Friday, March 06, 2009
Auction Keeper League Strategy
What is the best strategy to follow in Auction Keeper Leagues if...
The line above is usually followed by phrases such as "if my keepers really suck" or "I only have a few keepers but they are really good" and even "if all the good players are kept."
It is impossible to answer those questions well without a ton of information about the league, the owners, the rules, and rosters. I thought it might prove useful to some to share my own approach. By necessity (and enjoyment factors) I vary the plan a bit in every league. I think it is really boring to have multiple teams with duplicate rosters. I will not present this as a infallible plan. But this should give some of you a way to go and others some ideas to implement with your own strategies.
My Philosophy
KRS-ONE isn't the only one who thinks very deeply. After years of flipping and flopping I finally decided a few years ago that rebuilding in fantasy baseball is for losers. We are not running the Pittsburgh Pirates and unless you're in a very unique league there is no team with a New York Yankees advantage. Go for it. Every season. Rather than try to win every other year (I've seen some owners re-build for multiple years --sick) I try to finish first every year. If I fail to win a championship and finish second and third instead of rebuilding for the following year so be it. This doesn't mean I won't make a trade or pick up a player with the future in mind. You can very successfully do both.
Which Players to Keep
First and foremost, if you want to win do not keep players (aside from minor leaguers of course) based on what they might do in two or three years. Every player you protect should be a contributor to your success right now. While it is important to take a few chances on draft day, your protected list should be as full of as many certainties as possible. If you have young players with future value who you cannot stash in reserve or on a farm roster you must trade them for some present day value or future value that you can stash. If you are as obsessed with young players as I am this can be difficult but you get used to it when it results in winning more often.
The most valuable keepers are usually pitchers. It is much easier to replace the under priced hitter you put back into the available player pool than the under priced starter or closer. I like to keep as many under priced pitchers as possible so I can concentrate on hitters come draft day. I often attempt to trade my borderline hitting keepers for cheap pitching. Some years it works and others it does not. This year in my AL-only I tried to trade for a cheap Kevin Slowey and Phil Hughes.
Set Your Goals High
I often hear owners mention they set goals of finishing third in every category. That's sweet. I set a goal of finishing first in every category. Do I make it? Not usually but I've been damned close. Setting my goals high forces me to draft players with upside potential. This has the extra added benefit of building up my keeper list. It also gives me a little more room to screw up and still finish third in every category.
Building a Strong Roster
I use what is often referred to as a Stars & Scrubs strategy. However, the way I do it it is more of a Stars & Future Stars strategy. I plot out my budget well ahead of time and experiment by plugging various names into the different slots. If I have a very strong keeper list I'll take fewer risks but reach for my biggest upside sleepers. When I have a weaker roster I draft more sleepers but try to limit the downside. John Smoltz has a lot of upside if healthy but has very little downside. Russell Branyan has huge upside but also a pretty miserable downside. I usually split my budgets into 70 percent hitting and 30 percent for pitching. I split my roster into the following fairly obvious groups:
Catchers - I allocate enough here to buy one of the better catchers available. My second catcher will be a younger catcher with offensive potential. A lot of teams are willing to live with whatever two bucks will get them at the catcher position. I would prefer my one dollar guys to be corners and outfielders.
Corner Infielders - I like to have at least one stud at this position, if that stud is a inexpensive keeper all the better. In my optimum situation I end up with a stud, a steady vet and a young player with upside. Corners are usually among the most productive players on your team. This is not the place to be stingy.
Middle Infielders - I like to have a strong middle infield but if money is tight this is the spot I cut dollars from. I always seem to find cheap and productive middle infielders in the end game. I'm okay with drafting the good side of platoons and talented youngsters with bench roles here. Speed is especially easy to draft in the middle infield.
Outfielders - I do not feel comfortable unless I have two stud outfielders. When I have those two studs I grow very willing to take chances in my outfield. The outfield is a good place to do some gambling with your roster because mistakes are fairly easy to overcome. You can also find the widest variety of stats in the outfield.
Utility - When my utility does not need to be a qualifying Designated Hitter (as in a lot of AL-only leagues) I try to match positions with the biggest gamble I'm taking with the rest of my roster. This allows me to more easily replace that player if the gamble fails. I very rarely allocate more than a few dollars to this spot on my roster.
Starting Pitchers - I know a lot of fantasy baseball veterans who refuse to draft more than five starting pitchers. This is usually done as precaution against adding too many bad innings (which is difficult to overcome). I refuse to limit myself to a certain number of starters. I like to have at least five and actually prefer to have seven. This helps me be more competitive in the wins category. To pull this off you have to be careful not to bid on interchangeable fifth starters that appear at the end of a lot of major league rotations.
I usually look for pitchers with the following criterion (but there are always exceptions):
- At least half a season of major league experience in the books, but the more the better.
- A career K9 of 7.00 or higher
- A career Ground Ball rate of at least 40 percent
- Pitching in front of a strong defensive team (which does not require the team to actually be good)
- A good minor league resume (majors is obviously better but also more expensive)
Drafting future closers has usually been about drafting relievers with dominating stuff in bullpens with shakey, old, or injury-prone closers.
How to Stretch Your Budget Further
Never spend your available cash on mediocrities.. This is the kiss of death to fantasy teams. I buy the best talents available within my budgetary limits. I always place talent above roles. I would prefer to spend one dollar on talented Orioles starter David Pauley fighting for a job than on Jarrod Washburn who has a spot gift wrapped for him.
