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Monday, August 06, 2012

The daily grind: 8-6


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.


I've watched a lot of Phillies games in the past couple of weeks. Chase Utley is smashing the ball although his numbers don't show it and Domonic Brown is having great at-bats (generally). Both could be nice, cheap pick-ups for a stretch run.

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 definitely been a down year for streamable pitchers and today is no exception. Scott Diamond has a decent match-up with the Indians, except he's already 46 percent owned despite a mediocre fantasy skill set.

Chris Tillman at least is widely available and he should be able to handle the Mariners.

Pitcher (bum): Even the bums are scarce today. Erik Bedard, Aaron Cook and Drew Pomeranz have their share of rough outings, but they're frequently quite solid too.

Hitter (power): Carlos Quentin may unlock his power against Travis Wood. I'm not sure if Tyler Moore is capable of bouncing Jayson Werth, Adam LaRoche or Bryce Harper from the lineup, but he'll have a favorable match-up if he does. David Murphy against Cook looks good too.

Hitter (speed): Not a big day for speedsters. Ben Revere has a solid match-up and Carlos Gomez is starting most days.

Tomorrow's grind


Patrick Corbin's not an exciting pitcher, but he's serviceable and not too many pitchers who meet that description are on the waiver wire.

Samuel Deduno has just been flat lucky, but the Indians aren't terribly good so maybe his luck will hold one more outing.

Wade LeBlanc is a combination of the above. He's definitely been lucky, but he's also usually serviceable. Hopefully he'll hold up against the Mets. And it speaks volumes that the top recommendation of the day has to be qualified with a "hopefully."

Ross Detwiler is yet another service-oriented starter.
















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher
Angels         Astros      
  Alberto Callaspo R Bartolo Colon     Ben Francisco R Ross Detwiler
Athletics           J.D. Martinez R Ross Detwiler
  Jemile Weeks S C.J. Wilson   Brewers      
  Chris Carter R C.J. Wilson     Carlos Gomez R Johnny Cueto
  Jonny Gomes R C.J. Wilson     Norichika Aoki L Johnny Cueto
Blue Jays         Cubs      
  Anthony Gose L James Shields     Brett Jackson L Ross Ohlendorf
  Yunel Escobar R James Shields     Josh Vitters R Ross Ohlendorf
  Rajai Davis R James Shields     David DeJesus L Ross Ohlendorf
Indians         Dodgers      
  Travis Hafner L Sam Deduno     A.J. Ellis R Alex White
  Casey Kotchman L Sam Deduno   Giants      
Mariners           Brandon Belt L Lance Lynn
  Casper Wells R Zach Britton     Angel Pagan S Lance Lynn
  Trayvon Robinson S Zach Britton   Marlins      
Orioles           Carlos Lee R Jon Niese
  Wilson Betemit S Blake Beaven     Justin Ruggiano R Jon Niese
Rangers         Mets      
  Craig Gentry R Jon Lester     Scott Hairston R Wade LeBlanc
Rays           Andres Torres S Wade LeBlanc
  Sean Rodriguez R J.A. Happ   Nationals      
  Elliot Johnson S J.A. Happ     Steve Lombardozzi S Jordan Lyles
Red Sox         Padres      
  Ryan Lavarnway R Ryan Dempster     Yonder Alonso L TBA
  Cody Ross R Ryan Dempster     Carlos Quentin R TBA
Royals           Cameron Maybin R TBA
  Salvador Perez R Jake Peavy     Will Venable L TBA
  Alcides Escobar R Jake Peavy     Chris Denorfia R TBA
  Lorenzo Cain R Jake Peavy   Phillies      
Tigers           Domonic Brown L Mike Minor
  Brennan Boesch L Phil Hughes     Ty Wigginton R Mike Minor
  Quintin Berry L Phil Hughes     John Mayberry Jr. R Mike Minor
Twins         Pirates      
  Ryan Doumit S Corey Kluber     Starling Marte R Patrick Corbin
  Denard Span L Corey Kluber   Reds      
  Ben Revere L Corey Kluber     Todd Frazier R Mike Fiers
White Sox         Rockies      
  Dayan Viciedo R Bruce Chen     Josh Rutledge R Aaron Harang
Yankees           Tyler Colvin L Aaron Harang
  Raul Ibanez L Rick Porcello          


Let's try some newbies, Brett Jackson and Josh Vitters against Ross Ohlendorf.

The Twins coterie has a lovely match-up on its hands.

Look for Scott Hairston against LeBlanc.

Reliever watch


Ryan Cook is on very thin ice after blowing his fourth save on Saturday. I've been saying all along that Cook isn't really a fireman, but I also thought he'd survive the season. Now it looks like a committee could form, including Grant Balfour and Sean Doolittle among others.

Chris Perez blew his third save of the season yesterday. It was a five-run doozy.

Andrew Bailey's rehab is progressing well. It is unclear who will handle the closer job in Boston once he returns, though it will likely depend on Alfredo Aceves' recent performance. He blew a save on Saturday.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:58am (0) Comments

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

August outfield 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
Shortstop{/exp:list_maker}
Num Name AB R HR RBI SB AVG rPAA (ROS) EYES (ROS) Full Season*
1 Ryan Braun 203 34 12 37 8 0.3 1.87 2.81 15.19
2 Carlos Gonzalez 202 35 10 36 8 0.307 1.76 2.76 14.86
3 Andrew McCutchen 199 36 8 28 9 0.302 1.33 2.15 13.53
4 Mike Trout 189 38 6 22 14 0.291 1.28 2.03 13.39
5 Matt Kemp 162 30 9 29 8 0.296 1.01 1.50 12.56
6 Curtis Granderson 194 36 12 31 5 0.253 0.88 1.27 12.16
7 Justin Upton 189 33 8 27 7 0.28 0.72 1.15 11.67
8 Josh Hamilton 178 27 10 35 3 0.287 0.69 1.04 11.60
9 Matt Holliday 182 30 8 31 3 0.302 0.64 1.14 11.43
10 Michael Bourn 214 33 2 18 17 0.276 0.64 0.97 11.41
11 Adam Jones 204 30 9 28 4 0.284 0.52 0.86 11.07
12 Jose Bautista* 157 29 12 30 2 0.261 0.42 0.55 10.76
13 Alex Rios 197 28 7 26 7 0.279 0.37 0.56 10.62
14 Giancarlo Stanton 165 26 11 29 2 0.273 0.28 0.35 10.34
15 Melky Cabrera 196 29 5 23 5 0.306 0.25 0.62 10.25
16 Hunter Pence 204 28 7 31 4 0.275 0.25 0.43 10.24
17 Jay Bruce 183 28 10 31 3 0.257 0.25 0.29 10.23
18 Corey Hart 188 28 9 26 3 0.271 0.12 0.18 9.83
19 Nelson Cruz 175 24 9 30 4 0.263 0.11 0.04 9.82
20 Ichiro Suzuki 218 30 3 16 11 0.284 0.11 0.28 9.82
21 Mark Trumbo 189 24 10 31 2 0.265 0.09 0.02 9.74
22 B.J. Upton 187 26 6 23 12 0.241 0.08 -0.14 9.73
23 Alex Gordon 197 30 6 24 4 0.284 0.08 0.28 9.71
24 Drew Stubbs 184 30 6 19 12 0.239 0.07 -0.08 9.70
25 Michael Cuddyer* 182 27 7 28 3 0.28 0.06 0.17 9.66
26 Jacoby Ellsbury 157 23 4 17 11 0.287 -0.04 -0.14 9.35
27 Desmond Jennings 184 30 4 17 12 0.25 -0.07 -0.19 9.26
28 Ben Zobrist 175 28 6 25 6 0.257 -0.09 -0.16 9.18
29 Shane Victorino 191 26 5 20 9 0.267 -0.09 -0.20 9.18
30 Austin Jackson 193 30 4 19 7 0.275 -0.15 -0.10 9.01
31 Yoenis Cespedes 178 24 7 26 3 0.275 -0.19 -0.28 8.89
32 Jason Heyward 172 26 7 22 5 0.262 -0.22 -0.38 8.79
33 Jason Kubel 162 22 8 30 0.278 -0.26 -0.38 8.68
34 Carlos Beltran 150 22 7 25 3 0.28 -0.26 -0.42 8.66
35 Josh Willingham 153 24 9 28 1 0.255 -0.29 -0.51 8.59
36 Colby Rasmus 180 28 8 26 2 0.25 -0.30 -0.46 8.56
37 Alejandro De Aza 178 28 3 17 8 0.275 -0.32 -0.38 8.50
38 Shin-Soo Choo* 168 25 5 21 5 0.274 -0.37 -0.52 8.35
39 Torii Hunter 165 23 6 25 3 0.273 -0.39 -0.57 8.29
40 Ben Revere 177 23 12 13 0.288 -0.42 -0.60 8.20
41 Andre Ethier 170 24 6 27 1 0.276 -0.42 -0.54 8.20
42 Angel Pagan 170 22 3 18 9 0.276 -0.42 -0.68 8.18
43 Martin Prado 190 26 4 21 3 0.289 -0.43 -0.44 8.17
44 Michael Brantley 193 26 2 19 7 0.28 -0.45 -0.54 8.11
45 Dexter Fowler 177 29 3 18 6 0.271 -0.46 -0.54 8.06
46 Carl Crawford 135 20 4 17 8 0.281 -0.50 -0.83 7.96
47 Nick Swisher 169 24 8 28 0.254 -0.50 -0.78 7.94
48 Nick Markakis 188 25 5 22 2 0.282 -0.50 -0.61 7.94
49 Juan Pierre 166 22 13 12 0.289 -0.51 -0.74 7.93
50 Alfonso Soriano 169 20 8 27 2 0.254 -0.52 -0.94 7.87
51 Dayan Viciedo 190 23 7 25 1 0.268 -0.53 -0.78 7.86
52 Delmon Young 186 22 6 26 1 0.274 -0.56 -0.79 7.78
53 Rajai Davis 129 19 2 13 13 0.264 -0.58 -1.07 7.71
54 Ryan Ludwick 153 20 8 29 0.255 -0.60 -1.00 7.65
55 Garrett Jones 163 22 7 24 2 0.258 -0.61 -0.98 7.62
56 Jeff Francoeur 199 23 6 23 3 0.261 -0.61 -0.95 7.60
57 Allen Craig 135 21 6 24 1 0.281 -0.61 -0.89 7.60
58 Norichika Aoki 191 27 2 18 4 0.288 -0.62 -0.67 7.59
59 Carlos Lee 175 19 5 28 1 0.28 -0.63 -0.92 7.54
60 Chris Young 161 23 7 21 5 0.236 -0.63 -1.13 7.54
61 Matt Joyce 146 22 6 22 3 0.26 -0.66 -1.03 7.46
62 Cameron Maybin 169 26 3 16 9 0.243 -0.68 -1.10 7.39
63 Alex Presley 171 24 4 17 6 0.263 -0.69 -1.03 7.38
64 J.D. Martinez 184 22 5 27 1 0.266 -0.71 -1.01 7.32
65 Raul Ibanez 159 20 7 27 1 0.252 -0.72 -1.18 7.28
66 Bryan LaHair 166 20 8 21 1 0.265 -0.72 -1.17 7.26
67 Brennan Boesch 171 22 6 22 2 0.263 -0.74 -1.12 7.23
68 Bryce Harper* 164 21 5 18 7 0.244 -0.77 -1.34 7.12
69 Josh Reddick* 182 23 7 20 3 0.247 -0.77 -1.26 7.11
70 Tyler Colvin 152 21 6 23 2 0.257 -0.78 -1.23 7.09
71 Cody Ross 148 22 6 24 1 0.257 -0.79 -1.19 7.07
72 Michael Morse* 142 19 6 23 0.282 -0.81 -1.19 7.00
73 Denard Span 178 25 1 15 6 0.281 -0.82 -1.05 6.97
74 Gerardo Parra 157 20 3 17 5 0.28 -0.86 -1.26 6.85
75 David Murphy 139 17 4 19 4 0.281 -0.89 -1.39 6.75
76 Coco Crisp 134 18 2 13 10 0.261 -0.91 -1.53 6.69
77 Anthony Gose 145 18 4 11 12 0.228 -0.92 -1.74 6.67
78 Peter Bourjos 151 22 3 14 7 0.258 -0.92 -1.43 6.66
79 Jon Jay 148 21 3 14 4 0.284 -0.99 -1.40 6.46
80 Jose Tabata 159 24 2 11 7 0.264 -1.00 -1.46 6.41

