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May 22, 2013
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![]() Thursday, July 22, 2010Rookie report part 2: Fantasizing over the pitchers of the second halfIt is nice to have an ace starting pitcher or two who you can rely on, but, beyond that, when it comes to pitching I always subscribe to the plug and play method, unless I'm running an experiment or in an extremely deep league. There are always pitchers to be had, and odds are that a couple of pitchers who are free agents in your league are in the midst of a hot string of starts right now. So throw loyalty aside and play the hot hand or favorable match-up. On that note... Jake Arrieta is going through his share of struggles, but he is coming into his prime and could turn his strikeout to walk ratio around in a hurry. He deserves more attention than he is getting. I say it's safe to play him against promising match-ups if your rotation needs the boost. John Axford continues to play a big role in Milwaukee and on your fantasy team. The Brewers will stick with him as long as he produces, and he is showing no signs of slowing down. Ride him. Madison Bumgarner has been his same old self after a shaky April. His command has hit a new level and he should be owned in every league and started every time out right now. Andrew Cashner deserves a shot at a rotation spot, but there's no room unless Chicago decides to sell off a couple of arms. I don't see that happening. Cashner has value only if it does. Jhoulys Chacin deserved to stay in Colorado's rotation. While he was there he was a sneaky good back of the rotation mainstay for your fantasy squad. I have never understood the love for Jorge De La Rosa, and hopefully Colorado sees the light. If Chacin gets promoted back up to the rotation I won't hesitate to promote him either. Wade Davis has done more harm than good in fantasy leagues. But, if he is unowned in your league, he is still worth keeping an eye on. He has the stuff to turn things around and get the best of the hitters he is now facing a multitude of times. The chants for Jeremy Hellickson are getting louder, but Davis still has time. Barry Enright has always been a so-so pitching prospect in my book. But he has put together an impressive year thus far, and has managed to carry it over to the majors over a short sample size. He is definitely worth keeping an eye on, and if he has another solid start or two consider picking him up and plugging him in if you're looking for a spark to your rotation. Neftali Feliz has been as good as one could hope in the closer's role. Texas' faith in him has not faltered and Feliz is a horse to ride into the sunset. Jaime Garcia continues to put up all-star numbers, but he is showing signs of slowing down and becoming more hittable. My recommendation is to sell on Garcia, as his arm may be reaching its limitation this soon removed from Tommy John surgery. Jeremy Hellickson has been one of the most impressive minor league pitchers in baseball. If Tampa Bay hands him a spot in the rotation he needs to be an automatic addition to your team. Daniel Hudson is a wait and see play. He has the stuff to succeed, and I love his makeup, but patience should pay off here. If he shows what he's capable of over a series of starts, then it will be time to buy. Mike Leake has been surprisingly consistent this season, never having a downright awful start. That makes him a reliable back of the rotation play right now, but the cap on his innings has to be approaching fast. That will be something to watch. Brad Lincoln is finding it difficult to adjust to the majors. I have little doubt that he will improve over the course of the year, but he is a long way from even my watch list. Brian Matusz should improve in the second half. I would put money on that. But even that won't guarantee wins against the AL East. Keep him on your radar screen. He will never leave mine. Pounce if he puts together a couple of top notch starts in a row. Andrew Oliver, over the long haul, should carve out a spot as Detroit's No. 5 starter, but he will never be a fantasy mainstay. You can do better than Oliver for the second half. Stephen Strasburg has grown up in a hurry. But dare I say it may be time to sell high? Washington's inning constraints on his season are approaching fast. I won't fault you for riding it out, but if you can cash in, I say do it. Chris Tillman no longer qualifies as a rookie, but he is playing like one. He is definitely a keeper, but he isn't anywhere near my radar screen for the second half of this year due to an ugly recent set of starts. Travis Wood, for good reason, has been getting some positive publicity lately. He has made appearances on my Top-100 list before, but I always end up bumping him off. I just can't envision him ever making consistently strong contributions to the strikeout category. But the strikeouts have been there so far this year, making him a hot hand to play. I get the feeling that you will have to pull the plug at some point, though. Posted by Matt Hagen at 5:17am (3) Comments Roster DoctorIzzy writes in: My team started well but has fallen down in the standings into seventh place. I've had some bad luck with injuries as I traded Matt Holliday for Troy Tulowitzki just days before his injury and now must also deal with Chase Utley's injury. My biggest weaknesses are at MI and in stolen bases. I could also use help in saves. At second base Clint Barmes has done a good job filling in since Utley went down but I don't have confidence in him to maintain for much longer and am looking for a replacement. Free agents at 2B include: David Eckstein, Ryan Theriot, Adam Rosales, Carlos Guillen, Bill Hall and Freddy Sanchez. Free agents that could help with stolen bases are: Dexter Fowler, Alcides Escobar, Theriot, Tony Gwynn, Will Venable, and Carlos Gomez. Thanks. Yahoo! league Player Pool: Mixed No. of Teams: 12 Categories: 5x5, daily, Public, Keeper Scoring: Roto C: Jorge Posada C: Matt Wieters 1B: Kevin Youkilis 2B: Clint Barmes 3B: Ryan Zimmerman SS: Yunel Escobar CI: Adrian Beltre MI: Jason Bartlett OF: Vladimir Guerrero OF: Shin-Soo Choo OF: Carlos Gonzalez OF: Jay Bruce OF: Fred Lewis UT: Lance Berkman BN: Pedro Alvarez BN: Marco Scutaro BN: Chipper Jones DL: Chase Utley DL: Troy Tulowitzki SP: Roy Halladay SP: Felix Hernandez SP: Francisco Liriano SP: Javier Vazquez RP: Joakim Soria RP: John Axford P: Gavin Floyd P: Joel Pineiro BN: Jason Hammel BN: Jair Jurrjens DL: Brett Anderson Izzy, you've had some bad luck with Utley and Tulowitzki suffering injuries. But you're luck will hopefully be starting to turn with Tulo coming back shortly and Escobar perhaps finding his feet in his new Canadian home. Once Tulo comes back you'll obviously have some freedom to choose but until then, I would do the following: Pick up Theriot. He's a solid performer, though he has been struggling recently. He's also a good speed bet and has some position flexibility. Then, I would check matchups and play either Barmes or Bartlett and drop the other. When Tulo comes back you can put Escobar in the MI spot and Theriot at second base. At the very least, I'd probably start Scuturo over Bartlett unless the matchups really favored the latter. Meanwhile, what is Choo doing in your lineup? He should be on your bench this week-- though he will be ready for next week. In your position I would ditch Alvarez in favor of some upside speed players like Fowler or maybe Venable. Alvarez isn't likely to help you this season given who you already have at the corner positions. Posted by Jonathan Halket at 6:39am (2) Comments Friday, July 23, 2010Waiver Wire: AL, Week 16Last week I published a new fantasy tool: the xWHIP Calculator. Though the xWHIP calculator is intended for good, it can be used for evil and manipulating unexpecting fantasy owners. Consider it another tool in your tool chest of economizing your fantasy team along with the xBABIP Calculator and xFIP. Though the calculator is based on Tom Tango's (proven) research, the xWHIP calculator has not itself been statistically tested for "accuracy" and it may contain a few kinks (though I am fairly certain I have worked them out). If anyone out there wants to do the statistical proof diligence (p-tests, t-tests, or whatever), I would be more than happy to post said verification research on The Hardball Times to your credit. Otherwise, if you notice a mathematical problem with the calculator, please email me at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) with the subject "xWHIP Calculator." Also, in case anyone cares, my birthday is July 29. Feel free to wish/bless me accordingly in the comments. All stats current through at least July 21. Jose Bautista watch (07/12-07/18): .154 AVG, 1 HR, 2 R, 2 RBI, 0 SB (only 14 PA). His ownership is up 2 percent, to 83 percent, in Yahoo leagues. Jayson Nix | Cleveland | 2B, 3B, SS | 4% Yahoo Ownership YTD: .221/.293/.419 True Talent: .250/.335/.440 Two months ago, when Mark Teahen went down with an injury, I did a quick and dirty analysis of former first round pick Jayson Nix, noting that he "is a guy with good walking skills, decent (if not above-average) power and below average contact skills." Soon thereafter, Chicago gave up on Nix after he had hit .163/.268/.245 over a measly 57 PA. Cleveland has since reaped the rewards of the White Sox's impatience: He has batted .253/.309/.517 with six homers over 95 PA. To be fair, I am a misguided Jayson Nix fan, having defended the man as being better than Alex Rios on more than one occasion during the offseason. However,I did make amends and label Rios as 2010's big post-hype sleeper on March 16. Alas, I digress. Due to his early season struggles with the White Sox and limited playing time, Nix is still batting around the Mendoza line overall on the season. This, as evidenced by a sub-5 