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Wednesday, August 01, 2012

The daily grind: 8-1


I wrote today's grind and then I somehow deleted everything but the table while adding the player links. Here's yesterday's table and it's worth noting that Domonic Brown is now an everyday starter.
































































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher
Athletics         Cardinals      
  Brandon Moss L Henderson Alvarez     Jon Jay L TBA
  Jemile Weeks S Henderson Alvarez   Giants      
  Seth Smith L Henderson Alvarez     Brandon Belt L Chris Young
Blue Jays         Marlins      
  Anthony Gose L Bartolo Colon     Carlos Lee R Mike Minor
  Rajai Davis R Bartolo Colon     Justin Ruggiano R Mike Minor
Indians         Mets      
  Jose Lopez L Jeremy Guthrie     Scott Hairston R Barry Zito
  Johnny Damon L Jeremy Guthrie   Padres      
  Travis Hafner L Jeremy Guthrie     Yasmani Grandal S Johnny Cueto
  Casey Kotchman L Jeremy Guthrie   Phillies      
Rangers           Domonic Brown L Ross Detwiler
  David Murphy L C.J. Wilson     Ty Wigginton R Ross Detwiler
Red Sox           John Mayberry Jr. R Ross Detwiler
  Daniel Nava S Sam Deduno   Reds      
  Cody Ross R Sam Deduno     Zack Cozart R Ross Ohlendorf
Royals           Todd Frazier R Ross Ohlendorf
  Salvador Perez R Corey Kluber          
  Alcides Escobar R Corey Kluber          
  Lorenzo Cain R Corey Kluber          
Twins                
  Ryan Doumit S TBA          
  Denard Span L TBA          
  Ben Revere L TBA          


Reliever Redux


Greg Holland is now a closer. Aaron Crow and Kelvin Herrera wait in the wings.

Scott Downs is on the disabled list. So is Jordan Walden. That means all the saves go to Ernesto Frieri.

Wilton Lopez has elbow tightness which means that Francisco Cordero will likely to continue his crimes.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:53am (2) Comments

August first base rankings


**Please, if you have not done so already, READ THE INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPH. This will help you understand the methodology behind the rankings.

Most fantasy rankings are forged on "gut calls" and the whimsical notions of whoever is compiling the list. Some experts don’t pay for saves, some don’t pay for steals, some wait on pitching, some value upside, some value reliability, and so on. While it might be nice to see plenty of different opinions, it probably doesn’t truly help unless you understand the biases of each individual ranker. This is why some of the writers here at The Hardball Times have created their own, objective valuation methods, outlined here and here (reading, or at least skimming, these introductory articles will give you a much better understanding of the rankings that follow and should help to answer most potential questions).

In accompaniment with Oliver’s rest-of-season forecasts, we will use these objective formulas to create objective rankings. You may not agree with a particular rank, but you will know how the ranking was calculated and you won't have to guess what the ranker was thinking. This should make adding your own personal adjustments and biases much easier. And perhaps this type of ranking will introduce some potential buys and sells that you may have otherwise overlooked.

These rankings will assume a 12-team league in adjusting for league average. The ordering of players, however, is unaffected; players will rank in identical order for leagues of all sizes.


Previous installments:
{exp:list_maker}Catchers {/exp:list_maker}
Num Name AB R HR RBI SB BA rPAA (ROS) EYES (ROS) Full Season*
1 Albert Pujols 191 32 13 39 3 0.305 1.23 1.83 12.79
2 Paul Konerko 201 32 12 39 0.311 0.96 1.56 12.06
3 Adrian Gonzalez 203 32 9 36 0.323 0.71 1.33 11.37
4 Paul Goldschmidt 205 32 11 37 2 0.28 0.58 0.86 11.02
5 Michael Morse 200 29 10 35 1 0.296 0.40 0.64 10.50
6 Prince Fielder 193 32 10 34 0.297 0.39 0.72 10.49
7 Ryan Howard 192 30 11 36 0.278 0.26 0.37 10.13
8 Chris Davis 210 28 10 36 0.274 0.04 0.02 9.51
9 Justin Morneau 217 30 9 35 0.274 -0.02 0.01 9.36
10 Billy Butler 206 28 7 32 0.301 -0.07 0.08 9.24
11 Mark Trumbo 192 26 10 33 2 0.266 -0.08 -0.27 9.20
12 Anthony Rizzo 197 27 10 33 2 0.262 -0.09 -0.28 9.17
13 Bryan LaHair 173 26 10 32 0.278 -0.16 -0.30 8.99
14 Freddie Freeman 208 28 7 31 1 0.28 -0.28 -0.35 8.65
15 Mark Teixeira 178 26 10 32 0.26 -0.35 -0.65 8.45
16 Eric Hosmer 211 28 6 27 3 0.279 -0.36 -0.50 8.41
17 Adam Dunn 193 29 12 35 0.222 -0.39 -0.86 8.35
18 Adam Lind 201 25 9 32 0.26 -0.51 -0.87 8.02
19 Brandon Belt 192 29 5 26 3 0.274 -0.53 -0.71 7.97
20 Michael Cuddyer 165 24 6 26 2 0.289 -0.56 -0.83 7.86
21 Michael Young 202 26 4 25 1 0.302 -0.61 -0.70 7.75
22 Allen Craig 154 22 7 27 0.291 -0.68 -1.02 7.55
23 Kendrys Morales 167 22 7 27 0.283 -0.75 -1.14 7.37
24 Adam LaRoche 183 24 8 29 0.259 -0.75 -1.23 7.34
25 Carlos Pena 197 28 10 31 1 0.214 -0.80 -1.48 7.23
26 Carlos Lee 187 24 5 25 1 0.278 -0.89 -1.30 6.96
27 Joey Votto 101 19 5 20 1 0.329 -0.99 -1.46 6.70
28 Lance Berkman 132 21 6 21 1 0.283 -1.04 -1.61 6.55
29 Brandon Moss 164 22 7 25 1 0.243 -1.14 -1.88 6.29
30 James Loney 177 21 3 20 1 0.275 -1.43 -2.11 5.48
31 Casey Kotchman 186 22 4 22 0.264 -1.43 -2.13 5.48
32 Todd Helton 135 19 4 18 0.283 -1.52 -2.26 5.25
33 Ike Davis 129 17 5 20 0.256 -1.64 -2.60 4.90

*Full season = the raw (non-adjusted) full season pace roto score using the roto points-above-replacement method. This is, essentially, the amount of expected roto points each catcher would score above an empty spot in a lineup over a full season.

Analysis


Adrian Gonzalez – I can buy into the counting numbers Oliver projects for Gonzalez, but I cannot say I would endorse paying for a .323 average. Gonzalez hit .338 last season with a .380 BABIP (57 points higher than his career average). He also hit for more power last year than he is thus far in 2012, which gave his average a boost, too.

This year, his BABIP is fine at .334, and Gonzalez is striking out just as often as he did in 2011, but he is hitting just .298. Even with a small uptick in power, Gonzalez is going to need some serious BABIP love to hit .323 the rest of the way. Could he do it? Yes. Should fantasy owners pay for that as a baseline batting average? No.

Arbitrary Adjustment: Even with the slight uptick in power Oliver forecasts, I’d expect marginal regression in strikeout rate and BABIP. Giving him a 16.5 percent strikeout rate and a .330 BABIP, the new projected average of .305 seems appropriate. This would bring his roto value to 0.47 (rPAA) and 0.89 (EYES).

Paul Goldschmidt – Really? Paul Goldschmidt? I was surprised when I saw it, too. I know he has good power, and the low-teens stolen base total that he will end up providing is sneaky value, but does that justify a ranking one spot ahead of Prince Fielder?

Well, I am fine with the power and speed projections. And while a .280 average might seem high, Goldschmidt has cut down on the whiffs and has produced a high BABIP at every level, so I am going to defer to Oliver here, too.

Where I do disagree with Oliver, though, is in the run and RBI totals. In 471 career at-bats, Goldschmidt has averaged 0.163 RBI (0.161 in 2012) per at-bat. Oliver believes that Goldschmidt will produce 0.18 RBI per at-bat from this point forward. Maybe he will, as RBI are unpredictable, but that’s not the point. The point is that we shouldn’t be paying for things that probably won’t happen.

Arbitrary Adjustment: With an adjusted RBI rate of 0.163 (his career rate), Goldschmidt projects to drive in 33 more runs this year. Do the same with runs scored and we get 30, for new valuations of 0.34 (rPAA) and 0.44 (EYES), which moves him behind Fielder but still keeps him fifth overall among first basemen, a spot that I still wouldn't value him at.

