I won the whole fuckin' thing this year. It feels pretty sweet, even after my Tigers made an embarrassment of themselves in the World Series. For the hell of it (and because nobody reads this thing), here's the roster that propelled me to a championship this season...
HITTERS
Miguel Cabrera - 3B/1B - Detroit Tigers
I spent $61 on Miggy on auction day (the most spent on any player) and I was rewarded with the first Triple Crown season in 45 years. There's really not much to say about Cabrera's performance that hasn't already been said. He easily met or exceeded all of my floor performance projections and pretty much single-handedly got me through a couple weeks of the head-to-head schedule. I pretty much have to buy his jersey now.
Ian Kinsler - 2B - Texas Rangers
I had Kinsler third on my preseason board (behind Cano and Pedroia) and shelled out $47 pretty pennies to land him. Even though he finished in the top five among 2Bs, I still feel like I overpaid, especially since he failed to meet my floor projections in every category except runs scored. Investing in 20/20 players on great offenses is supposed to be a good thing, but I feel like I got taken.
Wilin Rosario - C - Colorado Rockies
My team had a black hole at catcher when Chris Iannetta's slump turned into an injury absence. Lucky for me, Rosario was in the free agent pool in early May. All he did was hit .274 with 24 homers once he hit the Chin Music roster. The real shame here is that his tremendous season will likely be ignored for NL Rookie Of The Year purposes because of the emergence of Bryce Harper and Rosario's own terrible defense.
David Ortiz - DH/1B - Boston Red Sox
Even though Ortiz missed close to 70 games (mostly down the stretch) due to injury, I could conceivably make the argument that the $18 I spent on him was the best investment I made on draft day. Not only did David hit .318 with a monstrous 1.026 OPS, but he also gained 1B eligibility during interleague play. If you prorate his counting stats over a full 162 games, he would have finished with 41 homers, 108 RBI and 117 runs scored. Not bad for a washed up old man, huh?
Ike Davis - 1B - New York Mets
When Brandon Beachy went down with his elbow injury on June 20th, I picked up Ike Davis who had been scuffling along for the first 3 months (.190 batting average, 7 HR, .601 OPS) while dealing with Valley Fever. From that point forward, Davis hit .254 with 25 HRs while holding down my 1B slot. I took a relatively big gamble on him, using a high waiver claim on a guy who looked like he couldn't hit Rihanna if he was Chris Brown, but the move paid off especially since I would lose Ortiz for the playoff run.
Kendrys Morales - 1B/OF - Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
Kendrys was one of the guys I was really high on before the start of the season. I was predicting a pretty hefty comeback season from a guy who hadn't played in almost 2 full seasons. While he didn't bounce back quite to his pre-injury level, I'll take .273/22/73 for a $13 1B on draft day. The OF eligibility certainly helped fill out the lineup card (since the rest of my outfielders were pretty weak), even if he was platooning in Anaheim and sat against most lefties.
Jon Jay - OF - St. Louis Cardinals
Jay was one of the few holdovers from the deplorable 2011 squad. He impressed me then with his scrappy play, showing adept baserunning and above average defense that would eventually, in 2012, earn him regular playing time in CF and a spot at the top of a potent lineup. Though he only played 119 games due to an early season platoon, Jay hit .300 with 12 steals in 74 games after the All-Star break.
Everth Cabrera - SS - San Diego Padres
Once Dee Gordon flamed out, I was left with a gaping hole at shortstop. Cabrera (like Gordon) is the kind of one-dimensional player that I absolutely hate, helping you in one category and leaving you high and dry in the rest. Lucky for me, I had built my team to be solidly above average in the other 5 categories, so Cabrera's speed-only game fit right in. In fact, he single-handedly ran me to playoff victories in all 3 weeks. If Miguel Cabrera is my regular season MVP, Everth Cabrera is the playoff MVP, no doubt.
Trevor Plouffe - 3B/2B/SS/OF - Minnesota Twins
See the Ike Davis entry above. I pulled the trigger on Plouffe on June 5th as he was starting to show some signs of breaking out of a 2 month slump. From then until a DL stint in late July, he hit .328 with 12 HR and 26 RBI over a 38 game stretch. He never put it back together upon his return in mid-August (.196 BA, 5 HR in 45 games), but his tremendous June and July carried my team to several victories when I needed them the most as my team succumbed to one injury after another.
Matt Joyce - OF - Tampa Bay Rays
I guess I could've done worse for $5. Coming into the 2012 campaign, Joyce had a track record of being the kind of player I love: reliably high OPS (around .825), left-hand side of a platoon (plenty of ABs), unsung cog in solid offense in a hitter-friendly environment. This year, however, it just didn't come together for him as he plopped a .241 BA and .769 OPS on the table. I'm encouraged that his walk rate improved, but his strikeout rate went up correspondingly. Could be a decent $1 gambit at next year's draft.
Bryan LaHair - 1B/OF - Chicago Cubs
I sung the praises of Bryan LaHair from the rooftops in the preseason. Written off as a Quad-A player, I saw a lot of potential in the 29 year-old, and I was given plenty to crow about for the first two months as he returned my $4 investment with a .308 BA, 10 HR and 22 RBI. But, alas, the bottom fell out and by season's end he was a part-time player, having ceded his 1B job to rookie stud Anthony Rizzo and squeezed out of the lineup by the Cubs' young OF talent. Still, that solid opening salvo shot my squad to the top of the league right out of the gate.
Wilson Betemit - 3B/1B/OF - Baltimore Orioles
An unlikely name to receive accolades, but the journeyman/utilityman was a solid plug-in at several roster spots and even showed a knack for timely power in a surprising Orioles lineup. An injury cost him playing time down the stretch (not to mention the resurgence of Nate McLouth), but Betemit was a helpful bit player for the Chin Music squad in the first half of the season.
