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Wednesday, July 11, 2012
In horse racing, swimming, track, and car racing alike, the winners aren't necessarily apparent in the beginning. Perhaps they save their energy for later, like Jason Lezak did here in his anchor leg of the historic Men's 4 x 100 Freestyle final in Beijing in the 2008 Olympic Games. A horse may stumble coming out of the gates and gallop to victory by a nose. A Usain Bolt-like figure may need 50 meters to calibrate and conquer. A racer may only best the field in the final lap.
And while baseball is no racing sport, sometimes it's helpful to think of it in such a context; it's a slow, crawling race. In both the standings found on (insert stat service of choice here).com and those posted on the Green Monster at Fenway Park, all that matters is one's location on the final day.
The same applies to a single player—do you care what he was hitting in mid-April, or mid-June for that matter? So long as you're starting them and playing in a roto league, players are the sum total of their stats; all the 0-fers and all the four-hit days (and everything in-between), totaled and averaged.
With that in mind, one should recognize the possible distortions of small sample size. Just because Aramis Ramirez struggled mightily in April (where he hit .214) doesn't mean his .273 batting mark is a high-water mark, or that he's destined for mediocrity all year. Just because Carlos Gonzalez is on pace for 33 homers, 112 runs batted in and 21 steals doesn't mean he won't up the pace. And just because Ian Kennedy was expected to regress heavily doesn't mean he won't improve on his 4.26 ERA. Look for the chance to buy these three and more, presented below.
Main targets
Carlos Gonzalez
Let's start with one of the more obvious answers to the question, "Who would I most like on my fantasy roster in the second half?". Before we dismiss the notion that one shouldn't buy Gonzalez because he's sure to falter from his .334 batting mark and 120/30/110/20 pace, let's look at the historical splits for the face of the Rockies. Gonzalez totaled only 84 at-bats in the first half of 2009 and logged a fatter 194 after the All-Star Game. The splits were profound:
Split G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB BAbip tOPS+ sOPS+
1st Half 27 94 84 11 17 4 2 1 5 5 0 9 25 .202 .280 .333 .613 28 .276 43 64
2nd Half 62 223 194 42 62 10 5 12 24 11 4 19 45 .320 .384 .608 .992 118 .357 125 160
Sure, sure. Small sample size. The 2010 season, though, brought Gonzalez's breakout, though not in full until the second half of the season:
Split G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB BAbip tOPS+ sOPS+
1st Half 77 347 325 56 102 12 4 17 60 12 5 16 76 .314 .346 .532 .878 173 .360 81 136
2nd Half 68 289 262 55 95 22 5 17 57 14 3 24 59 .363 .412 .679 1.091 178 .413 123 198
And 2011 confirmed a trend, whether it's because Gonzalez enjoys his days off, felt motivated by All-Star snubs, had extra time to work with the hitting coach and self assess, or loves the heat. Whatever it is, behold:
Split G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB BAbip tOPS+ sOPS+
1st Half 86 359 318 55 93 18 3 13 51 14 4 33 72 .292 .359 .491 .850 156 .336 92 138
2nd Half 41 183 163 37 49 9 0 13 41 6 1 15 33 .301 .372 .595 .967 97 .305 116 161
Granted, Gonzalez has never found as much success in the first half as he has in 2012. The balls are falling in play at what figures, to the naked eye, to be an unsustainable rate. That said, his approach at the plate (and specifically his strikeout-to-walk ratio) is far better than it was in 2010, when he posted a .336 average and sported a .384 BABIP (which is a tad lower than his mark now).
Oddly, Gonzalez is making less contact when he swings (which happens less than ever before) and isn't making as much contact outside the zone as in previous years. So, as crazy as this sounds, Gonzalez could be headed for a .350 average.
Aramis Ramirez
We'll keep it more simple with Ramirez. No story necessary, just a lot of raw numbers taken over his career (12-plus years of service time). Here are the splits:
Split G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB BAbip tOPS+
1st Half 963 4022 3636 493 1008 227 13 160 612 10 9 295 572 .277 .337 .479 .816 1741 .288 94
2nd Half 796 3264 2949 426 859 173 8 165 561 8 7 235 428 .291 .349 .523 .872 1543 .290 107 (sOPS+ is not available for the entirety of Ramirez's career, so that stat has been omitted.)
Despite playing in 167 more games in the first half than in the second , Ramirez has hit 160 homers in that total span; on the other hand, he's hit 165 dingers in his aggregate second half. His .291 average in the late-July to September bests his .277 mark for all games earlier. His second-half slugging percentage of .523 is better than the .479 mark he's put up in the first half over his career.
Slugging the ball more? More runs batted in, one would assume. More batting average and homers? It's self-explanatory how that'll help your fantasy roster. Ramirez has hardly been sexy this season, so you may be able to pry him out of his owner's hands for cents on the dollar. It would be a smart move.
