The Hardball Times Fantasy

August shortstop rankings

by Jesse Sakstrup
August 06, 2012

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.

Jesse is a sociology major at Michigan State University, with a particular interest in social psychology. Contact him by email at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address), or via twitter @JesseSakstrup.

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