Archive for ‘Fantasy Baseball’

Thursday: 07.24.2008

The Last 365

Fantasy owners (and baseball fans in general for that matter) make a lot decisions and engage in a host of arguments based on different sized samples of data. The first thing that someone disagreeing with an assertion will generally look at is the sample size. If you tout an unknown commodity after a hot week, you’re likely to get hammered for putting far too much stock into a 7-day period. Sometimes when we’re on the side that wants to be right, we’ll ignore obvious sample size issues in hopes of not being called out.

What is a big enough sample size? Honestly, that depends on what you’re asserting or trying to prove. If you look back at a .417/.489/.590 week of a player you chose over the .231/.300/.378 player for your head-to-head league match, then you can pound your chest a little bit because you clearly made the right decision. But if the latter player is clearly the better player and you let that week make you chose player A again then you start getting yourself into trouble.

Does a month offer enough data to start making judgments on players? Again, it’s going to depend at what you’re hoping to accomplish. At the beginning of the seasons, fantasy team owners across the world are hypersensitive to the highs and lows that their players (and even those not on their team) are going through. Entering May 1st, Emil Brown had 25 RBIs. He has 49 through Wednesday. Josh Willingham was hitting .341, but he has .167 since (missed all of May) to leave him at .260 on the season.

Most are familiar with the awful start of C.C. Sabathia, but it bears mentioning that he was 1-4 with a 7.88 ERA. After a complete game shutout of the Cardinals tonight, he is 10-8 with a 3.30 ERA. How many watched as the owner of Sabathia in their league dealt him for a quarter of his true value because it wasn’t just a bad start or two, but rather a month? Furthermore, how many watch Mark Hendrickson get picked up because of a 4-1 start with a 3.68 ERA for the Marlins? You start looking for reasons, however flimsy, to believe these things to be true. For someone like Hendrickson, it was the previous track record of Florida arms and the home stadium that all of sudden made him worthwhile. Sabathia was out of shape and his workload had caught up to him.

If a player has an established track record (of success or failure), then you shouldn’t begin to take numbers seriously until June 1st rolls around if they are going against that previously established record. Even at that point, you should be cautious of making hasty moves that could end up hurting you in the long run. Remember that on June 1st, there are still FOUR months in a fantasy baseball season. I’m not suggesting you have to stand pat until two months or more into the season, rather that it can be foolish that make moves because of numbers posted in the first 2-2 1/2 months into the season if they are inexplicably against years of unlike data. I grant that there are variables to this line of thinking that can come into play. Injuries, age, team situation (lineup/ballpark/playing time) are primary amongst these factors.

I have spent the last 500+ words telling you which time periods aren’t long enough to make, so what time period of statistics do I find suitable enough to make judgments off of for players who performing against career norms? I think a year’s worth of data is pretty solid. Meaning if a guy has a great 1st half, how is he looking against his peers when it is combined with his previous season’s second half? Believe it or not, a half season of data—no matter how good or bad—can be a fluke especially when it’s complete contrary to a player’s history that spans much more than a half season.

I’m going to post some of the 365-day Leaderboards so we can get a better idea of who has been performing the best over the past “season” worth of games. Plenty of this year’s top performers will be found within these lists, but others not currently atop the league leaders for 2008 will be scattered across these lists as well. This exercise isn’t meant to be a predictive measure so much as it is a better look who has been performing the best for a more sustained period of time than just the nearly four months of the 2008 season.

This set of lists covers the Top 25 across the main roto categories of home runs, runs batted in, stolen bases and runs scored. I took OPS instead of batting average because I (as many do) find it a better measure of a player’s value. I realize average or even on-base percentage are used in fantasy scoring, but went with the OPS anyway.

Again, I’m not looking at these to be predictive of the final two months of the season, instead just another set of data to chew on when judging talent. Most of the names found within the above listings have been getting it done for a full season’s worth of plate appearances and it wouldn’t be a horrible idea to rely on them to get it done for you during the final two months of the season.

I leave for Philadelphia tomorrow and I’ll be gone until Sunday evening. While I hope to have some stuff up during that time period, I’m unsure if I’ll have time for much of anything. When I get back, I’ll most assuredly report on my trip to Citizen’s Bank Ballpark as the Phillies play host to the Atlanta Braves. I think we’re down for at least Saturday’s matchup which features Cole Hamels against Jo-Jo Reyes. We might go to the Kyle Kendrick-Jair Jurrjens showdown on Friday evening as well, but that is TBD at this point.