Ryan Howard – Since returning from a lengthy stint on the disabled list, Howard has shown good power—a .250 ISO, his best mark since 2009—but also has struck out a ton (35.4 percent). Strangely, Howard’s swinging strike rate is at the lowest of his career, and his contact percentage is at a career best, so the strikeout issues are probably the result of a small 65-plate appearance sample.

The whiffs should come down, and his .214 average should come up, but ranking Howard sixth among first basemen would be extremely aggressive due to the injury risk, the uncertainty of performance, and the departures of Hunter Pence and Shane Victorino, two of the cogs that made the Phillies lineup ... uh, respectable? They are two of the Phillies' best hitters; let's go with that. Considering all of these factors, it would seem that cautiously undervaluing Howard would be more desirable than bullishly overvaluing him.

I am not going to make any arbitrary adjustments, but I will note that Ryan Howard is 32, a health risk, his skills have already been in decline, and the last vestiges of what was once a quality offense are being removed from around him. What's more, he hasn’t exactly set the world ablaze since his return, hitting .214/.323/.464. I would devalue him significantly.

Chris Davis, Justin Morneau and Bryan LaHair – I will make it quick here. I don’t agree with any of these three players’ high run and RBI projections because their traditional rates simply don’t warrant it. I also think Davis’ batting average will be about 20 points lower than his projected .274. He has struck out in nearly 30 percent of his plate appearances, which is actually lower than what he usually does. Both Morneau’s and Davis’ projected at-bat totals of 217 and 210, respectively, are a bit steep, as well.

Arbitrary Adjustments: Davis’ fantasy line changes to 24/9/28/0/.253 in 190 at-bats, moving him down to around 25th among first basemen. Morneau’s line dips to 23/8/27/0/.274 in 180 at-bats, 23rd at first base. And LaHair's adjusted line of 21/10/24/0/.278 drops him to 24th.

Mark Teixeira – This ranking is more a function of playing time than anything else. Adjusting Teixeria’s line to reflect 215 at-bats, rather than 178, gives him new scores of 0.31 (rPAA) and 0.36 (EYES), and a new ranking of 6th. Of course, his potential wrist injury could significantly impact Teixeira's playing time, so keep an eye on those MRI results.

Adam Lind – Blarg! Runs and RBI projections seem a bit high, once again. I am adjusting his projection to 21 runs and 25 RBI. New rank: 27th.

Ike Davis – Davis has been playing every day for a while now, so a projection of 129 at-bats is probably low. Giving him 180 at-bats and a bit more power moves him up to 16th at the position.

Here is how the ZiPS projection system ranks the top-30 first basemen for the rest of the 2012 season.
Num Name AB R HR RBI SB AVG rPAA (ROS) EYES (ROS) Full Season
1 Miguel Cabrera 213 36 12 40 1 0.315 1.49 2.50 13.06
2 Albert Pujols 208 35 12 37 4 0.293 1.31 2.04 12.56
3 Joey Votto 193 33 10 35 4 0.306 1.09 1.79 11.97
4 Mark Teixeira 209 33 12 41 1 0.263 0.73 1.08 10.97
5 Prince Fielder 209 31 11 39 1 0.282 0.72 1.14 10.95
6 Adrian Gonzalez 217 31 10 37 0.3 0.70 1.26 10.90
7 Michael Cuddyer 204 31 8 32 4 0.279 0.39 0.66 10.04
8 Eric Hosmer 231 30 7 29 6 0.281 0.35 0.59 9.93
9 Mark Trumbo 210 27 11 35 2 0.267 0.30 0.36 9.80
10 Paul Goldschmidt 201 27 10 32 4 0.264 0.23 0.23 9.62
11 Paul Konerko 190 26 10 32 0.295 0.21 0.39 9.55
12 Edwin Encarnacion 176 27 10 28 3 0.273 0.10 0.10 9.26
13 Freddie Freeman 202 29 8 33 1 0.277 0.05 0.19 9.12
14 Michael Young 226 27 4 28 2 0.283 -0.43 -0.43 7.80
15 Adam Dunn 180 27 12 33 0.211 -0.46 -0.97 7.70
16 Allen Craig 149 23 7 27 1 0.282 -0.48 -0.69 7.66
17 Carlos Lee 198 22 6 31 1 0.278 -0.49 -0.69 7.64
18 Mike Napoli 152 23 10 25 1 0.257 -0.50 -0.88 7.62
19 Anthony Rizzo 170 21 7 29 3 0.259 -0.53 -0.93 7.51
20 Mark Reynolds 179 27 10 28 3 0.212 -0.57 -1.12 7.42
21 Garrett Jones 177 23 8 27 2 0.254 -0.58 -0.99 7.38
22 Chris Davis 193 23 9 27 1 0.254 -0.59 -1.01 7.35
23 Ryan Howard 148 21 9 30 1 0.243 -0.61 -1.10 7.31
24 Carlos Santana 181 28 7 27 2 0.243 -0.61 -0.93 7.31
25 Michael Morse 160 22 7 27 0.281 -0.61 -0.88 7.30
26 Bryan LaHair 181 22 9 23 1 0.265 -0.65 -1.07 7.20
27 Adam Lind 178 20 8 28 1 0.258 -0.71 -1.20 7.02
28 Brandon Belt 167 23 5 22 4 0.263 -0.78 -1.20 6.83
29 Carlos Pena 176 26 9 26 1 0.21 -0.97 -1.66 6.32
30 Adam LaRoche 160 20 7 27 0.25 -1.00 -1.59 6.24

Posted by Jesse Sakstrup at 6:04am (7) Comments

Thursday, August 02, 2012

The daily grind: 8-2


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. There have been some pitching changes between yesterday and today so unfortunately, it's not terribly accurate.

The Fanduel Daily League Players of the Day are:

Pitcher (to start): Nathan Eovaldi has the match-up I'm most intrigued in. I must say, I lack respect for the Braves offense and I'm not entirely sure there's a reason.

Ross Detwiler is paired against the Phillies over-the-hill stars and scrubs lineup. Cole Hamels opposes so maybe don't bet on taking the W.

Pitcher (bum): The Cardinals should have no difficulty feasting on Alex White. Once upon a time I was really impressed with White, but then he hit the disabled list and his sinker has never looked the same.

The other bum of the day is Ross Ohlendorf. But there's probably an alternate universe where the Reds don't tattoo him, making the Cards a better play.

Hitter (power): Scott Hairston against Barry Zito and Todd Frazier versus Ohlendorf seem to be today's big boppers.

Hitter (speed): The fool who needs speed might want to look at Anthony Gose or Jemile Weeks for a day.

Tomorrow's grind


Joe Blanton's back on my "safe" list. Notice the quotations around safe there. The Diamondbacks do have something that resembles an offense so Joey Donuts isn't actually safe.

I'd be comfortable playing Felix Doubront against the Twins.













































































































































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher
Angels         Brewers      
  Alberto Callaspo R Philip Humber     Carlos Gomez R Joe Kelly
Athletics           Norichika Aoki L Joe Kelly
  Jemile Weeks S Brett Cecil   Cubs      
  Chris Carter R Brett Cecil     David DeJesus L Chad Billingsley
  Jonny Gomes R Brett Cecil   Dodgers      
Blue Jays           A.J. Ellis R Jeff Samardzija
  Yunel Escobar R Travis Blackley   Marlins      
  Rajai Davis R Travis Blackley     Carlos Lee R John Lannan
Indians               Gio Gonzalez
  Johnny Damon L Anibal Sanchez     Justin Ruggiano R John Lannan
  Travis Hafner L Anibal Sanchez         Gio Gonzalez
Rangers         Mets      
  David Murphy L Jeremy Guthrie     Jason Bay R Clayton Richard
Rays           Scott Hairston R Clayton Richard
  Carlos Pena L Tommy Hunter   Nationals      
  Elliot Johnson S Tommy Hunter     Steve Lombardozzi S TBA
Red Sox               Josh Johnson
  Cody Ross R Brian Duensing     Tyler Moore R TBA
Royals               Josh Johnson
  Salvador Perez R Matt Harrison   Phillies      
  Alcides Escobar R Matt Harrison     Nate Schierholtz L Ian Kennedy
  Lorenzo Cain R Matt Harrison     Domonic Brown L Ian Kennedy
Tigers           Laynce Nix L Ian Kennedy
  Brennan Boesch L Justin Masterson     Juan Pierre L Ian Kennedy
  Quintin Berry L Justin Masterson   Pirates      
Twins           Travis Snider L Mat Latos
  Ryan Doumit S Felix Doubront     Starling Marte R Mat Latos
Yankees           Garrett Jones L Mat Latos
  Raul Ibanez L Kevin Millwood   Reds      
            Zack Cozart R Wandy Rodriguez
            Todd Frazier R Wandy Rodriguez


Chris Carter and Jonny Gomes are set to tee off with the platoon advantage against Brett Cecil.