Dee Gordon - SS - Los Angeles Dodgers
Seriously, the best thing Gordon did for my team was to get hurt and get out of the lineup. After dropping $22 for him on draft day (I really thought he had the potential to lead the league in steals while putting up a respectable average and scoring a ton of runs), a hand injury put a merciful stop to his lackluster season on July 4th. He did manage to rack up 32 SBs, but it came along with a miserable .228 BA and only 38 runs scored.
PITCHERS
Chris Sale - SP - Chicago White Sox
Chin Music teams tend to do well when I cash in on pitchers who make the transistion from the bullpen to the rotation. Two years ago it was C.J. Wilson. This year, it was Chris Sale. The young lefty posted a 17-8 record and struck out a batter an inning. He tired a bit down the stretch, but his 2.19 ERA over 102.2 innings before the All-Star break more than justified the $6 investment on draft day.
Casey Janssen - RP - Toronto Blue Jays
I don't spend money on saves during the draft. I might pick up a set-up guy with potential for $1 here and there, but generally I just wait for the closer chaos to shake things up in the early season and swoop in to grab guys from the free agent pool. Such was the case with Janssen, who assumed the closer role after Sergio Santos got hurt. Janssen ran away with the job, piling up 22 saves with 9.47 K/9 after his installation in May.
Brandon Beachy - SP - Atlanta Braves
In April and May, I was looking like one smart motherfucker. My pitching was dominating in no small part due to the performances of the aforementioned Chris Sale and Brandon Beachy. Beachy led the National League in ERA for most of the first two months, a fantastic return on a $15 auction buy. Then, on June 16th, Beachy left his start with elbow soreness and was diagnosed with a UCL tear. Before departing for Tommy John surgery, he posted a 5-5 record with a 2.00 ERA and a microscopic 0.96 WHIP over 81 innings.
Lance Lynn - SP/RP - St. Louis Cardinals
Yet another reliver-turned-starter, Lynn took the rotation spot that Chris Carpenter left open as he rehabbed from injury. He ran with it too, reeling off an 18-7 record and striking out a little over a batter per inning. Easily the best $1 bet I made this season, I actually let Lynn go when he was briefly lifted from the rotation in late August. Joke was on me, of course, as he'd go on to win all four of his starts after being reinstated.
Marco Estrada - SP/RP - Milwaukee Brewers
If it weren't for bad luck, some guys would have no luck at all. It took Estrada 17 starts (and a DL stint) before he notched his first W of the season, despite posting a respectable 1.22 WHIP and 8.61 K/9 over the first 16 starts. His fortunes would turn over his last 8 starts, however, as Estrada went 5-2 with a squeaky clean 2.03 ERA and 0.99 WHIP with 56 Ks over 48.2 innings. Major 2013 value potential here.
Josh Johnson - SP - Miami Marlins
No, it probably didn't help that he was just coming back from Tommy John surgery. No, it probably didn't help that the Miami offense was terrible even before it was dismantled. No, it probably didn't help that their bullpen was completely unreliable. But I did expect better from Josh Johnson, especially for the $21 I shelled out for him. The first two months spoiled his season numbers, but he did look much better from June on, posting a 3.28 ERA, 1.15 WHIP and an 8.02 K/9 against a hard luck 5-11 record.
Felipe Paulino - SP - Kansas City Royals
The sole criterion for making this list was that a player had to have spent at least half a season on my roster, even if it was simply occupying a DL spot. I grabbed Paulino from the free agent pool in early April while he was rehabbing an elbow injury and held onto him until late June before he was ruled out for the rest of the season. But for that glorious month of May, he was untouchable. A 3-1 record in 7 starts, backed up by a miniscule 1.67 ERA and 39 Ks over 37.2 innings. I only wish there had been more before he left for Tommy John surgery.
Dan Haren - SP - Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
It's hard to find the silver lining with Haren (a $30 investment). He had been remarkably consistent until this year's fall-off. He had never been on the DL until a back issue forced him onto it in 2012. He should have been playing for a contract, but instead delivered a sub-par season and had his option bought out. I guess you could point to his post All-Star numbers (6-5, 3.58 ERA, 1.12 WHIP) as being much closer to his career averages, but even that was abnormal for Haren, who is usually much more solid in the first half and then prone to a late-season fall-off. This dude is going to get paid on the free agent market, but could be a value at next year's auction.
Ted Lilly - SP - Los Angeles Dodgers
You're probably starting to pick up on the theme of how I picked a bunch of pitchers who gave me a month or two before they got hurt. Enter Ted Lilly, a $2 draft day flyer. Before his May 23rd injury implosion, Lilly was carrying a 5-0 record with a 1.79 ERA and 0.90 WHIP over 43.1 innings. I don't know if the veteran lefty will be able to come back in the 2013 season at age 37 after undergoing shoulder surgery, but he's quietly been one of the most consistently above average pitchers in MLB since 2007, going 71-53 with a 3.71 ERA, 1.13 WHIP and 7.60 K/9. Guys like that shouldn't go for $2. Thanks ageism.
Dillon Gee - SP - New York Mets
Here's a guy who had his share of ups and downs before settling in to deliver a string of good starts from late May to early July. Before exiting with a shoulder injury, this $1 pick rattled off 9 quality starts over a ten start span, posting a 4-4 record, 3.11 ERA, 1.13 WHIP and 60 Ks in 66.2 innings.
Ben Sheets - SP - Atlanta Braves
Blast from the past. The former Brewers ace resurfaced in Atlanta after an almost two year layoff and pitched brilliantly for about a month before arm problems resurfaced. In his first 5 starts, he put up a dazzling 1.41 ERA, 1.19 WHIP while going 4-1 for the surging Braves. He would only make 3 more starts, getting roughed up in all of them before heading back to the DL. On the last day of the season, he made the start and threw one scoreless inning, striking out two, before leaving the field for the last time.