Ian Kennedy
Welcome our first pitcher on this list. Kennedy's splits are strong and consistent. Everything gets better, from the strikeout rate to the ERA to WHIP to the home run rate—everything. Behold:
Split W L W-L% ERA G GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB IBB SO HBP BF WHIP SO/9 SO/BB
1st Half 19 20 .487 4.25 63 62 1 2 0 385.0 371 192 182 49 124 4 327 21 1645 1.286 7.6 2.64
2nd Half 18 5 .783 2.81 33 32 0 0 0 198.1 161 65 62 14 61 0 177 7 810 1.119 8.0 2.90
Objectively, Kennedy's been unlucky this year. His home run rate is in line with his career mark, but at .326 his BABIP is far above his .280 career mark. Despite a marked improvement in his control (his walk rate is under two per nine!), he's simply giving up more hits. Luck will turn around, and turn around sharply. Kennedy is due to shine in the second half, as per usual.
Hiroki Kuroda
The fifth-year Japanese import is succeeding against the odds, which are, in no particular order, old age, a nightmarish home ballpark, a declining ability to pound the strike zone, and diminishing velocity. Kuroda has made the necessary adjustments, though. He's throwing more sliders, generating more grounders (last year's tumble in groundball rate spelled concern for some) and is still stranding runners at an above-average rate. (Last year's success seemed like a mirage partly because of his too-high left-on-base percentage.)
So while luck may be unkind to Kuroda in the second half, his career trend says he might find his groove and beat the Baseball Gods.
Split W L W-L% ERA G GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB IBB SO HBP BF WHIP SO/9 SO/BB
1st Half 29 35 .453 3.59 79 78 2 2 0 484.0 472 221 193 49 132 17 348 11 2038 1.248 6.5 2.64
2nd Half 20 18 .526 3.26 53 53 0 0 0 323.0 299 133 117 28 63 13 258 10 1321 1.121 7.2 4.10
Kuroda seems to harness his control in the second half historically, which would bode well in keeping his ERA at it's current mark in the mid-threes. He generates more double-play balls while operating with the same exact BABIP, meaning Kuroda's pitching ability seems to actually improve without the help of luck. He makes for a perfect mid-level pitcher to target.
Bigger names
In no particular order, here is a mish-mash of ten names who are probably owned in your league but can be expected to improve on some stats from hereon out.
1) Cole Hamels: The prodigious lefty won't be had at a discount in any functioning league, but he's absolutely aces in the second half. His ERA is better by 0.43 and his WHIP by 0.07. Worthy gains.
2) Clayton Kershaw: Ditto for the 2011 Cy Young winner. He's regressed closer to 2010 levels but soon may find his ERA and WHIP lower. (He has a 3.12/2.53 split for the former, 1.18/1.13 for the latter.)
3) Tommy Hanson: Struggling but might soon find his control. His first half totals feature a 2.58 strikeout-to-walk ratio; his second half, meanwhile, features a 3.27 mark.
4) Wandy Rodriguez: Finds his strikeout groove in the second half (8.3 K/9 bests his 7.0 mark pre-break). Modest improvements in ratio stats, too.
5) Max Scherzer: Seems to benefit from luck (a BABIP 20 points lower) and should similarly see a BABIP turnaround from the current, ridiculous .359 mark. WHIP will look much, much better.
6) Adrian Gonzalez: Slugs more, homers at a higher rate. Invest now and you'll be buying very low; luck turns plus historically hot trends in the hot months? Perfect target.
7) Troy Tulowitzki: More career homers in the second half, and a .321 batting mark compared to a .267 mark in pre-All Star games. Buy now while insisting that he's brittle. Then remind yourself that he is brittle.
8) Delmon Young: May salvage draft-day promises, as he hits far more homers in the second half (44) than in the first (35) and will likely enter on his hottest streak of hitting yet this year.
9) Mike Napoli: Really disappointing season for Napoli coming off an unquestionable career year. May find cozy home in late-summer months: his .907 second-half OPS is hotter than his .831 pre-ASB mark.
10) Jeff Francoeur: Sees modest second-half power boosts a la Napoli; OPS is ~80 points and batting average ~25 points better. Owners need to hold onto some hope; it's clearly worth doing.
Waiver turnarounds
In no particular order, here are five names worth adding off the waiver wire for their historic second-half success.
1) Cliff Pennington: His OPS is nearly 100 points better second half, and he steals more bases, hits more homers. A .264 second-half average is bearable, whereas his current .202 mark is not.
2) Will Venable: Seems to harness power in hot weather and enjoys modest boosts in his batting average, on-base percentage, and slugging marks.
3) Randy Wolf: Already covered in waiver wire column, but over the last three years, his second half ERA is 3.47 and his WHIP is 1.19. Key to improvement is lower walk rate.
4) J.A. Happ: Thanks to the ground ball (particularly the double play), Happ proves respectable in the later months (3.75 ERA, 1.35 WHIP, 7.2 K/9 marks). Worth streaming at least.