David Murphy has the esteemed Jeremy Guthrie to defeat.

Hairston is back for another tour of duty, this time against Clayton Richard.

The Marlins and Nationals have a double header, so you normal fantasy players ought to double up on games where you can.

Reliever watch


Now that Ernesto Frieri's job is secure, he blew his first save of the season. Apparently it was a wild game, but I was asleep for it.

Matt Belisle has a name that doesn't sound anything like its spelled. He also gave up a yakker to Matt Holliday yesterday. Rafael Betancourt's job remains secure.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:54am (0) Comments

August second base rankings


Instead of using Oliver's projections, as we did for the first two installments of the August rest of season rankings, we will be using ZiPS' ROS projections from here on out. Hopefully this will iron out some of the quirks.

Most fantasy rankings are forged on "gut calls" and the whimsical notions of whoever is compiling the list. Some experts don’t pay for saves, some don’t pay for steals, some wait on pitching, some value upside, some value reliability, and so on. While it might be nice to see plenty of different opinions, it probably doesn’t truly help unless you understand the biases of each individual ranker. This is why some of the writers here at The Hardball Times have created their own, objective valuation methods, outlined here and here (reading, or at least skimming, these introductory articles will give you a much better understanding of the rankings that follow and should help to answer most potential questions).

In accompaniment with Oliver’s ZiPS' rest-of-season forecasts, we will use these objective formulas to create objective rankings. You may not agree with a particular rank, but you will know how the ranking was calculated and you won't have to guess what the ranker was thinking. This should make adding your own personal adjustments and biases much easier. And perhaps this type of ranking will introduce some potential buys and sells that you may have otherwise overlooked.

These rankings will assume a 12-team league in adjusting for league average. The ordering of players, however, is unaffected; players will rank in identical order for leagues of all sizes.


Previous installments:
{exp:list_maker}Catchers
First Basemen {/exp:list_maker}
Num Name AB R HR RBI SB AVG rPAA (ROS) EYES (ROS) Full Season*
1 Robinson Cano 225 35 10 36 2 0.302 1.27 2.13 11.83
2 Ian Kinsler 214 36 8 27 10 0.271 1.06 1.57 11.24
3 Brandon Phillips 218 32 7 31 6 0.284 0.77 1.24 10.46
4 Jose Altuve 221 29 3 21 11 0.294 0.46 0.78 9.61
5 Neil Walker 213 29 6 32 4 0.277 0.32 0.55 9.22
6 Dustin Pedroia 199 29 6 24 6 0.286 0.30 0.52 9.16
7 Jason Kipnis 214 31 6 27 7 0.262 0.28 0.40 9.10
8 Ben Zobrist 188 31 7 27 6 0.255 0.22 0.29 8.95
9 Aaron Hill 197 26 6 26 4 0.279 -0.01 0.02 8.32
10 Danny Espinosa 218 30 7 24 7 0.234 -0.16 -0.42 7.91
11 Dan Uggla 201 32 9 29 1 0.234 -0.18 -0.33 7.84
12 Howie Kendrick 197 25 5 23 5 0.274 -0.23 -0.35 7.71
13 Kelly Johnson 189 26 7 22 5 0.238 -0.45 -0.86 7.09
14 Kyle Seager 197 26 4 24 4 0.264 -0.46 -0.65 7.08
15 Emilio Bonifacio 169 24 1 10 13 0.266 -0.53 -0.90 6.89
16 Rickie Weeks 177 26 7 20 4 0.243 -0.54 -0.93 6.86
17 Dustin Ackley 209 29 4 18 5 0.249 -0.68 -1.00 6.47
18 Mike Aviles 170 20 4 21 5 0.265 -0.70 -1.15 6.42
19 Darwin Barney 209 26 2 18 4 0.273 -0.77 -1.01 6.22
20 Chase Utley 131 20 5 19 4 0.26 -0.79 -1.30 6.18
21 Omar Infante 178 21 3 18 3 0.281 -0.88 -1.25 5.94
22 Gordon Beckham 190 25 5 21 2 0.247 -0.89 -1.36 5.90
23 Jemile Weeks 201 26 1 15 8 0.249 -0.93 -1.40 5.79
24 Steve Lombardozzi 205 22 2 16 5 0.268 -0.98 -1.45 5.64
25 Daniel Murphy 157 17 2 21 2 0.293 -1.00 -1.44 5.59
26 Marco Scutaro 189 22 3 16 3 0.265 -1.09 -1.61 5.34
27 DJ LeMahieu 159 15 1 17 3 0.296 -1.21 -1.77 5.02
28 Tyler Greene 143 19 3 14 7 0.231 -1.21 -2.04 5.02
29 Ryan Theriot 180 21 14 5 0.272 -1.24 -1.78 4.93
30 Ryan Roberts 154 19 4 17 5 0.227 -1.24 -2.09 4.93
31 Jordany Valdespin 140 15 3 13 6 0.257 -1.26 -2.10 4.87
32 Orlando Hudson 151 22 3 17 3 0.238 -1.29 -1.98 4.81
33 Pedro Ciriaco 131 16 1 15 6 0.26 -1.31 -2.08 4.75
34 Sean Rodriguez 147 19 4 17 4 0.224 -1.34 -2.21 4.67
35 Maicer Izturis 126 16 2 13 5 0.262 -1.36 -2.15 4.61
36 Alexi Amarista 163 18 2 16 4 0.252 -1.38 -2.15 4.56
37 Daniel Descalso 157 21 2 16 2 0.255 -1.40 -2.06 4.50
38 Mark Ellis 141 18 2 13 4 0.255 -1.44 -2.22 4.40
39 Ruben Tejada 172 20 1 14 2 0.273 -1.44 -2.05 4.39
40 Alexi Casilla 126 17 1 11 6 0.254 -1.46 -2.30 4.32

*Full season = the raw (non-adjusted) full season pace roto score using the roto points-above-replacement method. This is, essentially, the amount of expected roto points each player would score above an empty spot in a lineup over a full season.

Analysis


Jose Altuve— I like Jose Altuve a lot, and ZiPS does, too. He produces his value in the three categories—runs, steals and batting average—that many fantasy owners seem to value less, but this doesn’t mean that those categories count less.

While Altuve won’t drive in many runs hitting atop an abysmal Astros lineup, he does have some power—five home runs with a .124 ISO—so he shouldn’t be a complete black hole in the home run category. Think Starlin Castro at second base, with a little less power, and a little more speed.

Altuve makes a lot of contact and has drastically improved his plate discipline upon what he did in 2011. He cut his swing rate by 12 percent, and is chasing at far less pitches outside the zone. This has helped him nearly triple his walk rate, albeit only up to 5.9 percent. Altuve, though, has a blossoming skill set and doesn’t look in immanent danger of dropping off in the final two months of the season. I’d probably still take Pedroia over him, but I really like the aggressive ranking here.

Chase Utley— ZiPS’ projection for Utley is very cautious, calling for just 131 more at bats (35 games). The trepidation is not without merit, however, as Utley has played in only 56.8 percent of the Phillies’ games over the past three seasons.

He missed 43 games in 2010 with a torn ligament in his right thumb. In 2011, he missed the team’s first 45 games with right knee problems, but did play 103 of the remaining 117 games after returning. This year, he lost 76 games to left knee issues, but has played decently since his return (.333 wOBA). Those are three pretty serious injuries, but that’s the complete list of Utley’s DL stints, not just over the past three seasons, but since the 2007 season. What I am trying to say is that Utley doesn’t yo-yo on and off the disabled list, and none of his injuries have been reoccurring issues. Once he heals, he is usually good to go, at least for a while.

Since returning from his latest DL trip, Utley has hit .236/.330/.449, but that line is accompanied by five home runs and three stolen bases, a good sign his knees are feeling well.

If I were to arbitrarily adjust Utley's ZiPS’ projection for at-bats, I would bump it up to around 171, which would give him a rest of season projection of 26/7/25/5/.260. This would raise his expected roto values to -0.07 (rPAA) and -0.20 (EYES), and would bump him up to 10th among second basemen.

Posted by Jesse Sakstrup at 7:57am (2) Comments

Friday, August 03, 2012

August third base rankings


Most fantasy rankings are forged on "gut calls" and the whimsical notions of whoever is compiling the list. Some experts don’t pay for saves, some don’t pay for steals, some wait on pitching, some value upside, some value reliability, and so on. While it might be nice to see plenty of different opinions, it probably doesn’t truly help unless you understand the biases of each individual ranker. This is why some of the writers here at The Hardball Times have created their own, objective valuation methods, outlined here and here (reading, or at least skimming, these introductory articles will give you a much better understanding of the rankings that follow and should help to answer most potential questions).