Zach McAllister - SP - Cleveland Indians
At one point, I had 4 Indians starting pitchers on my roster (McAllister, Ubaldo Jimenez, Roberto Hernandez/Fausto Carmona, and Corey Kluber) and I was sure I was doomed to miss the playoffs. Of the Forgettable Four, McAllister was the least detrimental to my squad and at times even looked like he knew what he was doing out there on the bump. In his 6 starts in June and July, he racked up a 3-1 record, a 2.65 ERA, 1.23 WHIP and 37 Ks in 37.1 innings. Unfortunately, his decline coincided with the team's as he would post a 5.29 ERA in the final two months.
Johan Santana - SP - New York Mets
When you look at the final line, Johan looks like a guy you buy for $3 on draft day: 6-9, 4.85 ERA, 1.33 WHIP. When you look at the line at the end of June, Johan looks like Johan. The wheels came off in July and eventually led to an injury shutdown, but on June 30th, he was 6-4 with a typically Johan 2.76 ERA, 1.09 WHIP and 8.54 K/9 in 16 starts. Oh yeah, and one of those was a no-hitter. Unfortunately, he gave up six runs or more in each of his last five starts and was shut down with back problems.
These are only 26 of the 150-or-so players that passed through my team this year (most of those were playoff pickups after starters were shut down for the remainder of the year) , but at one point or another, these guys made a difference between winning and losing, so to each and every one of them, I say, with honest and heartfelt emotion...
"Thanks to you, I was able to fix the brakes on my van."
Chin Music
Monday, November 12, 2012
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
The All-Chin Music Team
Obviously my attempt to re-start this blog with tons of analysis fell on its head. I actually did all the statistical analysis - what responsible fantasy player wouldn't? - but I really just didn't have the time to do the writing like I thought I would.
Anyway, I'm in two leagues this year. One is a 15-team mixed league 5x5 roto that I'm commish-ing and the other is the 20-team mixed 6x6 head-to-head I've been in forever. The roto league was a standard snake draft (I picked 13th) and the head-to-head is an auction league. On the doorstep of Opening Day (and after almost a dozen roster moves in each league), I'll run down the dudes that I grabbed at each position with a quick breakdown. My strategy in both leagues was more or less the same: grab a big infield bat early (or for mucho dinero), don't overspend in the OF, don't worry about position scarcity, get starters with high K/9 and low WHIP, don't spend early picks or big bucks on saves.
As you're about to see, I'm big fans of a handful of guys this year, enough so that I specifically targeted them for both of my teams. Let's take a look at who ended up on my squads:
CATCHER
Roto: Jonathan Lucroy (free agent)
H2H: Chris Iannetta ($2)
I actually drafted John Buck with my final pick, but picked up Lucroy because I think he's due for a step up offensively. I didn't want to go $2 on a catcher, but there weren't a lot of palatable options left that late in the draft. I really hope he hits in Anaheim.
FIRST BASE
Roto: Prince Fielder (1st round)
H2H: Chris Parmelee (free agent)
There aren't too many bigger infield bats than Fielder (literally), and he actually slipped to me at 13th overall, so I feel like I caught a break there. I was prepared to take Justin Verlander until Prince fell in my lap. Parmelee is a guy who raked in the minors, had a decent cup of coffee last fall and tore up spring training. With Justin Morneau opting to DH, Parmelee's in line for a lot of AB's to show off his potential.
SECOND BASE
Roto: Mike Aviles (19th round)
H2H: Ian Kinsler ($47)
2B was looking pretty slim by the time I called Aviles's name. I had been loading up on corner infielders and pitchers, so I was a little desperate. I like Aviles's upside, but he's never converted on it in the last 3 years. Price inflation is rampant in a 20-team auction and $47 was probably way too much to spend on the injury-prone Kinsler. If he stays healthy all year, he'll be worth it.
THIRD BASE
Roto: Pablo Sandoval (3rd round)
H2H: Miguel Cabrera ($61)
I love Kung Fu Panda, even if the RBIs aren't there in the anemic Giants lineup. He still hits for acceptable power with great average and OPS numbers. I spent the most money on a player in the auction and it was two days after Cabrera took a bad hop that broke his face. He'll be ready for Opening Day, he'll be 3B-eligible in about a week... no brainer.
SHORTSTOP
Roto: Dee Gordon (6th round)
H2H: Dee Gordon ($22)
I officially reached twice for Dee Gordon. I almost never draft steals because the players who get them for you are either overvalued five-tool guys or one-dimensional players who hurt the rest of your stats. Gordon is probably closer to the latter, but he could lead the league in steals, score 90+ runs and hit in the .280-.290 range. I think I have enough homers, RBIs and OPS to counterbalance Gordon's deficiencies.
OUTFIELD 1
Roto: Shin-Soo Choo (5th round)
H2H: Matt Joyce ($5)
I'm banking on Choo to have a bounce-back season. Last year he was racked with injuries and a DUI arrest. He should be poised to post another 20-20 effort. Spending big bucks on Cabrera and Kinsler didn't leave me much of a budget for outfielders. Matt Joyce has a career .828 OPS, so grabbing him for $5 seems like a great deal as long as he gets regular AB's.
OUTFIELD 2
Roto: Kendrys Morales (7th round)
H2H: Kendrys Morales ($13)
The roto pick on Morales was probably my most egregious reach, but I am 100% sold on his health and potential. The $13 price tag seems like a steal for a guy who hit 34 homers in 2009 and was on pace to hit 30+ in 2010 before the freak leg injury that robbed him of a year-and-a-half. My original plan was to play him at 1B once Cabrera became 3B eligible, but the Parmelee pickup will let Morales bolster my potentially weak outfield (assuming Parmelee hits).