*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


Sometimes ZiPS has trouble projecting playing time for players who are currently on the disabled list. Since there are a lot of outfielders to get to, I will provide detailed analysis where I see fit, but if the issue is playing time, the analysis will be brief.

Playing time alterations:

Jose Bautista – Bautista’s wrist is still bothering him and there is no timetable for his return. ZiPS projects Bautista to play in 45 of the Blue Jays’ final 54 games. I’d exercise caution and arbitrarily project closer to 33 games. Using the same per-game production that ZiPS had projected, the lower playing time projection makes Bautista the 45th ranked outfielder going forward.

Michael Cuddyer – Cuddyer was placed on the disabled list on Saturday - retroactive to August 1 – with a strained oblique muscle, so he will be out until the middle of the month at the earliest. This means that Cuddyer will certainly fall shy of the 49 game projection that ZiPS has created for him. Reworking Cuddyer’s playing time projection to 40 games would slide him down to the number 50 slot among outfielders.

Bryce Harper – Harper has played in nearly every game since his call-up. I see no reason why we should expect that to change. Hence, an adjustment from 44 to 50 games played. This moves Harper up to number 40 at outfield.

Michael Morse – Since returning from the disabled list on June 2, Morse hasn't shown any signs that warrants distrust in his health. I am confident enough in his ability to stay on the field to project 50 games played, an adjustment that boosts his ranking to 38th at outfield.

Shin-Soo Choo – Almost everything about Choo’s 2012 production is in symbiosis with his career averages. He is on pace to finish with roughly 20 home runs, 20 steals and an average around .290, which is basically what he did in both 2009 and 2010. In 2011, however, Choo struggled through injuries, playing just 85 games. If you believe that Choo’s performance at the plate last year was partly due to his injuries, then it shouldn’t be hard to fathom that he could be back to his pre-2011 form. I am a believer, but ZiPS doesn’t project on assumptions, just numbers.

ZiPS projects Choo to appear in just 44 games down the stretch, to go along with a .333 BABIP (career .353). I don’t see why Choo’s production needs to drop at all – his .355 BABIP and 21.9 percent strikeout rate are, again, in congruence with his career marks – so I would put far more weight on his 2009, 2010, and 2012 production than his injury riddled 2011, which appears to be an outlier of a season.

Arbitrary Adjustment: In 191 at bats and a fantasy line of 28/6/25/6/.290 makes Choo the 16th ranked outfielder.

Josh Reddick – Reddick has come out of relative obscurity this year to post very good fantasy and real life numbers. Perhaps ZiPS has been caught off guard. Reddick’s huge HR/FB spike from 7.4 percent to 16.4 percent is probably unsustainable, but with a fly ball rate just shy of 50 percent, he will give himself plenty of opportunities to deposit baseballs over outfield fences. ZiPS projects seven more home runs. That may be a bit stingy, but not egregious, so I won't spend anymore time undressing Reddick's power peripherals. The real issue I have with the projection is the low run and RBI totals.

Reddick is currently scoring 0.135 runs and driving in 0.124 runners per plate appearances. ZiPS projects 0.115 runs/PA and 0.100 RBI/PA going foreward. Over the course of a full season those rates would translate to about 12 runs and 14 RBI less than what Reddick is currently doing. Oakland’s lineup is currently producing a wRC+ of 90, so Reddick isn’t in a great situation to rack up counting stats, but he should still do better than what ZiPS is projecting.

Arbitrary Adjustment: I would project a fantasy line of 26/8/25/3/.247. This would move Reddick up to 39th at outfield.

Posted by Jesse Sakstrup at 5:05am (8) Comments

The daily grind: 8-7


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):No exciting options; today's pitchers dabble in various brands of mediocrity. Ross Detwiler against the Astros may be the best, or maybe it's Wade LeBlanc against the Mets. There's also Patrick Corbin and Samuel Deduno to consider, although neither is anywhere close to a "must start."

Pitcher (bum): Corey Kluber got hammered his first time out and the Twins' lefty-heavy lineup won't be terribly friendly to him.

If you want a more established bag of suck, The Cubs and their shiny new call-ups face Ross Ohlendorf. Meanwhile, the Nationals will see Jordan Lyles. He's been struggling of late.

Hitter (power): Scott Hairston might be the best power option of the day. The new Cubs, Brett Jackson and Josh Vitters, also have a good match-up for showing off some power.

Hitter (speed): Dial up the Twins, namely Denard Span and Ben Revere.

Tomorrow's grind


People paid anywhere between $8 and $100 FAAB to acquire Dan Straily in my leagues, but he's still available in most leagues.

Carlos Villanueva has been homer-prone his last three outings, but he's still done solid work. Not a bad play against the Rays.