In accompaniment with Oliver’s ZiPS' rest-of-season forecasts, we will use these objective formulas to create objective rankings. You may not agree with a particular rank, but you will know how the ranking was calculated and you won't have to guess what the ranker was thinking. This should make adding your own personal adjustments and biases much easier. And perhaps this type of ranking will introduce some potential buys and sells that you may have otherwise overlooked.

These rankings will assume a 12-team league in adjusting for league average. The ordering of players, however, is unaffected; players will rank in identical order for leagues of all sizes.


Previous installments:
{exp:list_maker}Catchers
First Basemen
Second Basemen {/exp:list_maker}
Num Name AB R HR RBI SB AVG rPAA (ROS) EYES (ROS) Full Season*
1 Miguel Cabrera 206 34 12 39 1 0.316 1.32 2.17 12.95
2 Jose Bautista 171 32 14 33 3 0.263 0.73 0.93 11.31
3 David Wright 189 29 7 31 7 0.291 0.52 0.79 10.73
4 Brett Lawrie 216 31 8 26 8 0.278 0.45 0.63 10.54
5 Hanley Ramirez 183 28 7 26 10 0.268 0.29 0.27 10.08
6 Adrian Beltre 195 27 9 31 1 0.297 0.18 0.35 9.78
7 Ryan Zimmerman 192 30 8 29 1 0.281 -0.06 0.02 9.09
8 Edwin Encarnacion 171 26 10 27 3 0.269 -0.07 -0.22 9.09
9 Aramis Ramirez 180 26 7 34 1 0.283 -0.11 -0.11 8.95
10 Evan Longoria 148 25 8 29 3 0.277 -0.14 -0.28 8.87
11 Alex Rodriguez 161 24 8 28 4 0.267 -0.23 -0.48 8.63
12 Pablo Sandoval 181 25 7 27 1 0.298 -0.25 -0.28 8.57
13 Mike Moustakas 220 27 8 29 1 0.268 -0.35 -0.52 8.30
14 Martin Prado 205 28 4 23 3 0.288 -0.49 -0.54 7.91
15 Michael Young 219 26 4 27 2 0.283 -0.56 -0.69 7.71
16 Chase Headley 187 24 5 23 5 0.273 -0.56 -0.88 7.70
17 Pedro Alvarez 180 23 10 27 1 0.244 -0.64 -1.18 7.48
18 Mark Reynolds 173 26 10 27 3 0.214 -0.65 -1.29 7.45
19 Chris Davis 187 22 9 26 1 0.251 -0.75 -1.31 7.18
20 Kyle Seager 194 25 4 24 4 0.263 -0.79 -1.18 7.06
21 Todd Frazier 173 22 7 24 3 0.249 -0.84 -1.44 6.91
22 Emilio Bonifacio 167 23 1 10 13 0.263 -0.88 -1.47 6.81
23 Chris Johnson 181 21 5 25 1 0.271 -0.98 -1.48 6.52
24 Kevin Youkilis 149 23 7 22 1 0.248 -1.03 -1.64 6.40
25 David Freese 143 18 5 23 1 0.287 -1.03 -1.57 6.39
26 Juan Francisco 154 18 7 24 1 0.26 -1.05 -1.74 6.35
27 Mike Aviles 166 19 4 20 5 0.265 -1.06 -1.71 6.32
28 Trevor Plouffe 174 24 7 20 1 0.247 -1.12 -1.76 6.15
29 Josh Harrison 161 23 2 16 5 0.267 -1.22 -1.80 5.87
30 Chipper Jones 129 17 5 21 1 0.279 -1.22 -1.90 5.85
31 Steve Lombardozzi 202 22 2 16 5 0.267 -1.28 -1.90 5.71
32 Casey McGehee 176 19 6 25 0.25 -1.28 -2.05 5.69
33 Daniel Murphy 155 17 2 21 2 0.29 -1.31 -1.92 5.60
34 Will Middlebrooks 170 15 6 21 2 0.259 -1.31 -2.19 5.60
35 Jose Lopez 165 18 5 22 1 0.261 -1.32 -2.07 5.59
36 Jordan Pacheco 177 17 2 22 2 0.271 -1.46 -2.20 5.19
37 Alberto Callaspo 171 20 3 19 1 0.269 -1.47 -2.16 5.18
38 Ryan Roberts 151 19 4 17 5 0.232 -1.47 -2.42 5.17
39 DJ LeMahieu 156 15 1 16 3 0.295 -1.54 -2.28 4.96
40 Wilson Betemit 135 16 5 17 1 0.259 -1.58 -2.50 4.86

*Full season = the raw (non-adjusted) full season pace roto score using the roto points-above-replacement method. This is, essentially, the amount of expected roto points each player would score above an empty spot in a lineup over a full season.

Analysis


Alex Rodriguez— Rodriguez will have X-rays on his fractured hand sometime in the near future. Until then, we won’t have a timetable for when he might return. The general sense is that he may be out up to two months. With roughly two months left in the season, this could mean that Rodriguez misses anywhere from 75 to 100 percent of the remaining games this year.

Since ZiPS doesn’t know his timetable, it still has him projected for 161 at-bats. This is probably far too high, especially with the Yankees’ position six and a half games ahead of Baltimore and Tampa Bay in the AL East. They could play it safe and wait until the playoffs to bring Rodriguez back. This injury should probably push Rodriguez out of the top-40 third basemen entirely, as he won’t be very useful in fantasy until 2013.

Mike Olt and Michael Young—The Texas Rangers summoned third base prospect Olt on Thursday, leaving Michael Young’s playing time in serious jeopardy. As Dave Cameron mentioned in his analysis of the call-up, Young hasn’t hit a home run since May 7 and has hit just .247/.275/.306 since then.

Young has been an above league-average player every year since 2003, but his -1.5 WAR in 2012—second worst in baseball (Jeff Francoeur)—became too much for the Rangers to take. Olt's arrival likely means the end of Young as an everyday player. Despite Young’s overall ineptitude this year, he has remained solid against lefties, hitting for a 104 wRC+ against them, so he could still see at-bats in a platoon situation against lefties.

In the first game of the Olt era last night, he hit eighth and played first base, while Young remained in the lineup and hit sixth against lefty C.J. Wilson. We still don’t know if Young will be a strict platoon player for the rest of the year, but the Rangers didn’t call up Olt to sit on the bench, and with Young’s wRC+ of 50 against right handers, they would be best served to keep Young on the bench against them in favor of Mitch Moreland and his career 114 wRC+ against righties. However this situation ends up shaking out, it is not going to be good for Young's fantasy value.

Arbitrary adjustments: For Michael Young, it would probably be safe to assume he loses close to half of the 219 at-bats that ZiPS has him projected for the rest of the way, which moves him out of the top-40 third basemen completely.

As for Olt, getting a gauge of what he will do in a two-month sample is tricky. He hit .288/.398/.579, with 28 home runs this year at Double-A, but he also struck out in 24 percent of his plate appearances. ZiPS does not have a projection for Olt yet, but he should provide good power with a low batting average, and will benefit greatly from his home park and the dangerous Rangers lineup. Putting a specific ranking on him is almost futile, due to the excessively large range of reasonable outcomes, but he is absolutely worth an add if you have a need a third base or a corner infield slot.

Juan Francisco and Josh Harrison — I am not sure why ZiPS is so aggressive in the playing time projections for Francisco and Harrison. Both players have been used primarily as pinch hitters. Since the beginning of July, Francisco compiled more than one plate appearance in just five games, while Harrison has had six such games. Both have skill sets that would be worth keeping an eye on should either of them stumble their way into regular at-bats, but as of now, they should probably be left on the waiver wire in mixed leagues.

Will Middlebrooks— ZiPS projects Middlebrooks for a 15/6/21/2/.259 fantasy line in 180 plate appearances the rest of the way. I have no problem with the projected batting average regression, and, while six home runs translates out to only 20 over a 600-plate appearance sample, I don’t have a huge problem with being cautious on a player with a 66-game major league track record and horrible plate discipline. I do, however, have an issue with the low run and RBI totals that ZiPS projects for Middlebrooks.

So far this year, Middlebrooks has 32 runs scored (0.125 runs per plate appearance) and 48 RBI (0.188 RBI per plate appearance). ZiPS, however, projects just 15 runs (0.833 runs/PA) and 21 RBI (0.117 RBI/PA). Runs and RBI are difficult to predict and there is surely regression coming in these two areas for Middlebrooks, but that seems too steep.

ZiPS projects a .294 OBP and .165 ISO for Middlebrooks for the rest of the season. Using FanGraphs' new leaderboard filter, I extracted all hitters who have posted an on-base percentage between .290 and .300 in either 2011 or this year. The average runs scored rate for these players was 0.109 runs per plate appearance. I also extracted the hitters who had an isolated power between .155 and .175 over that same time period. The average RBI rate for this batch of players was 0.118 RBI per plate appearance.

