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Friday, June 08, 2012

The daily grind 6-8


The Daily Grind provides daily match-up advice based on my every-morning waiver wire search. I welcome advice to help make this column more effective. Ownership rates are from Yahoo!

Today's grind


So maybe I was a little crazy when I guessed that the Phillies might activate Chase Utley for today. It looks like they filled that roster spot with Michael Martinez.

Felix Doubront is set to face the Nationals today. I'm using him in two leagues.

Travis Wood and Nathan Eovaldi aren't great, but they're taking on the Twins and Mariners respectively. I have Eovaldi in one league, but Wood actually has the safer match-up.

Craig Gentry gets his usual mention. He faces Barry Zito.

Kirk Nieuwenhuis has a solid match-up against Hiroki Kuroda.

Tomorrow's grind


Scott Diamond draws the Cubs tomorrow. He's not great racking up strikeouts, but he should get through this outing just fine.

If you want a wild card, try pulling Daisuke Matsuzaka out of your sleeve.

Jason Vargas has a decent match-up against the Dodgers.

Trevor Cahill should benefit from facing his former employers.

Alex Presley is back in his former leadoff role and seems to be settling in.

Matt Adams against Justin Masterson just sounds too easy.

Reliever watch


Joel Hanrahan blew the save last night. Aroldis Chapman turned around and blew the save right back. The Pirates went on to win. Both relievers have secure jobs.

Yesterday’s results


Rajai Davis is day to day with a jammed finger.

Good game for Daniel Nava. He went 2-for-3 with two walks, one run, and two RBI. Might be a good time to hang onto him.

Nate Schierholtz was 0-for-1. I guessed he would start and was wrong.

Nieuwenhuis was 1-for-5 with one run and one stolen base.

I'm just going to spare you from future Shelley Duncan match-ups. If he can't make anything out of Casey Crosby, then he's useless.

Weekend updates


There will be no updates as I will be camping this weekend. However, some Twitter follows might engender good will for next week...

Posted by Brad Johnson at 6:01am (0) Comments

AL Waiver Wire: Week 9


Michael Saunders | Seattle Mariners | OF | ESPN: 13.7 percent ownership, Yahoo: 17 percent ownership
YTD: .277/.346/.462
Oliver ROS: 45 R, 8 HR, 38 RBI, 10 SB, .220 AVG


With 18 hits in his last eight games, including seven of the extra-base variety, I'm guessing Saunders has already been picked up in most competitive leagues. If he hasn't been in yours though, this is your notice: Go pick him up! With six homers and nine steals already on the season, Saunders has surprising power and speed. Plus, with his recent hot streak he's been moved up from eighth to sixth in the lineup, which should only increase his RBI opportunities.

The only area where Saunders will struggle is batting average, where his current .277 mark is probably at its peak. Oliver projects a .218 average the rest of the way, which seems a bit harsh, but as long as he can hit around .240, his production elsewhere should make up for it. I don't think a .240 average is asking so much. Even Drew Stubbs can do that.

Interestingly Saunders has an extreme home/road split this season (.185 average 0 homers at home, .301 average and 6 homers on the road). Safeco is no hitters haven but the difference should be nowhere this extreme and is likely mostly just a small sample fluke. Still, the Mariners have their next nine games at home so it will be an interesting test to see if his hot streak can continue there.

Saunders has likely been playing over his head the past week, but as is the case with most hot streaks, the best course of action is to add the player, hope it lasts as long as possible, and trade him if you can get something of value in return. Saunders' streak is no different.
Recommendation: Should be added in all leagues.

Sean Doolittle | Oakland A's | RP | ESPN: 0.2 percent ownership, Yahoo: 0 percent ownership
YTD (minors): 0.72 ERA, 0.60 WHIP, 2.52 BB/9, 17.3 K/9
Oliver ROS: 3.75 ERA, 1.28 WHIP, 9.3 K/9


Doolittle has logged all of 27 innings in his professional career, and yet he's already in the majors and being recommended as a fantasy pickup. However, his path to the majors wasn't nearly as deliberate as that innings total suggests, since Doolittle is actually a converted first baseman and began pitching essentially this year.

Beginning the season in Single-A, he threw 10 innings there while striking out 21, walking just two, and allowing one run. After another 11 innings at Double-A Midland and four in Triple-A with similar success, the A's decided to add Doolittle to their major league 'pen.

On Tuesday he made his first appearance against the Rangers and faced four batters, here's the play log:

N. Cruz struck out swinging
M. Napoli struck out swinging
Y. Torrealba struck out looking
C. Gentry lined out to first


It was an impressive first appearance, against a couple of tough hitters no less. For now Doolittle will fall into a middle relief role, but the A's bullpen is likely to be shaken up in the coming month. Grant Balfour is very likely to be traded and current closer Brian Fuentes, even if not traded, doesn't look like he'll hold on the job much longer. If those moves occur, Doolittle will find himself on a short list of possible closing candidates for the A's. And even if he doesn't close, he may simply be valuable enough to own because of his ERA and strikeout numbers alone.
Recommendation: Should be owned in AL-only leagues, deep mixed leagues, and by anyone looking to speculate on saves.

Travis D'Arnaud | Toronto Blue Jays | C | ESPN: 0.2 percent ownership, Yahoo 1 percent ownership
YTD (AAA): .321/.374/.584
Oliver ROS: .252/.300/.443


In his first year at Triple-A, the 23 year old d'Arnaud is proving his worth with a .321 average, 13 home runs and a strikeout rate below 20 percent. Granted, this is one of those PCL "grain of salt" lines, but his 143 wRC+ shows that he's still hitting 43 percent better than the average PCL hitter. I consider this impressive.