Monday: 07.21.2008

Need an Arm for the Stretch?

I got an email shortly after posting the Second Half hitter pieces asking if I had plans for anything on pitchers. I compiled the data to do a study on pitchers after the break, but the results were very light. I took the same three year data set of 2005-2007 and looked at the pitchers with 80+ innings and an ERA of 3.50 and below. The results were very underwhelming as only 63 results came back for all three seasons combined.

I could’ve loosened the ERA threshold, but even 80 innings of a 3.50 from a starter isn’t going to move the needle of a fantasy team’s ERA very much at all. I also could’ve lowered the innings threshold to 60+ or 40+, but 60 only brought in few more samples and 40 started to bring in relievers (and again, a 40-inning sample won’t dent an ERA).

There were 14 pitchers that showed up twice (well, John Smoltz qualified all three seasons, but he’s done for 2008 anyway), but these names aren’t going to surprise and Smoltz is one of three that isn’t even available via trade or waiver wire rendering this entire process just about useless. Thankfully it didn’t take terribly long, so I’ll share the results with you all and move on to the next project:

Pitchers w/80+ IP of <3.50 ERA for the 2nd-half twice from 2005-07:
1. Andy Pettitte
2. Brandon Webb
3. CC Sabathia
4. Chris Carpenter
5. Derek Lowe
6. Jake Peavy
7. Jeff Suppan
8. Johan Santana
9. John Lackey
10. John Smoltz
11. Josh Beckett
12. Roger Clemens
13. Scott Kazmir
14. Tim Hudson

Don’t get me wrong, you should probably still target these guys as your hired gun for the duration of the season, but the point of the exercise was to highlight a group of players to target that might turn up some unknown jewels given the narrowed data set. This list would be targeted regardless of the split analyzed.

Friday: 07.18.2008

Another Handful of Predictions

Yesterday I offered some predictions for every team in the American League and today I’ll look at the National League:

National League East
Atlanta Braves – Slugger Mark Teixeira will mash another 13-15 home runs from now until season’s end giving him a fourth straight 30-HR season. This is filed under Atlanta because that’s obviously where he is right now. Though despite the prevailing thought that Atlanta is going to get rid him, there are also reports to the contrary… Maligned outfielder Jeff Francoeur will catch fire for a good month and a half at some point in the 2nd half and still end up with >20 HRs.

Florida MarlinsCody Ross continues to hit well with eight home runs and a .280+ batting average in the 2nd half. Don’t forget that he hit 12 home runs and had a 1.064 OPS in 173 at-bats last year… Outfielder Jeremy Hermida turns it up in the 2nd half, as he did in 2007, and posts .800+ OPS… Scott Olsen will frustrate owners with his inconsistency, but post a second half ERA right around the 3.84 he put together prior to the break. Spot-starting or cutting your losses on Olsen after a string of shaky starts is a bad move. Ride him until October…

New York Mets – To hear some talk about his season, you’d think that Johan Santana was 4-11 with a 4.50 ERA instead of 8-7 with a 3.10 ERA. He was blown up a bit by the Reds in his first post-break start and I think it opens up a prime buy-low opportunity (low relative to Johan). I like him for a sub-3.00 ERA with 10 wins… John Maine should rack up some wins, but at a >4.00 ERA cost to your team… Carlos Beltran quietly put up a solid first half, but things will get even better in the second half with a .900+ OPS and a 25 HR-25 SB tally.

Philadelphia Phillies – With that high-octane offense, Pedro Feliz is left to do his thing in obscurity and he’ll match his first half output with another 12 home runs from here on out… The surprise in that Phillies’ offense has been the fact that Jimmy Rollins is having a pedestrian season by his standards. He won’t reach his 2007 heights of excellence, but an .850+ OPS in the second half is in store… Brett Myers will return from his stint in the minors and give the Phillies a sub-4.25 ERA in their rotation.

Washington Nationals – The season has been a pretty huge bust from an offensive standpoint as it seems anytime someone starts producing for the Nats, he gets hurt shortly thereafter. Austin Kearns finally appears to be healthy and should enjoy a solid, if unspectacular second half with eight home runs and a .750+ OPS… Who would have thought that the Nationals would have four rosterable starting pitchers? Jason Bergmann, John Lannan, Odalis Perez and Tim Redding have been legit middle/back of the rotation starters. Lannan and Bergmann will be the best bets out of that group going forward.

