Razzball expert league roster analysis

Jonathan Halket is participating in an expert league run by Razzball this year that features well-known fantasy analysts from around the web such as Scott Pianowski, Andy Behrens, and Eric Mack. Jonathan could not be present for the first hour of the draft, so he had me (Jeff) proxy draft the first 10 players for him. Jonathan returned just in time to draft players 11 and 12 and finish out the rest of the draft for himself.

Due to a miscommunication on my part, Jonathan and I both ended up writing the analysis below. Rather than have that all go to waste, we figured the readers might be interested in some insight into the draft day mind of two analysts. Perhaps we’re just being presumptuous.

First, the league dynamics. This is a draft (not auction) league with 12 teams, standard 5×5 scoring, and standard rosters save for the fact that each team needs only one catcher; this means five outfielders, corner and middle infielders, etc. The league is hosted on ESPN.

Here is the roster of players drafted. Each line represents a round, and the number to the left of the player’s name is his overall pick number. For example, Adrian Gonzalez was the 11th player picked overall.

11 Adrian Gonzalez, Bos 1B
14 Ian Kinsler, Tex 2B
35 Matt Holliday, StL OF
38 Michael Bourn, Atl OF
59 Brian McCann, Atl C
62 Asdrubal Cabrera, Cle SS
83 Michael Young, Tex 1B
86 Yu Darvish, Tex SP
107 Cameron Maybin, SD OF
110 Matt Garza, ChC SP
131 Josh Johnson, Mia SP
134 Cory Luebke, SD SP
155 Lucas Duda, NYM 1B
158 Frank Francisco, NYM RP
179 Matt Thornton, CWS RP
182 Chris Sale, CWS RP
203 Ryan Howard, Phi 1B
206 Daniel Murphy, NYM 2B
227 John Mayberry Jr., Phi OF
230 Jonathon Niese, NYM SP
251 Carlos Pena, TB 1B
254 Ben Revere, Min OF
275 David Robertson, NYY RP
278 Ryan Doumit, Min C
299 Chris Heisey, Cin OF

Jeffrey’s analysis

Pick No. 1: Adrian Gonzalez
Proxy drafting for someone is always hard, especially when you have the potential for fundamentally different drafting philosophies. Thankfully, draft over auction simplifies the complications of stars and scrubs (how I live and die) versus the merits of patient value hunting and the risk of leaving money on the table. (“The soup that got away,” for you Family Guy fans out there).

Still, even in a draft format, you have to ask yourself, and you have to ask it early on, whether you are going to pick the best player possible or strategize based on positional scarcity. This means making the choice in round one between drafting Ryan Braun (more raw value) over Troy Tulowitzki (lower absolute value, but high positional scarcity value). Particularly at a position like shortstop, where there are only a few elite options, even if those options are less elite in comparison to other players on the board, the choice sets up the rest of your draft.

Drafting Tulo early makes sense because he and Paul Goldschmidt in tandem are arguably a lot more valuable than Joey Votto and Derek Jeter. But if you draft Tulo in the first round and change your strategy 180 degrees a few rounds later, you might find your team loaded with underwhelming talent and a lack of value maximization.

Keeping this in mind, drafting 11th complicates things greatly. The earlier you draft, the more of a “choice” of which strategy to pursue you get—the best guy on the table or positional scarcity. It is no secret that, at least among the most elite players in fantasy, there is a noticeable dropoff between picks 1-4, picks 5-9, and the rest of the field. Few players have the potential to do what guys like Matt Kemp and Miguel Cabrera can do, and even fewer can do it with positional scarcity on their side.

When Gonzalez fell to me at 11, I felt it would be a disservice to Jonathan’s team not to take the best overall player on the board, even though he plays at the deepest position in (fantasy) baseball. I had two of the next four picks, and I seriously thought about drafting Ian Kinsler and either Hanley Ramirez or Evan Longoria and going the positional scarcity route, but I am a firm believer that Gonzalez was the last true “top-eight” guy on the board and that his fantasy value over either Kinsler or Longoria was worth sacrificing the opportunity to fill hard-to-fill positions with lesser elite players.