The players on these two lists came from various teams, but most teams aren’t the Boston Red Sox. Despite losing key players in Carl Crawford and Jacoby Ellsbury for long periods of time this year, Boston still ranks eighth in baseball in wOBA. The lineup looks fully healthy now and could easily hit like it did in 2011, when it produced a league-best 116 wRC+.

Arbitrary adjustment: If we adjust the average run and RBI rate of players similar to Middlebrooks to reflect a 110 team-wRC+, something Boston should easily be capable of coming close to going forward, then he would average 0.120 runs and 0.130 RBI per plate appearance. I would also bump his playing time projection to 200 plate appearances. Under these circumstances, Middlebrooks’ rest of season projection looks like this: 24 runs, seven home runs, 26 RBI, two steals and a .259 average. Since he typically hits sixth or seventh, we could probably add a couple of RBIs and subtract a couple of runs from that line, but the overall result would be similar, a boost into the 17th spot among third basemen.

Posted by Jesse Sakstrup at 3:38am (2) Comments

AL Waiver Wire: Week 15


First, it was Josh Shepardson. Then it was Paul Singman. Now, I'm taking over THT's AL Waiver Wire column, looking at some less notable names lurking on the scrap heap of fantasy baseball leagues the nation over. As August dawns, here are a few names that might be overlooked in your league.

Chris Carter | Oakland Athletics | 1B/OF | ESPN: 4.9 percent ownership; Yahoo: 6 percent
YTD: .275 / .405 / .652


If you’re a THT reader, I’m going to assume you’re a bit more hardcore than the average fantasy baseball fan, which means I can probably skip the introduction to Carter. But for those who haven’t been acquainted, Carter, 25, has been a perpetual prospect for seemingly forever—one incapable of making his mark at the big league level. A centerpiece in trades involving both Carlos Quentin and Dan Haren, Carter has been named to Baseball America’s top 100 prospects list three times and was the A’s organizational player of the year in both 2008 and 2009. A sturdy 6-foot-4, 245-pound right-handed slugger, Carter can mash, as evidenced by his career .535 minor league slugging percentage.

Trouble is, in his previous major league stints in 2010 and 2011, his mighty bat turned to putty, as he combined for a helpless .167 average with just three home runs in 124 plate appearances. Carter didn’t make the major league roster to open 2012, and was called up in late June after hitting .279 / .367 / .486 with 12 homers and 53 RBIs in the Pacific Coast League. Since then, he’s steadily become a fixture at Oakland’s first base, playing nearly every day since mid-July and becoming a big part of the A’s mid-summer surge.

All well and good. But what assurances do we have that Carter’s recent stretch has finally made him fantasy viable?

The biggest knock on Carter over the years has been his propensity for strikeouts; he compiled a 23.5 rate during his lengthy minor league tenure. That’s certainly not a crime at the big league level—isn’t that right, Adam Dunn?—but it’s also not going to make many friends among the fantasy flock if the power numbers and on-base production aren’t there. While Carter’s strikeout rate hasn’t changed much, he has maintained an on-base percentage above .400 since July 13, when he more or less took over as the everyday first baseman.

And the power is still there, proven by his five home runs, 12 RBIs and .558 slugging percentage over that period.

A quick glance at Carter’s plate discipline figures suggests he’s maturing as a hitter. After posting O-Swing rates approaching 30 percent during his first cups of coffee in the majors, Carter is learning to lay off pitches outside the strike zone, dropping that mark to 22.7 percent entering Thursday night’s action. His nearly 70 percent contact rate represents a new career high, such as it is, despite the fact that he’s seeing fewer fastballs, according to FanGraphs’ PITCHf/x data.

True, he’s benefited from a ridiculous 38.1 percent HR/FB rate, which will steadily come back down to earth over the coming weeks. But as long as he can draw enough walks to offset the strikeouts, he should be dependable enough to provide some pop at the middle of Oakland’s order, especially if Yoenis Cespedes can stay healthy enough to provide him some protection. It’s too soon to say whether Carter is flowering into the prize pig the A’s were once sure they had, but he’s moving in the right direction and right now has an everyday role in the A’s lineup.

Recommendation: Worth a pickup in all AL-only leagues, though it’s not yet clear whether he’s a viable mixed-league first baseman.

Hisashi Iwakuma | SP | Seattle Mariners | ESPN: .7 percent ownership; Yahoo: 3 percent
YTD: 4.10 ERA / 1.382 WHIP / 7.6 K/9


OK, so a back-of-the-rotation arm on the Mariners likely isn’t burning up the waiver wire in too many leagues right now. Then again, Iwakuma did post 13 strikeouts in a dazzling eight-inning gem Monday night against the Blue Jays, walking three batters and allowing just one earned run en route to a convincing 4-1 victory. Combine that performance with his previous two starts (1.89 ERA, 10.9 K/9, 3.32 BB/9 over 19 innings overall) and you have a guy who, at the very least, has popped up on the waiver wire radar.

The skinny: Iwakuma, 31, was one of Japan’s top pitchers entering the 2011 season, when he was courted by Billy Beane and the Oakland A’s for a reported four-year, $15 million deal. But the two sides couldn’t come to an agreement, making Iwakuma’s case the first time a Japanese player had gone through the posting process and did not agree to a contract. Back in Japan, a sore shoulder limited the right-hander to just 17 starts last year, and this time, Iwakuma took a one-year deal with the Mariners in the hopes of boosting his value for the upcoming offseason.

He’s spent the bulk of the 2012 season in the bullpen, but was promoted to the rotation after Mariners fans learned the Hector Noesi couldn’t get anyone out. In his five starts, Iwakuma has posted a nearly strikeout-per-inning rate, as well as a 4.03 BB/9 and a meh 1.345 WHIP. His overall numbers (4.10 ERA, 7.58 K/9, 1.67 HR/9 in 59.1 innings) aren’t too pretty, but then again, we’re talking about someone who’s spent his entire career up until April as a starting pitcher, and besides, he’s had to deal with a nasty 22.9 HR/FB rate, even while calling pitcher-friendly Safeco Field home.

I’m not ready to herald this guy as the second coming of Hideo Nomo (pre-Mets, post-Mets Nomo, that is), but he’s certainly showing improvement, and comes with a pedigree that suggests he’s capable of doing big things. True, the Mariners bullpen didn’t get any better over the past week with the Brandon League trade, but Iwakuma is definitely someone to keep an eye on, as he’s one or two starts away from becoming a popular waiver wire pickup.

Recommendation: Worth a look in AL-only formats and a pickup in deeper ones, though he’s not yet mixed-league material.

Daniel Straily | SP | Oakland A’s | ESPN: N/A; Yahoo: N/A
YTD: N/A


What do Stephen Strasburg, Felix Hernandez and Justin Verlander have in common? They all have fewer strikeouts than Oakland’s newest starting pitcher, Daniel Straily, whose eye-popping 11.38 K/9 (175 strikeouts) was summoned to the big leagues Thursday. Expected to make tonight’s start, Straily, 23, features a low to mid-90s heater, along with a strong slider and a change-up. Although he wasn’t a tremendous prospect entering the 2012 season—he wasn’t even invited to big league camp in the spring—improved mechanics caused Straily’s trajectory to take a sharp upward turn in 22 starts split between Double-A and Triple-A, where he combined to go 8-6 with a 2.60 ERA and .969 WHIP and keep his walks at a very manageable 2.4 per 9 rate.

I haven’t yet heard anything about an innings limit, but it’s worth noting he pitched 138.1 frames so far this season. And although his promotion pushed Travis Blackley to the bullpen, both Brandon McCarthy and Brett Anderson could be back with the team in a matter of weeks, forcing manager Bob Melvin to consider a six-man rotation, or demote Straily to make sure he’s receiving regular work.

It’s tough to speculate on what to expect from Straily, since we’re only talking about one season of elite minor league performance. But I’m a believer in stocking my fantasy squad with upside guys, risk/reward players with the potential to put up big numbers. Straily certainly seems to qualify in that respect.

Recommendation: We’ll find out more about this guy over the next few weeks. In the meantime, get him on your AL-only roster if you have the space, and for that matter, dump any extra cargo overboard in mixed leagues to see if you can grab a piece of the action down the stretch.

Mike Olt | 3B / 1B | Texas Rangers | ESPN: .5 percent ownership; Yahoo: 0 percent ownership
YTD: N/A


Speaking of upside guys, I’m sure you’re already familiar with Mike Olt, who was killing the ball in Double-A to the sound of a .288 / .398 / .579 line with 28 home runs and 82 RBIs. No. 43 on Baseball America’s top 100 prospect list entering the season, Olt, who turns 24 later this month, profiles as a bopper, and was shielded by the Rangers all summer long despite sustained interest from other clubs leading up to the trade deadline.