National League Central
Chicago Cubs – Two of the biggest surprises for the Cubs this season have been Ryan Dempster and Geovany Soto. Dempster moved back to the rotation after serving as a closer for several years and has produced great results with a 3.25 ERA and 1.18 WHIP. That said, I suspect he’ll get bumped around the rest of the way to the tune of a 4.00+ ERA… Soto has also been amazing with 16 home runs and a .876 OPS in his debut campaign. His second half won’t be as fruitful as he will post <.800 OPS.

Cincinnati Reds – This was supposed to be a breakout season for Edwin Encarnacion and a strong second half will allow him to deliver on that preseason promise. He will set a career high in home runs with his next one and he has .293 or better in every month but May, so he is going to get the average above that career .272 mark. An .800+ OPS and 10+ HRs are in store for EE the rest of the way… With a completely dominant first half, Edinson Volquez all but assured himself a great season, but non-keeper leaguers should sell high as Volquez is going to start getting punished for that colossal walk rate (4.3p9). He will have an ERA north of 4.00 in his remaining starts.

Houston Astros – Starting pitcher Wandy Rodriguez hasn’t COMPLETELY fixed his home/road splits issues, but he has greatly improved them and it’s benefited him very nicely with a 3.31 ERA/1.29 WHIP in 81.7 innings. Expect more of the same the rest of the way with a <3.50 ERA as the new ace of the Astros. Hunter Pence has been maddeningly inconsistent this year, but his end of season numbers will look alright come October. Look for a second half .800+ OPS and 10 home runs.

Milwaukee BrewersPrince Fielder set the bar pretty high for himself with 50 home runs last year which is why his 16 HR and .845 OPS from the first half is “disappointing”, but he will make amends with a .950+ OPS and 20 home runs from here on out… Dave Bush is putting it all together lately with his very strong recent stretch. His first half numbers of 4.39 ERA/1.15 WHIP resemble the 4.41 ERA/1.14 WHIP season totals from 2006. He could be amazing if he strand some runners (just 66% LOB% this season) and that’s why owners looking at his WHIP expect great things. The LOB problem has always been an issue and given his lengthy record with it, he will be turning back into a pumpkin before too long. Sell high.

Pittsburgh PiratesXavier Nady is a classic fade player with an OPS 98 points lower after the break in the past three seasons (.831 to .733), but I have a feeling he’s poised to stay strong during this second half with an .875+ OPS. An .875 mark would still be a 30-point drop, but definitely within reason and good enough to avoid that perennial fade… One thing you can usually count on is a good batting average from Freddy Sanchez which makes his .230 from this season all the more disappointing. He will get right in the second half with a .300+ AVG from here on out… This next one is a gut feeling with absolutely no statistical backing behind it, but I think Ian Snell will have a sub-4.50 ERA the rest of the way. I know 4.50 is hardly Cy Young material, but considering that he is currently at 5.83, it’s a marked improvement.

St. Louis Cardinals – Though not expected back until August, Adam Wainwright is going to give his fantasy owners a strong homestretch push with a <3.25 ERA and six wins… Several people seem to be waiting for the other shoe to drop with respect to Ryan Ludwick‘s Cinderella season, but I don’t think he’s going to fade. He’s got another 15 home runs and a .900+ OPS in the tank.

National League West
Arizona DiamondbacksChris Young‘s follow up to a great 2007 season has been a pretty big bust despite 13 home runs thus far. He will make some necessary adjustments to enjoy a .900+ OPS and 15+ HRs the rest of the way… Chris Snyder, recovering from a testicular fracture (OUCH!!), is expected back next week and I think he will double his home run total to 14 by season’s end.

Colorado Rockies – It’s been a decidedly different season for the Rockies after their surprise appearance in the World Series last year, but they are still just seven games out. Ubaldo Jimenez has developed into a good starter with declining ERAs in every month of the season. He will be a sub-4.00 ERA pitcher and pair with Aaron Cook for a legit 1-2 punch in Denver… Brad Hawpe has been great since coming back from the disabled list with 12 home runs in 129 at-bats. I expect him to grab 15 more home runs the rest of the year.