For every full price David Wright or CC Sabathia on my roster I plan to have a one dollar player. This will make it seem as if you have a lot more money to spend on the middle of your roster. If you find more bargains use any extra money on the middle of your roster rather than eliminating the one dollar spots.
Not every player needs to be an immediate everyday hitter like left fielder Ryan Braun is for the Milwaukee Brewers. For example, a player such as shortstop Emmanuel Burriss may not have a full-time role for the San Francisco Giants as the 2009 season begins but he is still likely to make a significant contribution to the fantasy teams that draft him. If he receives just 250 at bats he could steal 25 bases. At the right price a part-time player who contributes is worth rostering.
If you pay full price for a star batter be certain that said player will contribute in every statistical category. If you pay $35 dollars for a player you don't want him hurting your batting average. This is not to say that every player must contribute to every category. I'll roster a .250 hitter or two I just demand a discount.
Some Quick Auction Tips
The following bullet points are taken from my RotoExperts article "Dominating the Auction Draft" which is available for free as part of the RotoExperts Draft Kit if you register (again for free) as a member of the site. The article is a very good compliment to this one.
- Vary your bidding style between frequent small increments and sudden big jumps. This will keep your rivals off balance and unable to anticipate when you are truly interested in a player.
- Bid on as many players as possible. This will make it difficult for your rivals to discern your ultimate strategy.
- You will hear that you should never nominate players you really want and you will hear that you should never nominate players that you do not want. Ignore these people and mix it up.
- Hold off nominating your sleepers until most of the money is off the board. But do it before you run out of money yourself.
- Follow your instincts. There is nothing worse than having regrets after a draft.
- Draft players with upside potential, these are the players that have huge breakouts.
- It is okay to pay for saves, just do not overpay.
- Reserve some money and roster spots for the end game, there are always bargains at the end of an auction.
- Watch the other owners as much as possible, everyone has a tell.
- You are not running the Pittsburgh Pirates, there is no need to waste a whole season in re-building mode – just go for it.
- Do not overpay for rookies, especially pitchers, no matter how highly touted.
- However, do not avoid rookies altogether, a large percentage of breakout seasons come from rookies.
- With everyday players, it can be beneficial to draft a mediocre player if he has guaranteed playing time. The more at-bats you can roster the better you will do in Runs and RBI.
- Avoid starting pitchers without quality skills. They collect too many innings and drag down your ERA and WHIP.
- The point of all this is to have fun, so do it.
By TwitterButtons.com
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Alex Rodriguez to Have Hip Surgery
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Wednesday, March 04, 2009
The 2009 All Sleeper Teams
The Day Dreamers (not sleeping but lacking the proper respect) - This squad is composed of lite sleepers that are more likely to be bargains in shallower mixed leagues. In deeper leagues you might laugh at the notion of these players being sleepers.
C Jarrod Saltalamaccia, Texas Rangers - Increased playing time
C Jeff Clement, Seattle Mariners - Increased playing time, gaining position flexibility (C, 1B, DH)
1B Kendry Morales, Los Angeles Angels - Full time job, blistering hot in fall/winter leagues
3B Alex Gordon, Kansas City Royals - Improving skills, better lineup, post-hype
CR Chris Davis, Texas Rangers - Amazing 2008 preview, off the chart projections
2B Mark Ellis, Oakland Athletics - Better BABIP luck, better lineup
SS Khalil Greene, St. Louis Cardinals - Out of Petco Field Hell, better lineup
MI Bobby Crosby, Oakland Athletics - Healthy, new position flexibility, new batting coach
OF Nelson Cruz, Texas Rangers - Improving skills, new opportunity, great lineup OF Ryan Spilborghs, Colorado Rockies - Increased playing time, improving skills
OF Dan Murphy, New York Mets - Increased playing time
OF Shin-Soo Choo, Cleveland Indians - Increased playing time, improving skills
OF Jeff Francoeur, Atlanta Braves - Can't get worse, improved focus, he'll be a lot cheaper
UTL Julio Lugo, Boston Red Sox - Could still start but will play often either way, healthy
SP Joba Chamberlain, New York Yankees - Only health keeps him out of top ten starters SP Josh Johnson, Florida Marlins - True Ace stuff, underrated team, finally healthy
SP Manny Parra, Milwaukee Brewers - Groundball Pitcher with strikeouts = Awesome
SP Wandy Rodriguez, Houston Astros - Improving skills, good stuff
SP Kevin Slowey, Minnesota Twins - improving skills, improved defense
MR Grant Balfour, Tampa Bay Rays - Dominating stuff, no clear closer
MR Octavio Dotel, Chicago White Sox - Closer stuff behind the declining Bobby Jenks
MR Ryan Franklin, St. Louis Cardinals - Experienced closer behind youthful save candidates
CL Frank Francisco, Texas Rangers - Healthy, the forgotten closer, not throwing chairs
The Cat-Nappers (A loud noise would wake them in a hurry) - This group consists of players that are definitely underrated, unhyped, or unexperienced. These are the players you'll want in deeper leagues.