THT’s player forecasting engine, Oliver, which can be accessed by subscription here, projects only 10 hitters it expects to be worth more than $30 by the end of the 2012 season using a 65/35 allocative budget split between hitters and pitchers: Kemp, Albert Pujols, Votto, Cabrera, Justin Upton, Braun, Gonzalez, Jose Bautista, Carlos Gonzalez and Giancarlo “Don’t Call Me Mike” Stanton.

Gonzalez, being the best and safest pick on the board, just seemed to make the most sense, especially if you believe in a rebound in A-Gone’s home run output in 2012. Besides, it’s not like Jonathan wouldn’t be able to trade Gonzalez away at “market value” if he did not like my decision (which you cannot per se claim about a guy like Evan Longoria, who is more polarizing).

Pick No. 2: Ian Kinsler
In the world of fantasy baseball, it is absolutely no secret that I am the “expert” with the biggest mancrush on Ian Kinsler. I think he is more valuable than Cano (equally valuable if/when injured, in tandem with the right replacement player), and I own Kinsler in essentially every league I am in.

Based on my analysis, independent of position, Kinsler is more or less a lock to end up as a top 15-25 overall fantasy hitter this year given his expected batting average rebound. With positional eligibility on his side, Kinsler was a no-brainer choice. Considering Dustin Pedroia was still on the board before I nabbed Gonzalez, I had little fear, with two picks out of four, that I would not get Kinsler with my second pick.

Pick No. 3: Matt Holliday
Holliday’s down year was still pretty valuable. Over a career-low 124 games, some lost due to an appendectomy that I think skewed his early-season performance, Holliday still managed a robust .296 batting average with 22 home runs and a couple of stolen bases. Now seemingly entrenched as the Cardinals No. 3 hitter, there’s no reason to think Holliday can’t go .300/25/5/100/100 with upside to spare.

That’s elite overall production, and given the fact that a minimum of 60 outfielders get drafted in 12-team, five-outfielder leagues, he arguably fills out positional scarcity with somewhat bankable four-plus category production. Holliday was another no-brainer choice that I was shocked fell past pick No. 30, especially considering I just missed out on Adrian Beltre.

A Hardball Times Update
Goodbye for now.

Pick No. 4: Michael Bourn
I am not the world’s biggest fan of Bourn, but I am seemingly ending up with him on most of the teams this year. I have historically undervalued elite speedsters with good batting averages, so 2012 just seems like the year to make the right change.

The two fantasy categories I always seem to do the worst in are runs scored and stolen bases, and I did not want to short Jonathan on either. Accordingly, I drafted the best all-around speedster left on the board (my No. 18 overall outfielder, and Oliver’s No. 13 overall outfielder).

Pick No. 5: Brian McCann
I wanted Mike Napoli, especially because this is a one-catcher league, but I narrowly missed out. Interestingly, Carlos Santana was drafted before Napoli. In my fantasy experience, getting an elite catcher like McCann, one who bats out of the upper middle of the lineup, this late is rare, and I did not calculate him to last much longer (Buster Posey barely lasted another round.) A .275 average and 25 homers with 160-plus runs plus RBI potential out of the catcher slot seemed too promising to let slip by.

Pick No. 6:: Asdrubal Cabrera
Having passed on Hanley Ramirez and Jose Reyes, and never having a shot at Tulo, I decided to wait a bit to grab a useful shortstop. I was a little worried when Starlin Castro and Elvis Andrus went off the board, but Jimmy Rollins, J.J. Hardy, Dee Gordon and Cabrera were still around.

Of the bunch, I like Cabrera the most as a guy who does a little bit of everything, and since I already had my “all speed” guy in Bourn, I did not need a Gordon to help fill a hole early on. Cabrera offers .280/15/15 production, and I got him around market value. Diversification of production is an underrated fantasy asset for players. Consider this a risk-averse pick at a scarce position that would be hard to fill if I took a risk for Jonathan and missed.

Pick No. 7: Michael Young
I hate Michael Young. He’s the kind of guy who is always productive, but I can never predict why. One year he’ll have an elite batting average. In another, he’ll hit 20-plus home runs. In another, he’ll steal a ton of bases. In another, he’ll rack up huge RBI totals. Young makes planning your team a headache, and his biggest tool is being in a stacked lineup with solid batting average skills—the least bankable type of production in fantasy.