Is it impressive enough to warrant a call-up? With catchers the answer is especially tricky considering you never really know if a team considers a catcher defensively ready. At least John Sickels praised d'Arnaud's defensive abilities in his write-up of him last year. A lot of the answer to that question though is dependent on the man currently catching for the Jays: J.P. Arencibia
.

At first glance fantasy owners may see Arencibia's nine homers, 29 RBI and think he's been a valuable catcher, but the Jays front office is probably looking more at his .267 OBP and 0.5 WAR and showing concern. If the Blue Jays are serious about contending this year, it might make sense to call up d'Arnaud sooner rather than later.

I don't think anything is particularly imminent here, but give it another couple of weeks of mediocre Arencibia play and then start to listen for the promotion grumblings. d'Arnaud doesn't need to be added in most leagues yet, but if you're in a two catcher league with George Kotteras as your second catcher as I do, D'Arnaud can be a good player to stash away if you have the room.
Recommendation: Worth stashing in 2-catcher AL-only and mixed leagues where there's a need.

Ben Revere | Minnesota Twins | OF | ESPN: 1.6 percent ownership, Yahoo: 4 percent ownership
YTD: .307/.337/.409
Oliver ROS: .274/.313/.329


Ben Revere will bat either first or second for the Twins and therefore should score ample runs. Ben Revere will also hit for at least a .270 average but could push a .300 average too with a little luck. Yes, it will be an empty batting average. Ben Revere will also steal 20-something bases the rest of the season.

Now let's see what Ben Revere won't do. He won't drive many batters in, and certainly he won't put many baseballs over the fence. To sum it up, Revere is your standard three-cat contributor, which isn't bad for a fourth or fifth outfielder on most teams.

Playing time used to be a major concern for Revere, whose spot in right field has been filled with an odd bunch of players this season. This bunch included Clete Thomas, Trevor Plouffe, Ryan Doumit, Erik Komatsu and Darin Mastroianni to name names. Mastroianni is the only one to actually play in right field the past few weeks, though, and his slugging percentage is currently the same as his batting average: .152. I hope that paints the picture of his ineffectiveness.

Revere, on the other hand, has been rather effective, slapping 20 singles in 23 games and almost never striking out (6.3 K percentage). He also plays tremendous defense, which can only help to keep his bat in the lineup. Twins center fielder Denard Span is widely considered to be a trade deadline mover, and if he gets traded that will open up center field and even more guaranteed playing time for Revere.

There's not much upside here, but Revere isn't likely to hurt you with his play, either. Any team light on steals should have no problem adding him.
Recommendation: Should be added in AL-only and 14+ mixed leagues. For anything shallower, the team should have a specific stolen base need.

Brandon Moss | Oakland A's | 1B/OF | ESPN: 0 percent ownership, Yahoo: 0 percent ownership
YTD (AAA): .286/.371/.582
Oliver ROS: .243/.310/.431


The latest victim in the A's revolving door of mediocrity at first base was Kila Ka'aihue, presenting an opportunity for the 28-year-old Moss. In Triple-A this year he batted .286 with 15 home runs, good for a 146 wRC+. Most importantly, he also cut his strikeout rate to a tidy 18 percent.

Expectations aren't very high for Moss, but its worth noting that Oliver likes what he sees, projecting a .243 average and 21 home runs given a full season of at-bats. Given that he will also play nearly every day for a week at least, Moss should be an intriguing add for those in deeper leagues where at-bats are a currency of their own.
Recommendation: Can be added in deep AL-only leagues, and 16+ team mixed.

Posted by Paul Singman at 6:04am (8) Comments

NL Waiver Wire: Week 9


Alex Presely | Pirates | OF | 4 percent Yahoo ownership | 2 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .235 / .257 /.356
Oliver ROS: .282 / .325 / .433

Coming into the season, Presley was billed as a high-average, speedy guy who could be had for next to nothing in Senior Circuit leagues especially. While nothing went according to plan, per se—as evidenced by Presley’s demotion to Triple-A Indianapolis—he’s back in the big leagues with a new-found confidence and a chip on his shoulder.

All he did in the minors was mash: He put up a 1.016 OPS in only 18 games and hit five homers in fewer than 80 plate appearances. Presley can be a boon to fantasy rosters because he’s a plus runner; he has a 6.6 Speed Rating for his career, which puts him as faster this year than Dee Gordon, Andrew McCutchen, Jose Reyes, and Ryan Braun, for example. I wouldn’t believe wholeheartedly in the batting average that was hyped, but I certainly can’t see him hurting most rosters in that department, either.
Recommendation: Worthy of adding in NL-only leagues and deeper mixed formats.

Ryan Theriot | Giants | 2B, SS | 5 percent Yahoo ownership | 4.4 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .284 / .339 / .343
Oliver ROS: .273 / .322 / .337

Good for much of what Alex Presley is good for, Theriot, a speedster and slap-hitter with a history of helping fantasy rosters, is heating up. Over the last 15 days, Theriot has gone 19-for-46 with eight runs scores, six runs batted in, and three stolen bases. He’s also, it seems, hit his way toward a full-time gig at second base.

Theriot was a fantasy mainstay (at least in NL-only leagues) from 2007-2010, when he stole 20 bases or more every years and hit anywhere from .266-.307. The year before, he had slapped his way to a .328 average in his brief stint with the Cubs, and though he’s been a below-average offensive player since 2006, his defense should keep him in the Giants’ lineup, and his steals should keep him in yours.
Recommendation: Worthy of adding in NL-only leagues and deeper mixed formats.