C John Baker, Florida Marlins - Late bloomer, OBP skills, underrated team
C Brayan Pena, Kansas City Royals - The best skills at his position, underrated team
1B Chris Duncan, St. Louis Cardinals - Healthy, Mad Power, The Genius
3B Edwin Encarnacion, Cincinnati Reds - Better luck, underrated power
CR Russell Branyan, Seattle Mariners - Huge opportunity, 40 homer upside
2B Emmanuel Burriss, San Francisco Giants - batting average and steals what more do you need? SS Cesar Izturis, Baltimore Orioles - 30 steals possible if you can live with .260 average
MI Eugenio Velez, San Francisco Giants - a little old for his levels but still has underrated skills, 40 steal upside, should get steals even from the bench
OF Brett Gardner, New York Yankees - Could be the next Kenny Lofton, the best CF option
OF Carlos Gonzalez, Colorado Rockies - Nice tools, great park, opportunity
OF Josh Anderson, Atlanta Braves - does whatever Bourne, Tavares, and Pierre can do, only better
OF Jerry Owens, Chicago White Sox - This is not the year to pay for steals, 40 steal upside
OF Josh Phelps, San Francisco Giants - should be 1B/OF reserve, nice power upside
UTL Jonny Gomes, Cincinnati Reds - Could be the next David Ortiz, great power, needs an opportunity
SP Andrew Miller, Florida Marlins - Was better than he looked last season
SP David Huff, Cleveland Indians - Strikeouts and groundballs, gotta love it
SP Brett Cecil, Toronto Blue Jays - Top prospect with a rotation shot
SP Anthony Reyes, Cleveland Indians - If healthy he can be a frontline starter
SP Andy Sonnanstine, Tampa Bay Rays - If the K9 comes up a smidge he could win big
MR Jeremy Affeldt, San Francisco Giants - improving skills, could see saves
MR Garrett Mock, Washington Nationals - closer stuff behind shaky Hanrahan
MR Jose Mijares, Minnesota Twins - Closer stuff, improving role
CL J.J. Putz, New York Mets - The obvious choice if the rumors about K-Rod being injured are true
Nearly Comatose (No Explanation Necessary) - This team is loaded with long shots and comebacks. These are the high risk, high reward players. You don't want to own more than one or two of these players because the potential for failure is very high.
C Michael Barrett, Toronto Blue Jays - If healthy he could be a top ten catcher
C Nick Hundley, San Diego Padres - Big time power but he couldn't hit for average in the minors
1B Nick Johnson, Washington Nationals - If healthy he hits for average and power
3B Eric Chavez, Oakland Athletics - He appears to be healthy, 2002: .275, 34 Homeruns
CR Brett Wallace, St. Louis Cardinals - He's young but can seriously hit, next Pujols
2B Anderson Hernandez, Washington Nationals - failed prospect getting an opportunity
SS Jerry Hairston, Cincinnati Reds - Has a shot at the fulltime shortstop job
MI Alberto Callaspo, Kansas City Royals - Former prospect could be starting at second
OF Endy Chavez, Seattle Mariners - Defense could win him 400 at-bats
OF Andruw Jones, Texas Rangers - Only has to beat out Marlon Byrd
OF John Mayberry Jr., Philadelphia Phillies - Power hitter could sneak his way into a platoon
OF Jody Gerut, San Diego Padres - Has a shot to be the starting center fielder
OF Barry Bonds, Free Agent - He wants to come back
UTL Travis Hafner, Cleveland Indians - he needs to start hot or he'll be replaced by Matt LaPorta
SP Barry Zito, San Francisco Giants - After the all-star break he resembled the old Zito
SP John Smoltz, Boston Red Sox - He should be back in May. Iron Will and Huge Heart
SP Chris Carpenter, St. Louis Cardinals - So far so good, Ace or closer if healthy
SP Mark Prior, San Diego Padres - You never know...
SP Curt Schilling, Free Agent - Would return to a contender
Diamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
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The Fantasy Baseball Search Expert League
My biggest weakness in Fantasy Baseball is probably Head-to-Head Leagues. I have been in a few but have only one Head-to-Head Championship on my record. I've attributed this to balanced lineups that don't dominate any particular categories. Thus in this draft I decided to go for high OBP power hitters, and high strikeout starters and essentially dump steals and saves. I didn't do exactly as planned but I'm okay with the results.
The Results:
Player | Team | Acquired | |
1B | Mark Teixeira | NYY | R1 P10 |
1B | Lance Berkman | HOU | R2 P3 |
1B | Kevin Youkilis | BOS | R4 P3 |
1B | Jason Giambi | OAK | R20 P3 |
2B | Brian Roberts | BAL | R3 P10 |
2B | Jose Lopez | SEA | R11 P10 |
2B | Mark DeRosa | CLE | R15 P10 |
3B | Edwin Encarnacion | CIN | R12 P3 |
SS | Derek Jeter | NYY | R5 P10 |
C | Jorge Posada | NYY | R16 P3 |
C | John Baker | FLA | R26 P3 |
OF | Magglio Ordonez | DET | R6 P3 |
OF | Johnny Damon | NYY | R7 P10 |
OF | Andre Ethier | LA | R10 P3 |
OF | Brett Gardner | NYY | R22 P3 |
OF | Juan Pierre | LA | R27 P10 |
DH | Kendry Morales | ANA | R24 P3 |
SP | Felix Hernandez | SEA | R8 P3 |
SP | Jon Lester | BOS | R9 P10 |
SP | Josh Johnson | FLA | R13 P10 |
SP | Clayton Kershaw | LA | R17 P10 |
SP | Justin Duchscherer | OAK | R18 P3 |
SP | Chris Carpenter | STL | R19 P10 |
SP | David Huff | CLE | R23 P10 |
SP | Anibal Sanchez | FLA | R25 P10 |
RP | Joey Devine | OAK | R14 P3 |
RP | Kevin Gregg | CHC | R21 P10 |
Diamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
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Tuesday, March 03, 2009
Computer Problems and Expert Draft
From Todd Farino:
Hey everyone. Check out our expert draft coverage tonight at 9:00pm EST on Blog Talk Radio. Ryan, RC, and I will discuss our draft and have some fun while making our picks. The site is to listen www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru and follow the draft at www.mockdraftcentral.com.
Diamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
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Monday, February 23, 2009
SportsJudge - Fantasy Dispute Resolution
In today’s high paced, intensely competitive world, the constant strive for professionalism in fantasy sports is hardly uncommon. Despite this, no one is perfect, and problems do occur. With that in mind, SportsJudge prides itself on providing the most avid and intense fantasy gamers with a dispute resolution method to make sure each and every problem eventually ends with a proper solution.
SportsJudge.com brings an unsurpassed level of experience and expertise to the competitive world of fantasy sports. SportsJudge has quickly become recognized as a leading authority and resource by those who take their fantasy sports seriously.
Diamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
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Sleeper Alert: Daniel Murphy
New York Mets manager Jerry Manuel recently announced that rather than platoon INF/OF Fernando Tatis with Daniel Murphy in left field, he would be using Tatis in a platoon with right fielder Ryan Church.
From MLB.com:
"I don't want him to get into a strictly platoon situation," Manuel said of Murphy, who produced four hits in 10 at-bats off lefties last year. "I think he's a little better player than that. Also, with Church being left-handed, I kind of see Murphy being a better hitter right now."
Murphy is a natural third baseman in an organization with a young superstar at the position. The Mets had Murphy working out at second base in the Arizona Fall League. He shows the potential to be a solid contributor at the position. That the Mets did not manage to trade incumbent second baseman Luis Castillo to clear the position is the reason Murphy will spend 2009 in left field.
Murphy is an excellent contact hitter who had strong line drive rates. He does not draw a ton of walks but he draws enough to maintain a decent on-base percentage. He should regularly bat around .300 and may challenge for batting titles if his skills continue to develop. His homerun power is middling at best. At this point in his development 15 or so homers is about the most you can expect. Murphy has decent speed and is a fair base stealer. In full-time at-bats ten stolen bases is very possible with 15-20 not outside the realm of possibilities.
At three minor league levels, Murphy batted .305/.363/.481 with four homeruns in 131 at-bats against lefties and .320/.385/.502 with nine homeruns in 241 at-bats against right-handers. This seems to indicate that Manuel knows what he is talking about concerning Murphy's ability.
Murphy looks like a solid addition in NL-only leagues and a useful player in shallower mixed leagues. I would not hesitate to add him to my rosters
More on Dan Murphy:
Minor League Splits
The Baseball Cube
First Inning
FanGraphs
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Saturday, February 21, 2009
Depth Charts and Updated Rosters
MLB Depth Charts
NL EAST
* ATLANTA BRAVES
* FLORIDA MARLINS
* NEW YORK METS
* PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
* WASHINGTON NATIONALS
NL CENTRAL
* CHICAGO CUBS
* CINCINNATI REDS
* HOUSTON ASTROS
* MILWAUKEE BREWERS
* PITTSBURGH PIRATES
* ST. LOUIS CARDINALS
NL WEST
* ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS
* COLORADO ROCKIES
* LOS ANGELES DODGERS
* SAN DIEGO PADRES
* SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
AL EAST
* BALTIMORE ORIOLES
* BOSTON RED SOX
* NEW YORK YANKEES
* TAMPA BAY RAYS
* TORONTO BLUE JAYS
AL CENTRAL
* CHICAGO WHITE SOX
* CLEVELAND INDIANS
* DETROIT TIGERS
* KANSAS CITY ROYALS
* MINNESOTA TWINS
AL WEST
* LOS ANGELES ANGELS
* OAKLAND ATHLETICS
* SEATTLE MARINERS
* TEXAS RANGERS
Diamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
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Friday, February 20, 2009
2009 Fantasy Baseball Roundtable - Week Three
Name the player who is the worst value for his average draft position, within the first three rounds.
See how this group of experts answered
Patrick DiCaprio: Fantasy Pros 911
Jon Williams: RotoExperts
Tim Dierkes: RotoAuthority
Rudy Gamble: Razzball
Jason Collette: Fanball.com
Brett Greenfield: FantasyPhenoms.com
Adam Ronis: New York Newsday
Derek Carty: The Hardball Times
Patrick Cain: Albany Times Union
Commish:Fantasy Baseball Geeks
Diamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
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Saturday, February 14, 2009
Saturday Morning Links
Alex Rodriguez donated a few million to the University of Miami and they have named a park after him -- Alex Rodriguez Park at Mark Light Field (that was the best they could do???). I feel for A-Rod, despite my belief that he is still telling a few white lies about his steroid use. Coincidently (or maybe not so much) Selena Roberts' book about A-Rod has had its publishing schedule moved up. The book will now be out on April 14th. The worst part of this whole mess in my opinion has been the holier-than-thou act that Bud Selig has been perpetrating. Does anyone truly believe that a list of 104 steroid users did the rounds of backrooms in baseball and that Selig never saw it? Not I.