5) Juan Rivera: Improvement across the board, as in batting average, both parts of OPS, home run rate—even steal percentage. Dual eligibility helps add value and .292 batting average nothing to scoff at.
Posted by Nick Fleder at 5:02am
(4) Comments
Thursday, July 12, 2012
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!
Match-ups are rated from the hitter's perspective on a one to five scale with one being a weak match-up and five being an excellent match-up.
Today's grind
My intention is to for this section is to link back to the previous day's table.
I also plan to provide Fanduel Daily League Players of the Day.
Tomorrow's grind
This being the first day back from break, the pickings at pitcher are pretty thin as most clubs have opted to go with one of their best. The only guy I'd test the water with is Christian Friedrich against the Phillies.
Let's say the table is still in experimental phase. How much of this information do you think is unnecessary? What information would you like to see that isn't here?
The 1/5 match-ups that I presented are all those who have some form of platoon advantage and/or are very likely to start. Perhaps there is a better way to present this information
Reliever watch
Everyone's getting excited about Juan Carlos Oviedo, but I'm not sure I see any reason to. He's no better than Steve Cishek and is likely worse. Then again, he could find himself a handful of saves anyway.
Posted by Brad Johnson at 6:02am
(21) Comments
Friday, July 13, 2012
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!
The Fanduel picks are a mixture of Daily League specific advice and information for the more typical fantasy owner.
Today's grind
Already we have some changes between yesterday and today. Those in leagues with same-day moves should refer back to yesterday's table.
The Fanduel Daily League Players of the Day are:
Pitcher (to start): I'd shell out some money on Clayton Kershaw against the Padres today as the "cheap" pitchers aren't out there or have bad match-ups. You could consider Christian Friedrich against the Phillies.
Pitcher (bum): I just have a feeling that the Blue Jays are going to squeeze the fun out of Justin Masterson tonight.
Hitter (power): Adam Lind against Justin Masterson. Lind has been warm since returning to the show and Masterson is known to have a bit of a weakness for left-handed power hitters. Second choice is Jonny Gomes against Francisco Liriano. That's a TTO highlight reel in the making.
Hitter (speed): David Murphy against Kevin Millwood. Millwood seems to nut up when I pick against him, but that trend has to end eventually, right? Murphy's a great pick in that he does a little bit of everything. Second choice is Ben Revere against A.J. Griffin.
Tomorrow's grind
It's another day with scant pitching options.
Joe Saunders is coming off the disabled list for a friendly match-up with the Cubs, but I'd hardly be keen to pick him up.
If you have the cojones, Clay Buchholz is also returning from the disabled list. We've seen two versions of Buchholz this year, one that is good and one that is utterly devastating to fantasy rosters.
Tommy Milone against the Twins is yet another non-perfect option. He's the one I'd go with in a pinch.
If you're looking for power, Moore has a good match-up against the always crafty Buerhle. I also like the Smith versus De Vries match-up and might take another look at Lind for a second straight day.
Pierre has a great match-up against Guthrie, but the funny thing about Pierre-type players is they're almost match-up neutral. He'll put the ball in play against anyone and it either sees its way through the infield or it doesn't. The usual suspects—Revere and Davis—are available too.
Notes on the project
Positions WILL make it into the table at some point. I've marked it as a low priority fix since I think most of you have a general sense as to everyone's eligibility.
I forgot the @ to mark home or away today but I will work that in next week.
Consider yesterday's results officially dropped.
If you haven't guessed it, we're sponsored by Fanduel. I like the site a lot—it's intuitive and fun.
This feels to me like the general look and feel I'd like to settle on. Thoughts?
Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:54am
(9) Comments
Monday, July 16, 2012
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
• Although he never had the highest ceiling, Dillon Gee was turning into a nice success story for the Mets in 2012 as he helped anchor a spot in the back end of the team’s rotation. But a blood clot in his shoulder could relegate his contributions to nothing more than a warm memory going forward, as he could be done for the season following surgery.
Miguel Batista will take over fifth-starter responsibilities for Gee, though fantasy owners are hoping the Mets pull the trigger on 23-year-old Matt Harvey, who’s posted nearly 10 K/9 in his minor league career and entered the season as one of the team’s best prospects. It was unclear Sunday night whether the team would use Harvey for an upcoming start this weekend, as the Mets seem lukewarm on rushing him. He’s pitched decently at Triple-A this year (7-4, 3.39 ERA, 1.312 WHIP) and could be worth picking up right now in deeper mixed leagues.
• Speaking of terrific 2012 success stories, Jason Hammel had emerged as Baltimore’s ace this season, posting a career-high 8.7 K/9 and a nearly 3.0 FanGraphs WAR. Unfortunately, a knee injury suffered during his start on Friday will lead to surgery and could keep him out until September. Brian Matusz had been floated as a possible replacement for Hammel, but it looks like Zach Britton will make his first start of the season on Tuesday after missing the first half with a shoulder injury. Britton’s talent alone makes him worth a flier in deeper leagues, and he pitched well in nearly 60 innings this year.