Norichika Aoki | Brewers | OF | 2 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.4 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .303 / .357 /.487
Oliver ROS: .296 / .358 / .396

This isn’t the first time I’ve recommended Aoki in this column, but it may well be the last. It’s no coincidence that Aoki finds his name here after a three-hit, two home run game yesterday against the Chicago Cubs, his second straight three-hit performance and fifth multi-hit game in his last 15.

Many expected a high average out of the Japanese import, what with his detailed history of hitting for the highest average in town, but few expected a taste of power and speed as well. And while 13.4 homers and 8.9 stolen bases per 600 plate appearances isn’t startling, it’s impressive nonetheless when accompanies by a .300 average and developed on-base skills. His platoon splits indicate that he’s better in dealing with lefties but is above average against both hands, so Aoki should find himself in the lineup much more in the near future. Buy him now.
Recommendation: Worthy of adding in NL-only leagues and deeper mixed formats.

Shawn Camp | Cubs | RP | 3 percent Yahoo ownership | 1.3 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 2.37 ERA / 1.15 WHIP / 7.7 K/9
Oliver ROS: 4.09 ERA / 1.36 WHIP / 5.6 K/9

Let’s go with a little tale of the tape: Shawn Camp has a career 4.09 FIP, a career 3.97 xFIP, 10 saves, and a 2.37 strikeout to walk ratio over his career. James Russell, on the other hand, has a 4.79 FIP, a 4.44 xFIP, one save, and a similar 2.94 strikeout to walk ratio.

Though the Cubs have only one save in the last 14 days—and though it’s gone to James Russell—Shawn Camp is the superior pitcher of the two and should, at one point, “wrestle” the “job” from Russell. The quotes are to say, of course, that Russell, in my mind, doesn’t even have the job—it’s as unclear and fluid a ninth-inning situation as I’ve seen in years. Buy Camp for speculative saves, and sell Russell and his sub-replacement level skill set.
Recommendation: Worthy of adding in NL-only leagues and deeper mixed formats.

Andrew Cashner | Padres | RP | 4 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.8 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 3.81 ERA / 1.50 WHIP / 10.04 K/9
Oliver ROS: 3.70 ERA / 1.31 WHIP / 7.9 K/9

I never thought much of Cashner as a relief pitcher this year, as he reminded me of an Aroldis Chapman—owner of an overpowering young arm who tries to throw 115 miles per hour every time he takes the mound. And sure enough, he sacrificed control for what was viewed as overpowering stuff.

The Padres did what the Reds (perhaps intelligently) didn’t do—which is to say that they begun the process of moving Cashner to the rotation full-time. His ascent through the minors as a starting pitcher was impressive—it included a 10.5 K/9 in Double-A and a 2.31 FIP, as well as an 8.5 strikeout-to-walk ratio in 21 Triple-A innings. While Cashner will be watched with many careful eyes and paced slowly, he’s worth stashing for when he makes it to the majors. He has powerful stuff and a wicked good home park.
Recommendation: Worthy of adding in NL-only leagues and deeper mixed formats.

Posted by Nick Fleder at 8:37am (3) Comments

Monday, June 11, 2012

This week in (fantasy) baseball 6/4-6/10


It’s hard enough following one’s own fantasy team without having to keep track of an entire sport’s daily transactions. To assist you, here’s a column dedicated to recapping the most notable trades, signings, promotions, demotions and role changes across the majors over the past week as they relate to fantasy. We'll do this on a weekly basis. If you feel I've missed anything important, please don't hesitate to keep the conversation going in the comments below.

Fantasy infirmary


• Heading into week 10, Jaime Garcia was a risky start, having been scratched from a turn with a balky elbow. But after he was nuked by the Astros last week, it’s official: The Cardinals southpaw is seriously ailing after tearing in his labrum and rotator cuff.

At minimum, Garcia, 25, will miss at least the next month as he looks to avoid surgery, but he’s scheduled to visit the dreaded Dr. James Andrews today, which could hint at a more serious injury. For the moment, it appears right-hander Joe Kelly, 24, will replace him in the rotation. Kelly was 2-5 with a 2.86 ERA and 1.327 WHIP in 12 Triple-A starts before his promotion, and he pitched fairly well in a no-decision Sunday, going five innings and allowing just one earned run with four strikeouts and one walk.

Derek Holland landed on the 15-day DL with shoulder fatigue, though it doesn’t appear he has any structural damage. He was replaced in the rotation by Alexi Ogando, but there’s one problem: Ogando himself was injured Sunday when he strained his right groin running to first. He’ll be examined today.

• Bothered recently by a strained right hamstring, Detroit catcher Alex Avila was knocked to the DL last week. He was replaced on the roster by 24-year-old Bryan Holaday, who will split catching duties with Gerald Laird while Avila recovers.

• The Royals lost one of their best starters over the weekend when Felipe Paulino was placed on the DL with a strained right groin. Paulino, who was 3-1 with a 1.67 ERA, 1.221 WHIP and 9.3 K/9 in seven starts, will likely miss at least a start or two with the injury. Look for Luis Mendoza (2-3, 5.36 ERA, 1.809 WHIP in 43.2 innings) to pick up his action in the rotation.

Other bumps and bruises


Melky Cabrera was absent this weekend as he rests a sore right hamstring.

Felix Hernandez, who’s been dealing with a sore back this month, is expected to make his next start on Tuesday.

Carlos Zambrano left his start early Saturday after experiencing lower back stiffness, and it remains to be seen whether he’ll make his next start.

Yoenis Cespedes, who’s been nagged by injuries all season, missed the second half of last week with a strained left hamstring and could return by Tuesday, though the A’s might take it slow with their star center fielder.