Houston Chronicle Reports problems with Manager Cecil Cooper
This is interesting.
Cecil Cooper. He was some kind of uptight at the beginning of last season and struggled both with the on-the-field and clubhouse duties of a manager. He seemed so over his head at one point that Alyson Footer telephoned Phil Garner and said, ''You need to talk to Coop.'' He did things that lost the clubhouse, and there are players he may never get back in terms of respect. On the other hand, he was the manager filling out the lineup cards and calling the shots when the Astros had that 47-27 run between June 20 and September 11. He calmed down and got comfortable. This is his second time around, and things should be easier. But he's in the last year of his contract and it's telling that the Astros didn't extend him. This is a stupid decision. Even if the Astros don't think he'll be managing in 2010, they should have signed him for 2010 to remove his job security as an issue.Skip Schumaker's switch to second base
Tony LaRussa's latest genius plan to move outfielder Skip Schumaker to second base appears to have driven Dan of Viva El Birdos off the deep end.
1B Yadier Molina: There are few late-inning surprises I enjoy more than Yadi playing first base, because he plays it exactly like he catches: he gets his body in front of everything, and he doesn't dive after balls so much as getting into a crouch and sliding toward them. He'll provide an excellent competitive advantage when Motte is trying to pick a fastball hitter off of first base.Laying Down the Law
The guys at Drunk Jays Fans point out an article written by Keith Law that combats the idea that steroid users benefit significantly by their use. I particularly enjoyed this bit:
Marc (Manchester, NH): Keith, I know there is no analytical way to discern how many homers were added to Bonds' totals through PED's. But, is it reasonable to assume that given the spike in his HR totals at an advanced age, maybe 10-15 HR/year were added to his totals?Top Five Reasons to Sign Joe Crede
Keith Law: I wouldn't argue against someone saying he had 10-15 extra in 2001. Where the argument breaks down is in trying to explain that year as an outlier in a career that is in and of itself an outlier. Did he just get better stuff in that year? He was probably using the same stuff in 2002 that he did in 2001, right? Doesn't that tell you we should be looking for another explanation for the 2001 spike?
John channels John Cusack as he comes up with the top five reasons the Twins should sign third baseman Joe Crede. This is a great read if you're a High Fidelity fan or even just like reading about the Twins.
Screw Bud Selig
Once again the guys at Drunk Jays Fans have managed to put into words exactly the way I feel about Bud Selig.
It was fear of killing the golden goose that kept Selig, the owners, management, the media and the rest of the baseball world from digging deep into and asking hard questions about the drug culture pervaded the game. Now they want to punish players retroactively for something they once condoned?
Diamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
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Friday, February 13, 2009
Fantasy Baseball Magazines
UPDATE: The Rotoman Fantasy Baseball Guide is now available in bookstores. It has a cover price of $7.99.
Information on the 2009 fantasy baseball magazines has been very scarce. I thought I could put together a list of the expected magazines and their release dates but it has been much more difficult than expected. I'm going to share my work with you and hopefully you'll reciprocate by sharing the information you get with me. I'll keep updating this post with information as I get it.
Magazine Title | Date | Price |
Rotowire 2009 Fantasy Baseball Guide | 15-Feb | $8.99 |
The Fantasy Baseball Guide | ||
2009 Fantasy Baseball Annual Guide | 15-Jan | $7.99 |
2009 Fantasy Baseball Just Cheat Sheets | 11-Feb | $7.99 |
Fantasy Baseball Index | 1-Feb | $7.00 |
Sporting News Fantasy Baseball Owners Manual | ||
Fantasy Sports (FW Publications) | ||
MLB Yearbook & Fantasy Guide | ||
Sporting News Fantasy Baseball Yearbook | Now | $7.99 |
Fantasy Baseball Roundtable - Week Two
What sabermetric or alternative statistic (e.g., Ground Ball ratio, Contact Rate, etc.) do you find to be highly over or undervalued for fantasy baseball player valuation purposes
Check out the answers provided by these Fantasy Baseball Experts:
Patrick DiCaprio: Fantasy Pros 911
Jon Williams: RotoExperts
Tim Dierkes: RotoAuthority
Rudy Gamble: Razzball
Jason Collette: Fanball.com
Brett Greenfield: FantasyPhenoms.com
Adam Ronis: New York Newsday
Derek Carty: The Hardball Times
Patrick Cain: Albany Times UnionDiamond Draft - The Official Draft Software of Advanced Fantasy Baseball
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams
Diamond Draft - Advanced Fantasy Baseball Software
I first received the Diamond Draft software a few months ago. RotoExperts.com had just purchased the rights to Diamond Draft and logically wanted their writers to become familiar with the new product. I have to say that my first impression was that it was lacking graphically. There are not many fancy visual effects. But over the course of the last three months I have used it for three different leagues -- a 20-team mixed 5x5 draft, an AL-only 5x5 auction, and an NL-only 5x5 auction. Diamond Draft has been a cinch to use and made the work of the draft and auctions a lot simpler.