• Drew Smyly landed on the DL for the second time this season after he suffered a strained intercostal muscle. Phenom Jacob Turner, 21, will return to the majors for the second time this season to spot him on Tuesday. He earned a no-decision in his one start earlier this year against the Cardinals when he pitched five innings and allowed one earned run on five walks and three strikeouts.
• It’s been a nightmare season for Sergio Santos, and he’s now received word befitting such a horrible campaign: He’ll undergo season-ending elbow surgery, knocking him out of action until at least spring training 2013. At this point, that news couldn’t really matter less to fantasy owners, who have long learned to recognize Casey Janssen as Toronto's ninth-inning fireman.
• Houston shortstop Jed Lowrie landed on the DL with an ankle injury after getting into a collision at second base on Saturday. He’ll be replaced by fantasy nobody Marwin Gonzalez until he gets back.
Other bumps and bruises
• Gavin Floyd will probably miss his upcoming start with elbow tendinitis. If he’s not available, look for rookie left-hander Jose Quintana (4-1, 2.60 ERA, 1.075 WHIP in 62.1 innings) to take the ball on Wednesday.
• An oblique strain forced Ian Desmond out of the lineup on Sunday, and it seems likely he’ll miss a few more games to start week 16. Danny Espinosa will take over at shortstop in the All-Star’s absence, while Steve Lombardozzi will see at-bats at second base.
• Chad Billingsley was scratched from Sunday’s start with elbow pain and is scheduled to undergo a MRI, which sure doesn’t sound good. It was unclear Sunday who would take over for Billingsley assuming he won’t be able to make this week’s start, but one way or another, steer clear of the burly right-hander in anything resembling a fantasy baseball league this week.
• Jack Wilson sprained a finger in his right hand, which could cost him some playing time, if not a DL stint.
• A blister bumped Johnny Cueto from Sunday to Tuesday.
Road to recovery
• Welcome back, Lance Berkman, things weren’t the same without you. Things, however, have changed since you were gone, since Allen Craig, when healthy, has been a significant producer while splitting time at first base and the outfield. With both Carlos Beltran and Matt Holliday enjoying solid seasons, Berkman’s role is not immediately clear, though if he’s healthy, someone is going to have to make room for the Big Puma.
• Look out, world: Roy Halladay is slated to return on Tuesday against Los Angeles. When we last met one of this era’s most dominant starting pitchers in late May, he was suffering from a strained right lat muscle, which probably explained why the 35-year-old was enduring, at least by his standards, one of his most mediocre seasons in recent memory (4-5, 3.98 ERA, sub-7.0 K/9). But he is Halladay, and although the Dodgers are re-armed with Matt Kemp and Andre Ethier back in action, he’s worth starting across the board as he gears up for the season’s second half.
• Carl Crawford is scheduled to return to action on Monday after suffering an elbow injury that zapped the first half of the season. With Jacoby Ellsbury back in the lineup after a similarly long absence, at-bats could be split between Ryan Sweeney and Daniel Nava, though Sweeney is dealing with a tender hamstring, so Nava could stay in the lineup this week.
• For at least the time being, Ben Sheets is back among the living/fantasy relevant, which on Sunday translated to six scoreless innings against the Mets to pick up a win. His return sent Randall Delgado back to the minor leagues.
• Joe Saunders returned to action over the weekend after dealing with a left shoulder strain. His return knocked Patrick Corbin to Triple-A and demoted Josh Collmenter from the rotation to the bullpen.
Posted by Karl de Vries at 5:07am
(0) Comments
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!
The Fanduel picks are a mixture of Daily League specific advice and information for the more typical fantasy owner.
Today's grind
Have I mentioned I'm a little slow in the morning?
I accidentally made the table for today instead of tomorrow, which is fine since we had no handy table to refer to for today. I don't have time to make two, so I'll post tomorrow's table tonight.
I also tried to introduce a new table layout to make it less long, but that didn't really work out. And I forgot to do @ again.
The Fanduel Daily League Players of the Day are:
Pitcher (to start): There's all kinds of ugly pitching today, which means that there are several risky picks with upside. Personally, I'm a fan of J.A. Happ going against an ineffective Padres lineup at Petco. Chris Tillman is more than deserving of an honorary shout out.
Pitcher (bum): It's easy to pick out today's bums but it's hard to do something with that information. Dylan Axelrod faces the Red Sox and Ervin Santana draws the Tigers. Both offensive clubs have the kind of pricey talent that makes it harder to play a team match-up.
Hitter (power): I'm going to put my money down on Travis Hafner against Alex Cobb tonight. Carlos Quentin against J.A. Happ is a fair second choice.
Hitter (speed): There are three names that are going to show up here a LOT: Rajai Davis, Ben Revere and Juan Pierre. Use any and all of them today.