percent ownership rate, has led most owners to ignore him. However, Nix's current BABIP is .237 on the season and his xBABIP is much higher at .278. If we adjust Nix's current batting line to reflect his xBABIP, pessimistically assuming that all additional hits would be only singles, his triple slash line improves to .244/.315/.421 (.736 OPS) Though these figures indicate that Nix is likely to see some AVG/OBP/SLG improvement for the rest of the season, I feel they underestimate his true BABIP talent. xBABIP, per the THT xBABIP calculator, uses stolen bases as a factor to measure speed and Nix has none this season, despite having 10 last season in 290 PA and 114 over 3,660 PA in his minor league career. Using Nix's major league career numbers (507 PA) to get a better read on his true BABIP talent, the xBABIP calculator says that Nix is a .299 BABIP hitter. Adjusting Nix's current batting line to reflect this .299 xBABIP, again assuming that all additional hits would be singles variety, we get a .255/.334/.425 line, noting that this adjustment underestimates power. Between injuries, "underperforming reliables" and general positional scarcity, SS/2B is an incredible thin position in 2010 and those who have had their original MI knocked out by injury or ineffectiveness should take note of Nix's presence and playing time in Cleveland. Batting average aside, Nix offers HR/SB upside and enticing lineup positioning (second) for runs to boot. Sure, the Indians' 2010 season is over, but the club is likely going to continue running Nix out there every day in front of Carlos Santana (.435 wOBA), Matt LaPorta and Shin-Soo Choo (when he returns). Consider this your final notice. Recommendation: Jayson Nix should be owned in all AL-only leagues and mixed leagues with MI requirements. Matt Thornton/J.J. Putz | Chicago (AL) | RP | 60%/25% Yahoo Ownership YTD: 2.58 ERA, 1.04 WHIP, 11.97 K/9, 3.05 BB/9 (Thornton) // 1.50 ERA, 0.78 WHIP, 10.50 K/9, 1.50 BB/9 (Putz) Oliver ROS: 2.80 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, 10.9 K/9, 2.8 BB/9 (Thornton) // 3.70 ERA, 0.97 WHIP, 9.7 K/9, 2.2 BB/9 (Putz) Following yet another blown save for Bobby Jenks on July 22, Ozzie Guillen is likely to remove ol' pink beard from the closer's role. A few weeks back, I analyzed the White Sox closer depth chart. Though it likely still goes Thornton-Putz-Santos (in that order), I have a gut feeling that Ozzie might turn to Putz instead of Thornton. First, Putz has more of that "invaluable closing experience" that managers love to love. Second, Putz is a righty while Thornton is a lefty, a traditional no-no for closers. Billy Wagner and Mike Gonzalez excepted, how many left-handed closers can you name? Thirdly, Putz has pitched better. Though both players have pitched phenomenally so far, Putz (2.46 xFIP, 1.50 ERA) has the better peripherals and results, albeit marginally, compared to Thornton (2.52 xFIP, 2.58 ERA). If possible, I would pick up both players off the waiver wire. One is sure to close games for the White Sox for the immediate future and both pitchers are completely ownable in even deep mixed league formats. Putz and Thornton, like Hong Chih-Kuo and Takashi Saito in the NL, are ratio stabilizers who add Ks and the occasional win, but more importantly help balance out the ERAs/WHIPs of volatile high upside starters like Edinson Volquez (NL), Brandon Morrow and, heck, even Daisuke Matsuzaka (if you enjoy playing with fire). As of this writing, the White Sox have not announced that they will replace Jenks, but the writing is on the wall. Pounce now if you need saves (or just some good pitching with innings to spare). Recommendation: Both Thornton and Putz are must-own players in all formats. Scott Sizemore | Detroit | 2B | 3% Yahoo Ownership YTD: .206/.297/.289 Oliver ROS: .254/.321/.387 With incumbent third baseman Brandon Inge out for a while, the Tigers have recalled infielder Scott Sizemore from the minors. Despite the rumors to the contrary, I think that the Tigers are going to slide jack-of-all-trades Carlos Guillen, who I looked at last month, across the diamond like many a second baseman before him (see also 2008). This would likely place Scott Sizemore, who batted .329 in Triple-A, back at second. Sizemore's first cup of coffee (115 PA) in the majors earlier this year was less than inspiring (and very like Grady Sizemore a la 2010). With a strikeout rate north of 25 percent and an ISO sub-.100, Sizemore struggled to the tune of .206/.297/.289 with a .268 BABIP which is low, but not so far below his .302 xBABIP that translating his line would improve his slash line much. Though Sizemore can seemingly drive the ball well (23.5 percent LD rate in the majors, 22 percent in the minors this season) and takes his share of walks (11.1 percent minor league BB rate), his ISO in the minors is just under .150 and he is striking out way too much as of late (23 percent this season in the minors, 26.8 percent in the majors) for a guy with league-average power. Granted, Sizemore has a sub-18 percent strikeout rate in his minor league career, so there is a distinct possibility that Sizemore will have an improved consistency in the future. However, if Sizemore is going to succeed in the majors, he will need to keep those strikeouts in check (or develop more power). Bad drafts and trades have left the Tigers thin on options to replace Inge. Hence, it is likely that the Tigers will give Sizemore a longer leash than before—at least while Inge is out. Minor League Splits pegs Sizemore's 2010 Triple-A performance as worth a .288/.344/.435 (.779 OPS) major league equivalent line. If Sizemore keeps the the strikeouts in check, I do not doubt he can perform at that level. The Tigers are solid in the center of their line-up at the moment, so Sizemore's value, beyond just the strikeouts, will hinge upon two questions. First, where in the line-up will he bat? Second, will Sizemore continue the trend of swinging for the fences at the expense of stealing bases? The answers to these questions will be revealed this weekend. Monitor the situation closely, especially if you are in need of 2B/MI assistance (and Guillen is unavailable). Recommendation: Should be owned in AL-only leagues, fringe MI option for (deeper) mixed leagues. Luke Scott | Baltimore | 1B, OF | 13% Yahoo Ownership YTD: .285/.355/.549 Oliver ROS: .253/.332/.471 In one of my first AL Waiver Wire pieces, I profiled Luke Scott. Scott is what I call a 90-10 player, a roto-only productive hitter who is incredibly streaky and whose his numbers come in binges separated by huge droughts. Like Alfonso Soriano, when Scott gets hot, look out. When he gets cold, abandon ship. Not much has changed about his game since I covered him in week 8. However, he is starting to get hot again. Since returning to action on July 19 (he was on the 15-day DL), Scott has six hits in his last 12 AB (.500) with two homes, three runs and four RBI. Last season, Scott hit eight homers in the 10 games (18 RBI, 10 runs) following a return to action from the DL in May, so this kind of post-injury hotness is not unheard of. If you have room in your OF/UTIL spots I'd pounce now, while the porridge is still warm. Just be prepared to abandon ship when someone turns on the A/C. Recommendation: Must-own in all formats when hot. Thereafter, cut him loose. Chris Perez | Cleveland | RP | 35% Ownership YTD: 2.41 ERA, 1.21 WHIP, 7.71 K/9, 4.58 BB/9 Oliver ROS: 4.22 ERA, 1.35 WHIP, 8.9 K/9, 4.6 BB/9 Cleveland is another closer situation is turmoil. With Kerry Wood ineffective and back on the DL, Chris Perez is getting a First, Perez is seeing both a drop in his swinging strike rate (from 9.4 percent to 8.1) and K/9 (from 10.74 to 7.71). This comes on the heels of a three-year declining ground ball rate, which is now only barely above 30 percent. Perez also has seen an increase in wildness (4.58 BB/9 up from last year's 4.26 mark), though he is getting ahead of batters more often this year compared to last. F-Strike% and BB/9 have a polar relationship, so the "regression in control" may either be the result of unlucky calls or indicate that last year's "improved" BB/9 rate may have been the fluke. Regardless, Perez's peripherals are not pretty; his xFIP is a career-worst 5.08. Unfortunately for Indians fans/fortunately for people speculating for saves, the Indians do not have many better options in the pen to close, meaning Perez may stick around with the job (at least while Wood is out). Of the team's relievers, only Frank Herrmann has an xFIP below 4.00 and only Herrmann and Rafael Perez (4.28 xFIP) have xFIPs below 4.60. Herrmann (19 IP in the majors) has the best minor league track record (FIP of 3.87, though the MLE is 5.25) of any of the pitchers in Cleveland's weak bullpen, but he does not have "the big stuff" that managers generally love in closers. Hence, the closing job is likely Perez's job to lose and, given the state of the team's bullpen, relinquishing that position may be like failing gym: difficult to achieve. However, this possible job stability may not be worth the bumpy road ahead. If you can get Perez and flip him in a deal, it is worth the acquisition. If you need saves, let's just hope you have a good pitching core to balance out the Chris Perez experience. Recommendation: While closing, Perez is a must-own pitcher in all formats. Austin Jackson | Detroit | OF | 45% Yahoo Ownership YTD: .289/.396/.461 Oliver ROS: .266/.319/.374 Austin Jackson is an enigma to me. On one hand, he has absolutely no power (.105 ISO), strikes out entirely too much (28 percent K rate and walks very little (6.8 percent). On the other hand, he is clipping line drives like crazy (28 percent line drive rate), has the devil's feet (7.6 speed score, eighth best in the majors among hitters with 300+ PA, 16/19 in stolen base attempts) and uses said speed to the full extent of the