Young offers 15-home run upside, the potential for double-digit steals, the chance at 200 runs-plus-RBI, and he should hit for an above-average batting average at the very least. Having struck out on any truly legitimate third baseman, Young just seemed like the best choice.

Only Aramis Ramirez and Young were left on the board, and after them, it was a huge dropoff in terms of what you could expect from your hot corner plug. That’s why I acted when I did, and I chose Young’s surrounding lineup over Ramirez’s inconsistent and injury-riddled 25-home run and above-average batting average ceiling.

Pick No. 8: Yu Darvish
Jonathan’s only proclamation to me was to fill out hitting and not draft pitching too early. Otherwise, he (foolishly?) trusted me to make those critical first-hour-of-the-draft decisions for him. I begrudgingly and obediently watched guys like Madison Bumgarner and Clayton Kershaw fly by at arguably sub-market points in the draft, but when our eighth-round pick came around, I couldn’t let the only other pitcher I comfortably expected to be worth over $20 in 2012 fly off the board.

That’s why I took Darvish, as I have in so many other leagues, confidently buying into Oliver’s major league equivalencies for his Japan numbers that make the first few years of Hideo Nomo’s career look like Dice-K’s past three. Beyond the “will he translate” question, there might be some concern about Darvish’s durability in the Texas summer heat, but there’s no reason you can’t ride him out through an elite first half and flip him for someone else in July.

Pick No. 9: Cameron Maybin
With a minimum of 60 outfielders to get drafted (do not forget positional flexibility and the utility role), the outfield position quickly turns scarce in deep-league drafts. I had two solid guys in Holliday and Bourn, but players who were likely to be productive without hurting you in at least one category were starting to fly off the board. When I saw Maybin fall to me, I was pretty satisfied.

Petco is a better park for Maybin’s power stroke than the old Marlins stadium was, and he’s still young enough to grow out to 15-plus bombs in 2012. The Padres’ offense is not fierce enough to allow Maybin owners to legitimately bank over 150 runs-plus-RBI production, but in tandem with 40-plus stolen base production, Maybin looks like a poor man’s B.J. Upton or what people are expecting from Desmond Jennings in 2012—at a fraction of the price.

Maybe I bit a round too early in drafting Maybin, but it was worth avoiding the risk he would have been off the board some 20 picks later.

Pick No. 10: Matt Garza
Having filled out a good chunk of Jonathan’s hitting, I decided to turn to pitching to get another quality arm to anchor his staff with minimal risk. I debated taking either Anibal Sanchez, Cory Luebke or Max Scherzer—all of whom I like more than Garza—but I made the calculated decision that at least two of Sanchez, Luebke and Scherzer would be available by the time I got to pick next. With Ian Kennedy freshly off the board, Garza just seemed like the next-best starting pitcher option who likely wouldn’t be there 20 picks later.

For what it’s worth, per my expected WHIP calculator calculations, Sanchez and Garza are very, very close players in terms of talent shown last season and expectations for 2012. Per those calculations, Sanchez should have produced a defense- and luck-independent ERA of 3.10 with a WHIP between 1.187 and 1.212. Garza, meanwhile, clocked in similarly with an expected ERA of 3.13 and expected WHIP (xWHIP) range of 1.196 to 1.221. But that, of course, assumes Garza is the higher strikeout pitcher than he was in the second half of last season.

A look at Sanchez’s monthly strikeout rate (K%) and xFIP compared to Garza reveals just why, in a vacuum, I would prefer Sanchez:

April
Sanchez: 23.4% K%, 3.34 xFIP
Garza: 30.5% K%, 2.09 xFIP

May
Sanchez: 26.0% K%, 3.24 xFIP
Garza: 22.7% K%, 3.90 xFIP

June
Sanchez: 25.4% K%, 2.73 xFIP
Garza: 16.5% K%, 3.71 xFIP

July
Sanchez: 24.3% K%, 3.27 xFIP
Garza: 21.1% K%, 3.70 xFIP

Aug:
Sanchez: 19.7% K%, 3.75 xFIP
Garza: 26.1% K%, 2.98 xFIP

September
Sanchez: 26.6% K%, 3.24 xFIP
Garza: 21.5% K%, 3.30 xFIP

Of course we were not drafting in a vacuum, so Garza, whom I have come to like more and more in the offseason, just seemed like the better “value” pick here.