Tim Hudson missed Sunday’s start with a bone spur in his left ankle, though he expects to pitch this week.

Closer moves


• Well, that didn’t take long: Brian Fuentes has been bounced out of the closer’s job in Oakland after coughing up another game over the weekend. Manager Bob Melvin says the team will go with a closer-by-committee situation, using Fuentes, ex-closer Grant Balfour and Ryan Cook, who’s been outstanding so far this season (1-1, 0.69 ERA, .846 WHIP, 8.7 K/9 in 26 innings pitched). Melvin says he doesn’t want to use Cook as the full-time closer since he likes having him on call for late-inning situations, but Cook is certainly someone to keep an eye on as the save situations might begin to pile up for him.

• It’s too soon to tell for sure, but Brandon League might regain the closer’s job in Seattle after all. League, 29, has pitched well in six games since losing the job, and he’d replace Tom Wilhelmsen, who’s acted as his de facto replacement over the past couple of weeks.

Minor developments


Gaby Sanchez was recalled Sunday from Triple-A and went 1 for 4 with a RBI double in his return. He’ll likely play first base full-time, giving him an opportunity to live up to the potential that garnered him a spot on last year’s NL All-Star team.

• Unfortunately, Julio Teheran’s 2012 major league cameo is over—for now. The 21-year-old phenom was demoted back to the minors after filling in for Hudson, and pitched decently, giving up three earned runs in 4.1 innings with five strikeouts and one walk.

Jeff Francis has returned to Colorado, though the pitching-starved team might need more help than the 31-year-old southpaw, who was lit up in 3.1 innings and surrendered 10 hits and eight earned runs.

Posted by Karl de Vries at 5:58am (4) Comments

The daily grind 6-11


The Daily Grind provides daily match-up advice based on my every-morning waiver wire search. I welcome advice to help make this column more effective. Ownership rates are from Yahoo!

Today's grind


It's one of those Mondays where hardly anybody plays.

I found Chris Capuano to start today in the THT League (apparently there aren't any believers there), but he's 85 percent owned.

Garrett Richards is widely available, but don't use him unless you have to.

Raul Ibanez's ownership rate has crept back down to 35 percent. He faces Randall Delgado today.

Pickings are a bit slim beyond that. Daniel Nava and Rajai Davis are both under-owned, but both are dealing with day-to-day injuries and should be considered questionable for this evening.

Tomorrow's grind


Wei-Yin Chen against the Pirates feels pretty safe to me. He's just 19 percent owned.

Alex Cobb has a reasonably friendly match-up against the Mets.

It's doubtful they are available, but Max Scherzer (Cubs) and Clay Buchholz (Marlins) have good match-ups.

The Phillies vs. Twins game features Kyle Kendrick and Nick Blackburn. Stack up on as many left-handed hitters as possible from both clubs. Some names include Ryan Doumit, Ben Revere and Jim Thome.

Andruw Jones should be let off the bench to tame Mike Minor.

Davis might need a blanket recommendation. His teammate Colby Rasmus is under 50 percent owned and should be widely carried.

Reliever watch


Brian Fuentes blew another save on Sunday, losing his grip on the closer's role in the process. A committee of Fuentes, Grant Balfour and Ryan Cook is expected to be used, with Cook given a shot at the role. Sean Doolittle lurks in the wings. He struck out five in two innings yesterday and as a bonus, I played against him frequently back in the glory days.

Aroldis Chapman blew the save and took the loss yesterday. He came on in the eighth with inherited base runners. His role is safe for now, although the Reds really ought to be looking into stretching him out if they want to hold on to their narrow division lead (currently tied with Pittsburgh).

Rafael Soriano blew his first save of the season just in time to stir up some controversy. David Robertson is expected to return from the disabled list sometime this week. Robertson was originally handed the role when Mariano Rivera hit the shelf, but the Yankees ought to be fairly indifferent between Robertson and Soriano.

Alfredo Aceves blew the save Sunday, his fourth of the season. He's been stable since the beginning of the year, so he has a little bit of leeway. Besides which, the Sox bullpen lacks an obvious replacement at the moment.

Yesterday’s results


That was last week.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 6:00am (6) Comments

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Why we add the hot hitter


It's been debunked in The Book, and there are probably a few internet articles I could link to, that prove hitter hot streaks largely not predictive of future performance. That is, a player who out of nowhere bats .400 with four homers in one week is essentially no more likely to repeat that line next week than a player who batted .100 with zero homers. This is, of course, assuming the two players had the same true talent estimate for hitting home runs and such things beforehand.

If this be the case, then why do so many fantasy baseball articles revolve around this very phenomenon, the hot hitter? Are we, the fantasy community, acting short-sighted by jumping furiously on every hot streak to flash across our respective monitors?

The answer isn't a straightforward "yes" or "no," instead pulled by conflicting factors and falling somewhere in between. I'll look at a few of those factors in the following paragraphs and argue that for the most part, the answer is in fact "no." Despite what research has proven, investing in hot streaks in fantasy baseball is not a bad idea.

Playing time and batting orders

Like fantasy baseball managers, major league managers often make lineup decisions based on who's performing and who is not. If this means that the hot player could be given a greater share of playing time in a platoon or moved from eighth to second in the lineup as a result of his good play, then that is a tangible benefit from playing well. Even if the hitter doesn't continue his hot-hitting ways, his value has still increased.

Injuries and the threat of demotion

There may be a research piece that refutes this, but it makes logical sense that a hot-hitting player is less likely to be injured than an underperforming one, at least in the short term. Injuries can often explain poor play, but it would be quite an amazing story for an injury to explain great play. Freak injuries, of course, would be excluded here, as Troy Tulowitzki will tell you.