Clayton Richard at home against a patchwork Cubs offense might just work out. On the other side of that match-up is Jeff Samardzija, who also stands to have a solid outing.














































































































































































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing pitcher
Athletics         Brewers      
  Brandon Moss L Zack Greinke     Carlos Gomez R Mat Latos
  Seth Smith L Zack Greinke     Norichika Aoki L Mat Latos
Blue Jays         Cubs      
  Anthony Gose L Alex Cobb     Brett Jackson L Clayton Richard
  Rajai Davis R Alex Cobb     Josh Vitters R Clayton Richard
Indians         Dodgers      
  Shelley Duncan R Brian Duensing     A.J. Ellis R Jeff Francis
Mariners         Giants      
  Eric Thames L Tommy Hunter     Brandon Belt L Joe Kelly
  Mike Carp L Tommy Hunter     Angel Pagan S Joe Kelly
  Trayvon Robinson S Tommy Hunter   Marlins      
  Michael Saunders L Tommy Hunter     Carlos Lee R Chris Young
Orioles           Greg Dobbs L Chris Young
  Wilson Betemit S Kevin Millwood     Justin Ruggiano R Chris Young
Rangers         Nationals      
  David Murphy L Josh Beckett     Steve Lombardozzi S Armando Galarraga
Rays         Padres      
  Carlos Pena L Carlos Villanueva     Yonder Alonso L Jeff Samardzija
Red Sox           Carlos Quentin R Jeff Samardzija
  Cody Ross R Matt Harrison     Cameron Maybin R Jeff Samardzija
Royals           Will Venable L Jeff Samardzija
  Salvador Perez R Jose Quintana   Phillies      
  Alcides Escobar R Jose Quintana     Nate Schierholtz L Tim Hudson
  Lorenzo Cain R Jose Quintana     Domonic Brown L Tim Hudson
Tigers         Pirates      
  Delmon Young R CC Sabathia     Travis Snider L Ian Kennedy
Twins           Starling Marte R Ian Kennedy
  Ryan Doumit S Justin Masterson     Garrett Jones L Ian Kennedy
  Denard Span L Justin Masterson   Reds      
  Ben Revere L Justin Masterson     Zack Cozart R Randy Wolf
White Sox           Todd Frazier R Randy Wolf
  Dayan Viciedo R Jeremy Guthrie   Rockies      
Yankees           Josh Rutledge R Chad Billingsley
  Raul Ibanez L Anibal Sanchez     Tyler Colvin L Chad Billingsley


There aren't too many batter match-ups worth getting giddy over tomorrow. I like the slew of Mariners against Tommy Hunter, but expectations must be tempered given that they are the Mariners.

Anthony Gose would be a good threat on the bases if he manages to get on. A start for him is never assured.

Todd Frazier and Zack Cozart stand to gain from their match-up against Randy Wolf

Reliever watch


Nothing to report.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:52am (2) Comments

Wednesday, August 08, 2012

The daily grind: 8-8


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

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): Dan Straily's ownership jumped from six to 19 percent over the past 24 hours. If he's available in your league, he might be worth starting against the Angels.

Clayton Richard and the Padres face Jeff Samardzija and the Cubs at Petco. Middling pitchers plus bad offenses plus cavernous park equals good stream options.

I'm not a believer in Carlos Villanueva but he's been solid when he can avoid allowing home runs.

Pitcher (bum): The Twins' -efty heavy lineup should like Justin Masterson. However, I recall making this recommendation before and it did not end well...

I haven't seen Armando Galarraga pitch yet this season, but I have a hard time imagining he's suddenly a major leaguer again.

And then there's Chief Bum Jeff Francis. The Dodgers should do some thumping tonight.

Hitter (power): The slew of Mariners I recommended yesterday now face Steve Johnson, who I honestly must admit to knowing nothing about. That's very rare for me. Eric Thames, Mike Carp and Michael Saunders fit the power description.

Of course, I'd also bet on some non-Mariners like Todd Frazier against Randy Wolf and Dayan Viciedo against Bruce Chen.

Hitter (speed): Anthony Gose and Trayvon Robinson are my pure speed picks for the day. Not exciting options by any means.

Tomorrow's grind


Joe Saunders will face the Pirates. He's only 13 percent owned but it's probably because he's pretty blah. That's a technical term.

Wei-Yin Chen is set to face the Royals but his ownership is up to 46 percent.































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher
Blue Jays         Astros      
  Yunel Escobar R Matt Moore     Brett Wallace L Jordan Zimmermann
  Rajai Davis R Matt Moore     Jordan Schafer L Jordan Zimmermann
Orioles         Cubs      
  Wilson Betemit S Jeremy Guthrie     Brett Jackson L Mike Leake
Rays           Josh Vitters R Mike Leake
  Carlos Pena L Henderson Alvarez     David DeJesus L Mike Leake
Red Sox         Diamondbacks      
  Cody Ross R Ubaldo Jimenez     Chris Johnson R Wandy Rodriguez
Royals           Willie Bloomquist R Wandy Rodriguez
  Salvador Perez R Wei-Yin Chen   Giants      
  Alcides Escobar R Wei-Yin Chen     Brandon Belt L Adam Wainwright
  Lorenzo Cain R Wei-Yin Chen     Angel Pagan S Adam Wainwright
Tigers         Nationals      
  Brennan Boesch L Hiroki Kuroda     Steve Lombardozzi S Lucas Harrell
  Quintin Berry L Hiroki Kuroda   Pirates      
Yankees           Starling Marte R Joe Saunders
  Raul Ibanez L Doug Fister   Reds      
            Zack Cozart R Chris Volstad
            Todd Frazier R Chris Volstad
            Chris Heisey R Chris Volstad
            Ryan Ludwick R Chris Volstad


It's definitely a thin day but there are enough options out there to plug and play with some aplomb.

Todd Frazier and Zack Cozart are probably among the best options available.

Even though Chen is solid, Salvador Perez and Lorenzo Cain are good hitters and thus worth a peek given the paucity of options.

Wilson Betemit isn't a sexy choice, but he has the best match-up of the day.

Last but not least, Rajai Davis will hold the platoon advantage, which is just swell in my book.

Reliever watch


Tyler Clippard turned in his third blown save of the season. Expect the Nationals to start finding Drew Storen some opportunities. Clippard's still the better guy to own at this point, but Storen will eventually get that job back.

With Jim Henderson closing the door for the Brewers last night, it's tough to say who will get the next opportunity. Were I the Brewers, I would stick with John Axford.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:51am (0) Comments

Thursday, August 09, 2012

The daily grind: 8-9


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 definitely a thin Thursday even though there's a healthy slate of games. I never expected to recommend Joe Saunders prior to the season, but he's been predictably solid. Frankly, there just isn't anyone else available.

Wei-Yin Chen is owned in 51 percent of leagues. He's the only other option worth a sniff.

Pitcher (bum): At least there are some good bums to work against today. Chris Volstad should help fuel the Reds to another victory. Will Smith against the Orioles and Ubaldo Jimenez versus the Red Sox are likely to end with a lot of runs on the board.

Hitter (power): Todd Frazier, Wilson Betemit and Salvador Perez are my top picks to do a little bashing today.

Hitter (speed): Lorenzo Cain is more of a well-rounded type than a speedster, but placing him here lends a certain feng shui. Rajai Davis is a healthy pick if you really need a steal.

Tomorrow's grind


Maybe I should stop making recommendations against the Braves. Clearly I'm insane since these match-ups keep blowing up. That said, Matt Harvey has some talent and is only 35 percent owned. He's also probably the only guy worth using today.

Mark Rogers is only one percent owned and he's set to face the Astros Triple-A lineup. And yes, I'm aware that they somehow score runs on occasion.

Brandon McCarthy is owned in 46 percent of leagues. Why? In any case, he's set to come off the disabled list.


























































































































































































































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher
Athletics         Astros      
  Brandon Moss L Gavin Floyd     Brett Wallace L Mark Rogers
  Jemile Weeks S Gavin Floyd   Brewers      
  Chris Carter R Gavin Floyd     Carlos Gomez R Bud Norris
  Coco Crisp S Gavin Floyd     Norichika Aoki L Bud Norris
Blue Jays         Cubs      
  Anthony Gose L TBA     Brett Jackson L Homer Bailey
  Yunel Escobar R TBA     Josh Vitters R Homer Bailey
  Rajai Davis R TBA     David DeJesus L Homer Bailey
Mariners         Dodgers      
  Eric Thames L Ervin Santana     A.J. Ellis R Mark Buerhle
  Mike Carp L Ervin Santana   Giants      
  Trayvon Robinson S Ervin Santana     Brandon Belt L Tyler Chatwood
  Michael Saunders L Ervin Santana     Angel Pagan S Tyler Chatwood
Orioles         Mets      
  Wilson Betemit S Luke Hochevar     Jason Bay R Paul Maholm
Rangers           Scott Hairston R Paul Maholm
  David Murphy L Max Scherzer   Nationals      
Rays           Steve Lombardozzi S Trevor Cahill
  Carlos Pena L Cole De Vries   Padres      
Red Sox           Yonder Alonso L James McDonald
  Cody Ross R Chris Seddon     Carlos Quentin R James McDonald
Royals           Cameron Maybin R James McDonald
  Salvador Perez R Miguel Gonzalez     Will Venable L James McDonald
  Alcides Escobar R Miguel Gonzalez   Phillies      
  Lorenzo Cain R Miguel Gonzalez     Nate Schierholtz L Kyle Lohse
Tigers           Domonic Brown L Kyle Lohse
  Brennan Boesch L Scott Feldman     Laynce Nix L Kyle Lohse
  Quintin Berry L Scott Feldman   Pirates      
Twins           Travis Snider L Edinson Volquez
  Ryan Doumit S Jeremy Hellickson     Starling Marte R Edinson Volquez
  Denard Span L Jeremy Hellickson     Garrett Jones L Edinson Volquez
  Ben Revere L Jeremy Hellickson   Reds      
Yankees           Zack Cozart R Justin Germano
  Andruw Jones R Ricky Romero     Todd Frazier R Justin Germano
  Casey McGehee R Ricky Romero   Rockies      
            Josh Rutledge R Tim Lincecum
            Tyler Colvin L Tim Lincecum
            Eric Young Jr. S Tim Lincecum


Andruw Jones is back again with the platoon advantage.