Jonathan’s analysis

It was hard for me to enter the draft on the fly and get a quick sense of what was left on the board. It was even harder when you factor in that I was unfamiliar with ESPN’s draft interface. At 90 seconds per pick, things were coming fast.

Fortunately, Jeff’s expert drafting had left me in a pretty good position. I didn’t feel like we had any major holes that needed swift attention. Since this league is a daily league, I felt comfortable going for high-upside starting pitchers who would often have particularly tasty match-ups. The plan was to go for a few starters with excellent skills who, if healthy, I would feel good about starting on a regular basis; then I could patch in good match-ups on a week-by-week basis.

Josh Johnson’s an obvious risk/reward guy. If he’s healthy, he should be great. In a weekly league where it is harder to play the waiver wire for starters, his injury risk discount would be higher. Here I felt that an 11th-round pick was good value.

Likewise, I feel like a reasonable “floor” for Cory Luebke is that he becomes a great match-up starter—all those Petco starts and any against week offenses. I’m high on skills, though, so I think he could become a solid regular in my rotation.

After the 12th round, I felt like I need to address two concerns pronto: power and saves. So in the next five rounds I got Lucas Duda, Frank Francisco, Matt Thornton, Chris Sale (obviously not a reliever anymore) and Ryan Howard. With five outfield spots, a utility spot and a corner infield spot, Duda’s position flexibility allowed me to take a risk on Howard.

After taking Daniel Murphy for my middle-infield spot, and given that Jeff had picked up Young for third base, I knew we could sacrifice some batting average. So by the late rounds, I was looking for players who had good platoon splits (attractive since this is a daily league) and could give me some counting numbers. I went for Carlos Pena, John Mayberry Jr. and, with my last pick, Chris Heisey.

In a daily league, there’s no reason to have an idle catching spot if you can fill it with something productive. So I grabbed Ryan Doumit to play there when McCann gets days off. I also think there’s a chance Doumit ends up having value in a trade as a starting catcher in his own right. I threw in Ben Revere as a speed guy who may be a useful chip for trading later.

To round out my pitching staff, I grabbed Jonathon Niese and David Robertson. Niese has the skills to put together a great season with decent strikeout potential. Robertson has all the qualities I want in a middle reliever: high strikeout rates, solid ratios and an outside chance at a few saves during the season. On days where I’m not starting a full roster, he’ll definitely be in my lineup.

As always, leave the love/hate in the comments below.


Jeffrey Gross is an attorney who periodically moonlights as a (fantasy) baseball analyst. He also responsibly enjoys tasty adult beverages. You can read about those adventures at his blog and/or follow him on Twitter @saBEERmetrics.
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Edwin
12 years ago

Bourn horrible there, and Cabrera not much better. Johnson excellent at 131. Sale, meh. Overall, palatable.

Jeffrey gross
12 years ago

Bourn is elite speed that won’t hurt you too much. 3 reliable cat production. What’s wrong with that? Helps give late round flexibility and, as Jonathan did, find cheap power. Elite early on is underrated

Jeffrey gross
12 years ago

Also 2012 is sale’s year

Edwin
12 years ago

Bourn’s career average is .271, which does not project to reliable production in BA. Given the high projected number of PA, Bourn could quite easily damage your BA; Steamer projects a .266 BA over 690 PA.

R projects to ~90, which is solid, but not impressive.

SB are elite.

HR/RBI are obviously deadly. Really, Bourn is a 1.5-1.75 category player. Coco Crisp will offer similar production in the 15th round, especially with an increase in PA.

Jeffrey Gross
12 years ago

Edwin,

Michael Bourn projects as a $21 OF based on his production if you split a $260 budget in a 12 tm league 65/35 between hitters and pitchers. Forecast is a .281 AVG, 51 SB. What’s wrong with a $20+ OF i the fourth round? Bourn almost a lock to be a top 5 SB guy by the end of the year, depending on the roles of Rajai Davis, Juan Pierre and Jason Bourgeois

Edwin
12 years ago

Jeffrey,

I’d be curious to know the math behind the valuation metric that gives you Bourn at $21. And I’m not trolling, I really would be curious to know.