OUTFIELD 3
Roto: Bryan LaHair (16th round)
H2H: Bryan LaHair ($4)
Here's to hoping LaHair isn't the Quad-A player that people think he is. Dude has hit 159 homers in 9 minor league seasons (including 38 last year) and Theo Epstein says he's legit. I'd like to see him get a shot at socking some balls out of Wrigley, though he does have Anthony Rizzo breathing down his neck and he's dealing with a back issue at the end of Spring Training.
UTILITY
Roto: Mark Reynolds (9th round)
H2H: David Ortiz ($18)
I couldn't let 35 homer potential slip away, even if it does come with one of the predictably worst batting averages in the bigs. Reynolds was my only real batting average risk, and I hedged my bet with a later pick (which I'll explain in a bit). Ortiz goes at a discount every year not only due to his inflexibility of position, but also because haters gonna hate. He's not going to put up steroid-era numbers, but I'll take .275-25-95 at this price tag any day.
BENCH 1
Roto: Ike Davis (11th round)
H2H: Alberto Callaspo ($1)
Davis is the afore-mentioned hedge bet. If the Valley Fever diagnosis ends up being not too detrimental, Davis could be an everyday player in my lineup. He was on pace for a .300-28-100 season last year until he was derailed by injury. If he doesn't show that potential, I still have Reynolds. Callaspo was the best 3B option on the board in the late going and I needed somebody to man it until Cabrera could move across the diamond. He should see AB's in the powerful Angels lineup at least until Mark Trumbo proves he can play there every day.
BENCH 2
Roto: Jason Kubel (17th round)
H2H: Jon Jay ($1)
I'm expecting Kubel to take full advantage of his new hitter-friendly environment in Arizona. He could end up being a mid-round steal. Jay is one of the few repeat offenders from last year's 18th place squad: I picked him up as a free agent once Colby Rasmus was traded to the Blue Jays. This year Jay's playing time is in question with the acquisition of Carlos Beltran and the health and effectiveness of Allen Craig. He might get pushed out of a job even though he's a solid contributor with the bat and glove.
BENCH 3
Roto: Eric Thames (free agent)
H2H: Juan Uribe (free agent)
Thames won the competition against Travis Snider for Toronto's starting left field job. He showed a pretty healthy stroke in the latter half of 2011 and could score a fair amount of runs in the potent Blue Jay lineup. Uribe will primarily serve as a backup/insurance policy in case Ian Kinsler gets hurt. That is, assuming he hits as LA's third baseman. He has good power upside, but is coming off the worst year of his career. I originally drafted Daniel Descalso to be a utility infielder, but I don't think he brings anything at the dish. At least Uribe could knock a few balls out.
STARTING PITCHER 1
Roto: Roy Halladay (2nd round)
H2H: Dan Haren ($30)
I had 5 starters identified as difference makers and when Verlander and Clayton Kershaw came off the board back-to-back ahead of me, I figured I'd have to act fast to get one of them. Halladay is such a workhorse that he'll get you the K numbers you want even if his K/9 isn't as high as other elite pitchers. No innings max in the roto league, so I'll take him. Haren was probably the best player on last year's squad and I gladly paid $30 to take him again (though I got him for $20 in 2011).
STARTING PITCHER 2
Roto: Stephen Strasburg (4th round)
H2H: Josh Johnson ($21)
Strasburg was the last of the 5 impact starters on my list and I felt I needed to take him in the 4th round since I didn't think he'd be there 25 picks later. He'll be innings capped at 160, but should be able to post some hellacious numbers while active. Josh Johnson was an unmitigated ace from 2009 until an injury ended his 2011 season. He's looked just as sharp as before so far this spring, so $21 seems reasonable if he gives me 180 innings.
STARTING PITCHER 3
Roto: Brandon Beachy (8th round)
H2H: Brandon Beachy ($15)
I probably reached for Beachy, but I love his strikeout potential. I just hope that the ERA and WHIP he posted last year are typical and not rookie phenom numbers. He hasn't looked very good this spring, but you can never trust spring stats. In a vastly improved NL East (except the Mets, of course) this was a big gamble in both leagues.
STARTING PITCHER 4
Roto: Cory Luebke (12th round)
H2H: Chris Sale ($6)
Luebke impressed last year, posting gaudy ratio numbers but taking it on the chin in wins and losses due to the weak Padres offense. Shockingly, Luebke's road numbers were better than his Petco Park stats, which bodes well. Sale is a converted reliever with nasty strikeout stuff. He may only be good for 160-180 innings this year but should help in the first 2/3 of the head-to-head season.
STARTING PITCHER 5
Roto: Daniel Bard (15th round)
H2H: Johan Santana ($3)
Bard survived the audition to win a spot in the Boston rotation. As a reliever he was primarily a fastball-slider pitcher, so he will need to develop his changeup and right quick if he expects to stick around. Santana hasn't thrown a pitch in a big league game since 2010, but you know his track record before he lost a year to injury. His velocity is down, but his out pitch was always the changeup so as long as the control and deception (and health) is there, he should be well worth $3.
RELIEF PITCHER 1
Roto: Rafael Betancourt (10th round)
H2H: Henry Rodriguez (free agent)
I didn't exactly stick to the script with Betancourt, using a 10th round pick on him. Several other closers had come off the board and I had my eye on him due to his high K/9 and low WHIP rates. In the H2H, I spent all of $2 on two relief pitchers and dropped one - Jesse Crain - when it seemed apparent he wasn't going to win the White Sox closer job from Matt Thornton. Rodriguez has been tearing it up this spring and looks like he might get a couple save looks while Drew Storen is out.