Diamond Draft has proven to be an immensely valuable pre-draft tool. By entering the parameters of your league and any keepers there may be you eliminate the need to calculate inflation and cross names off of your draft list. Diamond Draft also provides you with three years of stats for every player and an extensive list of minor leaguers for those leagues that have farm systems. Every player has a projection (updated weekly) that covers includes every statistic from singles, doubles, and triples to Total Bases, OPS, and sacrifice flies. If you don't like a projection just change it. You can also highlight players in various colors to assist with your draft strategy. So, if you were using the LIMA Plan you could highlight LIMA pitchers in magenta (or whichever color you like), sleepers in blue, injury risks in red and so forth. Check out this video on using the edit screen. There is a video for almost every function available.
I have primarily used pen and paper for the 20-something years I have been involved in fantasy sports. I think it is vital to track every team's roster and budget as well as the in-draft inflation. Doing this by hand has gotten much easier over the years but it is a bitch to do. Diamond Draft handles all of this which gives you more time to look your rivals in the eye (an underrated necessity of Advanced Fantasy Baseball).
I have used a few different brands in the past and while I have nothing bad to say about them I have always gone back to my pen and paper method. One of the main reasons is I hate spending $60, $75, and even $100 dollars on software only to need to spend close to the same amount again the following season. Diamond Draft offers most of the functionality of those packages for just $34.95.
- Drag and Drop Functionality
- League Overview Screen
- Position Overview Screen
- Team View Screen
- Points Total Screen
- Depth Chart Screens
- Position Eligibility Screen
- View/Edit Screens
- Assign Players to a team from anywhere in the program
- Warning Signs (overbid, position eligibility, all players drafted)
- Multiple Leagues
- Select from multiple databases
- Printable Reports
- Laptop Battery Monitor
- Screen Captures
- In-program Calculator
- An Amazing Help Screen
- Add Players to the Database
- An amazing array of sound effects (including the ever popular crickets)
- Add your own sound clips
- Search Function
- Select from various player pools (by league, undrafted, minor leaguers, MLB plus Free Agents
- Choose which stats to display
- Add Players to the depth charts
- Move players in the depth charts
- Complete Set of Projections
- Edit or Enter your own projections
- Wide array of instruction videos
- Forum Support at the RotoExperts.com Forums
- Half the price of similar products!!!
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Monday, February 09, 2009
Anti-Dumping Strategies
Few aspects of fantasy baseball have created as much controversy and discussion as anti-dumping rules. Fantasy team owners take advantage of their also-ran status to trade away their expensive studs and expiring contracts for under priced veterans, rookies, and minor leaguers. The owner dumping his present season is hoping to gain an advantage in the next one. The owner benefiting this season is willing to trade cheap keepers to improve his chances of a championship. Message boards from one end of the internet to the other have hosted the debate. Is it more important to protect the integrity of the draft and good team management or to protect the ability to trade freely as in real baseball? Should poorly managed teams benefit from trades with aggressive contenders at the expense of other contenders? Are dump deals a form of collusion or is rebuilding your fantasy franchise via dumping a right worth protecting? Regardless of your answers, most leagues have instituted rules to prevent dump deals or at least limit them.
FLAWED SOLUTIONS
The most commonly adopted rules have been an In-Season Salary Cap and a system for vetoing unpopular deals. These rules, however well intentioned, are flawed. A salary cap prevents an owner from moving a large amount of salary for a smaller amount. This might put a severe drag on dump deals but it also prevents many perfectly fair deals. Why should an owner with the expiring contracts of Chad Billingsley $10 and Jose Reyes $17 be prevented from trading for $40 Carlos Lee and $45 Matt Holliday? Even worse than preventing owners from making fair deals is allowing other owners or even just the league’s commissioner to decide if the trade should be allowed or not. Compare it to the Boston Red Sox given the power to decide if the New York Yankees can complete a deal with the Houston Astros. A trade that seems unfair can often greatly reward the owner making the questionable deal.
Fantasy leagues cannot afford to ignore the owners that despise dumping. If a majority of owners would like to prevent such trades, leagues must take action or their futures become endangered. A Google search will reveal thousands of owners who left their leagues because their rivals took a different stance on dumping. However, it is just as important that a league consider their solutions carefully. An overly aggressive solution can make the league less fun for those owners that like to make frequent trades. The best solutions will encourage all owners to finish as high in the standings as possible. If league members at some point discover that finishing in a money position is impossible, then that owner should also see the value in finishing seventh or even eighth rather than eleventh or twelfth.
BETTER SOLUTIONS
CHANGE THE MINOR LEAGUE DRAFT ORDER
Fortunately, good solutions exist. A very simple solution that works well in conjunction with other solutions is changing the order of minor league and reserve picks. Rather than simply using the reverse of the standings as your draft order, reward the owner that finishes in the highest non-money position with the first pick in your supplemental drafts. Dole out the remaining picks in a similar fashion, with the second pick going to the next highest placed team and so on. The teams in the money would receive picks in reverse of the standings after the non-money teams. The teams finishing out of the money still receive the best minor league/reserve picks, but in a twelve-team league, that has prizes for the first six spots, the seventh place team receives a reward for its superior effort.