This blurb is not to tell you about how wonderful Olt is, since either you believe in his ability, or you can go to any number of other places to read about how other people look at him. Instead, I’m more interested in how much he’s going to play, as he doesn’t do fantasy owners a lot of good if his name isn’t being scrawled on the lineup card on a regular basis. In the immediate future, it seems as if Olt will face lefties and will play mostly at first base and DH, though he could spell Adrian Beltre at third base, which is his primary position.

Granted, it’d be great if we were assured out of the gate that Olt was guaranteed a position all to himself. But sharing first base with Mitch Moreland (.278 / .326 / .503) isn’t the worst fate in the world, either, because if you take away the 26-year-old’s hot May, you’re left with a guy who’s hit .248 with just five home runs this season. Moreland still offers pop against right-handed pitchers, and Olt’s leapfrogging over Triple-A suggests his learning curve could be a bit longer, but Moreland doesn’t represent an immovable roadblock by any means.

Recommendation: Olt’s ceiling is too high to ignore in AL-only leagues, and owners in mixed leagues might as well roster him, too. Just don’t expect instant results, and stay tuned to see if he eats up more playing time as the season progresses.

Posted by Karl de Vries at 4:39am (1) Comments

NL Waiver Wire: Week 15


Last week, Carlos Gomez and Nate Schierholtz were plus-plus recommendations, with the former sharing NL Player of the Week honors and the latter landing an everyday job in a hotter park to hit in (Citizens Bank). Paul Maholm might enjoy his new home, too, and his first match-up in a Braves uniform will pin him against the lowly Astros. Edward Mujica, once a low risk speculative saves guy, is that no longer as a St. Louis Cardinal, but all in all, it was a successful week of recommendations. What about week 15?

Nate Schierholtz | Giants | OF | 2 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.6 percent ESPN ownership
Labeled a “speculative add” last week, Schierholtz finds himself promoted to a “must add” in NL-only leagues. Ruben Amaro’s outfielder fire-sale shipped out once-glorious Shane Victorino and struggling Hunter Pence, with Schierholtz returning in the latter deal. Domonic Brown will get burn in center field, but the Phillies should be expected to do good on Schierholtz’s wish, and will play him mostly every day. What do such days hold in store? He’s hit as many as 15 homers in a season (429 at-bats in 2008) and should benefit from moving out of San Francisco, where fly balls go to die on AT&T Park’s warning track.

A telling stat about Schierholtz’s power: From 2009 until 2011, he hit 17 homers. His rate at home was 77.4 at-bats per home run; on the road, the number fell to 38.3 at-bats per home run. He’ll play 31 games at Citizens Bank Park, four in Milwaukee, three in Cincinnati, and three in Atlanta. In other words, he’ll hit a few dingers.
Recommendation: Worth an add in all NL-only leagues.

Brett Wallace | Astros | 1B | 2 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.3 percent ESPN ownership
With zero alternatives and nothing holding him back, Brett the Beast has been unleashed for the final two months of the season. Can we expect the small sample (four homers in 14 games, and a .333 batting average) from 2012 to hold up, or will Wallace flop to last year’s struggle (five homers in 115 games, and a .259 batting average)? The answer, unsurprisingly, should be somewhere in-between.

Wallace is an enigmatic one. Once, he was a highly regarded top prospect, it seemed; the catch was that he occupied a spot in four farm systems despite his pedigree and high draft position.

His first go-round at Triple-A was disappointing—he was barely above league average with the Cardinals in 2009—and he didn’t light the world on fire with the A’s. The A’s turned into the Blue Jays and the Jays turned into the Astros, and suddenly, Wallace looked (and played) more like a cast-off than a cornerstone to any franchise. And his big shot in 2011 with the major-league Astros was a disappointment in every sense: His defense and base running were below average, and his near .700 OPS was unacceptable considering his corner-infield position. He’s hitting the ball with some authority in Triple-A, and in the majors, "some authority" has turned magically into "some authority and so much more." It won't last at this level or anything near it, but Wallace, at the very least, will be an able-bodied filler.
Recommendation: Worth an add in all NL-only leagues.

Josh Vitters | Cubs | 3B | 0 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.1 percent ESPN ownership
Vitters isn't entirely unlike Wallace: high pick, good makeup, but struggled to hit the ball with much authority and stalled in the minors. His shot may finally come, though, on the lowly Cubs, who are fishing for pieces to build around. They have no reason not to give Vitters a chance to play himself into a job, what after his .365 Weighted On-Base Average and nice power showing (16 homers in 402 at-bats) in Triple-A. Third base options are hard to come by at this point in the season, and Vitters projects to hit a handful of homers in the friendly confines of Wrigley.
Recommendation: Worth an add in deeper NL-only leagues.

Wade LeBlanc | Marlins | SP | 1 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.5 percent ESPN ownership
It's too early to tell, I concede upfront. That said, it certainly looks like Marlins Park plays pretty well as a pitcher's park. It's as helpful in keeping balls in the park, perhaps, as PETCO, where LeBlanc functioned in the last two years as a good NL-only stream option. Over his Padres career, LeBlanc pitched to the tune of a 2.91 ERA at home, and matched in with a playable 1.25 WHIP.

And while I'm not here to argue LeBlanc's merit as a major league starter—he hardly profiles as one with an 87 mph fastball that hardly works with his fly-ball tendencies—but he can be a worthy fantasy stream half the time. Nothing wrong with using him and Jason Marquis each at home, and divorcing them every time they hit the road. You'd be smarter than most.
Recommendation: Worth streaming in all leagues.

Patrick Corbin | D'backs | SP | 1 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.1 percent ESPN ownership
A sneaky streaming option, too, is Pat Corbin, who will likely learn to hate Chase Field. Corbin, though, put up a 3.01 FIP at Triple-A Reno, and if his control follows him to the majors, he'll survive well on his ground-ball heavy profile. About Chase: Diamondback starters collectively have a 4.40 ERA and .269 batting average against on their home turf, while those numbers drop to 3.36 and .235. Corbin and LeBlanc sounds like a good tandem.
Recommendation: Worth streaming in all leagues.

Oliver has experienced some troubles this week, so rest of season projections are not available at the moment. Many apologies.

Posted by Nick Fleder at 4:54am (0) Comments

The daily grind: 8-3


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): It's another day where the pitching options are dangerous. Joe Blanton has pitched very well lately, as he often does in the second half of the season. His match-up against the Diamondbacks isn't a walk in the park, though.

Felix Doubront has been merely solid all season long. He has the top number I look for in a fantasy pitcher—about one strikeout per inning. He also has the second number—a tolerable walk rate. But the results just haven't really been there all season. The Twins lean lefty with some of their better hitters, so it's a solid match-up for him.

He's on waivers in most leagues, but Dan Straily leads baseball in strikeouts this year and he's making his debut.

Pitcher (bum): I disrespected the Braves yesterday and it prevented me from winning some Fanduel cash for once. Today I'll overcompensate by placing Armando Galarraga on the bum list.

Jonathan Sanchez is always some kind of terrible. I'm shocked he's still getting starts. He could challenge Nick Blackburn for most superbly bad pitcher of 2012. As such, the Giants should benefit.

The Rangers should bash Jeremy Guthrie to pieces.

Hitter (power): There's quite a few power options. Jonny Gomes and Chris Carter are squared off against Brett Cecil and Scott Hairston draws Clayton Richard.

Hitter (speed): David Murphy's not really a true speed threat, but he could swipe one if the Rangers aren't too busy forming a conga line. Quintin Berry, Rajai Davis and Jemile Weeks have truer speed match-ups.

Tomorrow's grind


Wei-Yin Chen will face the Rays tomorrow. He's generally solid and is coming off a 12 strikeout performance.

Paul Maholm is rostered in way more leagues than he ought to be—41 percent. He has a middling option against the Astros.