law (47.7 percent GB rate. Though Jackson may not have the profile of a plus-quality OPS or wOBA guy, his 2010 numbers do give him a good xBABIP profile, with a .348 mark. However, this .348 xBABIP is substantially below his current (and MLB-leading, by a long-shot) .426 BABIP. Though Jackson is currently producing a valuable .309/.361/.415 (.776 OPS) triple slash line, if we adjust his current line to reflect his xBABIP and optimistically assume that all hits subtracted would be only singles, Jackson's line tumbles back to Earth to the tune of .253/.310/.359 (.668 OPS). Jackson may be in store for a terrible second half, especially if that line drive rate starts to come down a bit. In my estimation, that level of risk, given only R/SB upside (which can easily be replaced on the waiver wire), is not worth buying or holding. If you currently own Jackson, consider shopping him around. If you do not own him, well, I would not recommend it. Recommendation: Should be owned (begrudgingly) in AL-only formats, sub-fringe option in deeper mixed league (12+ team, 5 OF). Cliff Pennington | Oakland | SS | 20% Yahoo Ownership YTD: .270/.342/.395 Oliver ROS: .236/.319/.321 While the shortstop position (especially in the AL) has been incredibly thin and under-productive this season, Cliff Pennington has been a bright spot for owners in need of value. Unlike his AL West counterpart Elvis Andrus, Pennington has been efficient on the basepaths (15-for-17 in stolen base attempts) and is getting the green light. Though Pennington's average (.270) is not as pretty as Andrus' (.280), Pennington is getting the job done with enough runs production (40) out of the shortstop to make his average serviceable enough. Pennington's xBABIP currently projects at .309, which is right in line with his current .316 mark. Hence, what you see is likely what you get. While Pennington is by no means an elite option at shortstop, he is still serviceable enough to be top 12 at the position with top 10 potential (yes, shortstop is really that thin this year). If you are in need of MI/SS help and Erick Aybar is not sitting in free agency, I suggest you take a quick look at Pennington. He may not be the shortstop you deserve, but he might be the shortstop you need. Gotta love Batman references. Recommendation: Must own in AL-only formats, should be owned in mixed leagues with 12+ teams or MI requirements. Jack Cust | Oakland | OF | 4% Yahoo Ownership YTD: .289/.396/.461 True Talent: .236/.366/.427 Last week, I took a veiled shot at Jack Cust's power outage. In response, Cust hit two homers this past week and now has four in the past 10 games after hitting only two total in the 42 prior games. Though he is on pace for only a 20 HR complete season (600 PA), Cust is posting the highest batting average of his career (.289) thanks to a career-best line drive rate (24.8 percent) and a career low strikeout rate (32.2 percent). Unfortunately, that strikeout rate is still astronomical and Cust's BABIP sits at a career high .384 mark (ignoring seasons with five or fewer PA). Cust's current batted ball profile pegs him as a .321 xBABIP hitter. Not much of that BABIP value is coming off his career best line drive rate, as Cust has an elite career line drive rate of 21.9 percent. If we adjust Cust's batted ball profile to reflect his 21.9 percent career LD rate, his xBABIP falls only to .320. If we adjust Cust's current batting line to reflect his xBABIP, graciously assuming all lost hits would be singles, Cust's triple slash line falls to .253/.370/.463 (.832 OPS), which is in line with his career line of .244/.376/.456 (.832 OPS). Though Cust's true talent on the season does not much exceed his career production, his numbers this year represent career second-bests for fantasy owners looking for some pop/RBI in Oakland. For the first time since 2007, Cust may reward owners with a .250+ BA with decent power/RBI to boot down the stretch. While that kind of average won't help you, it won't nearly as much kill you as a .230 would. Just ask Carlos Pena owners. Recommendation: Should be owned in AL-only formats, a worthy option in 5 OF mixed leagues and for teams in need of a power/RBI boost. Posted by Jeffrey Gross at 6:53am (9) Comments Waiver Wire: NL, Week 16Juan Gutierrez | Arizona | RP | 3 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: 7.13 ERA, 1.53 WHIP, 7.64 K/9, 2.31 K/BB, 30.9 GB Oliver ROS: 5.18 ERA, 1.53 WHIP, 6.7 K/9, 1.83 K/BB Don't mistake Juan Gutierrez inclusion in this week's article as a ringing endorsement for adding him. Consider it more of a public service announcement that he's currently being given the opportunity to close games for the Diamondbacks. Outside of throwing the baseball hard, there isn't much in Gutierrez' profile that screams closer. He posts a mediocre strikeout rate and walk rate, and allows a ton of flyballs, and with it a ton of home runs (22.0 HR/FB percentage). Those looking for a chance at picking up a few saves while potentially torching their ERA and WHIP may want to look at Gutierrez. I don't believe Gutierrez will retain the job the remainder of the season, so consider this a short term saves investment. Recommendation: Should be owned only by saves-desperate owners in 12-team or larger mixed leagues. Should be owned in all NL-only leagues. Barry Enright | Arizona | SP | 2 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: 2.66 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, 7.99 K/9, 3.00 K/BB, 36.9 GB Oliver ROS: 5.24 ERA, 1.45 WHIP, 5.5 K/9, 2.44 K/BB Barry Enright has made a solid splash in his major league debut, posting a shiny 2.66 ERA and 1.14 WHIP. Enright has been a bit lucky, however, as his xFIP currently stands at 3.90. He has a useful strikeout rate, but I don't expect that to continue: His K/9 in Double-A this season was actually lower (7.75) than his K/9 at the major league level. While Enright was a relatively high draft pick (second round) his pedigree isn't tremendous. He ranked 11th in the Diamondbacks prospect rankings in 2009, according to Baseball America's Prospect Handbook and dropped out of the top 30 this year. Given that and his low ceiling Enright has the makings of a player to ride while he's playing well, and ditch when he hits the skids. Recommendation: Should be owned in some 14-team mixed leagues or larger while he's playing well. Should be owned in medium to large NL-only leagues. Scott Olsen | Washington | SP | 2 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: 3.77 ERA, 1.37 WHIP, 6.70 K/9, 2.29 K/BB, 43.3 GB Oliver ROS: 4.72 ERA, 1.43 WHIP, 5.3 K/9, 1.67 K/BB Currently on the mend from shoulder soreness, Scott Olsen threw five innings for High-A Potomac on July 22, allowing six hits, zero walks, four strikeouts and four runs (three earned) and a home run. Prior to his injury, Olsen was shaping up to be a useful starter in deeper leagues, and if he is able to stay healthy, has a chance to build on his early season success. Olsen's groundball rate is good enough to limit home run damage and help keep his ERA in check. The biggest key to Olsen's success will be to keep his walk rate in check and his strikeout rate hovering around or above seven K/9. Taking into account Olsen's still relatively young age, and some previous success both early this season and in prior seasons for the Marlins, there are reasons for optimism, making him a worthwhile DL stash option for owners desperate for some pitching help. Recommendation: Should be owned in some 14-team or larger mixed leagues. Should be owned in medium and large NL-only leagues. Ross Detwiler | Washington | SP | 0 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: In minors Oliver ROS: 5.45 ERA, 1.61 WHIP, 5.3 K/9, 1.4 K/BB Making his second consecutive appearance in this column, Ross Detwiler put up yet another solid start in Double-A Harrisburg throwing seven innings allowing five hits, one walk and zero runs while striking out seven. Detwiler has the markings of a post-hype sleeper and a solid addition in dynasty and deep keeper leagues where he is available, and even a useful addition for those playing in deeper re-draft leagues. With the Nationals out of playoff contention, I firmly believe Detwiler will be promoted shortly to get further major league experience. He is expected to be a part of their future. Recommendation: Should be owned in some 14-team or larger mixed leagues, should be owned in all NL-only leagues. Starlin Castro | Chicago (NL) | SS | 19 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: .296/.349/.425 Oliver ROS: .289/.324/.393 Starlin Castro's success at the major league level at such a young age is exciting for Cubs officials and fans alike. While I believe Castro's real life value will always be considerably greater than his fantasy value, I am beginning to warm up to Castro the fantasy shortstop as well. The most promising part of Castro's game, at least in my eyes, is his 20:36 walk-to-strikeout rate. Castro's power upside, this season, is low, as he's not hitting many flyballs (28.8 FB rate) and his HR/FB rate is only 3.6 percent. Thankfully, Castro doesn't have to hit many home runs to be useful if he's able to hit for a useful average, which he has thanks in part to his .340 BABIP on the heels of a 21.5 percent line drive rate, score runs at a healthy clip, which he should thanks to his OBP and friendly lineup slot of hitting second, and steal a handful of bases (four stolen bases, but two caught stealing). Castro should be owned in all leagues using a MI, and even most larger leagues not using one. Recommendation: Should be owned in all 10-team or larger mixed leagues using a MI, should be owned in most 12-team or larger mixed leagues not using a MI, should be owned in all NL-only leagues. Pedro Alvarez | Pittsburgh | 3B | 17 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: .250/.315/.491 Oliver ROS: .252/.330/.459 After a poor start to his major league career, Pedro Alvarez has begun mashing in the month of July, which seems to be a fact lost on 83 percent of Yahoo! gamers. Alvarez's July slash stands at .318/.384/.697 and he's hit all seven of his home runs this month. Not all is rosy for Alvarez: His walk rate of just 8.9 percent is low for a guy who projects to be a heart of the order bat, and his strikeout rate is alarming at 37.5 percent. The high strikeout rate for Alvarez is largely a product of a terrible contact rate of just 62.5 percent. Taking into account Alvarez's-blue chip prospect status and his minor league record, the power is real, even if it is a tad bit inflated by a 22.6 percent HR/FB rate. Even when his HR/FB rate drops some, I still expect it to be well above league average, and given his all or nothing approach, when he does make contact the ball should travel a long way. If you can stomach a poor batting average, Alvarez is a great source of home runs, and a must-own in leagues of all sizes. Recommendation: Should be owned in all leagues. Neil Walker | Pittsburgh | 2B/3B | 8 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: .320/.355/.471 Oliver ROS: .244/.289/.408 In spite of another poor season, the Bucs feature yet another useful fantasy player in Neil Walker. Walker has been manning second base and thanks to his lineup slot, second and third, more often third lately, presents a great opportunity to pick up counting stats from a middle infielder, yet he continues to be under-owned, in 92 percent of Yahoo! leagues. Walker has been scorching lately, seeing his batting average climb from .269 on July 16 to its current .320. He does have some shortcomings as his home run pop has been limited, just three in 172 at bats, and his strikeout rate is high for a non-slugger at 20.3 percent. That said, Walker's making solid contact, ripping 23.9 percent line drives, and slugging a healthy number of extra base hits—19 total including his three home runs. Thanks to owning both second base and third base eligibility Walker provides solid roster flexibility for those in deeper daily roster change leagues, further boosting his value. Recommendation: Should be owned in all 12-team or larger mixed leagues using a MI. Should be owned in all NL-only leagues. Domonic Brown | Philadelphia | OF | 2 percent Yahoo! ownership YTD: In minors Oliver ROS: No projection Domonic Brown is a popular prospect to mention in fantasy articles lately as rumors swirl about the Phillies potentially moving Jayson Werth, thus opening up a spot in the outfield for uber prospect Brown. Even if Werth isn't dealt, I think it's highly likely you see the Phillies promote Brown to cut into Raul Ibanez's playing time, and give him some major league seasoning before he moves into an everyday gig replacing Werth next year. Brown is the epitome of a five-tool prospect, and is dynasty league and deep keeper league gold. He opened the season in Double-A and has 88 at bats in Triple-A (324 at bats in total), posting a combined line of .321/.383/.574 with 19 home runs and 15 stolen bases with a 33:67 walk-to-strikeout rate. A little more time in Triple-A won't hurt, but he's essentially ready to get his feet wet in the majors, and has a chance to be a difference maker even in re-draft leagues this season. Recommendation: Should be owned in most 12-team or larger mixed leagues using five outfielders. Should be owned in all NL-only leagues. Posted by Josh Shepardson at 2:55pm (10) Comments Monday, July 26, 2010Forecasting Dan Haren the AngelSunday, the Arizona Diamondbacks traded Dan Haren to the Angels for starting pitcher Joe Saunders and left-handed pitching prospects prospects Pat Corbin, Rafael Rodriguez and Tyler Skaggs. Haren went to Arizona from the A's only two and a half seasons ago for a haul of prospects that included Carlos Gonzalez, Chris Carter and Brett Anderson. Considering how good Haren is (career 3.61 xFIP, 3.38 xFIP this season) and how much the Diamondbacks paid for him, it is surprising to see how little they wanted in return, even if they were trying to dump salary. It is hard to imagine that this was all that the Diamondbacks could get in return when the Yankees (Jesus Montero), Twins (Wilson Ramos) and Mets (Wilmer Flores, Jennry Mejia, Fernando Martinez) were all on the market for a quality arm. Readers of my Game of Inches blog should all know how much I love Haren. I have detailed just how good he is many times, defended his honor on ESPN podcasts, and despite his early season struggles and career second half struggles, Haren remains a top 10 rest of season starting pitcher in my estimation On average, pitchers generally surrender home runs on 11 percent of flyballs (note: using OF_FB% instead of FB% has no statistically significant impact on xFIP). Per The Hardball Times' top secret four-year park factor data, Arizona inflates HR/FB% for pitchers. However, Haren has not played all his game at home: he's pitched 66.2 of his 141 innings on the road (52.7 percent of his innings have come at home). Hence, the true park factor index of Chase Field on Haren's starts is only 1.058. This pushes Haren's adjusted park factor HR/FB rate to 11.64 percent. His current rate is well above that, at 13.9 percent. To translate Haren's ERA, we cannot simply take his xFIP and run with it. As Derek Carty has previously pointed out, a change in leagues has a noticeable effect on a pitcher's K/9, BB/9 and HR/FB percentage thanks to that designated hitter guy (versus the pitcher). Thus, we need to first translate the peripherals and get a zFIP (alternative expected FIP). As Haren has 607 batters faced, most of his peripheral rates are statistically significant. Hence we can use his current strikeout and walk rates as a baseline. At the moment, Haren has a 9.00 K/9 and 1.85 BB/9 (4.86 K/BB). As noted above, his expected HR/FB% this season is ~11.64 percent. To account for Haren's change in leagues, we need to (1) subtract 0.57 from his current K/9) add 0.05 to his current groundball rate, and 3) 0.21 percent to his adjusted HR/FB rate. Over the course of 141 IP and 165 flyballs surrendered, these numbers extrapolate into 132 strikeouts, 30 walks and 19.5 home runs. Keeping Haren's HBP/IBB totals constant and using The Hardball Times adjusted FIP formula of 3.2+((HR*13+(BB+HBP-IBB)*3-K*2))/IP), we get a zFIP of 3.74 for AL Dan Haren. Using this 3.74 mark as the baseline for our ERA projection, we need to get an expected innings total and account for park factors and defense. The Angels only have 62 games remaining. Assuming that Haren slides right into his rightful role as team ace, this puts him at around 12 more starts on the regular season. Haren is averaging six and two-thirds innings per start, which would put his innings load max around 80. For the sake of getting a nice number, let's pretend the Angels, who are seven games out of first place, make a playoff run this season (though I think Haren is more of a 2011/12 acquisition) and allow Haren to reach this max load. At a league-adjusted K/9 of 8.43 and zFIP of 3.74, this would give Haren 75 strikeouts and 33.25 runs allowed. Now that we have an innings projection, we need to accord for park factors and team defense. Per Baseball-Reference, Angel Stadium inflates run scoring by 2 percent. Since a player generally plays just half his games at home, we should use a 1 percent park factor. Multiplying Haren's runs total by a 1.01 park index, we get a new RA total of 33.58. Though park factors will likely not have much of an impact on Haren's expected RA total, the Angels' defense, which includes Bobby Abreu, might. In 883.2 innings of defense, the Angels have allowed 26.2 more runs to score than the league average defense. (The Angels have the fourth lowest UZR/150 in baseball). This gives the Angels a UZR/inning of -0.02966. Over 80 innings pitched, that means that the Angels defense will allow 2.37 more runs to score than would the league average defense. Adding this to Haren's park factor adjusted RA total, we get a final RA total of 35.95. Over 80 IP, the above indicates that Haren has an expected ERA of 3.82. That is well below the Angels' current team ERA/xFIP of 4.40/4.37. But what about Haren's WHIP? Thanks to Tom Tango's research and a day of macro programming, I created an xWHIP calculator a few weeks ago to answer that very question. Plugging in the relevant numbers, we see that Haren's current WHIP of 1.35 translates into a xWHIP of 1.07 with a hits per nine rate of 8.2 (yet another sign of Haren's awful luck in 2010).As noted above, a change in leagues generally results in a +0.05 increase in a pitcher's BB/9 and Angel Stadium has a 0.99 walk rate index compared to Chase Field. This yields an xBB total for Haren the Angel of 16.7 per 80 IP. Similarly, Angel Stadium has a 0.99 hits rate index compared to Chase Field of .90. This yields an xHits total of 65.6 for Haren on his new team, at least before defense is considered. However, as noted above, the Angels have a UZR/INN of -0.02966. Tom Tango has previously broken down runs-expectancy based on types of hits and has found that the average single is worth approximately 0.49 runs. Assuming that all additional hits allowed by the Angels' defense would be singles, the Angels' defense would yield an additional 4.8 hits. Adding this to his expected hits total, we find that Dan Haren as an Angel has an xHit total of 70.4 per 80 IP. The above analysis yields an xWHIP of 1.09 for Dan Haren in Anaheim. Through today, the Angels have a team WHIP of 1.40. Hence Haren is a noticeable improvement for the Angels in the baserunner prevention department (which is somewhat important given the state of the Angels' defense). Fantasy spin: All in all, my analysis shows that Haren has the following expected pitching line as an Angel: 80 IP, 3.82 ERA, 1.09 WHIP, 75 