Additional notes: I've lost a handle on the Red Sox outfield situation. I think Daniel Nava and Ryan Sweeney will start tonight over Cody Ross, but that's a barely educated guess. The Reds tend to platoon Chris Heisey and Ryan Ludwick in a difficult-to-predict deployment. So I left both on the chart.
Tomorrow's grind
I'll post this in the early evening.
Reliever watch
Heath Bell has been temporarily removed from the closer role. Steve Cishek stands to benefit the most, especially with Edward Mujica on the disabled list. Meanwhile, Juan Carlos Oviedo (Leo Nunez in a past life) has elbow pain and will be out indefinitely.
Sergio Santos is officially done for the year with the decision to schedule season-ending surgery.
Jim Johnson blew an ugly one on Saturday, but his job is safe for the time being. Besides, the Orioles won the game.
Here's a fun one. The Padres stole home off Kenley Jansen to hand him his fourth blown save.
Alexi Casilla's job is in jeopardy after a run of poor performances. Sergio Romo would replace him but it's been hard to track when he's available over the past season and a half. Stay tuned.
There was a smattering of other blown saves over the weekend, but we have to stop somewhere, right?
Posted by Brad Johnson at 6:05am
(4) Comments
If you somehow landed here without seeing today's picks, you can find them here.
Tomorrow's Grind
TBA appears to be busy tomorrow.
The unsponsored picks for tomorrow include:
Pitcher (to start): He's owned for fantasy purposes, but I like the prospect of Matt Moore against a somewhat lefty heavy Indians lineup. Jon Niese, Ross Detwiler and Travis Wood are all perfectly acceptable streaming options.
Pitcher (bum): Could the Yankees form the much dreaded Bugs Bunny Conga Line against Brett Cecil? Might the Red Sox match the Yankees fervor against Philip Humber?
Hitter (power): The ghost of Andruw Jones is known to be particularly lethal to mediocre lefties like Cecil. Plenty of alternatives in the power department tomorrow like Scott Hairston, Jim Thome, Brandon Moss, Seth Smith, and Tyler Moore.
Hitter (speed): Besides the usual suspects, I see Tony Campana and Cameron Maybin as nice stolen base picks.
Posted by Brad Johnson at 4:09pm
(1) Comments
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
SUPREME COURT OF FANTASY JUDGMENT
Lone Ranger vs. Greene County Giants
ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI FROM THE PAT VISKER MEMORIAL BASEBALL LEAGUE
Decided July 4, 2012
Cite as 4 F.J. 110 (July 2012)
Factual Background
A rotisserie fantasy baseball league named the Pat Visker Memorial Baseball League (hereinafter referred to as “PVMBL”) that is hosted on CBSSports.com seeks an evaluation of a trade made between two teams. This is a fourteen-team mixed NL/AL keeper league that utilized a snake draft. Teams are required to retain seven players each season and all keepers can be retained indefinitely.
As with many rotisserie leagues, the PVMBL uses most of the standard 5×5 scoring categories to determine the standings and prize money. For offensive players, the five categories are: (1) batting average; (2) homeruns; (3) runs batted in; (4) runs scored; and (5) stolen bases. For pitchers, the five categories are: (1) wins minus losses; (2) earned run average; (3) WHIP (walks+hits/innings pitched); (4) strikeouts; and (5) saves. Statistics are cumulative throughout the course of the season and there are no head to head games contained within the PVMBL.
Procedural History
The Lone Ranger (hereinafter referred to as “LR”) has made a trade with the Green County Giants (hereinafter referred to as “GCG”). LR traded Jose Reyes (SS-MIA), Josh Beckett (SP-BOS), and Wilin Rosario (C-COL) to GCG in exchange for Chris Sale (SP-CHW), J.J. Hardy (SS-BAL), and Derek Norris (C-OAK).
A member of the PVMBL has requested that the Court review this trade and determine whether it should be approved.
Issue Presented
(1) Should the trade between the Lone Ranger and the Greene County Giants be upheld and approved?
Decision
The Supreme Court of Fantasy Judgment typically favors fantasy sports participants and teams’ ability to make moves, transactions, and trades. People pay money to participate in fantasy leagues, and generally they should be afforded the freedom to manage their team accordingly. Whether success is bred from that individual’s decision-making is purely left to some skill, luck, dedication, and savviness. 4 Ponies v. Carson City Cocks, 3 F.J. 13 (May 2011).
It is well documented that there is a different analysis of trades in a keeper league as opposed to a non-keeper league. A trade that may look facially uneven or lopsided could easily pass muster in a keeper league. Trades made between teams in a keeper league need to be analyzed by other factors besides merely comparing statistics. Grave Diggers vs. Chilidogs, 4 F.J. 5, 8 (January 2012). These other factors include salary cap flexibility, contractual status of players, and long-term planning at the expense of the current season. Smittydogs vs. Moneyball, 1 F.J. 32, 33 (June 2010); Winners vs. Seven Shades of Shite, 3 F.J. 97, 102 (July 2011) (holding that team owners in keeper leagues with no hope of contending in the current season must make critical roster management decisions of whether to trade established players to help build for the future).