If I had more balls, I'd recommend Mark Rogers against the Cardinals. Instead, I not-so-subtly hint that maybe you can make use of your cojones.



































































































































































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher
Angels         Astros      
  Alberto Callaspo R Gavin Floyd     J.D. Martinez R Paul Maholm
Athletics         Brewers      
  Jemile Weeks S Ricky Romero     Norichika Aoki L Adam Wainwright
  Chris Carter R Ricky Romero   Cardinals      
  Jonny Gomes R Ricky Romero     Jon Jay L Mark Rogers
Blue Jays         Dodgers      
  Anthony Gose L A.J. Griffin     A.J. Ellis R Chris Volstad
  Rajai Davis R A.J. Griffin   Giants      
Mariners           Marco Scutaro R Jeff Francis
  Eric Thames L Hiroki Kuroda   Mets      
  Mike Carp L Hiroki Kuroda     Kirk Nieuwenhuis L Edinson Volquez
  Trayvon Robinson S Hiroki Kuroda   Nationals      
  Michael Saunders L Hiroki Kuroda     Jesus Flores R Mark Buehrle
Orioles           Steve Lombardozzi S Mark Buehrle
  Wilson Betemit S Jeremy Hellickson     Tyler Moore R Mark Buehrle
Rangers         Padres      
  Geovany Soto R Will Smith     Yonder Alonso L Jeremy Hefner
  Craig Gentry R Will Smith     Carlos Quentin R Jeremy Hefner
Red Sox           Cameron Maybin R Jeremy Hefner
  Cody Ross R Cole De Vries     Will Venable L Jeremy Hefner
Royals         Phillies      
  Salvador Perez R Scott Feldman     Domonic Brown L Joe Saunders
  Alcides Escobar R Scott Feldman     Ty Wigginton R Joe Saunders
  Lorenzo Cain R Scott Feldman     John Mayberry Jr. R Joe Saunders
Tigers         Pirates      
  Brennan Boesch L Ubaldo Jimenez     Travis Snider L Mike Leake
  Quintin Berry L Ubaldo Jimenez     Starling Marte R Mike Leake
Twins           Garrett Jones L Mike Leake
  Ryan Doumit S Clay Buchholz   Reds      
  Denard Span L Clay Buchholz     Zack Cozart R James McDonald
  Ben Revere L Clay Buchholz     Todd Frazier R James McDonald
White Sox                
  Dayan Viciedo R Ervin Santana          


A few match-ups stand out as better than the rest. There is the usual mix of A's hitters—Gomes, Carter and Weeks. If that's not your style Travis Snider has a friendly match-up against Mike Leake. Last and potentially least, Craig Gentry will find himself facing Will Smith.

Reliever watch


Chris Perez blew just his second save of the season. Prior to the season, I had written him off as a Kevin Gregg-quality nightmare to manage, but he's really helped out his owners.

Frank Francisco is nearing return, which shouldn't mean anything but somehow does...

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:53am (6) Comments

Monday, August 06, 2012

August shortstop rankings


Most fantasy rankings are forged on "gut calls" and the whimsical notions of whoever is compiling the list. Some experts don’t pay for saves, some don’t pay for steals, some wait on pitching, some value upside, some value reliability, and so on. While it might be nice to see plenty of different opinions, it probably doesn’t truly help unless you understand the biases of each individual ranker. This is why some of the writers here at The Hardball Times have created their own, objective valuation methods, outlined here and here (reading, or at least skimming, these introductory articles will give you a much better understanding of the rankings that follow and should help to answer most potential questions).

In accompaniment with Oliver’s ZiPS' rest-of-season forecasts, we will use these objective formulas to create objective rankings. You may not agree with a particular rank, but you will know how the ranking was calculated and you won't have to guess what the ranker was thinking. This should make adding your own personal adjustments and biases much easier. And perhaps this type of ranking will introduce some potential buys and sells that you may have otherwise overlooked.

These rankings will assume a 12-team league in adjusting for league average. The ordering of players, however, is unaffected; players will rank in identical order for leagues of all sizes.


Previous installments:
{exp:list_maker}Catchers
First Basemen
Second Basemen
Third Base{/exp:list_maker}
Num Name AB R HR RBI SB AVG rPAA (ROS) EYES (ROS) Full Season*
1 Starlin Castro 226 29 4 25 8 0.292 0.71 1.19 10.20
2 Troy Tulowitzki 160 26 8 28 4 0.294 0.69 1.03 10.12
3 Hanley Ramirez 176 27 6 25 9 0.267 0.59 0.76 9.83
4 Jose Reyes 182 27 3 15 12 0.297 0.52 0.80 9.62
5 Elvis Andrus 213 31 1 19 12 0.282 0.48 0.84 9.52
6 Jimmy Rollins 190 27 5 21 9 0.258 0.23 0.23 8.77
7 Asdrubal Cabrera 200 27 6 24 4 0.275 0.20 0.34 8.68
8 Alexei Ramirez 205 26 5 25 4 0.273 0.07 0.15 8.31
9 Ian Desmond 188 23 5 22 7 0.266 0.02 -0.08 8.17
10 Alcides Escobar 199 25 2 17 9 0.281 -0.02 0.00 8.03
11 Dee Gordon 191 23 10 17 0.262 -0.08 -0.33 7.86
12 Danny Espinosa 200 27 6 22 7 0.235 -0.11 -0.35 7.77
13 Derek Jeter 202 28 3 19 4 0.282 -0.16 -0.04 7.64
14 Emilio Bonifacio 156 22 1 9 12 0.263 -0.47 -0.83 6.71
15 Erick Aybar 178 22 2 16 7 0.27 -0.49 -0.75 6.66
16 J.J. Hardy 186 24 7 21 0.253 -0.55 -0.85 6.49
17 Jhonny Peralta 184 21 5 25 0.266 -0.56 -0.82 6.45
18 Rafael Furcal 155 24 3 15 5 0.265 -0.57 -0.82 6.43
19 Zack Cozart 187 27 5 16 3 0.251 -0.57 -0.83 6.42
20 Trevor Plouffe 164 23 7 19 1 0.25 -0.58 -0.94 6.40
21 Mike Aviles 158 18 4 19 4 0.266 -0.64 -1.06 6.22
22 Yunel Escobar 186 24 4 18 1 0.269 -0.68 -0.92 6.09
23 Brian Dozier 188 22 2 17 5 0.25 -0.86 -1.33 5.57
24 Andrelton Simmons 162 19 1 14 5 0.278 -0.87 -1.28 5.53
25 Cliff Pennington 172 21 2 15 7 0.238 -0.90 -1.50 5.44
26 Marco Scutaro 177 21 2 15 3 0.266 -0.96 -1.39 5.26
27 Yuniesky Betancourt 163 16 4 21 1 0.258 -0.99 -1.58 5.18
28 Ryan Theriot 169 20 14 5 0.272 -0.99 -1.42 5.18
29 Pedro Ciriaco 122 15 1 14 5 0.262 -1.17 -1.84 4.67
30 Sean Rodriguez 138 18 4 16 3 0.225 -1.18 -1.95 4.62
31 Everth Cabrera 117 16 1 9 9 0.231 -1.18 -2.01 4.62
32 Willie Bloomquist 122 16 1 8 5 0.279 -1.23 -1.86 4.49
33 Ruben Tejada 161 18 1 13 2 0.273 -1.27 -1.83 4.37
34 Alexi Amarista 152 17 1 15 4 0.25 -1.27 -1.97 4.36
35 Eric Sogard 138 19 2 13 3 0.246 -1.27 -1.94 4.36
36 Stephen Drew 124 16 3 15 1 0.258 -1.28 -1.97 4.33
37 Jed Lowrie 111 14 4 14 1 0.252 -1.33 -2.12 4.19
38 Elliot Johnson 111 12 2 11 6 0.243 -1.34 -2.25 4.16
39 Cody Ransom 121 14 5 18 1 0.215 -1.37 -2.31 4.07
40 Brendan Ryan 139 18 1 12 4 0.23 -1.50 -2.34 3.69

*Full season = the raw (non-adjusted) full season pace roto score using the roto points-above-replacement method. This is, essentially, the amount of expected roto points each player would score above an empty spot in a lineup over a full season.

Analysis


Troy Tulowitzki – Tulo took batting practice Tuesday for the first time since undergoing surgery on his groin. There is still no timetable for his return, however, and with the Rockies’ position, 29 games below .500, it would be prudent to make sure he is fully healthy before bringing him back. There is no indication that the Rockies are planning on, or considering, shutting Tulowitzki down for the remainder of the season, so without any major setbacks, he should see action at some point in 2012.

ZiPS projects Tulowitzki to play in 43 of the Rockies’ remaining 57 games. Since there is still no timetable for his return, this seems overly optimistic.

Arbitrary adjustment: Taking my best guess, I would project around 34 games for Tulo. This would move his value to 0.05 (rPAA) and 0.03 (EYES), ninth among shortstops.

Starlin Castro – At the end of April, Castro had 10 stolen bases and looked like he might be on his way to a 30-steal season. He followed that up with five steals in May, but since then he has stolen just one base in six attempts over the past two months. ZiPS has Castro down for eight more steals the rest of the way. Steals can come at random, but unless his current stolen base trajectory takes an drastic turn, paying for eight steals the rest of the way might not be the wisest move.

Arbitrary adjustment: Four steals? Does that sound fair? That is what I am going with. This would move his expected roto score down to 0.36 (rPAA) and 0.76 (EYES), also sliding him down to fourth at shortstop.