A simple search on lastplayerpicked.com (SGP) has him at $15 with a .277/95/2/53/58 line, which seems a bit aggressive to me. For me I see Bourn as a .275/50 SB guy. I certainly wouldn’t spend more than $15 on him.

Jeffrey gross
12 years ago

Edwin,

Preliminarily note a few things that will change values.

The first is budget splits. Are you using 65/35? 70/30? 50/50?

Second the forecasting basis. Not only for the specific player, but the expected universe of players. 50 stolen bases’ value is contextual. I use a recursive method known as EYES to determine the value of a player. If you search google for “Jeffrey gross e.y.e.s. auction” you’ll likely stumble on it. Normally I would link, but I’m on my phone.

So I use Oliver as the basis of my system. So there’s going to be variance against what last player picked uses. Further, note that $21 is not all so different than $15. Oliver projects bourn for a .281 avg. that might be enough, with his sb totals, relative to olivers projection for the rest of the player universe, too be worth +6 bucks. There’s no definitive way to say that the guys in my player universe are identical to yours and that we have roughly equivalent forecast for the Aggregate player pool.

Now had your system Said bourne was worth $10 we might have more of a problem

Edwin
12 years ago

Thanks for that, Jeffrey. After a cursory glance, it seems that your system doesn’t adjust for position scarcity? This could be part of the difference of opinion here, although I doubt it is so simple.

The difference between $21 and $15 is not much in an auction, because of the fluid nature of things, but in a valuation system, it really is. It should mean that the $15 dollar player is only 70% as valuable as the $21 player. You are right in saying that a simple adjustment to Bourn’s BA or R could change his value quite a bit. Which is why I’d like to stay away. That BA could be pretty bad, over too many PA.

This is the reason why I don’t bother getting so deep into dollar value projection. It is so difficult to project PA, let alone AB. I’d much rather rank tiers, adjust for position scarcity, and then give dollar value ranges to tiers.

In a snake draft, I don’t like Bourn where you took him because of the other players I imagine were out there. Do you have a link to the draft results, so I could list some?

At any rate, thanks for the dialogue. Certainly beats prepping for this interview.

Jeffrey Gross
12 years ago

Edwin,

To be fair, for this draft i USED (not I used) the THT Forecasts price guide system. Only a handful of players project for even 30 stolen bases in the Oliver engine, so guys like Bourn are worth an additional premium in its eyes. I think value again is relative. This was a team that was looking light on steals early on. The longer you wait to fill SB, the more “damage” you end up doing to the rest of your hitting categories. Bourn, Maybin and Upton seemed like the best SB options. Maybin I knew I could (and did) get later. Upton was a large AVG liability that offsets with HR upside that I thought I was fine on early on. Bourn, with a solid AVG and solid OBP skills for a slapper, seemed the best choice to fill a need I knew would only get harder to fill, and one which I historically undervalue. Bourn was likely not the best player picked overall, but he was the best player for the strategy I was going for.

Edwin
12 years ago

I understand, man. I hope good BA Bourn appears for you this year!

Jeffrey Gross
12 years ago

Is it bad that whenever I see “BA”, I think “Barrel Aged”? I know you mean batting average, but I think
“Barrel Aged Michael Bourn”

Edwin
12 years ago

Yeah, that’s BAd.

Ricardo Elorza
12 years ago

When I saw the title, I thought for a second you were talking about Razzball, the game… as in, bad players are good and viceversa. For some reason, I don’t think there’s a blogger’s league this year, though.

John C
12 years ago

Am I the only one who finds roto leagues utterly boring? You’re just playing category shuffle.  I never could get over how roto largely nullifies the magnitude of the difference between one team’s performance in a particular category versus another.  Points – I’m lovin’ it.

Mark Himmelstein
12 years ago

@John C

I can see both sides of the argument. On the one hand, in points leagues (especially non-traditional ones such as ottoneu), you’re goal is much more precise and focused on “straight up” and “true” value. In Roto, the “category shuffle” adds another dimension which is both less predictable and require an added level of planning, strategy, and tactics. Instead of one market for fairly predictable values, you have 10 independent markets for highly volatile and overlapping but independently credited assets. So I see roto as the far more dynamic but unstable game, while points is better for a group of baseball experts who just want to have some fun with their baseball knowledge. And ultimately, though its counter intuitive, I find roto to both be more interesting and to take more “luck” as well.