Frazier's becoming a popular standby here, he's set to face Justin Germano, who I never really expected to see in the majors.

My irrational lack of respect for the Braves is outweighed only by my lack of respect for Kyle Lohse. I expect Domonic Brown and Nate Schierholtz to have solid games. By the way, Brown's smoking the ball to the tune of a 27 percent line drive rate. Unfortunately, it's coming at the expense of fly balls. And it's very small sample.

Reliever watch


Jim Henderson appears to be the guy in Milwaukee, earning his second consecutive save. All I can offer are shrugs.

Ryan Cook hung on for an ugly save, giving up a couple of runs in the process. His grip on the closer gig has to be loosening and Sean Doolittle appears to be next in line despite Grant Balfour's "experience." I could be leaping to conclusions: Balfour pitched the seventh yesterday and allowed a solo home run while Doolittle pitched the eighth and allowed two hits while striking out the side.

The Giants' bullpen is devolving into an ugly mess, not unlike the A's, now that Santiago Casilla has gone cold. Because Sergio Romo is often unavailable, I'd bet on Casilla righting the ship and reclaiming the job. Others may wish to put their chips on Romo or Jeremy Affeldt.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 6:01am (3) Comments

Friday, August 10, 2012

August starting pitcher 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
Shortstop
Outfield{/exp:list_maker}
Quick Note: ZiPS is a projection system that takes past performance into consideration. For many pitchers, the past applies less to the present than it does for hitters, as is the case with pitchers who have experienced significant velocity loss; this is something that pitchers generally don’t recoup. ZiPS may not recognize diminished skill sets, but I will try to cover what I can in the analysis section.
Num Name IP SO W SV ERA WHIP rPAA (ROS) EYES (ROS) Full Season*
1 Justin Verlander 72 74 6 3 1.1 1.93 1.61 13.03
2 Clayton Kershaw 69 72 5 2.61 1.09 1.82 1.54 12.66
3 Felix Hernandez 73 70 5 2.96 1.15 1.45 1.20 11.49
4 Cole Hamels 67 64 5 3.36 1.13 1.11 0.92 10.43
5 Cliff Lee 66 62 4 3.14 1.09 1.02 0.87 10.12
6 Jered Weaver 64 57 5 3.23 1.13 1.00 0.83 10.06
7 Roy Halladay 60 52 5 3 1.12 0.98 0.82 10.02
8 Tim Lincecum* 66 70 5 3.27 1.26 0.90 0.75 9.76
9 David Price 67 64 5 3.36 1.21 0.88 0.72 9.68
10 Matt Cain 69 59 4 3.13 1.13 0.87 0.73 9.65
11 Adam Wainwright 59 54 5 3.2 1.2 0.72 0.60 9.18
12 Gio Gonzalez 62 64 5 3.34 1.29 0.65 0.53 8.94
13 James Shields 71 63 5 3.68 1.23 0.64 0.49 8.92
14 CC Sabathia 69 62 5 3.52 1.25 0.64 0.50 8.91
15 Zack Greinke 62 62 4 3.34 1.18 0.63 0.55 8.90
16 Yovani Gallardo 65 67 5 3.74 1.29 0.52 0.41 8.54
17 Mat Latos 62 60 4 3.63 1.21 0.37 0.31 8.07
18 R.A. Dickey* 61 48 4 3.25 1.18 0.36 0.30 8.04
19 Madison Bumgarner 65 57 4 3.6 1.23 0.27 0.21 7.75
20 Chris Sale 54 55 4 3.5 1.26 0.18 0.17 7.45
21 Ian Kennedy 57 49 4 3.63 1.19 0.17 0.14 7.43
22 Johnny Cueto 61 46 4 3.25 1.25 0.13 0.10 7.30
23 Stephen Strasburg 37 42 3 2.68 1.08 0.13 0.20 7.29
24 Josh Johnson 49 45 3 2.94 1.16 0.11 0.14 7.23
25 Dan Haren 64 52 4 3.94 1.2 0.08 0.04 7.14
26 Tommy Hanson 55 53 4 3.76 1.27 0.00 0.01 6.90
27 Jon Lester 61 57 4 3.84 1.3 -0.04 -0.04 6.78
28 C.J. Wilson 64 57 4 3.66 1.33 -0.04 -0.06 6.76
29 Max Scherzer 59 61 4 4.12 1.31 -0.09 -0.08 6.60
30 Chad Billingsley 59 52 4 3.66 1.32 -0.11 -0.10 6.54
31 Yu Darvish 62 60 4 3.92 1.34 -0.12 -0.11 6.51
32 Matt Garza* 60 56 3 3.9 1.27 -0.27 -0.22 6.03
33 Tim Hudson 53 34 4 3.57 1.25 -0.29 -0.26 5.97
34 Shaun Marcum 46 41 3 3.52 1.2 -0.29 -0.20 5.96
35 Jordan Zimmermann 47 37 3 3.45 1.19 -0.33 -0.24 5.83
36 Doug Fister* 55 36 4 3.93 1.24 -0.37 -0.33 5.72
37 Jaime Garcia 50 40 3 3.42 1.28 -0.44 -0.34 5.49
38 Mark Buehrle 60 34 4 3.75 1.28 -0.44 -0.41 5.48
39 Jake Peavy 50 44 3 3.96 1.24 -0.47 -0.37 5.40
40 Mike Fiers 33 31 3 3.27 1.18 -0.47 -0.32 5.40
41 Trevor Cahill 64 47 4 4.08 1.34 -0.49 -0.46 5.32
42 Chris Capuano 51 43 3 4.06 1.25 -0.55 -0.44 5.14
43 Ricky Romero* 66 52 4 4.23 1.37 -0.56 -0.52 5.12
44 Josh Beckett 49 40 3 3.86 1.27 -0.58 -0.47 5.04
45 Vance Worley 54 44 3 3.83 1.31 -0.59 -0.48 5.02
46 Hiroki Kuroda 56 42 4 4.18 1.34 -0.59 -0.52 5.01
47 Ubaldo Jimenez* 61 54 4 4.28 1.41 -0.60 -0.54 4.99
48 Matt Moore 51 52 3 3.88 1.39 -0.60 -0.48 4.98
49 Anibal Sanchez 58 49 3 4.03 1.33 -0.63 -0.53 4.89
50 Brandon Morrow 48 49 3 4.13 1.35 -0.65 -0.51 4.83
51 Wandy Rodriguez 62 46 3 3.92 1.34 -0.70 -0.60 4.68
52 Justin Masterson 65 50 4 4.15 1.42 -0.70 -0.64 4.68
53 Jeff Samardzija 39 36 3 3.69 1.33 -0.70 -0.54 4.66
54 Edwin Jackson 62 49 3 4.21 1.34 -0.77 -0.66 4.46
55 Bud Norris 55 53 2 4.09 1.33 -0.82 -0.65 4.29
56 Matt Harrison 56 36 4 4.18 1.38 -0.82 -0.73 4.28
57 Jeremy Hellickson 52 37 3 3.98 1.33 -0.84 -0.70 4.23
58 Wei-Yin Chen 56 40 3 4.34 1.29 -0.85 -0.72 4.19
59 Jon Niese 54 47 3 4.33 1.37 -0.87 -0.73 4.13
60 Ryan Vogelsong 53 42 3 3.91 1.4 -0.87 -0.73 4.13
61 Ivan Nova 62 44 4 4.5 1.39 -0.88 -0.79 4.10
62 Gavin Floyd 58 47 3 4.5 1.33 -0.88 -0.75 4.09
63 Bartolo Colon 46 31 3 4.11 1.28 -0.88 -0.73 4.09
64 A.J. Burnett 57 48 3 4.26 1.39 -0.90 -0.76 4.04
65 Randy Wolf 60 40 3 4.2 1.33 -0.92 -0.80 3.98
66 Johan Santana 37 31 2 3.65 1.24 -0.92 -0.70 3.98
67 Mike Minor 57 52 3 4.58 1.39 -0.95 -0.80 3.88
68 Tommy Milone 55 40 3 4.42 1.33 -0.97 -0.83 3.80
69 Alex Cobb 39 29 3 3.92 1.36 -0.98 -0.79 3.79
70 Homer Bailey 55 42 3 4.42 1.35 -0.98 -0.83 3.79
71 Clay Buchholz 43 30 3 3.98 1.35 -0.98 -0.80 3.78
72 Francisco Liriano 50 52 3 4.5 1.46 -0.98 -0.81 3.77
73 Jair Jurrjens* 42 26 3 3.86 1.33 -0.99 -0.81 3.76
74 Joe Blanton 44 35 2 4.09 1.25 -0.99 -0.78 3.75
75 Dillon Gee 51 41 3 4.41 1.37 -1.00 -0.84 3.71
76 Lance Lynn 47 41 3 4.21 1.43 -1.01 -0.83 3.68
77 Kyle Lohse 49 30 3 4.22 1.31 -1.02 -0.86 3.65
78 Ricky Nolasco 59 46 3 4.58 1.36 -1.03 -0.88 3.63
79 Clayton Richard 51 31 3 4.06 1.35 -1.04 -0.88 3.59
80 Bronson Arroyo 58 35 3 4.66 1.28 -1.09 -0.95 3.44
81 Paul Maholm 54 37 3 4.33 1.37 -1.09 -0.93 3.44
82 Ryan Dempster* 54 44 3 4.5 1.41 -1.10 -0.93 3.40
83 Erik Bedard 35 32 2 3.86 1.34 -1.11 -0.86 3.37
84 Aaron Harang 48 35 3 4.31 1.4 -1.13 -0.94 3.31
85 Jason Hammel 52 40 3 4.5 1.4 -1.14 -0.96 3.28
86 Brandon McCarthy 40 27 2 4.05 1.25 -1.14 -0.91 3.27
87 Derek Holland 54 45 3 4.67 1.41 -1.15 -0.97 3.25
88 Luke Hochevar 55 38 3 4.58 1.36 -1.16 -0.99 3.22
89 Jeremy Guthrie 57 31 3 4.42 1.32 -1.16 -1.01 3.20
90 Jake Westbrook 49 30 3 4.22 1.39 -1.19 -1.01 3.10
91 Phil Hughes 47 38 3 4.98 1.36 -1.21 -1.01 3.06
92 Ervin Santana 59 44 3 4.73 1.39 -1.21 -1.05 3.03
93 James McDonald 50 45 2 4.14 1.44 -1.22 -1.00 3.00
94 Jarrod Parker 44 35 3 4.3 1.48 -1.24 -1.02 2.97
95 Rick Porcello 58 33 3 4.34 1.38 -1.25 -1.08 2.94
96 Hisashi Iwakuma 38 30 2 4.26 1.32 -1.25 -0.99 2.93
97 Josh Tomlin 48 27 3 4.69 1.31 -1.25 -1.06 2.92
98 Mike Leake 54 38 2 4.5 1.31 -1.26 -1.05 2.88
99 Bruce Chen 50 34 3 4.68 1.38 -1.27 -1.08 2.86
100 Joe Saunders 56 34 3 4.5 1.39 -1.30 -1.12 2.78