RELIEF PITCHER 2
Roto: Matt Thornton (13th round)
H2H: Glen Perkins ($1)
I drafted Thornton in this league last year and he fully imploded. He finished strong in a set-up role last year and I think that if he wins the closer job (fingers crossed) he'll be fine. Perkins is the set-up man to Matt Capps in Minnesota. That's a question of "when," not "if," Capps loses his gig and Perkins ascends.
RELIEF PITCHER 3
Roto: Jonathan Broxton (free agent)
H2H: Brad Lidge (free agent)
The roto league drafted a couple days before Joakim Soria was declared out for the season. I scooped up the seemingly rejuvenated Broxton who should at least get the first look at the ninth inning on an improved Royals team. Lidge is the other half of the stop-gap solution in Washington until Storen returns. Rodriguez has looked better this spring, but Lidge has the resume and Davey Johnson isn't a maverick manager.
RELIEF PITCHER 4
Roto: Joel Peralta (free agent)
H2H: Joel Peralta (free agent)
This is why you don't pay for saves. Kyle Farnsworth seemed safe in Tampa Bay but had a flare-up of elbow soreness and is expected to miss some time. Of all the characters in the Rays 'pen - including former closers J.P. Howell and Fernando Rodney - Peralta has the best stuff, the best track record and the trust of his manager. If Farnsworth is out for an extended period, Peralta is extremely valuable.
PITCHING DEPTH
Roto: Erik Bedard (18th round)
Roto: Gavin Floyd (20th round)
Roto: Jonathan Sanchez (21st round)
Roto: Greg Holland (free agent)
H2H: Ted Lilly ($2)
H2H: Chris Narveson ($1)
H2H: Dillon Gee ($1)
H2H: Lance Lynn ($1)
Same old story: get those strikeouts, keep the WHIP down, ignore wins and losses. Holland is the only reliever on the list because I don't trust Broxton yet. Lance Lynn is intriguing, though I don't think he'll stick in the rotation once Chris Carpenter returns.
DL STASHES:
Roto: Allen Craig (24th round)
Roto: Mike Carp (free agent)
Roto: Brett Anderson (free agent)
I picked Craig up late because I wasn't sure about Aviles at 2B. He's obviously got better power upside but health is a big factor. Carp ended up in the free agent pool after he separated his shoulder in the Japan series. Could provide some cheap outfield power. Anderson won't be activated until August at least, but looked like an ace-in-the-making before his Tommy John surgery last year.
DRAFTED AND RELEASED:
Roto: Addison Reed (14th round)
Roto: Alfredo Aceves (22nd round)
Roto: Glen Perkins (23rd round)
Roto: John Buck (25th round)
H2H: Josh Reddick ($1)
H2H: Daniel Descalso ($1)
H2H: Jesse Crain ($1)
H2H: John Lannan ($1)
H2H: Felix Doubront ($1)
I dropped Reed when he was ruled out of the White Sox closer race, even though he'll probably end up with that job before the year's out. I dropped Aceves when he lost out on the Boston rotation. Now he's in the mix for saves in Andrew Bailey's absence. That will probably end up being the dumbest move I make this year. Eh, I can probably do dumber. I dumped Reddick for Parmelee, but not before I got a homer out of him in Japan. Lannan got the boot speculatively for Joel Peralta, and shortly thereafter I read that Lannan was sent to Triple-A. That will look like a really smart move, but I was lucky more than than anything.
Saturday, March 3, 2012
2012 First Base Rankings
Look out behind you, Albert. You've got company.
Albert Pujols signed the third $200+ million contract in MLB history (the first two belong to Alex Rodriguez) and will be anchoring first base in Anaheim for the foreseeable future. There's little doubt that Pujols is worthy of a $25 million salary for the next 3-4 years, given his historic production over the past eleven.
But upon signing with the Angels, the "player in decline" rhetoric that has floated around Pujols for the last few seasons got turned up to 11: he's locked up until age 41 and they'll owe him around $30 million in the final year of the contract. I've heard that the end was nigh for Pujols every spring after his sub-par (for him) 2007 campaign. All he's done since is hit .323 and average 41 homers, 117 RBI and 111 runs in the last 4 seasons. I have no doubt that Albert will make the transition to the American League with no difficulty and put up another typical Pujols year. If I had first pick in my fantasy draft, I'd probably take him...
...if it weren't for Miguel Cabrera moving to third base. The former Tiger first baseman - supplanted by the newest member of the $200 million club, Prince Fielder - has been the steadiest of ships over his 9 year career. Banking on a .320 average, 30-35 homers, 110-120 RBI and around 100 runs this season is one of the easiest bets you could make, especially since he'll be hitting ahead of Fielder in the Detroit lineup. He'd be the second first baseman on my board behind Pujols, but when you add in the 3B eligibility, he becomes far and away the top player available.
So what does Fielder's debut season in Detroit hold? I don't see a reason to think that there will be a major drop-off from his last three seasons. Comerica Park does tend to punish left-handed power a bit, but Prince wasn't exactly hitting wall-scraping homers in Milwaukee. He should hit somewhere around 30-35 homers and drive in a ton of runs, though I have some reservations about the rest of the lineup behind him being able to drive him in. The big gaps at Comerica do actually help a big, lumbering runner like Fielder as he can smack a lot of doubles and score a little easier from second than he would in a smaller park.
Heavy speculation that Joey Votto will be the next member of that exclusive $200 million club. He's in his last year with the Reds and has put up impressive (if not spectacular) numbers over the past 3 seasons, including his 2010 MVP campaign. I don't believe in walk-year bumps, and especially not from guys with a temperament like Votto's. I do expect a season that should look suspiciously like Miguel Cabrera's and you can grab him in the mid-to-late first round. Not a bad deal.