K, 4.5 K/BB. Those numbers are not quite as ERA/WHIP pretty as Cliff Lee's projected numbers (though much of it has to do with the Angels' poor defense), but his plus-quality ERA/WHIP and high strikeout ability make Haren a tantalizing must-own AL option for the rest of the season. If you have FAAB, empty it accordingly. Real life spin: One can easily see how Haren can improve the Angels' current 4.40 team ERA/1.40 team WHIP. What one cannot see, however, is how the Diamondbacks benefit from this trade. Bryan Smith of Fangraphs analyzed what the Diamondbacks netted in return for Haren and somewhat rationalized the deal. However, given Haren's talent, the market for a quality arm (of which Haren was the best and cheapest available option), and what the Diamondbacks paid for Haren in the first place, this trade makes very little sense to me. Posted by Jeffrey Gross at 3:38am (1) Comments Tuesday, July 27, 2010All’s bad that ends bad(ly)There are just two more months of regular season play left before the season will be over, until the fantasy champions will be crowned. After then will come the void of the offseason, over which fantasy football will have to suffice but won't compare. The truth is that it's impossible to say for sure which players will perform well and which ones will not, since two months is a short enough time for fluky events to have significance. If you can remember some of the players who had ridiculously bad or good numbers at the end of May, then you will understand that anything can happen from now till the end of September. Still, some players are more likely to play better than others, and some players are likely candidates to perform worse than they have this season to date. With that in mind, here's a few players who, if traded, should fetch in return a player more likely to perform better over the next two months. My choices
Austin Jackson: Amazingly his BABIP has risen—from .415 to .436—since I noted its unreasonableness in mid-July. Unsurprisingly Jackson has run hot over that 10-game stretch, collecting 20 hits and raising his average up to .318. Jackson can definitely sustain a uniquely high BABIP, but even he of many line drives and blinding speed should not be missing fielders this often. When assuming a still high yet more earthly line drive rate and BABIP he projects to be more of a .280 hitter than a .320 one. If you need his steals, I suggest hanging onto him but otherwise see if you can flip him for a hitter less dependent on maintaining the unmaintainable. Phil Hughes: The Phil Hughes who is currently pitching for the Yankees is barely within shouting distance of the Phil Hughes who started the season 5-0 with a 1.38 ERA. Why he cannot strike batters out anymore or avoid batters making solid contact I am unsure, and at the moment he shouldn't be started in most mixed formats. Most damaging are the innings limits the Yanks are certain to enforce upon their young hurler, stripping him of his most valuable fantasy asset—his penchant for wins—by pulling him out of games earlier. With those issues coupled together, Hughes is someone you will probably rather see on someone else's team in the coming months. Trevor Cahill: If you took a leap of faith on this sinkerballer so far you have been handsomely rewarded with a 3.15 ERA and a surprising nine wins. Cahill's season isn't likely to end as prettily as it began however, with a string of tough matchups ahead of him starting with the Rangers tomorrow. Cahill has been striking out fewer batters of late, and I wouldn't be surprised if more of those balls in play become hits. The Oakland offense is doing its best act to look respectable, but it should not help Trevor out much in getting more wins. A low strikeout pitcher with a mid-four ERA and little chance of getting wins doesn't look so attractive now, does it? Don't be fooled by the mirage. Tyler Colvin: Colvin has been an integral part of the rookie parade that is currently sweeping the majors, by blasting 15 home runs in his inaugural season. That much power is, however, out of line with what he accomplished in the minors, so even though it is possible Colvin remains hot and hits 10 more home runs this year, it's also very possible he contributes only a few more. With poor contact skills, Colvin is batting just .261, and that is with the home runs inflating it a little. A lot of hitters can provide mild pop with a .250s average, so I feel it's worth investigating if another owner is intrigued by this young Cubbie and willing to part with a more proven commodity. Posted by Paul Singman at 5:47am (2) Comments Wednesday, July 28, 2010WHIP it goodAs I’m writing this, Carl Pavano boasts the fifth lowest WHIP among all starting pitchers in Major League Baseball and is tied for the fifth highest win total. And, if disturbing facial hair was a category, he’d be neck and neck with John Axford and Clay Zavada for dominance in that category as well. According to Yahoo, he is the 34th ranked player in fantasy baseball, and 10th among pitchers. So, why am I unable to trade him in my 12-team mixed league? Normally when somebody asks this question, my default answer is that the player’s owner is asking too high a price. I don’t think that is the case here. The only player whose ranking is particularly close to Pavano’s who I’ve asked for is Jose Bautista, and the fact that his season is at least equally, if not more, improbable as Pavano’s mitigates the significance of his ranking as much as I would expect as prospective trade partner do to Pavano’s. I do think there’s a bit more at play regarding my leaguemates’ denial of Pavano’s value and I think it has to do with economies of scale regarding different stats. Pavano’s two main statistical strengths this season have been his wins and his WHIP, though his 3.26 ERA doesn’t hurt either. I can certainly understand dismissing the importance of his 12 wins, as it is hard to bank on wins. However, it should be mentioned that Pavano pitches a lot of innings for a good quality team, in a pitcher-friendly home park and in a division with no dominant team. This seems like a pretty complete profile of the context that lends itself to amassing wins. Anyway, one of the dynamics I believe to be at play here is that the value of the fifth lowest WHIP over the fifth most innings of any pitcher this season isn’t intuitively grasped by all. In this league, the lowest team WHIP is owned by my team with a mark of 1.20 – Pavano is certainly a major contributor to that. The team with the worst WHIP clocks in at 1.35. The WHIP differential between teams is necessarily small. In fact, the .015 range between king and peasant is half the size of the batting average gap between top and bottom. I think WHIP is largely dismissed when looking at a player’s value in the context of a trade because a mark of 1.20 doesn’t intuitively look allthe different from a 1.30. But, in reality, lowering your team’s WHIP by four-hundredths can often mean three, four or five points if you’re in the middle of the pack. Now, does that mean adding a guy like Pavano can reduce your WHIP by that magnitude? Well, it depends who Pavano would be replacing on your staff. Let’s take a fairly extreme example. The team that owns A.J. Burnett tin this league has basically just endured his travails, I would presume because of Burnett’s potential, history as an elite K-pitcher and because it’s just tough to sit any proven commodity with that lineup backing him up. This owner has not pitched Burnett every start, but has so for most of them. So, as a little experiment, I removed Burnett’s line (taken from this owner’s “Team Log” page) and replaced him with Carl Pavano’s line from my log. This swap lowered the other owner’s season WHIP from 1.32 to 1.25, which would have been good for a four-point improvement in the standings, right behind two other teams tied at 1.24. Conveniently enough, this owner is in last place in strikeouts, so losing Burnett there wouldn’t have made a difference. But, to avoid the cheap way our of this aspect of the hypothetical, Burnett has not been fanning batters at a great rate this year, and because of the innings disparity between Pavano and Burnett, such a swap wouldn’t be likely to largely affect the strikeout category either. When preaching the value of WHIP, it is also important to restate the obvious to remind us what the stat is actually measuring. In its essence, WHIP is about limiting baserunners. Practically, what that means is that having a good WHIP indicates fewer pitches thrown per inning, which allows a pitcher to stay in a game longer, giving him a better chance to factor in the decision. It is no accident that so many of the starters with elite WHIPs have high win totals and rack up high innings totals. The high innings totals I refer to is a second-tier point in this discussion as well. I’ve often mentioned that a team’s rate stats should ideally be properly in relation to skill set and sample size. When it comes to WHIP, this balance often works itself out because the pitchers who post great rates often get the most innings over which to do so. A workhorse with a high WHIP is like a batter who clocks 650 ABs with a .300-plus batting average. To be sure, if you’re reading this and saying to yourself, “I’m still not sold on Pavano as a reliable front-line fantasy pitcher,” I’m not going to tell you that isn’t a fair position to hold. My point is that, if you do believe in the power of smoke, mirrors, low walk rates and beguiling mustaches, there’s no cheaper way to significantly improve your team WHIP than Carl Pavano. Every other starting pitcher in his range is a certified stud (Josh Johnson, Roy Halladay, Adam Wainwright, etc.) or Matt Latos, a young up-and-comer who you’d have to pry from an owner’s dead, lifeless, mouse-clicking finger in a keeper league. By the way, just to share with you