Los Angeles Dodgers – Despite seemingly loaded with talent, the Dodgers have been completely anemic on offense this season. Look for the offense to heat up during the dog days of summer with Matt Kemp clubbing 10+ HRs, Jeff Kent slugging 12 of his own and Andre Ethier with another 10 while all three post a better than .800 OPS.

San Diego Padres – Speaking of anemic offenses, the Padres fit that classification as well despite how great Adrian Gonzalez has been this season. Scott Hairston and Kevin Kouzmanoff have displayed some power of their own, but I like Khalil Greene, usually a reliable power threat if nothing else, to muscle up for 12+ home runs and rookie phenom Chase Headley to smack eight or more as well. They could put together a little run if they bats heat up. No one has done anything to establish themselves out West, so perhaps the Padres turn around their 2008 season and challenge a little bit.

San Francisco Giants – Some are labeling this team a surprise team, but they are 40-57 so despite how great their top three of Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain and Jonathan Sanchez have been on the mound, this is still a pretty weak team. Ray Durham has already been dealt to Milwaukee and Randy Winn may be out very soon as well since this team has no need for the veterans. I think they’ll get some youthful exuberance and play some near .500 ball with their trio of starters notching eight wins apiece. Eugenio Velez is back up and I think this time he’ll deliver and steal 15+ bags.

Thursday: 07.17.2008

A Handful of Predictions…

Today kicked off the unofficial 2nd-half of the baseball season, after all most teams have played nearly 95 games meaning the “real” split was two weeks ago. I’ve never had a problem labeling the post All-Star Break portion of the season as the second half. It’s colloquially accepted that the second half begins when the All-Star Break wraps up. OK, so that’s out of the way… sorry, you’re never getting that 30 seconds of your life back and I feel wholly responsible.

I’ll do the American League today and the National League tomorrow. Without further ado, a handful of predictions for the entire league:

American League East
Baltimore OriolesAdam Jones enjoys a very formidable second half and joins teammates Nick Markakis (.892), Aubrey Huff (.875), Brian Roberts (.864) and Luke Scott (.809) in the .800 OPS club for 2008. Last year only Markakis and Roberts hit the mark and Roberts barely squeezed in with his .808… Closer George Sherrill‘s ERA will be north of 4.50 by season’s end, though he’ll end the season approaching 45 saves. He has a dominant strikeout rate with 9.8 per nine, but the 5.4 walks per nine is simply atrocious.

Boston Red Sox – Slugger David Ortiz has been shelved with a left wrist injury since June 1st, but he’s expected to return this weekend. Look for him to mash from here on out and end the season with 30 home runs. I know, wrist injuries don’t usually bode well for power hitters, but Ortiz will buck the trend… I was high on Daisuke Matsuzaka coming into 2008 and his results have been a mixed bag including a DL-stint. He was absolutely trashed upon return from the DL (7 ER in 1 IP), but he’s been brilliant since despite 16 walks in 23.3 innings. His luck bank will run out as he delivers a >4.00 ERA for the rest of the way yet still wins 17+ games.

New York YankeesJoba Chamberlain will lead the Yankees’ staff during the 2nd half as he throws a sub-3.50 ERA and racks up 10 wins while the Yankees charge hard for the wildcard… During that charge, the much-maligned Alex Rodriguez posts a >1.050 OPS with 20 home runs.

Tampa Bay Rays – Everyone’s feel good story fell on hard times right before the break and inspired several “the-sky-is-falling” articles that pronounced their Cinderella run over or severely harmed. It is not. They are legit and I don’t think they’ll just fade, though they’ll have to fight tooth and nail to make the playoffs. Carl Crawford will do his part in that run with an .800+ OPS and 10 home runs… Future Rookie of the Year, Evan Longoria does his part as well with 14+ home runs completing his best Ryan Braun imitation… Starter Andy Sonnanstine continues to rack up wins and drops his ERA near 4.25 by season’s end.

Toronto Blue Jays – Workhorse starting pitcher Roy Halladay completes five more games this season for a total of 12, the most since Randy Johnson finished the same amount way back in 1999. No team even notched that many in all of the 2007 season… Despite three straight months of rising ERAs, A.J. Burnett, whether with or without Toronto, posts a sub-4.00 ERA from here on out… Alex Rios‘ power outage has been a disappoint to all of his fantasy owners, but he has tried to make up for it with 23 stolen bases. He will continue to run at a solid clip, but he will also hit 10+ home runs after the break.