Adrian Gonzalez's first season with the Red Sox was a huge success as he set career highs in hits, runs, batting average and on-base percentage. Clearly, he has benefited from getting out of Petco Park and into a much more friendly hitting environment. I'd expect something close to a repeat of last year's numbers, especially if the team can come together under new manager Bobby Valentine. During Boston's horrendous September stretch, A-Gone drew 21 walks (6 of them intentional), a sure sign that opposing pitchers were more than happy to face someone else in the scuffling Sox lineup.
Yankee first baseman Mark Teixeira has seen a marked decline in batting average over his last three seasons in the Bronx. He still hits a solid .295 against lefties over that span, but the switch-hitter has posted a .287, .247, and .223 against righties and an exaggerated defensive shift. In response, Teixeira has dropped 15 pounds of fat over the offseason and is even talking about bunting against the shift to try to raise his average. He would really only need to do it a couple of times before teams would go back to a traditional defensive alignment, which should help his average get closer to his career .281 mark.
Second Tier:
Paul Konerko - White Sox
Michael Morse - Nationals
Eric Hosmer - Royals
Mark Reynolds - Orioles
Michael Young - Rangers
Mike Napoli - Rangers
Konerko will be 36 years old on opening day. Pundits have loudly announced the end of his career on several occasions, and eventually they're going to be right. I just don't think it'll be this year. He just about single-handedly carried the Chicago offense last year, and I find it hard to believe that they'll look that bad this season.
One of the few smart projections I made last year was on Michael Morse. I saw a big power year, but not much else. All he did was hit 31 homers and back it up with a .303 average and 95 RBIs. I'd like to see a little more plate discipline this year, but I think Morse will have a solid follow-up to his breakout year with the Nationals.
The hate has been flowing against Eric Hosmer this spring, but I can't really put my finger on why. The biggest hole I see in his game is his relative inability to hit lefties, which may lose him some at-bats to Billy Butler. Still, I don't think righties have a book on him yet, so Hosmer's worth a shot, but I wouldn't count on him as an anchor yet.
Mark Reynolds slides into the second tier on power alone. There's no mystery to this guy's game: go yard or go home. Reynolds has a home run, a walk, or a strikeout in over half of his plate appearances. Rob Deer would be so proud. On the plus side, 2011 was the first season since 2007 that he did not lead the majors in strikeouts: Drew Stubbs topped him, 205-196.
During last year's spring camp, everyone expected the Rangers to trade Michael Young, assuming that the acquisition of Adrian Beltre would squeeze him out of playing time. Instead Young accepted a utility/DH role and tied for the league lead in hits. Expect more of the same (though with a batting average closer to his career .304 mark) in this high-octane offense.
Third Tier:
Kendrys Morales - Angels
Mark Trumbo - Angels
Howie Kendrick - Angels
Kevin Youkilis - Red Sox
Billy Butler - Royals
Carlos Pena - Rays
Michael Cuddyer - Rockies
Nick Swisher - Yankees
The Angels' logjam at 1B/LF/RF/DH seems like a ticking time bomb. Obviously Pujols isn't going anywhere, so that leaves Morales, Trumbo, Vernon Wells, Torii Hunter and Bobby Abreu vying for 3 lineup spots. Morales still has to prove that he's healthy, but if he does he'll suck up a fair number of DH at-bats due to his surgically repaired ankle. Trumbo is learning how to play third base, but he'll have to really show something to push natural 3Bs Alberto Callaspo and Maicer Izturis out of playing time, even though Trumbo has the best bat of the trio. Abreu appears to be the odd man out, but his contract is unmovable.
This might be Kevin Youkilis's "phoenix from the ashes" season. He's been plagued by injuries the last two years, but still managed to put up respectable numbers. At 33, he's probably got one more great campaign in him, but I wouldn't reach too far to get him this year.
Everyone seems content to believe that Billy Butler's power ceiling is about 20 homers. I'm going to go out on a limb and say that's his floor. He'll turn 26 in April and he hit for much better power last year down the stretch when the Royals were clicking on offense.
The Rays got their franchise home run leader back in Carlos Pena. He'll have free reign to swing for the fences, and with Tampa's talented table-setters hitting in front of him, he should be able to post some respectable counting numbers.
I'll cover Kendrick and Cuddyer more in-depth when I rank second basemen (Cuddyer will be a right fielder in Colorado, but is still 2B eligible and holds higher fantasy value there) and Swisher will get his due when I rank outfielders.
Question Marks:
Lance Berkman - Cardinals
Ryan Howard - Phillies
Ike Davis - Mets
Lucas Duda - Mets
Gaby Sanchez - Marlins
Adam Lind - Blue Jays
Paul Goldschmidt - Diamondbacks
Freddie Freeman - Braves
Justin Morneau - Twins
Adam LaRoche - Nationals
Adam Dunn - White Sox
Berkman had his "phoenix rising from the ashes" season last year, and I think a lot of people are expecting a steep regression from the 36 year-old.
Howard may not return from his freak Achilles injury until mid-to-late May. He should put up good numbers, but obviously his value takes a hit with all the missed time.
Ike Davis just cannot catch a break. He was well on his way to posting a statement season when he rolled his ankle and lost most of 2011 to injury. Now, it's being reported that he's contracted valley fever, a fungal infection that causes flu-like symptoms and can nag for months. So far, the Mets don't seem concerned, but their young 1B might start to think he's cursed.
The improved Miami Marlins lineup should benefit Sanchez in the RBI column, but the organization doesn't have a whole lot of confidence in him as a long term answer at first base.
Is Adam Lind ever going to show the same plate discipline that he did in his 2009 career year? I really doubt it, but the power is still there in bunches.
The starting 1B gig in Arizona belongs to Goldschmidt, but he needs to show the same combo of power and discipline that he did in the minors. Easy enough to say when you play in the same division as Clayton Kershaw and Tim Lincecum.
Freddie Freeman is the guy experts point to as having the same general profile as Eric Hosmer, but going later in drafts. Good opportunity to get value here, though keep an eye on his recently dislocated kneecap.