Similar to the playing time reasoning above, a hot streak can decrease the chance of being demoted for a fringe player whose roster spot is in jeopardy.

Trade value

Given two identical players, except for whatever reason one has a greater trade value (say one was a top prospect), you would always take the player with more trade value. This is because being able to trade a player is like an option a fantasy owner can exercise on a player, and the more that player can return in a trade, the more valuable the option.

More often than not, a player on a hot streak will hold more trade value than a similar player who isn't. And let's say both players play very well the following week, which is fair because they are equally likely to do so. Now we have one player who people will still be fairly skeptical of with just one strong week. The other, the player who was hot before, now has two good weeks to his name and may start to convince people of his long-term ability.

If you hate trading with the people in your league, though, I guess you wouldn't value this point too much.

Final thoughts

The overarching theme here is of the discouraging sort: We know little of players' true talent levels and even less about how they'll perform in the short term, so the success of the personnel decisions we make is largely luck influenced. With that in mind, it makes sense to simply choose to add the hot hands for the extra benefits explained above.

No one is suggesting dropping a player who is clearly superior for a worse talent on a hot streak... but for two players ranked closely enough, there's no shame in trying to ride the hot hitter.

It's often more fun that way, or at least that's how you'll remember it.

Thanks to this Mr. Thell comment on a Fangraphs article yesterday for the inspiration.

Posted by Paul Singman at 3:30am (2) Comments

The daily grind 6-12


The Daily Grind provides daily match-up advice based on my every-morning waiver wire search. I welcome advice to help make this column more effective. Ownership rates are from Yahoo!

Today's grind


Wei-Yin Chen has a favorable match-up against the Pirates that isn't quite good enough to be called "safe."

Alex Cobb is set to take on the Mets.

Clay Buchholz and Max Scherzer have both showed up on a couple of my waiver wires despite high ownership rates. They face the Marlins and Cubs respectively.

The Phillies vs. Twins game could be a slugfest with Kyle Kendrick opposing Nick Blackburn. Try snagging Ryan Doumit, Ben Revere or Jim Thome.

Andruw Jones should face the lefty Mike Minor today.

Rajai Davis and Colby Rasmus draw Chien-Ming Wang. Rasmus has been on fire lately, while Davis is dealing with a seemingly minor hand injury.

Tomorrow's grind


Felix Doubront is up to 43 percent owned, but he's available in some of my leagues so he's worth a mention. I'll be using him at least once tomorrow.

Nathan Eovaldi has an avoidable match-up against the Angels. I mention him because other writers like him. I haven't seen him since last season and I was unimpressed.

J.A. Happ will face the Giants. He's having a stealthily decent season.

Justin Smoak, Mike Carp and Michael Saunders should all benefit from facing Jason Marquis tomorrow.

I'd give Seth Smith against Alex White a try if I needed a push in power.

Raul Ibanez is back to being widely available at 34 percent owned. He'll face Tim Hudson, who'e been a bit banged up and could be rusty. The game is in Atlanta, so it wouldn't be a total shock if Ibanez sat.

Reliever watch


Mark Melancon is back in the picture in Boston. The Sox recalled Melancon to take the roster spot of Rich Hill. Alfredo Aceves recently blew a save, but currently appears to have a firm grip on the role.

Rafael Soriano is battling a blister and should be considered day-to-day. David Robertson is expected to return on Friday.

Yesterday’s results


One of Chris Capuano's worst outings of the year: 5 IP, 2 K, 3.60 ERA, 2.40 WHIP

Palatable outing from Garrett Richards: 5 IP, 4 K, 1.80 ERA, 1.80 WHIP

Ibanez was 1-for-3 with one home run, one run, one RBI and one walk.

Daniel Nava sat due to a cortisone shot in his hand. Rajai Davis played but did nothing.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:52am (4) Comments

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Trader’s corner: reviewing the misses


We're now deep enough into the 2012 season that we can start looking at player performance and evaluate predictions from the beginning of the year. It's a good time to sit back and take stock of performances thus far—both those of the players on our rosters and of our own as fantasy managers.

Believe it or not, THT Fantasy experts aren't immune to mistakes. Some of the calls made in this space have not worked out as hoped. Any good gamer will tell you process trumps results, so even some of the misses can be misleading, but some were simply misses. What follows is a review of the recommendations I've made in this space that have failed to live up to my predictions.

I'll also dedicate a separate column to the predictions I made that were successful, and one to the predictions that were neither obvious successes or obvious failures.


Justin Upton
Initial recommendation: Buy High
Date: March 27, 2012
Before: N/A
After: .250-37-22-5-8

While Upton certainly hasn't been awful, he's been far from a first round value. Neither his power or batting average are what owners were hoping for when they paid first round value to acquire him.

The good news is this looks more likely to be noise than degradation of skill. His strikeouts are up a bit from last year, but still on pace with his career to date. He's not hitting too many balls on the ground, and nothing jumps out in his plate discipline profile that makes an obvious culprit for his struggles.

Upton has the look of a player well worth being patient with. His Oliver projection still calls for a .290-59-56-16-13 the rest of the way, which is qualifies as first round production. His end of season line is likely to look disappointing at this stage, but there's no great reason to doubt his production moving forward.

Updated recommendation: Buy Low


Matt Garza
Initial recommendation: Buy High
Date: April 11, 2012
Before: 0-3.00-1.00-5
After: 2-4.10-1.13-56

Garza has had a bit of a roller coaster season so far. He got off to a fine start, struggled a bit at the end of May, but has picked it up in two starts so far in June. He's provided a better-than-expected WHIP, a worse-than-expected ERA, and a quality strikeout rate. The real killer, though, has been his two lonely wins, largely thanks to awful offensive and bullpen support.