EARLIER TRADE DEADLINES
Every league should have a trade deadline in place but often it is late in August. A great change to make moves the deadline for uninhibited trading to a week after the Major League Baseball trade deadline in July. During the month of August, owners can trade with teams within two spots of them in the standings. The late July deadline limits dumping by taking place before most teams’ elimination from contention. The limited trading in August allows teams to make the small adjustments that injuries and MLB transactions make necessary without allowing the drastic trades between the second place team and the last placed team.
THREE-YEAR CHAMPIONSHIP PRIZE
By far the best solution to dumping is instituting a Three-Year Championship. This rule’s intention is to reward the owners that are continually high in the standings over a three-year period. Leagues that charge dues can set aside a small portion each season as a prize. How much to set aside would depend on how much would motivate teams to battle for every homerun or stolen base. At the end of three seasons, simply combine the total stats from each season and rank the teams accordingly. Reward at least the top three teams with a prize and you will have teams that would have dumped previously battling to finish as high as possible every season. This increased competition is the very best drag on dumping.
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams
Thursday, February 05, 2009
New Fantasy Baseball Auction Site
Free Fantasy Baseball Auctions Now Open
Join our new and free baseball auction drafts. Go to http://www.CouchManagers.com/baseball/?auction_email
You can create custom auctions. Fast live, slow, public, private, NL-only, AL-only... Everything is free.
Our free fantasy baseball mock drafts are open at http://www.CouchManagers.com/
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams
2009 Fantasy Baseball Roundtable
Jon Williams: RotoExperts
Tim Dierkes: RotoAuthority
Rudy Gamble: Razzball
Jason Collette: Fanball.com
Brett Greenfield: FantasyPhenoms.com
Adam Ronis: New York Newsday
Derek Carty: The Hardball Times
Patrick Cain: Albany Times Union
Fantasy Roundtable Debut 2009-Biggest 2008 Disappointment and 2009 Goals
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams
Thursday, January 29, 2009
MLB Front Office Manager Review
I have been dying to play this game. MLB Front Office Manager offers the player the chance to control every function that a real MLB GM does (with the exception of dealing with shareholders and politicians as Mike puts it). The guys at River Ave Blues give us a great review of the game and its features. It is much more important for me to hear about the game from a baseball guy rather than a video game guy. The baseball guy doesn't care if the interface could be a little smoother, as long as you get to make trades with Billy Beane.
...The backbone of the game is player development, just like today’s MLB. There’s six freaking levels of minor league affiliates (AAA, AA, Hi-A, Lo-A, short season and rookie) and the scouting network is insanely deep. You’re given a scouting budget and must allocate those funds as you see fit. You can “invest” in a long list of regions, including different parts of the U.S., Latin America, Asia and Australia, and the more money you spend the better the job your scouts do. Scouting Japan is an entirely different undertaking, as it’s more expensive but also more rewarding (because the players are ML ready). The Japanese posting process is in the game, so to land the next Dice-K you have to outbid the other clubs...I am buying it very soon.
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams
ESPN and RotoWorld Park Factors
Also interesting is this SeamHeads.com article that attempts to find truer park factors. It comes with a link to an excel file of more than 50 years of data that I haven't made much sense of yet.
Roto World:
Boston Red Sox – 108
Colorado Rockies – 107
Arizona Diamondbacks – 107
Chicago Cubs – 106
Chicago White Sox – 105
Cincinnati Reds – 104
Philadelphia Phillies – 103
Baltimore Orioles – 103
Tampa Bay Rays – 103
Cleveland Indians – 103
Los Angeles Angels – 103
Detroit Tigers – 102
San Francisco Giants – 102
Texas Rangers – 101
Washington Nationals – 101
Los Angeles Dodgers – 100
Milwaukee Brewers – 100
Houston Astros – 99
Toronto Blue Jays – 99
Florida Marlins – 99
Atlanta Braves – 99
St. Louis Cardinals – 99
Kansas City Royals – 97
Seattle Mariners – 96
Pittsburgh Pirates – 95
Minnesota Twins – 93
Oakland A's – 93
San Diego Padres – 89
And then ESPN's
Rk | Park Name | Runs | HR | H | 2B | 3B | BB |
1 | Rangers Ballpark (Arlington, Texas) | 1.142 | 1.229 | 1.070 | 1.042 | 2.227 | 1.030 |
2 | Chase Field (Phoenix, Arizona) | 1.135 | 1.068 | 1.072 | 1.242 | 1.406 | 0.955 |
3 | Coors Field (Denver, Colorado) | 1.126 | 1.299 | 1.098 | 1.048 | 1.387 | 0.919 |