Ian Desmond – Desmond is currently on the disabled list and, as with Tulowitzki, there is no timetable for return. Players with this type of oblique injury collectively miss an average of 26 games, according to the Los Angeles Dodgers’ senior director of medical services, Stan Conte, who has studied this sort of injury extensively.

Desmond was placed on the DL on July 22, so look for him to return sometime close to the end of August, which would leave the Nationals with about 40 games left in the season. Assuming he plays all of those games, his new expected roto value becomes -0.53 (rAA) and 0.95 (EYES), moving him back to 15th at the position.

Dee Gordon – Gordon suffered a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his right thumb on July 4. According to Gordon’s original timetable, he is expected to miss at least two more weeks. That timetable was announced about three weeks ago, so it might be outdated by now.

Assuming he is still on course for a five-week recovery, a reasonable expectation might be 35-40 games from this point forward, much less than the 47 games that ZiPS projects. And that is also assuming that the Dodgers don’t get tired of his .280 on base percentage, and .263 wOBA, and cut his playing time now that they have added Hanley Ramirez.

Arbitrary adjustment: With 35 games played, and that might be a bit volatile, his expected roto value moves down to -0.75 (rPAA) and -1.35 (EYES), which makes him the new 22nd ranked shortstop.

Josh Rutledge - ZiPS does not have a projection for Josh Rutledge. However, since he was called-up on July 13, Rutledge has hit .329/.348/.659, with six home runs and three stolen bases, so he is merits mentioning.

Can Rutledge continue at this pace? No. But, there are reasons to believe that he could be useful for owners in need of a middle infield option down the stretch. His .349 BABIP is probably a bit high, but he has maintained a high BABIP throughout his minor league career and is seen as having the hitting tools that might foreshadow a high BABIP. He is also controlling his strikeouts (15.5 percent), as he did in the minors, so while a .329 average is probably out of his reach going forward, we shouldn't expect a complete free-fall either, especially when he plays half of his games in Coors Field.

Coors Field will help his home run totals, too, but he is more of a gap hitter than a home run hitter. Rutledge is also a solid runner and has stolen 30 bases in the minors since the beginning of 2011 (902 plate appearances), so look for a modest contribution on the base paths as well.

The Rockies won't be taking Rutledge out of the lineup while he has a .445 wOBA, but Tulowitzki will be returning at some point this season. With the way Rutledge is hitting, that could mean he moves to second base, pushing DJ LeMahieu to the bench, or, if Rutledge comes back to earth, he and LeMahieu could split time at second. Tulo's return will make this situation much more hazy if Rutledge does begin to slump, but right now he is playing, and playing very well. I'd be skeptical about going all-in, though.

Arbitrary projection: A fantasy line of 21/4/17/4/.272 in 182 at-bats. This would give him expected roto values of -0.53 (rPAA) and -0.86 (EYES), ranking him as the 16th best shortstop for the remainder of 2012.

Posted by Jesse Sakstrup at 4:40am (5) Comments

This week in (fantasy) baseball 7/30-8/5


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


Tommy Hanson landed on the DL last week with a strained lower back injury, though the acquisition of Paul Maholm has filled his rotation spot for the time being. The injury doesn’t sound all that serious, and Kris Medlen could stand to lose his spot in the rotation when the right-hander returns.

• After missing roughly two months earlier this year, Emilio Bonifacio reinjured his left thumb last week, an injury that manager Ozzie Guillen initially feared would cost him the rest of the season. Fortunately, X-rays turned out negative, so although the injury doesn’t look to be season-threatening, it could be enough to cost him a few weeks.

• There aren’t too many players who enjoy breakout seasons at the age of 33, but it’s been a magical campaign for Carlos Ruiz, who’s burst out to become one of the most productive catchers in fantasy this year. But plantar fascitis in his left foot could cost him up to the next six weeks, which looks like it will force the Phillies to use a combination of Erik Kratz and Brian Schneider going forward.

• One of the principal reasons for the A’s mid-summer surge, A.J. Griffin has matured from being a solid prospect to a solid major league starter. Unfortunately, the 24-year-old has hit the disabled list with shoulder inflammation. Brandon McCarthy, himself recovering from a shoulder injury, looks like he could come back before Griffin’s spot in the rotation comes up.

• It’s been a tough year for Lance Berkman after returning to the fantasy fore in 2011. But he’s been bothered by his right knee all season, and after getting hit by a pitch last month, he’s been suffering with inflammation, which has now sent him to the DL. Although he intends to return this season, Berkman was already losing playing time to Allen Craig, who now should be counted upon to play every day for at least the next few weeks.

Michael Cuddyer’s oblique injury has sent him to the disabled list and could cost him up to the next month. Todd Helton will pick up more playing time at first base, while a platoon of Tyler Colvin and Eric Young Jr. will pick up the slack in right field.

• It wasn’t all that long ago when John Danks was a viable fantasy starter. But for the time being, such thoughts are distant memories, as the 27-year-old southpaw will undergo season-ending shoulder surgery. He’s been out since May, anyway, so chances are you weren’t making too many firm plans to use him in fantasy.

• Speaking of once-relevant fantasy players, Neftali Feliz is headed for Tommy John surgery, eliminating him from fantasy owners’ minds for the rest of 2012.

Other bumps and bruises


Brandon Phillips continues to be bothered by a left calf strain, which held him out of the lineup for the better part of week 18. Manager Dusty Baker isn’t sure when he’ll return, so Phillips is probably a safe sit this upcoming week.

Francisco Liriano left his start early on Sunday after suffering a right quad contusion.

Colby Rasmus (groin) and Brett Lawrie (rib) were beaten up last week, though they’re expected to be in the lineup Tuesday against the Rays.

Josh Beckett is expected to start Wednesday against the Rangers after being pulled early from his start last week with back spasms.

Road to recovery


Jaime Garcia looked good on Saturday with 4 ⅓ strong innings in his second rehab start from a shoulder strain. He’s expected to pitch again on Thursday, and if that goes well, he could next join the Cardinals’ rotation.

Brett Anderson is making his way back from Tommy John surgery and could be a few starts away from rejoining the team later this month.

Rotation changes


Carlos Zambrano’s return to fantasy relevance earlier this year was fun while it lasted, but now it looks like the party’s over as the volatile right-hander was demoted to the bullpen early last week. Wade LeBlanc (1-1, 1.35 ERA, 1.000 WHIP, 5.9 K/9 in 20 innings, one start) will take over his rotation spot.

Josh Tomlin was brought in to replace Derek Lowe in the Indians’ rotation, but now he’s been bounced to the bullpen, giving Corey Kluber (11-7, 3.59 ERA, 1.356 WHIP, 9.2 K/9 in 21 Triple-A starts) a chance to make a big league splash. His first major league start last week didn’t go so well when he allowed six earned runs against the Royals to pick up a loss.

• The Blue Jays’ rotation has been crushed by injuries this season, but apparently the team wasn’t desperate enough to keep Brett Cecil in the rotation, demoting him last week. J.A. Happ (7-9, 4.85 ERA, 1.446 WHIP, 8.5 K/9 in 111.1 innings between the Astros and the Blue Jays) will take his spot in the rotation.

Trading block


Ryan Dempster finally agreed to be traded by the Cubs, shipped over to Texas in exchange for a couple of minor leaguers. Although he was roughed up by the Angels in his first start, Dempster’s fantasy value figures to rise now that he’s on a contender. His arrival corresponds with the Rangers’ decision to bump Roy Oswalt to the bullpen in place of Scott Feldman.

• In case you were still wondering, the Phillies will not be repeating as NL East champions this year, now that they’ve gone into full fire-sale mode. Leading things off last week was the trade of Shane Victorino to the Dodgers, sending the outfielder to LA for reliever Josh Lindblom and a prospect. His arrival allowed the team to cut Bobby Abreu.

• No sooner had Victorino been swapped than the Phillies sent Hunter Pence to San Francisco for Nate Schierholtz, prospect Tommy Joseph and another minor-leaguer. It’s hard to see how Pence’s fantasy value will not be hurt from the change from Citizens Bank Park to AT&T Park, especially since Ryan Howard and Chase Utley had returned from the DL.

• Lastly, the Phillies also dealt Joe Blanton to the Dodgers for a player to be named later, boosting the 31-year-old’s value as he pitches in a division with better pitchers' parks and weaker lineups.

• The Pirates boosted their outfield last week by acquiring Travis Snider for reliever Brad Lincoln. Snider, 24, had played well since being called up by Toronto last month, though we’ll see how much playing time he grabs as the Pirates also traded for Gaby Sanchez, whom the team can play at first base to spot Garrett Jones.

Posted by Karl de Vries at 5:11am (0) Comments


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