The reason for Garza's inflated ERA is a 15.3 percent home run per fly ball rate. His strikeout rate is still high, walk rate still solid, and he's getting more ground balls than ever, leading to a very respectable 3.53 xFIP and 3.43 SIERA

In the initial discussion about Garza, one of the points raised was the connection between his increased slider usage and his success in 2011. The idea was that if he maintained this pitch distribution heading into 2012, he should continue to find success. And indeed he has, throwing his slider nearly 25 percent of the time.

His fastball velocity is steady, and while his swinging strike rate is down a touch, it's still above average. He should be able to maintain the above average strikeout rate, and there's no reason to expect he won't see his ERA improve moving forward as well.

The biggest problem for Garza is that the Cubs have been such a disaster that it's impossible to project he'll start winning more games. He should provide solid ratios and a nice strikeout rate, but as far as wins go, Garza owners simply have to hope he gets traded (which, thankfully, looks like a very real possibility).

Updated recommendation: Buy Low, especially for ratio help, but don't expect many wins. If he does get traded, be ready to make a strong play for him.


Mat Latos
Initial recommendation: Buy Low
Date: April 11, 2012
Before: 0-7.71-1.93-4
After: 4-4.64-1.36-55

Unlike Upton and Garza, Latos is looking like a pretty major whiff so far. While he likely hasn't been as bad as he looks so far, he hasn't been very good either. His strikeouts are down, walks are up, and he's getting fewer ground balls than ever. That's a bad combination considering he's now in one of the game's most hitter friendly ballparks.

It's difficult to pinpoint exactly what's gone wrong for Latos. Early in the year, he'd significantly reduced the rate at which he was throwing his slider, instead throwing a harder, tighter, cutter. It seemed this might be at the root of his struggles, but he's been throwing his slider more recently, and the results have only slightly improved.

His fastball velocity is steady, and there's no major difference in his pitch distribution, but he's simply not generating swings and misses at the rate he's used to. As a result, it's hard to predict the strikeouts are suddenly going to return.

If there is a silver lining, it's that he's actually throwing first pitch strikes at a strong rate, but an improved walk rate would only help so much.

Oliver still expects him to improve to 7-3.96-1.27-116 over the rest of the year, but that's much more a back end starter than the mid rotation guy Latos was expected to be, and not at all the strong value I called him in April.

Updated recommendation: If you can get anything of value, sell low. Otherwise hold. He's not outright droppable in standard mixed leagues, but he's not someone worth targeting right now despite the big hit his value has taken.


C.J. Wilson
Initial recommendation: Sell High
Date: April 25, 2012
Before: 2-2.37-1.05-15
After: 5-2.40-1.10-58

Much to my chagrin, Wilson continues to outperform his peripheral rates, putting up ace like fantasy numbers despite less-than-ace like components.

At this point, I'm honestly befuddled. Wilson continues to generate strikeouts despite a swinging strike rate that's now well below average. His ERA and WHIP are strong not because he limits walks—in fact his walk rate is quite poor this year—but thanks to a .240 BABIP and 6.7 percent home run per fly ball rate.

Wilson is now in his third straight season of outperforming his xFIP. It may be time to accept that he's simply a unique entity on the baseball landscape. Still, I can't recommend him as a buy. A .240 BABIP is low even for him, and rostering a pitcher with a walk rate over 10 percent is playing with fire in fantasy. His ERA may not regress all the way to his 3.69 xFIP, but I'm still betting it's closer to 3.50 than 2.50 for the rest of the year.

Updated recommendation: If someone is willing to pay for him as a Top 10 or 15 pitcher, I stand by the sell. Otherwise, hold.


Matt Wieters
Initial recommendation: Buy High
Date: May 9, 2012
Before: .299-16-18-7-0
After: .210-11-9-2-0

Wieters was one of my favorite preseason value picks. So, of course, it figures that immediately after I recommended him he went into the tank for a month.

Wieters did almost nothing for three weeks in May, but he's showing signs of life again in June, going 14 for 36 so far (.389) with a homer.

In total, Wieters' numbers now look much like they did a year ago—good power with a mediocre batting average. He still looks like a Top 10 catcher, but not quite the major breakout candidate he appeared to be after the first six weeks of the year.

In part, the problem with this recommendation was timing. It would look much more palatable had it been made a week or two earlier or later. The increased power still looks to be very much for real, and a .260 batting average and 25 home runs from a catcher is certainly nothing to sneeze at.

Updated recommendation: Buy—you should be able to get away with paying less than you would have had to a few weeks ago.


Bryan LaHair
Initial recommendation: Buy High
Date: May 9, 2012
Before: .388-14-17-8-0
After: .247-11-8-4-1

After an absurdly strong start to the year, LaHair was bound to come back down to earth a bit. The buy high recommendation was never meant to suggest he'd hit .388 all year, but that the power was real and that he shouldn't become a black hole in the other categories.

Well, that's essentially what's happened since May 9. LaHair still hit four home runs in less than 100 plate appearances, but his batting average declined. His BABIP fell to .304 over that stretch while his strikeout rate actually improved slightly.

Oliver actually projects a .329 BABIP for LaHair moving forward and roughly a .280 batting average for the rest of the year. So while we can't expect him to be as good as he was over the first six weeks of the year, there is reason to expect he'll be better than he's been over the last month or so.

The most significant negative development for LaHair since we last checked in on him is that he's gone back to the bench against most left handed pitchers. This does hurt his projection in terms of volume in a way Oliver can't quite correct for, but he still should be plenty valuable going forward just playing against righties.