some strategic thoughts and an anomalous situation, the reason I am trying to trade Pavano in this league is because I am over the innings cap pace and leading in WHIP. Since assuming co-ownership of this team, my buddy and I are, for the first time, floundering toward the bottom of the standings at this fairly late point in the season. I’ve never seen a team put together a pitching category performance like this. Here’s how many points, out of 12, we are taking in each category, right now: Wins - 1 Saves – 9 Ks – 12 ERA – 3.5 WHIP – 12 We have about 30 more innings pitched than the next team, so if we scale back our starts, I’d think we’d drop down to 10 points or so in Ks, but not much farther than that. Meanwhile, our offense is brutal, despite not drafting a single starting pitcher until the 100th pick in the draft. Of course, three of those bats were Jacoby Ellsbury, Aaron Hill, and the finally awakening Aramis Ramirez. I am proud of the fact that we did actually draft Pavano though. Fantasy baseball is just like real baseball in the sense that every season is its own animal, and no matter how much you think you’ve seen, you haven’t even come close to seeing it all. Posted by Derek Ambrosino at 4:31am (5) Comments Thursday, July 29, 2010Trending Prospects: Seven up and seven downA massive Top-100 update is in the works. I'm now mainly waiting for the 2010 draft class to get signed so the update can be all-encompassing. Some slight information tweaking is also underway to try to get you the most important, bottom-line details as simply as possible. For now, please enjoy a sneak peek at player movement for 14 top prospects. Seven trending upward: J.P. Arencibia has put his awful 2009 behind him with an incredible batting average for his skill level and an improved, but always impressive, power display. He will always strike out too much, and the batting average won't entirely translate, but if Toronto eventually entrusts him with the full-time catching gig, he should be a pertinent power threat for a long time. Danny Duffy has decided to return to baseball after some time away. He was entrenched in the Top 100 beforehand, and his initial return performances have been promising. Nick Franklin was never projected to hit for better-than-average power when entering the 2009 draft. But he has made adjustments to his swing and is scorching the ball in his first full season. His contact rate, plate discipline, and defense in the middle infield are right in line for a teenager in Single-A ball as well. Austin Jackson will come back to reality. I think. I have been a notorious Jackson detractor for years now, but the young man continues to find ways to generate base hits in the majors. His walk rate is poor, but there is some home run power that has yet to surface. He has been a useful big leaguer thus far at the age of 23, and there is some upside left. He deserves the respect. John Lamb has quietly been one of the best A-ball pitchers of 2010, and he deserves a spot in everyone's Top 100. He has always had great upside, and he is putting the whole package together this year. He combines three at least average offerings with his excellent command. Jake McGee is looking more and more like another Tommy John surgery success story. It took him a while to shake the rust off, but the 2010 scouting reports suggest that he hasn't lost anything from his velocity or repertoire. The big question holding him back from his pre-surgery glory days is his endurance, but he is fighting his way back to prominence. Wil Myers brought immense upside into 2010, but I was patient enough to wait and see. I have waited and I have now seen what he offers. Myers has quickly earned his spot among some of the top catching prospects in baseball. Seven descending: Tim Alderson has always held a soft spot in my heart, but since the 2009 trade bringing him to the Pirate organization his velocity has dipped to the point where he's having a difficult time touching 90 and his command has disappeared. We've all seen success in the past, but he has been passed up. Casey Crosby has upside and will remain on my watch list, but he can't shake the injury bug at this point, which is even more disheartening when it's his throwing elbow that's always in question. Aaron Crow his disappointed on many levels this year. The biggest question when he was drafted was his command, which may turn into a chronic issue. Some guys just can't figure out the importance of consistence in pitching. Crow is far too hittable and is getting lost in the shuffle right now. Brandon Erbe had an 0-10 International League record. The record isn't everything in pitching, but it does make his faults stand out more. His command has been a year-to-year problem that may never get solved. Matthew Hobgood has workable tools and irrefutable upside, but he is simply unimpressive from every angle at this point. Every video I have seen this year has been "meh," his season stat line is pedestrian, his lack of command is worrisome, and his velocity has not improved from high school. Andrew Lambo has been riding on the upside train for long enough. His home run power potential is his greatest tool, but has been dormant since 2008. Compounding the matter, his contact rate and plate discipline are not improving. Lance Lynn has the makeup and stuff of a mid-rotation mainstay. But that's as good as he will possibly get, and his Triple-A results point to a work in progress. Posted by Matt Hagen at 1:05am (6) Comments Lebron, Lee and your leagueSometimes it takes an extreme to shed light on the normal. July has seen two transactions on the “free” market notable for how much consternation they caused among the great and good. First Lebron James signed with the Miami Heat. Then Cliff Lee was almost traded to the New York Yankees. Believe it or not, these transactions (or near transactions) and the way we think of them can help us craft and enforce rules in fantasy leagues—particularly the dreaded trade veto. The Lebron and Lee moments help by forcing us to evaluate what’s fair and what’s good. They help because all to often we let anything that is “fair” be considered also “good” when they need not be the same. By teaming up with Chris Bosh and Dwayne Wade, James has made the Heat the presumptive favorite to win and the prohibitive favorite to at least get to the finals next season. In a sport where one or two players make most of the difference, superstar players inevitable shift the balance of competition when they move teams. This was an extreme case, perhaps the most extreme in NBA history. Was it too extreme? Evidently not, at least according to the NBA, which guards its marketability fiercely. I have zero doubt that folks in the head office know whether it is better for their league (and in a sense for fans) to have deep, NFL style competition with many teams rising and falling each year or whether it is better to have dynasties reigning (though I’m guessing they’d prefer two at once, a la Lakers-Celtics in the 1980s rather than one, a la the Bulls in the 1990s). James is and should have been free to sign as he wanted. I have no qualms about him leaving Cleveland since that was his wish. But I am sure that the league would have found a way to squash the Heat deal if it had thought it was bad for the NBA (see for instance the Ilya Kovalchuk deal in the NHL). Leagues find ways to do these kinds of things usually (particularly outside of MLB, which has a stronger player’s union), whether for the good of the owners directly or for the good of the owners via the good of the fans (i.e., the more fans that like the league, the better). The Lee deal to the Yankees is another story. If he had been traded to the Evil Empire, New York would have leaped from marginal favorite to return to the World Series to extremely likely to win it. I doubt the league would have in any way inhibited the deal. But I’m not so sure that Bud Selig wouldn’t have liked to block it if he could have (had the trade happened, of course). MLB loves that the Yankees are perennial contenders; it likes to have a team that everyone either loves or hates. But, whereas I think many casual NBA fans like to see “greatness," I wonder if the marketing people in MLB haven’t found that casual fans in baseball prefer controversy, game-winning suicide squeezes and Cinderellas. Sure the Yankees don’t win every year (flukes can happen—this is targeting a certain ESPN Baseball Today personality who thinks that because the Yankees don’t win every single season it isn’t bad for baseball that they trade for all-star after all-star), but do we want a system in which they win way more than any other team? Random chance would mean they win one out of every 30 years. They win one out of four. What would you have done if you were commissioner? Let’s suppose that you are like David Stern, that the written rules can be made or ignored as you please. Would you have overturned either deal? Would you at least consider it or would you tie your hands behind your back because each side had acted in its own best interest (the Heat and James, Seattle and New York)? So if I’ve carried you this far, no doubt (at least) two things have occurred to you: {exp:list_maker}Trades that are good for each side are not always good for the league. It is a fine line dividing common good versus personal penchant. {/exp:list_maker} I wrote last year about trades that may be bad for the league while benefiting both teams—one classic case is the dump trade. Dump trades end the season for all but one or two teams. A team that has an outsized lead is not likely to mean-revert once it picks up all of the last place teams' high priced veterans in exchange for a few minor leaguers and some growth potential. By and large, it is better to have explicit rules constraining behavior that hurts the league (such as a rule that says