The Court will evaluate the objective merits of a deal and ensure that the integrity of the league is maintained. Victoria’s Secret vs. C-Train, 2 F.J. 32, 35 (October 2010). The Court will not undermine a fantasy owner’s ability to manage his/her team unless a deal is unfair or inequitable, rife with collusion, or not in the best interests of the league. Whether a trade is objectively intelligent or popular will not be part of the analysis. 4 Ponies vs. Beaver Hunters, 3 F.J. 26, 27 (June 2011). The virtue of a trade is measured in both quantifiable criteria and subjective needs of the teams involved. Carson City Cocks vs. Stud Muffins, 3 F.J. 23, 24 (May 2011).
No evidence has been submitted indicating any alleged collusion or malfeasance. As such, the Court will operate on the presumption that there is no collusive conduct between the parties.
At first glance, the trade of Jose Reyes, Josh Beckett and Wilin Rosario in exchange for J.J. Hardy, Chris Sale and Derek Norris looks slightly uneven. Reyes is regarded as an elite fantasy shortstop, so we must ensure that proper value is being offered in return for a player of such magnitude. See Steelers vs. Patriots, 3 F.J. 216, 220 (November 2011) (holding that elite players included in trades require additional scrutiny merely because of how valuable they are in terms of name recognition and reputation). Sale has had a terrific first half of 2012 and could be on his way to becoming an elite pitcher, but he is not quite at that level just yet.
The following chart represents a statistical comparison between the six players in the relevant roto categories through games played on July 3, 2012:
Player AVG HR RBI Runs SB
Jose Reyes 0.272 3 21 41 19
Wilin Rosario 0.247 14 36 29 3
J.J. Hardy 0.234 12 32 39 0
Derek Norris 0.333 2 6 5 1
Player Wins ERA K WHIP Saves
Josh Beckett 4 4.06 60 1.15 0
Chris Sale 10 2.19 98 0.97 0
As can be seen from this comparison, the hitters’ collective statistics lean heavily in favor of the package being obtained by GCG. While Hardy has better homerun and RBI totals, Reyes is markedly better in batting average and stolen bases. Reyes will also likely eclipse Hardy in runs scored by the end of the season. In addition, Rosario is light years ahead of Norris at this point. Even with Ramon Hernandez set to return from the disabled list in the foreseeable future, Rosario has earned the playing time and should still see a majority of the at bats. However, Norris was just recently called up and could be in line for more playing time if Oakland does indeed trade Kurt Suzuki or they tire of his lack of performance.
However, Sale represents an upgrade over Beckett who just recently came off the disabled list. Sale has emerged as one of the American League’s top starting pitchers and zoomed past Beckett in every significant category. Beckett has always been susceptible to injury and has also clashed with Red Sox management and the fan base this season. It is safe to say that Sale is well beyond the value of Beckett as of right now.
When analyzing the fairness and equity of a trade, the Court will consider each team’s individual needs to assess whether the trade subjectively made sense from each team’s perspective. See Cajon Crawdads vs. Carson City Cocks, 1 F.J. 41, 42 (June 2010) (upholding a trade for Jason Bay because of the Carson City Cocks’ desperate need for a starting outfielder due to the demotion of Cameron Maybin). Here, this trade involves the swap of a catcher, shortstop and starting pitcher. Clearly, positional needs did not factor into the decision-making behind this trade.
GCG is currently in 4th place and is setting their sights on improving for this season. There is no question that Reyes and Rosario are significant upgrades at their respective positions. The tradeoff is swapping Sale for Beckett which does represent a downgrade on his pitching staff. This could have a negative impact on GCG because he just lost C.C. Sabathia to injury, Ricky Romero has been horrendous, and ace Stephen Strasburg could be limited in his innings and outings going forward. In the scope of analyzing the trade, there are discernible benefits and risks for GCG in making this trade.
On the other hand, LR is in 11th place and 50 points out of 1st place. They are trading away established players in exchange for a package of players that does not appear to have equivalent present-day value. This is symbolic of a team in a keeper league looking to build for the future. See Moneyball vs. 4 Ponies, 4 F.J. 67, 68 (May 2012) (upholding the 4 Ponies’ trade of Hanley Ramirez for a package of younger and less expensive talent as part of building for future seasons). It is indisputable that Sale has more value than Beckett, so that will help LR in both the short and long-term.
However, Hardy is an average, aging shortstop with good power but lacks production in all other categories. Additionally, Norris is a nice prospect that Oakland acquired in the Gio Gonzalez trade with the Washington Nationals. But Norris only has 30 at bats under his belt and still may not see regular playing time until some point next season, depending on what the As do with incumbent Kurt Suzuki,
When a team owner in a keeper league no longer believes he has any hope for contending in the current season, he must make a critical roster management decision of whether to trade off established players in exchange for unknown entities in building for the future. Winners v. Seven Shades of Shite, 3 F.J. at 102. This is precisely what LR has done in acquiring players like Sale, Hardy and Norris who do have some current value as well.