*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.

Pitchers I like less than their ZiPS ranking


Tim Lincecum—What to make of Tim Lincecum? He has undoubtedly been one of the most disappointing fantasy pitchers in all of baseball. His ERA sits at 5.43, his WHIP at 1.49. But, despite his woeful surface numbers, Lincecum has maintained a 9.67 K/9 rate and his FIP, xFIP and SIERA are all sub-4.00. Even his 4.31 walk rate has a silver lining, as his first strike percentage of 58.2 percent is the highest it has been since 2007, which suggests that he should be demonstrating better control.

Lincecum has been bitten by a strand rate that is 10 percent lower than his career average, a BABIP 27 points higher than his career mark, and a four percent spike in his HR/FB rate. ZiPS is looking at Lincecum’s dominant 2008-2011 where he posted an average FIP of 2.82, and his 3.82 FIP this season and is expecting some regression toward’s his personal mean.

DIPS don’t absolve Lincecum of all blame for his results, he has not been sharp with his command, but this type of thing generally doesn’t continue to happen over extended periods of time. We should expect Lincecum to improve, but lets not go overboard and write off the first four months of his season solely as bad luck.

I would certainly not treat Lincecum as a top-10 pitcher going forward, but his underlying numbers make a good case for him as a buy-low.

Matt Garza— Garza was placed on the disabled list on Tuesday with a stress reaction in his right elbow—an elbow-related trip to the disabled list is typically not a good thing. The move was made retroactive to July 28, but that doesn’t mean he is close to returning. There is currentlyno word on whether or not Garza will return in 2012. Garza is the Cubs’ biggest trade chip, so they won’t want to rush him back before they are certain he is healthy. Since there is no timetable, it is almost futile to put a rank on him, just be judicious in your valuation.

Ricky Romero— Unlike Tim Lincecum, Romero’s peripherals don’t exonerate him of any blame. His ERA is 5.47 and his FIP (5.05) and xFIP (4.62) agree that he has been awful. His walk rate has shot up to 4.87 and his F-Strike percentage (53.1 percent) is far below his career average. His strikeout rate is down to 6.39 and his swinging strike rate (7.8 percent) confirms that he is missing less bats. He is probably stranding fewer runners than he should and is giving up home runs a little more frequently than he should, but he has been really bad, without any real positives.

With Lincecum, we are hoping that he sharpens control enough to allow his underlying numbers to show through. With Romero, there appears to be no quick fix. We aren’t puzzled as to why Romero is struggling. We may wonder what has caused the degradation of his skills, but the numbers are clearly telling us that there are ample differences with the 2012 version of Ricky Romero.

The American League East is unforgiving, so when you pitch poorly you don’t often get away with it. Romero is showing no signs of turning things around, and even if he does, the division he pitches in will limit his upside. With less than two months remaining in the season, expecting Ricky Romero to return to some semblance of his former self is probably unwise. ZiPS is regressing what he is doing this year towards what he has been in the past, but Romero has not been that pitcher at all this year. He should get a little better, but you don’t want to be rolling him out there unless you are trying to attain a better draft slot for 2013.

Ubaldo Jimenez— ZiPS is, again, taking Ubaldo’s 2008-2011 into consideration. But, Ubaldo is simply not the same pitcher. He has lost 3.3 mph off of his fastball since 2010 (down 1.4 mph from 2011) and hasn’t developed enough command to mitigate these loses. Without that mid-90’s heater, Ubaldo is not generating swinging strikes—just 6.5 percent in 2012 (career 8.6 percent), well below league average—and batters aren’t going out of the zone as much, either—22.5 percent in 2012 (career 25.9 percent). And, to add to his woes, his control has completely abandoned him, as he is walking an outrageous 5.36 batters per nine innings (13.2 percent).

His ERA is 5.29 and all of his DIPS agree that an ERA over 5.00 is appropriate. He isn’t even getting unlucky with his BABIP or his strand rate. The story is similar to that of Romero, only Ubaldo offers less hope of respite.

Jair Jurrjens — In 2010, Jurrjens averaged 91.3 mph on his fastball. This year, his average heater is registering just 88.6 mph. As a result, Jurrjens isn’t missing bats. He is striking out just 3.54 batters per nine, a level that is fully embraced by his 4.6 percent swinging strike rate (career 8.0 percent). With a 6.89 ERA, it is difficult to imagine he won’t improve some, but he just doesn’t have the same stuff as he used to and a return to fantasy usefulness in any format seems unlikely.

Pitchers I like More than their ZiPS ranking


RA Dickey— Dickey’s swinging strike rate of 12.1 percent ranks fourth among all starting pitchers this year. Since he began resorting to the knuckleball as a main component of his arsenal, he had not posted a swinging strike rate of higher than 8.4 percent in any season prior to this one. It is difficult to pinpoint exactly what is causing all of the extra whiffs. Batters are chasing pitches out of the zone more and he is throwing the knuckler 1.1 mph faster this year than he did in 2011, but it isn’t as if he has added a breaking pitch or drastically changed the usage of any single pitch. He is just getting batters to swing and miss more often than ever before.

ZiPS projects a conservative 7.08 strikeout rate going forward, but given his newfound ability to miss bats, I think Dickey has the upside to maintain a strikeout rate of nearly a batter an inning. Thus, I see Dickey as more of a top-15—or fringe top-10—pitcher than top-20.

Doug Fister— Fister upped the usage of his slider and curveball in 2011 and saw his strikeout rate climb from 4.89 to 6.07, validated by a 2.3 percent increase in his whiff rate. This year, Fister has increased his curveball usage further and is also utilizing his changeup more. The result: an increase in swinging strike rate from 6.7 percent to 8.1 percent and a jump to 7.68 strikeouts per nine.

While this type of strikeout rate surge will probably not be completely sustained, a change in pitch mix, especially when increasing the usage of off-speed pitches, makes an increased strikeout rate more explainable. ZiPS projects a strikeout rate of 5.94 going forward, but given the pitch mix/swinging strike rate combination, it seems reasonable that Fister could outperform that projection, and, in turn, produce a lower ERA and WHIP, as well.