Updated recommendation: Still buy high.


Adam Jones
Initial recommendation: Sell High
Date: May 9, 2012
Before: .297-23-17-8-5
After: .311-19-20-9-4

Somehow, it seems the more ground balls Jones hits, the more home runs he hits as well.

The crux of my concern with Jones was that he's historically been a very heavy ground ball hitter, and nothing in that regard has changed. In fact, his ground ball rate has actually increased quite a bit since early May. But despite that, he's more than doubled his home run total since then.

The last hitter to have a ground ball rate of at least 47 percent and hit at least 30 home runs was Shawn Green back in 2002 (Ellis Burks actually did it that year as well).

Jones's rate currently sits at 50.5 percent. It's very unusual for a player to hit so many balls on the ground and so many balls over the fence in the same year. At this point, Jones seems likely to join crack the 30 home run barrier despite the high ground ball rate, but that doesn't mean you can't still get value for him.

Updated recommendation: Sell high, but be deliberate. Even though it's unlikely he maintains the power production, and the ground ball rate is a red flag, it would take a massive slump to damage the community's perception of Jones at the moment. Try and get a Top 20 or 25 player, and if you can't, there's little harm in holding him as you approach your league's trade deadline.

Observations



-Out of 32 players covered through Week Six, just seven have yielded poor results so far. I'll take it.

-It's probably no coincidence that three of the seven players were from Week Six. We expect to see more extreme results in small sample sizes, and given more time, these results should stabilize further. I expect at least one of the predictions on Wieters, LaHair, or Jones to look considerably better in another month or two.

-Oddly, six of the seven misses were on either "Buy High" or "Sell High" players. Do I have an issue with evaluating strong performance as opposed to weak performance? These results are far from conclusive, but perhaps this is something worth watching moving forward.

Posted by Mark Himmelstein at 5:30am (3) Comments

The daily grind 6-13


The Daily Grind provides daily match-up advice based on my every-morning waiver wire search. I welcome advice to help make this column more effective. Ownership rates are from Yahoo!

Today's grind


Felix Doubront is up to 44 percent owned. If he's still available, he faces the Marlins today.

To recap what I said yesterday, Nathan Eovaldi is liked by other writers I respect but I haven't had an opportunity to form an opinion on him. The Angels aren't the most difficult match-up in baseball, but it certainly isn't an easy assignment. Avoid unless you think you know something I don't (which is very possible).

J.A. Happ against the Giants could go very well. Then again, most of Happ's season could have gone very well thanks to solid peripherals... but it hasn't.

The Mariners have a troop of lefties facing Jason Marquis. Justin Smoak, Mike Carp and Michael Saunders, come on down.

Seth Smith returns to Colorado to face Alex Smith.

Raul Ibanez has a solid match-up against Tim Hudson.

Tomorrow's grind


Tomorrow marks what I believe is the inaugural recommendation of Barry Zito. He's 28 percent owned and will take on the Astros.

Joe Blanton has the coveted Twins match-up, but he's burned me frequently this year. I'm wary and will probably pass on the opportunity.

On the other side of that match-up, Scott Diamond gets the pleasure of facing a mostly ineffective Phillies lineup.

Reliever watch


Nothing to report.

Yesterday’s results


Wei-Yin Chen survived his not quite "safe" outing with a win and otherwise undesirable numbers: 6.1 IP, 4 K, 5.68 ERA, 1.58 WHIP

Alex Cobb had a rougher go of things: 6.2 IP, 6 K, 6.75 ERA, 1.50 WHIP

Clay Buchholz should be rostered after last night's win: 7 IP, 9 K, 1.29 ERA, 1.00 WHIP

Max Scherzer had a typical evening: 6 IP, 8 K, 4.50 ERA, 1.67 WHIP

Ryan Doumit was 3-for-5 with two runs.

Ben Revere was 3-for-5 with two RBI.

Jim Thome was 2-for-4 with one run, two RBI, and one walk.

Andruw Jones turned in an 0-for-3 night.

Rajai Davis was similarly disappointing with a 0-for-3 performance.

Colby Rasmus was 1-for-4.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 6:05am (13) Comments

Thursday, June 14, 2012

NL Waiver Wire: Week 10


Tyler Colvin | Rockies | OF | 3 percent Yahoo ownership | 2.5 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .304 / .336 / .589
Oliver ROS: .246 / .287 / .450

It’s about time Colvin shows up here, right, what with his four home runs in his last 10 at-bats, and seven in his first 112? Colvin’s always possessed a superior power stroke, all the way from Low A (11 homers in 64 games) to his 2010 “breakout” with the Cubs, where he stroked 20 long-balls in fewer than 400 plate appearances. He fell out of favor in Chicago last year, though, mostly due to his inability to hit the ball. Colvin, on the heels of what looked like a rise to stardom, fell nearly 75 percent below league average offensively. It got ugly.

He landed in the right situation, though: that is, a home park that functions as a launching pad. And while the three occupants of Colorado’s outfield range from solid everyday player (Dexter Fowler) to underrated masher (Michael Cuddyer) to MVP-caliber star (Carlos Gonzalez), Colvin’s managing to carve out some much-deserved playing time. Cuddyer, luckily, is eligible just about everywhere, and everyone requires a day off every once in a while—particularly the unimpressive (D.J. LeMahieu, 2B) and the elderly (Todd Helton, 1B). Suffice it to say that I think Colvin will get three-to-five days a week of burn, and he’ll be particularly useful in Coors, where his OPS is 1.177 and he’s 91 percent above average. Buy!
Recommendation: Worth adding in all leagues.