The concussion Justin Morneau sustained in 2010 seems to have fundamentally changed the former MVP, so much so that he's openly considering retirement if he can't get himself right. I'm not expecting much from him this year, but I'd like to be surprised.
Adam LaRoche was a remarkably consistent performer until last year's attempt to play through a torn labrum torpedoed his season. It remains to be seen if he's recovered from surgery, but there could be sleeper value here.
Adam Dunn put up what very well may be the single worst season of baseball that any hitter has ever had. He was mercifully held out of games at the end of the season so that he wouldn't qualify for the batting title: he would have obliterated the record for lowest qualified batting average, besting (worsting?) Rob Deer's .179 mark by 20 points. Nothing about Dunn's struggles last year made any sense. While he was always a free-swinger, he still showed a pretty sharp batting eye, drawing 75 walks. There was just no contact. Hopefully the regime shake-up on the south side will be fruitful for Dunn and he can regain some of the form that he lost.
Labels:
Fielder,
first basemen,
Miguel Cabrera,
Pujols,
Teixeira,
Votto
Friday, March 2, 2012
2012 Catcher Rankings
Get used to that sight: Mike Napoli admiring another moon shot.
Power has never been a question for the Rangers' backstop, but age might become one soon. Napoli turned 30 last Halloween, and if your last name isn't Molina, that usually signals the downslope of a catcher's career. I'm not expecting a precipitous decline this season - though I think last year's .320 batting average will be pretty tough to match - but he probably has about 2 or 3 more monster power years in him. He's also got a pretty tragic injury history, losing significant parts of 3 seasons including last year. Not to mention that he's coming off a sprained ankle sustained in the World Series that was still troubling him at the beginning of spring camp. Still, Napoli's at the top of my list, though you can really only expect about 100-120 games out of him.
The Indians' Carlos Santana shares the top tier of my list with Napoli. Santana came off his own devastating injury in 2010 to post an impressive season last year. There's still a fair amount of room for him to improve (especially in batting average and defense), but he demonstrated a good eye at the plate (97 walks in 658 plate appearances) and a powerful bat. I see about the same production out of Santana this year as last - he put up a .239 average with 27 homers, 79 RBI and 84 runs scored - and is probably a safer choice than Napoli if you're trying to decide between the two. I personally give the edge to Napoli on the chance that he might stay healthy all year, in which case the counting numbers should be staggering.
If you don't feel like gambling on follow-ups to Napoli's career year or Santana's breakout campaign, think about Brian McCann. The Braves' backstop has been remarkably consistent over his 6 full seasons, batting at a .287 clip and averaging 22 homers, 86 RBIs and 60 runs over that span. There's no reason to believe that he's in for a regression. In fact, at 28 years old, he may be primed for his best season in 2012.
Miguel Montero is in close to the same boat as McCann: a solid catcher who will help your squad across the board. He doesn't excel in any one category, but is overall above average at the position. I'm projecting a .275/15/65/60 floor for the season, though if the D-Backs improved offense clicks together, he's poised to do some real damage.
Last year, I was understandably cautious about Joe Mauer. He was coming off of arthroscopic knee surgery (you never want to hear about catchers with knee trouble) and ended up missing the first half of the season. In the second half, he caught pneumonia and was sapped of health, strength and effectiveness. A disaster year for the former MVP and 3-time batting champion. This spring, Mauer arrived to Twins camp 30 pounds heavier than at the end of last season - back to his typical 235 - and ready to put last year's disappointment behind him. A healthy Mauer, even in the power-sucking Target Field environment, is still capable of a return to form. Lot of fantasy experts out there saying not to touch him, so he could be an excellent value since I suspect he'll fall pretty far in drafts. Just don't expect any kind of power: 5-10 HR, tops.
Second Tier:
Buster Posey - Giants
Alex Avila - Tigers
Matt Wieters - Orioles
J.P. Arencibia - Blue Jays
Posey is only down here because we need to see how he bounces back from that gruesome injury last year. He had a stellar rookie campaign, but wasn't really showing much in 2011 before he got hurt.
Avila had a breakout year last year and needs to prove it was no fluke. He'll have the job all to himself in 2012: Victor Martinez (who started behind the plate against lefties, when healthy) will miss the entire season with a torn ACL.
Three seasons into the Matt Wieters Era and he keeps showing us more and more. I don't know if he's ready to jump into the top tier yet, but one more year like 2011 and it'll be a no-brainer.
Arencibia is an interesting case. He clubbed 23 homers last year, but struck out 133 times in 443 at-bats en route to a .219 average. With the defensively superior prospect Travis d'Arnaud breathing down his neck, he is going to have to mash to keep his job.
Third Tier:
Wilson Ramos - Nationals
Yadier Molina - Cardinals
Salvador Perez - Royals
Carlos Ruiz - Phillies
A.J. Pierzynski - White Sox
Ramos had a solid rookie season and is a bright spot on a Nats team I expect to perform much better than the 2011 edition.
Molina just signed a 5 year/$75 million dollar contract extension, which means the Cards place a much higher value on him than I do. Defense doesn't count in fantasy.
The Royals just locked up their 21 year-old backstop through 2019. Perez impressed down the stretch with the big club last year, hitting .331 in 148 at-bats.
Ruiz is more or less an inconsistent copy of Molina, but playing half your games in Philly is a clear boost to fantasy value.
I hate Pierzynski, but he finds a way to hit for average every year. At age 35, I hope he finally crashes and burns this year.