Ryan Dempster— With a BABIP 46 points lower than his career average and a strand rate 8 percent higher, it is reasonable to expect a lot of regression from Dempster down the stretch. And swapping the NL Central for the AL West will only fuel that regression further. The question is how much regression, though? ZiPS thinks a 4.50 ERA is an appropriate adjustment given Dempster’s track record and league switch. Maybe ZiPS will end up being correct, but given the way he has pitched so far this year, and given his control gains both in walk rate and in his first strike percentage—the best of his career—I would give Dempster more credit than that.

Arbitrary Adjustment: Giving him a 4.00 ERA, 1.35 WHIP would move him up to 56th among starters. A 3.75 ERA and 1.30 WHIP moves him to 46th, and add a win to the latter projection and he slides up to 33rd. Dempster is a sell-high right now, there is little debate about that, but I would still move him up to the 40-50 range among starting pitchers.

Matt HarveyZiPS only projects Harvey for six starts. If we translate his numbers to nine starts, he would move up to 89th.

Wade MileyOne would assume that a pitcher with a 3.64 FIP over his first 172.2 major league innings would get more love from ZiPS, but this is not the case. Miley has never really had the type of success in the minors that he is having this season. He is probably getting some BABIP assistance and some good fortune with his strand rate, too, but he has demonstrated tremendous control and is crafting a profile that is beginning to look very reminiscent to that of Doug Fister - good ground ball rate, very low walk rate, modest strikeout numbers. He isn't quite in Doug Fister's range yet, but he has probably established himself as a top-60 option.

Posted by Jesse Sakstrup at 5:21am (8) Comments

AL Waiver Wire: Week 16


Since we began our AL bargain-hunting relationship, we’ve had some ups, like (Greg Holland ascending to the closer’s role, Lorenzo Cain hitting a lot of things stitched in red) and downs (not a peep from Nick Castellanos, Zach Britton is down in the minors, and A.J. Griffin has landed on the DL). But hey, with each new week comes a new beginning, as well as—surprise!—new talent to survey in the silver mines of AL-only leagues the nation over. Here’s a look at a few players you might want to consider adding to your team as fantasy playoff time nears.

Scott Feldman | SP | Texas Rangers | 15 percent Yahoo ownership | 16 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 4.52 ERA / 1.300 WHIP / 6.1 K/9
Oliver ROS: 4.52 ERA / 1.360 WHIP / 5.4 K/9


There’s never going to be a huge grassroots movement to get Feldman elected to the Hall of Fame, but surely there are plenty of people who recall the right-hander’s 2009 campaign, when he pitched to a 17-8 record and was worth 3.5 wins above replacement, according to FanGraphs. But as the Rangers have soared to become one of baseball’s elite teams in the intervening years, Feldman hasn’t been as fortunate, compiling a 9-12 mark with a 5.19 ERA and 1.506 WHIP in 2010-11. After undergoing microfracture surgery on his right knee in November 2010, he didn’t appear in a major league game last year until late July, made only two starts, and, for good measure, suffered a blown save in the infamous World Series game six.

Although he was healthy to begin 2012, Feldman was still lacking the magic of 2009, as he spent the first three months of the season shuttling between the bullpen and the rotation, compiling a 2-6 record with a 6.13 ERA and 1.531 WHIP. Beginning on July 23, however, Feldman has looked like a new man over his past three starts, going 3-0 with a 1.19 ERA, and pitching at least seven innings in each of the outings. With Roy Oswalt knocked to the bullpen, Neftali Feliz a goner for 2012 thanks to Tommy John surgery and Derek Holland having a down second half, Feldman has re-emerged not just as a rotation man for the AL west’s leading team, but as a viable fantasy arm.

What’s changed? Feldman has typically been effective at keeping walks under control in his career, but he’s been especially stingy this season, walking fewer than two batters per nine innings. During his past three starts, he’s practically stopped walking people altogether, allowing just one base on balls (against 14 strikeouts) in 22.2 innings. Data compiled by PITCHf/x show Feldman has seriously cut back on his changeup, instead relying more on his cutter and curveball, which might explain a four percent increase in his strike rate, as well as an improved line drive rate.

Feldman has never been especially adept at stranding runners, and the 72.8 mark he achieved in 2009, hardly an astounding rate, still marked a career high. But the 62.6 percent rate he’s achieved in 2012 sounds a bit low and suggests, along with a .296 BABIP and a FIP (3.29) and xFIP (4.15) that are below his ERA, that he’s pitched within his means.

He’ll never resemble a fantasy ace so long as he struggles to maintain a 6 K/9, but there’s evidence to suggest that Feldman can be counted on to provide some consistent, modest production, which, on a team like the Rangers, certainly isn’t a bad thing—or a commodity not worth owning as playoff time nears.
Recommendation: Worth picking up in all AL-only leagues, as well as some standard mixed leagues.

Chris Tillman | SP | Baltimore Orioles | 9 percent Yahoo ownership | 11.7 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 2.38 ERA / 1.206 WHIP / 6.6 K/9
Oliver ROS: 5.42 ERA / 1.530 WHIP / 6.3 K/9


I’m going to assume you’ve seen the beginning of “Raiders of the Lost Ark” and understand the reference when I point to Indy’s pursuit of that gold Buddhist statue thing: it’s highly coveted, but ultimately a prize for which our hero must navigate a series of threats, hazards and a devious Alfred Molina for success.

Think of Tillman as that gold Buddhist idol: he’s a guy who’s part of the Orioles’ would-be wave of top-of-the-rotation power pitchers, but plays on an Orioles team that has a mediocre offense and, according to FanGraphs’ ultimate zone rating, the worst defense in the American League. In this analogy, Baltimore is an ancient Peruvian temple, a jungle of booby traps and arrows that can ensnare even the most talented major league prospect—or a daring fantasy owner who just wants his share of the gold.

But fear not, fellow fantasy owner: Tillman, 24, has started to turn a corner. And judging by his lack of respect from fantasy owners, he’s probably available in your league.

The facts: Tillman has made six major league starts so far this year, and has compiled a 5-1 record with a 2.38 ERA, 1.206 WHIP and 2.5/1 K/BB ratio. This comes after a very impressive Triple-A season, in which he punched out hitters to the tune of a 9.3 K/9. With an average fastball velocity touching the mid-90s, Tillman’s heater seems re-energized, and he’s been mixing in his change-up and cutter more often, according to PITCHf/x data compiled by Texas Leaguers.

That’s made for a lethal potion so far as AL hitters are concerned, as his swing rates have jumped in comparison to years past. Granted, he’s made two starts against Seattle’s weaklings, and feasted on Cleveland and Minnesota matchups as well, but he’s also dealing with a subterranean 60.2 percent strand rate, which has to climb.

As for the Orioles ... whatever. The team continues to play over its head (nine games over .500 with a -47 run differential entering Thursday night’s action), but I choose to believe that a good pitcher, even without much help, can still make a fantasy impact, particularly when he’s aided by a bullpen that features a 78.5 percent strand rate, still good for second in the American League. Tillman is hardly a slam dunk case—for one thing, his ridiculously low 4.8 percent HR/FB rate has nowhere to go but up—but he offers mucho upside and now has a real chance to shine.
Recommendation: Worth a pick up in all AL-only leagues, and some deeper mixed ones as well.

Grant Balfour | RP | Oakland A’s | 39 percent Yahoo ownership | 39 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 2.72 ERA / 1.019 WHIP / 7.6 K/9
Oliver ROS: 3.23 ERA / 1.160 WHIP / 7.9 K/9


When Balfour opened up the season as Oakland’s closer, he was mediocre, compiling a 4.24 ERA, blowing two saves and eventually losing the job on May 13.

Since he was moved to the eighth inning however, things had seemingly snapped into place for the A’s, as Balfour settled down, compiling a 2.00 ERA, .917 WHIP and 8 K/9, providing solid late-inning relief as Ryan Cook’s caddy. Cook, of course, made the All-Star team, the A’s have gone on to surprise baseball by making a run at a postseason spot and this is just another happy ending in the saga known as a Major League Baseball season, right?

Well, not really.

Cook has been bleeding runs since a shaky save on July 19, watching his ERA jump nearly a run and a half and coughing up nine earned runs and four home runs. In half of those eight trips to start the ninth, Cook has returned to the dugout with a blown save.

Meanwhile, Balfour, who gave up an earned run on Wednesday for the first time since June, continues to roll, and is now a candidate to replace his ninth-inning successor. I’m not ready to endorse Balfour as a must-add in all leagues so long as Cook is in command, and the taste of Balfour’s closing prowess might suggest he doesn’t have the mental makeup that’s par for the course. But in AL-only leagues, this bullpen’s dominoes might be the first to fall—and if so, you’ll want to reintroduce yourself to Balfour.
Recommendation: Not yet worth a pick up in AL-only leagues, but could be within a matter of days.