that a team that trades a first-round pick must get at least, say, a third round pick back in return). But if two teams have found a loophole, far better to veto the trade than to let it go, hurt the season, and try to close the loophole for next year. Of course, there is this fine line—the delicate balance between acting for the common good and acting for one’s one good or just out of spite. It is pretty easy to dislike a trade just because it helps the first place team (even if you like the leader). Many of us are naturally inclined to root for the underdog. Should we feel differently about the first place Rangers getting Lee rather than the first place Yankees? The Yankees were arguably in a more competitive division... The voting system for vetoes helps here. One man’s opinion doesn’t reign. But alas nothing and no one is foolproof, except for David Stern and Bud Selig of course. Posted by Jonathan Halket at 7:26am (2) Comments Friday, July 30, 2010Waiver Wire: AL, Week 17Thank you to everyone for the birthday wishes. I hope readers followed my "Luke Scott is getting hot" advice. In the seven days since I wrote about him, he's batted .417 with three homers and six R/RBI. Another personal note: I will be returning to law school during the last week of August and hence the September editions of the AL Waiver Wire will be slightly abbreviated from what I've been writing since May. In honor of the trade deadline, I am going to look at a few players you should trade forCthe underperforming assets of fantasy —or trade away. All stats current through at least July 26. Jose Bautista watch (07/19-07/25): .333 AVG, 2 HR, 3 R, 9 RBI, 1 SB. His ownership is up 3 percent, to 86 percent, in Yahoo leagues. A great week for Bautista's owners. Also, Bautista crossed the 30 HR plateau this week, which marks me beating TBO in a gentlemen's bet that Bautista couldn't hit 30 this year. Dan Haren | Los Angeles | SP | 96 percent Yahoo ownership TYD: 4.60 ERA, 1.35 WHIP, 9.00 K/9, 1.85 BB/9, 40.8% GB% My ROS Projection: 3.82 ERA, 1.09 WHIP, 8.43 K/9, 1.88 BB/9 Oliver ROS: 3.56 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, 8.70 K/9, 1.60 BB/9 Over the weekend, Dan Haren was traded to the Angels and I extensively analyzed his rest of season prospects as an Angel. My analysis yielded an expected pitching line of 80 IP, 3.82 ERA, 1.09 WHIP, 75 K and a 4.5 K/BB ratio. Those numbers are much improved over the Angels' current 4.40 team ERA/1.40 team WHIP. From a fantasy perspective, Haren is an immediate FAAB buster. He may not have the ERA upside of Cliff Lee, but he's got a superb WHIP (he's top 10 in WHIP over the past three seasons combined) and tantalizing K-upside. The move away from Chase Field should do wonders for Haren's home run problems (1.47 HR/9), but the Angels' team defense (-26.2 UZR) might present the man with disturbing consistency with all new problems. Nonetheless, Haren remains a top 50 rest of season starter. If you have the FAAB and are in an AL-only league, spend it now. If someone owns him and is frustrated, take the opportunity to buy Haren at a discount, especially if that owner buys into the myth of Haren's second half failures (look at the xFIP splits, but be comforted). Only a possible Adam Dunn infusion could make a worthy alternative. Recommendation: Must own in all formats. Matt Wieters | Baltimore | C | 64 percent Yahoo ownership YTD: .245/.315/.355 Oliver ROS: .283/.356/.436 One season removed from a Baseball Prospectus projection that could not have been any more wrong (unless you are Garrett Atkins), Matt Wieters continues to disappoint fantasy owners. Prior to going on to the disabled list on July 9, Wieters was hitting .245/.315/.357 (.672 OPS) with a modest six homers in 269 at-bats. On a positive note, he was posting an improved BB rate (8.9 percent) which was more akin to his 14.7 percent minor league record than his 7.3 percent rookie showing. However, his .110 ISO is disappointing, even by his 2009 ISO standard of .124. In the minors, Wieters hit a composite .341/.437/.576 (1.013 OPS) across High-A, Double-A and Triple-A ball. Per Minor League Splits, this line is worth an MLE triple slash of .272/.345/.433 (.778 OPS), which is, batting average excepted, significantly better than his current .270/.329/.388 (.670 OPS) career line over 687 PA. Per his career batted ball profile, Wieters has a .318 xBABIP. Through 302 PA this season, his BABIP is much lower at .290. If we adjust Wieters' current triple slash line to reflect his xBABIP and assume all additional hits would be singles, hiss offensive numbers inflate to .266/.334/.376 (.710 OPS). Of course, those numbers assume that Wieters' power outage continues. However, as indicated above, Wieters had an MLE ISO of .160 in the minors. Oliver projects Wieters with a ROS ISO of about .150. And in the two days since returning from the DL, Wieters already has two homers. He may not post the .300/30/100 numbers that BP predicted only a season ago, but his final two months could be productive enough to warrant 100 percent ownership. Though I am a firm believer that catcher is a shallow position in which everyone hits .260 with 15 HR and 60 R/RBI, I also think Wieters is a top five-capable catcher and his current ownership rates indicate that he is available in more than one of three fantasy leagues. Wieters is definitely worth the pick-up and likely worth the effort to trade for. Recommendation: Must own in all formats. James Shields | Tampa Bay | SP | 83 percent ownership YTD: 4.89 ERA, 1.36 WHIP, 8.04 K9, 2.10 BB/9 Oliver ROS: 4.17, 1.32 WHIP, 7.7 K/9, 2.0 BB/9 Despite a declining trend in swinging strike percentage, James Shields has a career high K/9 with a 8.04 mark (though this runs contrary to logic). Perhaps the increased punch-outs have something to do with his 1 mph increase in velocity. Like Haren, Shields has pinpoint control of a four-pitch mix (2.10 BB/9) and a consistent enough release point with enough unique movement to keep hitters off balance. This, combined with a neutral GB/FB rate (1.16 career, 1.11 in 2010) gives Shields quality sabermetrics reading material (3.86 career xFIP, 3.71 2010 xFIP), though the results, like Javier Vazquez' before him, have never quite synced up (4.14 career ERA, 4.90 2010 ERA). Working against Shields, of course, is the fact that he pitches in the AL East. Between the Yankees and Red Sox and a rising Orioles offense in a disproportional divisional schedule, Shields is likely to continue to post an above xFIP ERA. However, the WHIP (1.25 career) should be strong enough and the wins plentiful enough (the Rays are averaging 5.12 runs per game) and the strikeout rate above average enough (7.28 career K/9) for Shields to be worth a buy-low investment to round out a pitching staff. Though I do not peg Shields as a top 50 rest of season starting pitcher, I do think he has top 50 starter upside. Given the uptick in velocity and continuously consistent walk rate, Shields might approach his 2007 season for the rest of 2010. If that isn't worth 50 cents on the dollar, I don't know what is. Recommendation: Must own in all formats. Justin Masterson | Cleveland | SP | 5 percent Yahoo ownership YTD: 5.19 ERA, 1.58 WHIP, 7.17 K/9, 3.89 BB/9 Oliver ROS: 4.22 ERA, 1.42 WHIP, 7.1 K/9, 3.8 BB/9 In his last two turns versus the Twins and Rays, Masterson has given up only six ER (seven runs) over 13 innings with 12 strikeouts and a healthy diet of ground balls (71.1 percent) as always. Masterson's ERA-xFIP splits are by no means new to the regular reader, but it is worth noting that you can't exactly subtract ERA from xFIP. Still, his 5.19 ERA/3.93 xFIP/4.01 FIP split is too glaring too ignore. Perhaps a comparison of Masterson's ERA-xFIP standard deviations would be more telling, but I have neither the time nor the means (new laptop, no Excel yet; does anyone want to do it in the comments?). Though it may be baffling to some as to why Masterson struggles so mightily with the best groundball rate in baseball, improved control and an above average K/9, a look at Masterson's splits indicates that it may be less bad luck than the 65.1 percent LOB and .345 BABIP against seem to indicate. Simply put, Masterson cannot get lefties out. While Masterson has a 9.11 K/9, a 2.88 BB/9 and a 3.23 xFIP against righties this season (8.69 K/9, 2.95 BB/9, 3.40 xFIP career), he has a 5.40 K/9 with a horrendous 4.82 BB/9 and a merely average 4.56 xFIP against lefties (his career rates are even worse, with a 6.34 K/9, 5.19 BB/9 and 4.75 xFIP against lefties). Unless Masterson can start getting lefties out more consistently, he will continue to underperform as a starting pitcher and may eventually be converted into a ROOGY. Given his age (25) and minimal MLB experience (335.2 IP), I still believe in Masterson's upside. For now, Masterson is an elite spot starting option. Against RHB-heavy teams (especially where the nucleus of a team's lineup is mostly right handed), Masterson is a must deploy starter. I'd just keep him on the bench against teams with lots o' lefties. Recommendation: Must own in AL-only formats, worth a RHB-heavy spot start and bench spot in deeper mixed leagues with larger innings limits (1,400+ IP) or deeper benches (six-plus BN spots). Scott Baker | Minnesota | SP | 76 percent Yahoo ownership YTD: 5.00 ERA, 1.33 WHIP, 7,76 K/9, 1.72 BB/9 Oliver ROS: 3.94 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, 7.3 K/9, 1.9 BB/9 Scott Baker is a poor man's Dan Haren. He mixes elite control (career 2.00 BB/9, 172 mark in 2010) with plentiful punchouts (7.01 career K/9, 7.76 mark in 2010, 10.0 percent career SwStr%) to post strong peripherals (3.77 xFIP this season). Where Haren and Baker deviate most is groundball rates: Haren is a neutral GB/FB pitcher, Baker is an extreme or semi-extreme flyball pitcher (career 34.1 percent groundball rate, 0.76 career