A trade will be rejected when the Court cannot objectively ascertain any benefit to one of the teams and the net result in no way makes a team better now or in the future. Los Pollos Hermanos v. Little Stumps, 3 F.J. 192, 195 (October 2011). This trade benefits GCG in their pursuit of success in the current season. The trade also provides LR with a couple players to build around for the immediate future, as well as a shortstop who can hit 30 home runs which may have solid trade value later in the year.
The dichotomy between LR and GCG’s motivations is precisely why the Court must look at trades in keeper leagues differently than non-keeper leagues. Smittydogs v. Moneyball, 1 F.J. at 34. However, had this trade been made in a non-keeper league, the Court could possibly reject it.
Here, a trade was proposed and agreed to between two teams with differing priorities. While the two packages are not completely equitable in terms of present-day value, the trade has discernible benefits for both parties without any specter of collusion. Based on the foregoing reasons, the trade should be approved as it was made in good faith and within the best interests of the league.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Posted by Michael Stein at 4:32am
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Last week, I discussed some stud starters likely to be traded and the implications a trade could have on their fantasy value. This week I’d like to address position players from the same perspective. There seems to be less consensus on which position players are likely to be traded, and the overall crop is weaker than the top-heavy group of starting pitcher trade candidates. Therefore, I’m going to switch up the format a bit and go for more of a quick-hitter approach, covering more players in less depth.
Justin Upton
Upton is the best bat considered to be available. Arizona boasts a homer-friendly park and Upton has been surprisingly average on the road throughout his career, sporting a pedestrian .740 career road OPS —a stark contrast from his .924 home mark. Still there are a few considerations to mitigate the seemingly open-and-shut case. First, his road games are heavily weighted by the NL West, three-quarters of which (excluding the D-backs) play in strong pitcher’s parks. Second, it appears that a change of scenery probably couldn’t hurt right now. There are situations that would up Upton’s value, though on paper his current spot is better than most. The bigger question remains whether Justin Upton will resume being Justin Upton… for any team
Shane Victorino
It’s not certain that the Phillies are going to shop the Flyin’ Hawaiian. Rumor has it that the Yankees are interested, though. Were Victorino to land on the Yankees, we’d be looking at a top-50 player. He’d basically be Caveman-era Johnny Damon. Word is the asking price is high, and Victorino doesn’t make peanuts now, so it’s likely that if he goes anywhere, it would be to a pretty good situation with a good amount of premium talent also in place. The Philly lineup isn’t doing anything for him now. Getting out would most likely help.
B.J. Upton
Upton the elder has always been difficult to figure, and I don’t foresee a significant change in value if he’s traded. He’s still likely to be a well-rounded player who gives you gives you solid three-category production, borderline elite speed, and is a bit of a batting average drain.
Josh Willingham
Surprisingly enough, I like him where he is. Word in the offseason was the Twins pursued him (instead of retaining Michael Cuddyer or Jason Kubel) because they thought his swing was a great fit for their park. They look like geniuses right now.
While Willingham could move into a better lineup, it’s unlikely he’d hit in the heart of the order were he traded to a really strong team, and it’s unlikely his situation would improve much, lineup wise, were he traded to a team that needs him in the heart of its order. I wouldn’t be overly excited about fixing what’s clearly not broken.
Chase Headley
Headley is a potential 20-20 player with legitimate on-base skills who is trapped in an awful lineup, home park and division. He is one of the players who could benefit most from a trade. And, to cap it off, he seems reasonably likely to be traded. If you like to speculate, maybe a lowball offer for him in a deeper league would be a good idea.
Carlos Quentin
My overall opinion on Headley applies to Quentin as well, just a bit less so. Quentin is a bigger injury risk. He’s less likely to be traded. His value is more fixed to one category. All that said, getting out of San Diego would be a major step up for him, presuming health.
Denard Span
Span is a bit of a tricky case. He could help a lot of teams, but if acquired his role could be anything from starting number two hitter to platoon player, depending on where he goes. If he goes to the right spot, he could be standard mixed league relevant as a fifth outfielder. It’s not worth speculating on it, though, as the returns aren’t high enough to warrant placing a bet.
Juan Pierre
The possible outcomes for Pierre are similar to that of Span. However, unless he goes to the Orioles, I don’t see Pierre playing a prominent role in a new destination. I’d be shopping Pierre to teams in need of speed. I also don’t trust him to maintain a plus-.300 average.
Ty Wigginton
If you could use what he was doing before the return of Ryan Howard, grab him. He’s likely to resume doing that in a different jersey.
Bryan LaHair
LaHair gave us a taste of his power before Anthony Rizzo came on to steal his thunder. I think the Cubs bungled this situation and sapped much of LaHair’s trade value. At the very worst, he’s a platoon masher. I could see LaHair finding a job and emerging as deeper league relevant again.