Blake Beavan | SP | Seattle Mariners | 5 percent Yahoo ownership | 6.6 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 5.12 ERA / 1.231 WHIP / 4.7 K/9
Oliver ROS: 4.47 ERA / 1.300 WHIP / 4.4 K/9


Starting Beavan is like swallowing whatever people had to swallow before Robitussin made that somewhat-potable grape flavor—it’s not something you do because you like it, but because you need to do it. So while I’m not here to trumpet the special skills of Beavan, he is getting two manageable matchups next week at Safeco’s comfy confines, pitching against the Rays, the team featuring the third-lowest AL batting average against right-handed pitching, and Minnesota, a team that, well, kind of sucks.

Over his last five starts, Beavan has been solid, pitching to a 3.67 ERA, .903 WHIP and a 10:1 K/BB rate, a period during which he lowered his ERA by nearly a full run. Regrettably, his strikeouts are still lacking, as he has just a 5.24 K/9 to show for his strong run, and the 16 home runs he’s allowed in 96.2 innings is way too much. But it’s important to remember that Beavan, 23, is a former first-round pick, and was highly touted enough to be a part of the Cliff Lee-Justin Smoak trade a couple of years ago.

There’s nothing glamorous about Beavan, but he’s got some longer-term upside, and with two decent starts this week, he’s probably worth a gamble.
Recommendation: Worth using in most AL-only leagues, though mixed league owners can probably do better elsewhere.

Posted by Karl de Vries at 5:33am (2) Comments

NL Waiver Wire: Week 16


Recap: Last week’s recommendation of Patrick Corbin as a matchup-dependent stream option is solidified after striking out seven Buccos in a quality start... Wade LeBlanc, on the other hand, didn’t get a chance to show off his chops in Marlins Park, and struggled with his WHIP at Citi Field... Joshua Vitters got the call and drove in a couple of runs, and he’s certainly worth keeping around for his mix of power, third-base eligibility, and opportunity... Best of all is that Nate Schierholtz, free at last, started a clean five-out-of-five Phillies games at this writing. Let’s touch on next week’s helpers.

Jean Segura | Brewers| 2B| 2 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.6 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .267 / .304 / .364
Oliver ROS: .264 / .299 / .384

A big part of the Zack Greinke haul, Segura is a speedster who hardly set the world ablaze in the Texas League (Double-A) but warranted a promotion anyways with his .294/.341/.404 line for the Angels affiliate, the Arkansas Travelers. Think of Segura as a Jose Altuve spin-off: they aren’t entirely alike, as Altuve’s much shorter and will hit for a much higher average, but both jumped from Double-A straight to the majors and both project for about 10 homers (despite small frames) and 30 steals over the course of a full season. Another difference—as if it matters for fantasy—is that Segura is skilled with the leather at shortstop, where he was converted last year. A soon-eligible shortstop with small pop and quick speed who won’t drain your batting average? Count me in, even through the growing pains.
image
Speedy Segura scurries for a soft single. Say that five times fast. (US Presswire)

Recommendation: Worth an add by any team that can’t stomach a low batting average and has a need for speed and a little bit of power.

Tyler Greene | Astros | 2B, SS| 1 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.4 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .218 / .272 / .358
Oliver ROS: .249 / .320 / .388

Because of his hacking ways and lacking pitch recognition, Greene will forever be a flawed hitter who can’t manage a high average. At this point in the season, though, a couple of months of a .220 batting average will hardly kill you, especially when it comes with a dozen or so steals. Greene is speedy and efficient, going a hot 25-for-27 over his 495 major-league at-bats, and now resides in Houston, who scooped him up when the Cardinals decided they’d had just about enough. The Astros attempt more steals and have a hole at shortstop with Jed Lowire nursing a leg injury for the indefinite future. Greene might not make the playoffs, but he’ll surely enjoy some free reign in Houston.
Recommendation: Worth an add by any team that can stomach a low batting average and has a need for speed.

Eric Young Jr.| Rockies| OF | 2 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.1 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .218 / .272 / .358
Oliver ROS: .249 / .320 / .388

How about an alternative to Greene if you truly can’t stomach the batting average? Young is among the fastest major leaguers—far speedier than Greene—but doesn’t have the playing time assurances. That hardly mattered last year, though, as Junior scurried to nearly 30 steals in just 77 games. I’d be surprised if he’s not already owned in single league formats, but this month’s Tony Campana deserves a roster spot.
Recommendation: Worth an add by any team that can’t stomach a low batting average and has a need for speed.

Brett Jackson | Cubs| OF | 3 percent Yahoo ownership | 1.8 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: .221 / .293 / .397
Oliver ROS: .240 / .317 / .415

Jackson’s even less likely to be available and is even more flawed, in this author’s opinion, than the two above names. Long a staple on top prospect lists, Jackson’s underwhelmingly risen through the Cubs system despite his ugly plate discipline (promoted with a 24.9 percent strikeout rate in Double-A!), and graduated this year despite a 33.8 percent strikeout rate in Iowa. I can hardly argue against a power-speed outfielder in fantasy, but comparisons to Drew Stubbs are greatly premature; Stubbs’ strikeout rate never touched 25 percent in the minors. I wouldn’t be surprised if Jackson’s strikeout rate hovers near 40 percent, and I wouldn’t expect a batting average high above the Mendoza Line, but he’ll provide the power half of the punch that Young, and to some extent Greene, can’t.
Recommendation: Worth an add by any team that can stomach a low batting average and has a need for speed and power.

Rudy Owens | Astros | SP | 0 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.0 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 4.94 ERA / 1.36 WHIP / 5.3 K/9
Oliver ROS: N/A

Admittedly, this is a stretch, but so is the case with searching for starting pitching in the post-deadline days of August. Owens was moved to Houston in the Wandy Rodriguez swap, and was obviously better suited for PNC Park (who isn’t?) with his fly-ball tendencies and underwhelming strikeout totals. To add to the list of cons, he’s struggled mightily since his introduction to the Pacific Coast League, where he’s flashed uncharacteristically poor control and surrendered four long balls in three starts. So, why the hell is he among suggested waiver wire pickups for the rest of the year? Opportunity is a big reason why: assuming he finds his groove over the next handful of starts in Oklahoma City, Houston has no reason not to test Owens’ chops against big-league competition (logic dictates that if Dallas Keuchel gets a chance, the more talented Owens will, too). Scarcity is another: you’d be hard pressed to find even one viable starter on the Waiver Wire, and Owens managed a 3.14 ERA in his second go-round of Triple-A, showing marked improvement and pinpoint control. He won’t blow you away, but he’s worth a shot as someone who can likely give you major league innings in a couple of weeks. Ah, a stretch, but sometimes those gambles can land you a little guap.
Recommendation: Worth an add by any team desperate for innings, strikeouts, and wins without concern for ERA and WHIP.

John Lannan | Nationals | SP | 0 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.6 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 6.12 ERA / 1.72 WHIP / 4.7 K/9 (Triple-A)
Oliver ROS: N/A

A Lannan pickup would be a gamble in its own right: he’s never put up the prettiest ratios at the major league level and he’s absolutely laying a turd at Triple-A. That said, he’ll be a major league starter on a pretty good team in September (remember Stephen Strasburg’s innings limit?), and that means wins. If you ignore the ratio stats (because how much will five starts or so swing your totals in the ultimate month?), you’ll have a good bet at wins (Lannan’s won his two spot starts this year at the major league level). Go ahead, we won’t judge you.
Recommendation: Worth a speculative add by any team desperate for wins in the stretch run.

Javier Lopez | Giants | RP | 1 percent Yahoo ownership | 0.1 percent ESPN ownership
YTD: 3.48 ERA / 1.72 WHIP / 8.1 K/9
Oliver ROS: 3.72 ERA / 1.25 WHIP / 6.6 K/9

So you missed out on the Steve Cishek, Wilton Lopez, Sergio Romo and Jeremy Affeldt sweepstakes, respectively, and you’re desperate for saves. You’ll likely fish a few out with Javier Lopez, who is one of six whose finished a close game successfully for the Giants this year. He’s the dark horse for saves in the newly formed committee, and though the opportunities he’ll get will be far and few (as both the least talented and least deployable member of said committee), this lefty specialist will likely tally a few. Desperate times call for desperate measures, right?
Recommendation: If you really need saves...

Posted by Nick Fleder at 5:56am (0) Comments

The daily grind: 8-10


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 not the best collection of arms today. Matt Harvey is interesting in that he's a prospect and has been rather successful in his first few big league starts. That said, he's not a dominate pitcher so he's going to run into some bumps. The Braves might be one of those bumps.

Mark Rogers is less interesting, but perhaps he shouldn't be. He's only one-percent owned and he's MUCH better than that. He should be owned in all NL-only leagues at the very least and those have to make up more than one percent of leagues...

Brandon McCarthy would be a nice streamer choice today if he wasn't 49-percent owned. He's coming off the disabled list.