Question Marks:
Jesus Montero - Mariners
Geovany Soto - Cubs
Chris Iannetta - Angels
Devin Mesoraco - Reds
Russell Martin - Yankees
Jarrod Saltalamacchia - Red Sox
Jonathan Lucroy - Brewers
Former Yankee prospect Jesus Montero will suit up for the M's this year and don the catcher's gear for at least a few games when he's not DHing or doing time at 1B (he's currently not C-eligible in Yahoo leagues, by the way). The bat is supposedly big league ready, but it'll be interesting to see how the time split works between him and Miguel Olivo (who clubbed 19 homers last year, including 10 at hitter-unfriendly Safeco Field).
Which Soto will show up on the north side this year: 2010's disciplined slugger, or 2011's free-swinging mess?
Iannetta gets the change of scenery and the starting job he needed, but will his power proclivity make the trip from Colorado to Anaheim as well?
Dusty Baker isn't committing to his hyped young catcher yet, so it's hard to predict Mesoraco's upside with veteran Ryan Hanigan still in the picture for playing time.
Russell Martin's resurgence with the Yankees in 2011 was certainly unexpected, but can he do it again? I think his only fantasy value would be in AL-only or deep mixed leagues or as a back up to an injury-prone star catcher.
Saltalamacchia posted 4 solid months from May-August, but book-ended them with an abysmal April and September. With slugging prospect Ryan Lavarnway just about ready for prime time, how long can you count on Salty?
I have really nothing to back this up, but I think Lucroy might be ready to take the next step offensively. He'll be 26 in June and as long as he can build and maintain trust from the starting pitchers, he could give you a solid effort in 2012.
Labels:
Carlos Santana,
catcher,
Mauer,
McCann,
Miguel Montero,
Napoli
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Braun Wins Appeal
According to Tom Haudricourt of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Ryan Braun had his 50-game PED suspension overturned. The
2012 PROJECTION: .315 BA, 30 HR, 105 RBI, 95 R, 20 SB, .925 OPS
It's yet to be seen how the loss of Prince Fielder and the addition of Aramis Ramirez to the Brewer lineup will impact Braun's numbers, but I have a feeling that he'll find a way to get to this projection without too much struggle.
UPDATE:
So the courier didn't take Braun's sample directly to FedEx and instead kept it in his fridge before sending it to the lab. I'm sure while it was in the fridge some of the courier's giant vat of synthetic testosterone accidentally spilled into Braun's pee. Consider the projection above to be a ceiling, not a floor...
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Mannyball
Manny Ramirez, only the second major-leaguer to be busted twice for performance-enhancing drugs* and the first to be handed a 100-game suspension, signed a minor-league deal with the Oakland Athletics. He will receive an invitation to spring training where he will have the opportunity to make the major league club before serving his reduced 50-game sentence. Assuming he makes the team, Manny will be allowed to play in extended spring training games during his suspension, so he should be able to keep his skill set relatively sharp.
So what is Manny Ramirez worth in the fantasy game?
First of all, let's talk history. Manny has a career .312 batting average, which puts him in 9th place among all active MLB hitters. He's a 12-time All-Star, has 9 Silver Slugger awards, 555 homers (14th all-time), 1,831 RBI (18th all-time), a .585 slugging percentage and a .996 OPS (each 9th best all-time). If not for the 2 PED suspensions and the third positive test that MLB never acted on, he'd be a nearly unanimous first-ballot Hall-of-Famer. But alas...
The last we saw of Manny was his 5 game stint in Tampa before the announcement of his 100-game suspension and subsequent retirement. He had 1 hit in 17 at-bats, which is one more major league hit than most of us will ever get. Prior to that, Manny hadn't hit under .290 since his rookie season in 1994, a streak of 16 seasons in Cleveland, Boston, Chavez Ravine and the south side of Chicago. There were a lot of things Manny couldn't do - field his position, get along with management, join his world champion teammates at the White House, keep from abusing his wife, stay off the juice - but hitting the ball was never in doubt.
Even at 40 years old (which he will be when his suspension is over) and over a year removed from his last MLB at-bat, I have little doubt that Manny will find a way to get hits. The real question is, how many chances will the A's give him? Billy Beane has stockpiled outfielders and first basemen, and unless there's a way to put more than 5 of those guys in the lineup every day, someone's going to lose at-bats. Manny was a liability in the outfield in his prime, so there's no way that he touches grass at his current age.
Seth Smith, Coco Crisp and Josh Reddick are the frontrunners for outfield jobs left-to-right. Yoenis Cespedes should push one of those guys out when the club decides he's MLB-ready, which could be as early as Opening Day. Colin Cowgill, Jonny Gomes and a few talented farmhands are competing to make the club out of spring training. Then there's the 4-headed logjam at first base between Daric Barton, Chris Carter, Brandon Allen and Kila Ka'aihue. When Manny shows up in late May, something's got to give.
Is Manny a better DH option than Seth Smith or Josh Reddick? Can you play percentages with Manny? Does he fit in a platoon role? Part of the signing is to help boost attendance. Manny = money, even though you don't have to pay him a dime over $306K. Nobody expects Oakland to contend this year given the Angels and the Rangers loaded squads, but do you let Manny take at-bats away from the talent you're trying to develop so you can contend 2-3 years from now?
If he ends up being Oakland's everyday DH and stays healthy, I think Manny's capable of a .285, 10 HR, 55 RBI season over about 300 at-bats. Probably worth a $1 or a late-round flyer if you have a deep bench and can afford to stash him for two months. However, if a couple of the A's outfield is reasonably productive through May, there would be intense pressure to keep Manny on the pine or cut him outright.
It's as unpredictable as, well, Manny.
*Neifi Perez, of all people, was the other. He hit .172 with 1 home run the year he was suspended twice (2007).
Labels:
Manny being Manny,
Manny Ramirez,
Oakland,
Yoenis Cespedes
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
2012
Cannot wait for this season to start. It's been far too long and I need to make up for last year's awful showing.
Thinking about taking this blog in another direction, something a little less "me-centric". Haven't put all the pieces together just yet. Stay tuned...
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