Jason Giambi
I know this sounds like a crazy name, but he still has power and on-base skills. I doubt he can play first base anymore, but if he were to fall into a DH role, deeper and AL-only leaguers might stumble into one of the best potential power sources on a barren waiver wire.
Posted by Derek Ambrosino at 5:37am
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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!
The Fanduel picks are a mixture of Daily League specific advice and information for the more typical fantasy owner.
Today's grind
Those in leagues with same-day moves should refer back to yesterday’s table.
The Fanduel Daily League Players of the Day are:
Pitcher (to start): He's owned for fantasy purposes, but I like the prospect of Matt Moore against a somewhat lefty-heavy Indians lineup. While his numbers against lefties have been poor this season, it's a 21.2-inning sample and the only thing out of sorts is his strikeout rate.
Jonathon Niese, Ross Detwiler and Travis Wood are all perfectly acceptable streaming options.
Pitcher (bum): Could the Yankees form the much dreaded Bugs Bunny Conga Line against Brett Cecil? Might the Red Sox match the Yankees fervor against Philip Humber?
Hitter (power): Andruw Jones is known to be particularly lethal to mediocre lefties like Cecil. There are plenty of alternatives in the power department tomorrow like Scott Hairston, Jim Thome, Brandon Moss, Seth Smith, and Tyler Moore.
Hitter (speed): Besides the usual suspects, I see Tony Campana and Cameron Maybin as nice stolen base picks.
Tomorrow's grind
Pitcher (to start): I'm hard-pressed to pick an available starter today. You could try Clayton Richards against the Astros, but only if you're forced to. For daily leaguers, someone like Jordan Zimmermann against the Mets might make sense.
Pitcher (bum): Plenty of bum pitchers tomorrow, but who will get hit hardest? I'd try stacking Cardinals against Tyler Thornburg. Keep in mind that Carlos Beltran is expected to sit a couple games during this series. Jeremy Guthrie is going against the Pirates at Coors.
Hitter (power): My favorite platoon power hitter, Andruw Jones, should be back in the lineup tomorrow. Luke Scott and Carlos Quentin are nice alternatives.
Hitter (speed): I'm going to call a steal from Jemile Weeks just for some variety. Otherwise, look for the usual suspects.
Reliever watch
John Axford blew another save last night, leading some to call for Francisco Rodriguez to step in. I think Axford has just a little bit more wiggle room left but it's probably time to pick up alternatives.
Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:43am
(6) Comments
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
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!
The Fanduel picks are a mixture of Daily League specific advice and information for the more typical fantasy owner.
Today's grind
Those in leagues with same-day moves should refer back to yesterday’s table.
The Fanduel Daily League Players of the Day are:
Pitcher (to start): For those that use FanDuel, I've noticed that Jeremy Hellickson seems cheap relative to his ability. Bruce Chen could be interesting for daily leaguers too. More traditional fantasy owners would be best served to skip a day of streaming, although I suppose Clayton Richard is usable.
Pitcher (bum): Tyler Thornburg and Jeremy Guthrie strike me as match-ups that can be abused today. I'll be looking to get Andrew McCutchen and a number of Red Birds in play.
Hitter (power): Andruw Jones had a big day yesterday and will start again today. Luke Scott, Carlos Pena, and Carlos Quentin are alternatives.
Hitter (speed): Jemile Weeks should get a shot to reach base and swipe a bag against Colby Lewis, but we'll see.
Tomorrow's grind
Some notes worth discussing before the table.
I have no idea how the usage patterns for Daniel Nava, Ryan Sweeney and Cody Ross are going to work out now that Jacoby Ellsbury and Carl Crawford are back. With David Ortiz banged up, two of the three should get into the lineup for the next week.
I don't know how the Chris Heisey- Ryan Ludwick platoon works. Similarly, it's tough to tell when Scott Rolen or Todd Frazier is going to start.
I'm going to continue to recommend these players and leave it up to you to decide if it's worth the risk that they don't play.
Wei-Yin Chen is my pitcher of choice today. Otherwise, you could roll the dice with Clay Buchholz. He looked like he was turning a corner prior to injury.
For five-category production, I like the idea of Michael Saunders against Luke Hochevar. Keep in mind that Hochevar has been crisp recently.
Look for Jim Thome to pound a couple hits against Cole De Vries.
Will Venable will get a chance to swipe some bags against Lucas Harrell.
Reliever watch
John Axford has officially lost his title as closer. Francisco Rodriguez's peripherals are down to the point where's he's merely a solid option at closer. Axford needs to get the walks under control before returning to the role.
Tyler Clippard blew his first save just in time for Drew Storen's return. Everyone loves a good controversy.
Now Bobby Parnell is blowing saves for the Mets. I said a lot of bad things about this Mets roster prior to the season, but they could have been a relevant team with a good closer. Too bad.
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