Pitcher (bum): The Red Sox face lefty Chris Seddon. Not much to say on that; they should score runs in bunches.

Freddy Garcia will be opposed by Ricky Romero today. Shall we set the over/under on total runs scored to 12.5?

Hitter (power): Andruw Jones reprises his role as top slugger off the waiver wire. And Todd Frazier reprises his role as my most popular new pick.

Hitter (speed): Eric Young Jr. has been getting consistent play with Michael Cuddyer out. Then there's Ben Revere, who's somehow only 42-percent owned, and Trayvon Robinson.

Tomorrow's grind


Tomorrow features several pitchers who are moderately interesting. You could try Franklin Morales against the Indians, Chris Tillman against the Royals, or Marco Estrada against the Astros.

Kris Medlen's finally stretched out enough to be useful, too.















































































































































































































































































































































































































































Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher   Team Player Handedness Opposing Pitcher
Angels         Astros      
  Alberto Callaspo R Hisashi Iwakuma     Brett Wallace L Marco Estrada
Athletics         Brewers      
  Jemile Weeks S Francisco Liriano     Carlos Gomez R Dallas Keuchel
  Chris Carter R Francisco Liriano   Cubs      
  Coco Crisp S Francisco Liriano     Brett Jackson L Bronson Arroyo
  Jonny Gomes R Francisco Liriano     Josh Vitters R Bronson Arroyo
Blue Jays           David DeJesus L Bronson Arroyo
  Rajai Davis R Ivan Nova   Diamondbacks      
Mariners           Chris Johnson R Edwin Jackson
  Eric Thames L Dan Haren     Stephen Drew L Edwin Jackson
  Mike Carp L Dan Haren   Dodgers      
  Trayvon Robinson S Dan Haren     A.J. Ellis R Ricky Nolasco
  Michael Saunders L Dan Haren   Giants      
Rays           Brandon Pill R Drew Pomeranz
  Sean Rodriguez R Nick Blackburn     Angel Pagan S Drew Pomeranz
  Carlos Pena L Nick Blackburn   Marlins      
  Elliot Johnson S Nick Blackburn     Carlos Lee R Joe Blanton
Red Sox           Greg Dobbs L Joe Blanton
  Cody Ross R Zach McAllister     Justin Ruggiano R Joe Blanton
Royals         Nationals      
  Salvador Perez R Chris Tillman     Steve Lombardozzi S Wade Miley
  Alcides Escobar R Chris Tillman   Padres      
  Lorenzo Cain R Chris Tillman     Yonder Alonso L A.J. Burnett
Tigers           Carlos Quentin R A.J. Burnett
  Omar Infante R Derek Holland     Will Venable L A.J. Burnett
  Delmon Young R Derek Holland     Cameron Maybin R A.J. Burnett
White Sox         Phillies      
  Dayan Viciedo R Tommy Milone     Nate Schierholtz L Jake Westbrook
Yankees           Domonic Brown L Jake Westbrook
  Andruw Jones R Aaron Laffey   Pirates      
  Casey McGehee R Aaron Laffey     Travis Snider L Jason Marquis
            Starling Marte R Jason Marquis
            Garrett Jones L Jason Marquis
          Reds      
            Zack Cozart R Travis Wood
            Todd Frazier R Travis Wood
            Ryan Ludwick R Travis Wood


The options are almost too plentiful to count. There are regulars like Jones and Jonny Gomes, fresh names like Travis Snider, Starling Marte, Delmon Young, and Domonic Brown, and even a great speed option in Carlos Gomez.

Reliever watch


Nothing to report.

Posted by Brad Johnson at 5:59am (0) Comments

Monday, August 13, 2012

This week in (fantasy) baseball 8/6-8/12


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


• Considering Boston’s fortunes in 2012, it’s probably fitting that one of the team’s few bright spots, Will Middlebrooks, has suffered a fractured wrist and is probably going to miss the rest of the season. The team has called up newly acquired Danny Valencia (.198/.212/.310, two home runs in 132 PAs), who probably will see the lion’s share of playing time at third base in the immediate term, but Pedro Ciriaco, who’s played very well since joining the team in early July, made the start against the Indians on Saturday and probably has more to offer fantasy-wise if he can lock down serious playing time.

• Elbow inflammation pushed CC Sabathia to the disabled list last week, though he’s not expected to miss more than the minimum two weeks. The team picked up Derek Lowe off the scrap heap, though David Phelps (2.42 ERA, 1.135 WHIP, 9.7 K/9 in 52 innings, three starts) is expected to take Sabathia’s spot in the rotation this week, beginning with tonight’s start.

Brett Lawrie had been bothered by an oblique injury for the past week or so, but he’s now officially landed on the DL. Adeiny Hechavarria has picked up the majority of starts at third base over the past week, but he’s been awful in six games entering Sunday’s action, batting just .059/.158/.059 at the big league level.

Paul Konerko is dealing with concussion issues and consequently landed on the seven-day DL, giving Adam Dunn a chance to pick up starts at first base.

• A strained left quad bounced Mike Napoli to the DL, the Rangers announced over the weekend, giving Geovany Soto a chance to remind people that he used to be relevant in fantasy leagues.

Huston Street is headed back to the DL for the second time this season after suffering a left calf strain, the team announced on Saturday. That seems to leave Luke Gregerson (0 saves, 2.56 ERA, 1.120 WHIP, 9.4 K/9) and Dale Thayer (5 saves, 3.60 ERA, 1.150 WHIP, 6.5 K/9) to share the closer’s role.

• This doesn’t sound good: Matt Garza is dealing with an elbow stress reaction and hasn’t pitched since July 21. Garza insists he’ll return this year, but he’s been shut down indefinitely, and considering the Cubs don’t have much left to play for in 2012—and could entertain thoughts of dealing him over the offseason—it’s hard to imagine the team rushing him back in September.

Rookie Brooks Raley was mauled by the Padres in his big league debut on Tuesday, surrendering seven earned runs in four innings, but he was much better on Sunday against the Reds and looks as if he’ll inherit Garza’s spot in the rotation, at least for the time being.

• A separated left shoulder forced Astros outfielder Jordan Schafer to the disabled list last week.

• You can throw away Todd Helton, as the soon-to-be 39-year-old underwent hip surgery and is now done for the season. While we’re on the subject of lost causes, Drew Hutchison underwent Tommy John surgery last week and is similarly done for 2012.

Other bumps and bruises


• I’m a loyal Jason Kipnis fan, as he’ll probably be among my keepers in my primary fantasy league. But the rookie has shown serious signs of wearing down in his first major league season, as he last banged out a home run on June 17, and he’s hit .216/.328/.268 ever since. No one is questioning Kipnis’ talent or ceiling when they reassess his current value in mixed leagues, and now that he’s missed four games with neck soreness, it might be just as well to sit him for week 20.

Kelly Johnson missed Sunday’s action with a groin issue and is considered day-to-day.

Colby Rasmus missed time over the weekend after reaggravating his right groin injury and could miss time early in week 20, if not land on the DL.

Road to recovery


• The highest-scoring shortstop in fantasy at the time of his injury, Ian Desmond took his first swings since landing on the DL on July 22 with a strained oblique. He’ll probably be out until the beginning of next month.

Tommy Hanson was scheduled to make a rehab start on Sunday as he covers from a back injury. Atlanta is considering whether to move to a six-man rotation, which would allow Kris Medlen (2-0, 8.64 K/9, 1.62 ERA over his past three starts) to keep his job as a starter.

Jose Bautista has been cleared to start swinging a bat, though an MRI still shows some inflammation in his left wrist.

Closer moves


Ryan Cook is out as A’s closer after a particularly bad stretch in which he blew four saves in a two-week span, allowing Grant Balfour, who opened the season as the team’s closer, a chance to reclaim the job. Balfour has been much more effective this season as a setup man than as a ninth-inning stopper, but he picked up a save against the White Sox on Saturday and should be considered the A’s primary candidate to close out wins.

Rotation changes


Roberto Hernandez, the artist formerly known as Fausto Carmona, has a fancy work visa, a new name and has completed his rehab outings to put him on course to rejoin the Indians rotation on Wednesday when he gets the start. It’s not yet clear who will get bumped from the rotation when Hernandez returns, though Corey Kluber was torched in his second big league start Sunday and has to be considered the one most likely to lose his job.

Trading block


• No one in fantasy circles really cares about how Cesar Izturis spends his days, but his trade to the Nationals last week is good news for fans of former Angels’ super prospect Jean Segura, who now gets to anchor shortstop in Milwaukee on a full-time basis. Segura, 22, who I wrote about last month, offers immediate help with steals and had a very good contact rate in the minors, though it’s important to remember he made the jump from Double-A right to the majors, which could result in a longer learning curve.

Phenom watch



Manny Machado was promoted from Double-A right to the majors to help the Orioles with their third-base sinkhole. One of the brightest prospects in all of baseball, Machado, 20, is worth a look in any league and probably is already scooped up in the majority of keeper leagues.

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


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