GB/FB ratio), which prevents him from becoming an elite pitcher (especially with Twins outfielders averaging a -7.0 UZR/150). Though the lack of a quality outfield defense in Minnesota explains some of why Baker's ERA does not match his peripherals, Baker's ERA should nonetheless be closer to the high 3's/low 4's than its current 5.00 mark. Between getting ahead of hitters early more often (career best 65.5 percent F-Strike%) and consistently inducing hitters to swing-and-miss (10.0 percent SwStr%, right in line with his 2007-2009 numbers and tied for top 20 among all major league starters with 70-plus innings in 2010), Baker's numbers should improve in the final two months. Though he had a pair of bad outings versus Toronto and Cleveland (10.2 IP, 11 ER, 5:3 K/BB), he had a nice bounce-back startagainst Baltimore's anemic offense (7.0 IP, 2 ER, 8:1 K/BB). Since I wrote about him on June 15 for my Week 11 AL Waiver Wire column, Baker has an atrocious 5.36 ERA. However, over that 43 IP time frame, Baker has a ridiculous 46:5 K/BB ratio. Sure, the groundball rate is still, and will likely always, be an issue for Baker, but his continually improving fastball velocity, quality control, improving strikeout results and spacious home park will continue to make him a tantalizing No. 3 starter for a fantasy team. Some owner, waiting four months for "regression," may be willing to part ways with Baker on the cheap. If so, exploit the opportunity, especially if you could use some strikeouts and WHIP help. Recommendation: Must own in all leagues. Gordon Beckham | Chicago (AL) | 2B, 3B | 55 percent Yahoo ownership YTD: .239/.293/.339 Oliver ROS: .271/.346/.443 Gordon Beckham is no stranger to early-season struggles. Through his first 60 AB last season, Beckham hit .180. Of course, Beckham turned things around, batting over .280 the rest of the way with plenty of HR/SB upside to get labeled a huge sleeper for 2010 by many,including me. Beckham's first half numbers were not exactly pretty: He batted .216/.277/.304 (.581 OPS) with three HR and was caught stealing (three) almost as many times as he was successful (four). However, since the All-Star break, Beckham has done nothing but hit, posting a .366/.381/.537 (.918 OPS) triple slash line, which has raised his season OPS by .043 points. These disparate numbers are likely much due to his .255 first half/.314, second half/.300 xBABIP splits. Though it is highly improbable that Beckham will continue to hit above .360 down the stretch, it is more than likely that he approaches my preseason forecasts the rest of the way (prorated): .280 AVG, seven HR, four/five SB, 40 R, 25 RBI. Oliver somewhat agrees, predicting a .271 average with six homers, three steals and 26 R/RBI. Beckham is available in almost half of Yahoo leagues, which is entirely too high given the impact of injury and ineffectiveness on two already thin positions, second and third base. Beckham should be owned or acquired in all leagues; if lady luck leaves him alone (or swings his way), he's not likely to disappoint (again). Recommendation: Must be owned in all formats. Beckham is a top 10 option at both 2B and 3B. Jorge Cantu | Texas | 1B, 3B | 75 percent Yahoo ownership YTD: .259/.308/.408 Oliver ROS: .272/.326/.434 In Roto, it doesn't matter how you get your numbers, only that you get them. However, in the case of trading within a Roto league (or head-to-head leagues generally), a player's true talent line is extremely important. Thus, it is important to look not at what a player has done, but what a player will likely henceforth do. On the surface, Jorge Cantu looks like a quality third base option with first base eligibility. In 2008 and 2009 combined, Cantu hit .283 with 195 RBI, 45 HR, 159 R and nine SB over 1,213 AB (though two-thirds of those homers came in 2008). This season, Cantu's BA is down (.259) and his strikeouts are way up (20.3 percent, compared to 17.7 percent in 2008 and 13.8 percent in 2009), but his power is back (10 homers in 370 AB) and the RBIs are still healthy from the middle of the order (54). Masked beyond Cantu's big year in 2008, though, is "Jorge Can't Do," the man whose inabilities inspired the Rays to give up on him (a la Johnny Gomes) several years ago. After hitting .286 with 28 HR and 117 RBI in 2005, Cantu floundered in 2006 and 2007 (split between Triple-A and the majors for the Rays and Reds), posting wOBAs of .299 (90 wRC+) and .304 (83 wRC+). Much of his struggles and prolonged slumps likely had much to do with his allergy to walks: In 2004, he walked 4.9 percent of the time, in 2005, at a 3.0 percent clip, and in 2006, 5.8 percent of the time. Cantu may have had much success in 2008, but he still walked just 5.8 percent of the time. Historically, a lack of walks indicates a lack of strike zone command, which often leads to inconsistent results and can really mess with a guy's head. A hitter who walks is still getting on base; the non-walker flounders completely. Masked with Cantu's quality-enough 2009 final season numbers (.289, 16 HR, 100 RBI, 67 R, three SB) was extreme inconsistency. Cantu started the season hot (April: .365, seven HR, 22 RBI, 15 R, one SB) and ended the season strong (September: .339, three HR, 29 RBI, 13 R, one SB), but was nothing to wet your pants about in between (May-August, combined: .261, six HR, 49 RBI, 39 R, one SB). Essentially, Cantu accrued 60 percent of his numbers in 33 percent of the season. Perhaps this kind of "ride" is normal for hitters, but Cantu's hot/cold ways make him less reliable via trade than his final season numbers indicate over the past couple of seasons. Cantu has shown similar streakiness in 2010. After hitting .311 with five HR, 23 RBI and 15 R in April, Cantu's hit .252 or lower in each of the past three months with a combined five homers,, 31 RBI and 24 runs. Also, Cantu has no place in the heart of the order in Texas. Even with Ian Kinsler out (15-day precautionary DL), the best Cantu will likely bat is sixth. That limits the R/RBI upside almost immediately (well, that and his career .321 OBP). Cantu may be a decent all-season Roto hitter, but he's incredibly inconsistent and unreliable. When making a trade, you want to acquire future value and in Cantu, that is a question of whether he's "got any lightning left" (as a sabermetrically inclined person, I realize I shouldn't have made that statement). By all means, Cantu might be valuable in August and September, but it would be wise to think long and hard as to whether Cantu can help you down the stretch. Is it worth gambling on the possibilities? Streaky hitters are worth a full season gamble in Roto, but when the remaining playing time dwindles, the risk-reward curve bends towards the red. Recommendation: Cantu should be owned in most AL-only leagues and leagues with CI-requirements and 12-plus teams. I would not count on him as a top 10 third baseman or first baseman down the stretch. C.J. Wilson | Texas | SP | 67 percent Yahoo ownership YTD: 3.03 ERA, 1.20 WHIP, 6.70 K/9, 4.23 BB/9, 49.4 GB% Oliver ROS: 3.54 ERA, 1.26 WHIP, 7.5 K/9, 4.0 BB/9 I am substantially more bearish on C.J. Wilson for the rest of the season than Oliver. For starters, Wilson's swinging strike rate has fallen this year. It's currently 6.7 percent, the lowest mark Wilson has posted since his 2005 debut. Correspondingly, Wilson's 6.70 K/9 rate is the lowest of his career since 2005. Wilson's career SwStr% is 8.4 percent and the only time it's dipped below that as been when he has pitched as a starter (in 2005 and 2010). Furthermore, Wilson is getting ahead of batters with the first pitch at a career low rate of 53.1 perrcent, which is well below the 58.9 percent major league average for pitchers. This failure to get ahead of hitters early has resulted in plentiful free passes (4.23 BB/9 in 2010, career 4.14 mark). Though Wilson has a quality groundball rate around 50 percent, his inability to whiff hitters and talent for putting runners on base has resulted in a career worst 4.58 xFIP, which is well above his current 3.11 ERA. Even Wilson's 1.20 WHIP is misleading. Per my xWHIP Calculator (which has been updated since its debut, so get a fresh v.1.1 copy if you haven't already), Wilson's current batted ball profile pegs him as a 1.34 WHIP pitcher in a defensive neutral alignment (see right, click to enlarge). However, once the Rangers' stellar defense is considered, Wilson's WHIP gets a thorough cleaning (1.29). In my estimation, much of Wilson's success to date has been the result of smoke and mirrors and one of baseball's best defensive alignments. Though the defense is likely to keep scooping up balls in play at a great rate, the smoke and mirrors game is no sure thing. No defense can cover all blemishes, especially when super gloveman Ian Kinsler is on the DL and the weather gets real hot in Arlington. Wilson's groundball rate is declining by month (54.8 percent in April, 51.3 in May, 48.3 in June, and 43.2 this month), which is a disturbing trend to carry into August in the ballpark in Arlington, which inflates home runs as a function of flyballs by 10 percent. The rule of thumb for reliever to starter conversions is add a full run to the reliever ERA. As a reliever (259 IP), Wilson has a career 3.65 ERA. Add a run to that and you get a 4.65 mark, which is much closer to his current xFIP (4.58) than his ERA (3.11). And that's before you consider the decline in peripherals across the board. Hence, despite a 2.03 ERA in July, Wilson is a sell high candidate no matter how you slice it. Pretend Wilson is Walgreens stock 10 years ago: and get out now, while it's still a hot commodity. Recommendation: I do not believe Wilson is particularly ownable for the rest of the season in AL-only or mixed leagues. Perhaps in AL-only leagues with high innings limits. Well, to be honest, he's ownable, but should not be owned by you. | ||||||