4 | U.S. Cellular Field (Chicago, Illinois) | 1.122 | 1.353 | 0.974 | 0.907 | 0.564 | 1.087 |
5 | Fenway Park (Boston, Massachusetts) | 1.077 | 0.850 | 1.056 | 1.589 | 1.000 | 1.095 |
6 | Comerica Park (Detroit, Michigan) | 1.077 | 1.188 | 1.074 | 0.972 | 1.114 | 0.877 |
7 | Great American (Cincinnati, Ohio) | 1.069 | 1.230 | 1.010 | 1.017 | 1.038 | 1.013 |
8 | Wrigley Field (Chicago, Illinois) | 1.068 | 1.163 | 1.032 | 0.975 | 0.658 | 0.939 |
9 | Turner Field (Atlanta, Georgia) | 1.063 | 1.014 | 1.068 | 1.028 | 1.206 | 1.109 |
10 | Camden Yards (Baltimore, Maryland) | 1.051 | 1.359 | 1.044 | 0.989 | 0.566 | 0.948 |
Rk | Park Name | Runs | HR | H | 2B | 3B | BB |
11 | AT&T Park (San Francisco, California) | 1.045 | 0.992 | 1.014 | 1.132 | 1.875 | 1.029 |
12 | Yankee Stadium (Bronx, New York) | 1.040 | 0.982 | 0.980 | 0.997 | 1.045 | 1.000 |
13 | Nationals Park (Washington, D.C.) | 1.038 | 0.942 | 1.014 | 1.013 | 1.101 | 1.009 |
14 | Minute Maid Park (Houston, Texas) | 1.036 | 1.155 | 1.012 | 1.102 | 0.908 | 1.002 |
15 | Citizens Bank Park (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) | 1.029 | 1.022 | 1.036 | 0.957 | 0.743 | 0.991 |
16 | Angel Stadium (Anaheim, California) | 1.017 | 0.933 | 1.028 | 0.993 | 0.828 | 0.807 |
17 | Progressive Field (Cleveland, Ohio) | 0.995 | 0.824 | 1.020 | 1.016 | 0.654 | 1.187 |
18 | Rogers Centre (Toronto, Ontario) | 0.959 | 0.926 | 0.981 | 1.086 | 1.864 | 1.102 |
19 | Tropicana Field (St. Petersburg, Florida) | 0.955 | 0.850 | 0.934 | 0.813 | 1.226 | 1.043 |
20 | Dolphin Stadium (Miami, Florida) | 0.954 | 0.844 | 0.946 | 0.926 | 1.481 | 1.025 |
Rk | Park Name | Runs | HR | H | 2B | 3B | BB |
21 | Shea Stadium (Flushing, New York) | 0.946 | 1.081 | 0.926 | 0.935 | 0.500 | 1.088 |
22 | Miller Park (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) | 0.945 | 0.893 | 0.963 | 0.857 | 1.375 | 1.130 |
23 | Busch Stadium (St. Louis, Missouri) | 0.943 | 0.915 | 0.962 | 0.868 | 1.000 | 0.969 |
24 | Safeco Field (Seattle, Washington) | 0.932 | 0.900 | 0.992 | 0.921 | 1.222 | 1.021 |
25 | Kauffman Stadium (Kansas City, Missouri) | 0.929 | 0.788 | 1.003 | 1.097 | 0.816 | 0.980 |
26 | McAfee Coliseum (Oakland, California) | 0.916 | 0.988 | 0.960 | 0.953 | 0.536 | 0.974 |
27 | PNC Park (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) | 0.898 | 0.869 | 1.024 | 1.064 | 0.929 | 0.977 |
28 | Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minnesota) | 0.887 | 0.896 | 0.941 | 0.989 | 0.960 | 0.844 |
29 | Dodger Stadium (Los Angeles, California) | 0.842 | 0.857 | 0.892 | 0.866 | 0.425 | 0.891 |
30 | Petco Park (San Diego, California) | 0.796 | 0.743 | 0.896 | 0.780 | 0.931 | 1.024 |
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Understanding BABIP and Groundball Rates
Also read these interesting and related articles:
What’s the best BABIP estimator?
What I Hate About Line Drives
Working the Numbers: On BABIP estimation
BABIP, Projection, and New Statistics
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams
Sleeper Alert: Russell Branyan
Before the 2008 season outfielder Ryan Ludwick was known to be a powerful hitter that had probably missed whatever chance he had to be a major league regular. Then the St. Louis Cardinals actually needed him enough to give him an extended series of at-bats. He carried the Cardinals offense the entire season. This year no one questions that Ludwick belongs in the Major Leagues and the Cardinals need to figure out how to work top prospect into the mix with Ludwick, Colby Rasmus, Rick Ankiel, Brian Barton, Chris Duncan, Joe Mather, and Skip Schumaker.
Russell Branyan is a similar player. Great power but too high a strikeout rate to win a regular job at this point in his career. In 2008, Branyan hit 12 homers in 132 at-bats. And he has essentially always performed that way. Last month, the Seattle Mariners signed him to a one-year guaranteed contract approaching a million bucks a year to be their primary first baseman. This was an excellent move. Branyan has a low contact rate but has a career fly ball rate over 50 percent and approaching 60 percent the last few seasons. This translates into homeruns because of his excellent career HR/FB of 21.9 percent. Do the math – (500 at-bats)*(70 percent contact rate)*(50 percent fly ball rate)*(22 percent HR/FB) = 38 homeruns. Branyan's best-case batting average is probably no better than .270 and reality suggests an average closer to .250, but if Ludwick can hit .290, anything can happen.
Eventually, Bryan LaHair will eventually present Branyan with a challenge for the position but almost no one expects that to happen in 2009. Chris Shelton has also been brought in as a platoon partner for Branyan. This is a good development. Less at at-bats against lefties against whom Branyan has hit .204 during his career gives Branyan better odds at a fantasy tolerable batting average.
He should be owned in every AL-only and the deeper ,mixed leagues.
Follow me on Twitter: @BigJonWilliams