Jason Marquis | Padres | SP | 0 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.1 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 7.65 ERA / 1.90 WHIP / 4.05 K/9
Oliver ROS: 4.48 ERA / 1.35 WHIP / 4.9 K/9


Maybe this is taking the whole “PETCO makes fantasy-relevant pitchers like a factory” thing too far, but Marquis could thrive like many have before in the home-run killing haven. Over his long, bumpy road, Marquis has been as good as a 4.0 fWAR pitcher and as bad a 6.02 ERA, and while control issues have been the biggest plague for Marquis, his home run rate has never been friendly.

His career home-run to fly-ball ratio of 12.1 percent is above league average, and has predictably fell when he’s been in friendly confines: see, most recently, his 20 start stint in Washington just last year, where he had an eight percent mark and a 3.95/3.78/3.96 triple-slash for ERA/FIP/xFIP. It’s not a stretch to think that, like last year, he’ll have strikingly opposite home/road splits, and, like last year, he’ll have stretches of fantasy relevance when pitching at home.
Recommendation: Worth adding and starting in deeper NL-Only leagues when at PETCO.

Everth Cabrera | Padres | SS | 4 percent Yahoo ownership | 2.1 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .278 / .352 / .468
Oliver ROS: .236 / .305 / .318

One month ago, things weren’t sitting so pretty for Cabrera: he had domestic violence charges against him, he was stuck in Triple-A Tuscon after a post-hype burnout, and he was a largely forgotten name in the baseball world as a whole. Fast forward to today, where the charges have been dismissed, he’s nearly a win above replacement in 23 games, and he seems to be a gem amidst the rubble in Padre-land.

I, for one, can’t figure out why he isn’t on more fantasy rosters. Sure, his .278 average might drop when his .357 BABIP goes down, but he’ll have more than two infield hits for every nine slap singles. And his strikeouts are a concern, but his walk rate is high enough to mitigate some of the ugliness. The speed is without question (he has yet to be caught in his eight attempts), and a 7.6 speed rating puts him only behind the following qualified hitters: Cameron Maybin, Dexter Fowler, and Jason Kipnis. What do those names all have in common? They have 30+ steal potential.
Recommendation: Worth adding in all leagues.

Brett Wallace | Astros | 1B | 3 percent Yahoo ownership | 2.6 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .400 / .500 / .760
Oliver ROS: .255 / .323 / .401

For a team as bad as the Astros, it seemed silly to me that Brett Wallace, a (potential) talent, was sitting at Triple-A. Why not let him develop, despite his unimpressive career beginning? Why not try to salvage some value? I see now that the goal all along has been to let Carlos Lee play in hopes that he can be sold at the deadline, but the past shouldn’t be dwelled on: a Lee injury has Wallace manning the first bag for the Astros, and doing a fine job of it so far.

Nothing about his eight game performance is sustainable, but that doesn’t make it any less impressive: he has two homers where had five in 115 games last year, and he’s been the Astros sixth best player in terms of WAR in a matter of two weeks. What can you expect from him from hereon out? He’s a sort of James Loney-lite, which certainly doesn’t sound appealing but carries it’s value in a single-league format. He’ll hit for an okay average with okay power (see last year’s .259 average and five homers in two-thirds of a season), and should be the Astros full-time man at first base if/when Carlos Lee is traded at the deadline.
Recommendation: Worth adding in deeper NL-Only formats.

Chris Young | Mets | SP | 3 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.1 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 3.36 ERA / 1.68 WHIP / 5.0 K/9
Oliver ROS: 4.61 ERA / 1.43 WHIP / 6.0 K/9

Young, I would think, is what he’s always been: a fly-baller who would fizzle in the wrong home park but could thrive despite shoddy control. His career ERA, for illustration’s sake, is nearly a run below his career xFIP, which is to say that he’s made a living off of keeping the ball in the fences. Not much should change in Flushing, where Citi Field has remained a pitcher’s park despite the shortened fences and where Young had four successful (0.96 WHIP, 1.88 ERA) starts last year.

What is sure to remain attached to Young, rightfully, is a reputation for being brittle (at best). From 2005-2007, he started 30+ games to much success, but since then, he’s been a headache, a backache, and a sore rotator cuff for the Padres and Mets. He’s started 40 games in the last four years, and you’d be wrong to expect even eight more starts this year. He’ll probably be helpful to your roster, and at the very least he’ll be a useful streamer at home (where his career ERA is .66 better than his career ERA on the road).
Recommendation: Worth adding in deeper NL-Only formats.

Wilton Lopez | Astros | RP | 4 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.1 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 2.51 ERA / 0.96 WHIP / 7.2 K/9
Oliver ROS: 3.44 ERA / 1.18 WHIP / 6.5 K/9

If this year’s taught us anything so far, it’s that talent wins eventually in most bullpen situations (see Kenley Jansen, Shawn Camp, and Tyler Clippard, for example). With that nugget of wisdom, make a speculative add of Wilton Lopez if you can, with the knowledge that: 1) he’s the best pitcher in Houston’s bullpen right now, and 2) Brett Myers and Brandon Lyon, the two apparent heads ahead of him for saves, will likely be moving come deadline time.

What does Lopez sport that makes him a potentially valuable closer? His groundball rates are elite (hovering around 55-60 percent over the last four years), his strikeout to walk ratio is otherworldly at 6.50, and he has a three-pitch mix that’s worked before (fastball, slider, changeup). So speculate with me a little, why don’t you, and buy Wilton Lopez while you still can.
Recommendation: Worth adding in most formats.

Posted by Nick Fleder at 5:05am (2) Comments


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