American League Central
Chicago White SoxGavin Floyd collapses in the 2nd half and ends up with an ERA nearing 4.50… Outside of an amazing June, Nick Swisher has been a colossal bust for the White Sox despite the expectations that he’d have a breakout season in that ballpark. While he won’t mean the expectations from the preseason, he’ll end up with >25 home runs and a batting average approaching .260.

Cleveland Indians – It’s not entirely his fault, but Ryan Garko‘s failure deliver on expectations of a very strong season have helped lead to a rather anemic offense in Cleveland. He can’t single-handedly change their fortunes, but he’ll do his part with an .800+ OPS… Matt LaPorta gets a mid-August callup that leads to 12+ home runs.

Detroit Tigers – On May 19th, Justin Verlander was 1-7. He will end the season with 15 wins and an ERA south of 3.75 as the Tigers’ stopper in their playoff chase… Curtis Granderson lost almost a month to injury, but has picked up right where his amazing 2007 season left off and he’ll finish the season with 20 home runs and 15 stolen bases… Miguel Cabrera dominates American League pitching for the remainder of the season and ends the season with more than 30 home runs and a .300 average.

Kansas City RoyalsAlex Gordon isn’t Ryan Braun or Evan Longoria, that much is evident by the fact that he still hasn’t completely figured out in the majors. The expectations of him were at least as high if not higher coming into his rookie season last year, but even still he’s hardly chopped liver. A 10-home run 2nd half gives him a 21-home run season and gets some of the critics off of his back for a hot minute… Golden child teammate Billy Butler has absolutely sucked this year despite some lofty expectations yet he continues to get a pass. Watch him continue to scuffle and end the season with fewer than 10 home runs.

Minnesota Twins – I wrote these out prior to the news on Thursday night that Francisco Liriano‘s agent was considering filing a grievance against the Twins for leaving his client in the minors despite looking like he’s completely back from Tommy John surgery and ready to contribute for the Twins again. Not knowing how that will play out could impact how soon Liriano is called up whether he deserves it or not. That said, I’ll stand by the prediction that he comes up and throws 75 innings of sub-4.00 ERA.

American League West
Los Angeles Angels – Throughout May, you could find several articles and message boards around the internet declaring the end of Vladimir Guerrero‘s career. He had 6076 at-bats as one of the game’s BEST hitters, yet these idiots were ready to write him off after less than 200 (he had 199 by the end of May). Sample size people. Vlad the Impaler is going to continue mashing with a ridiculous second-half that sees him post a .900+ OPS with 10 home runs and 40 RBIs… The Los Angeles rotation will end with three 15-game winners, and one of them will be John Lackey.

Oakland AthleticsJack Cust will end the season with 30+ HRs and Rajai Davis will end the season with 20+ SBs, yet the two will combine to hit <.235… I’ve made it clear before that I am a HUGE Justin Duchscherer fan and I placed him on SEVERAL of my fantasy baseball teams this spring (in the draft/auction, not just as a waiver pickup), but the realist in me says he is in for a 4.00+ ERA in 2nd half. He’s already pitched 36 more innings than he did in the past two seasons combined and he’s riding a very beneficial (read: lucky) hit percentage and runners-left-on-base percentage. Both of those will raise the ERA as they normalize. By the way, I really want to be wrong on this one as Duchscherer has helped me so much this season… Newly acquired Sean Gallagher will off-set the Duke’s “mediocre” 2nd half with a sub-4.00 ERA in the Oakland rotation.

Seattle Mariners – There hasn’t been much to celebrate about for the M’s in 2008. And to think, I predicted them to finish 2nd in the West. At least Felix Hernandez is starting to reach the expectations unfairly placed on him the past few seasons… Jeff Clement will post a >.800 OPS with 10 home runs in the 2nd half… Brandon Morrow and Sean Green continue their 1st half success and give the M’s a very formidable back-end of the bullpen. This is hardly a bold prediction, but I wanted to give M’s fans something realistic to expect from here on out.

Texas Rangers – Offense comes easy in Texas, especially in the summer, regardless of who is playing there. It seems to happen without trying when Milton Bradley, Josh Hamilton, Ian Kinsler, David Murphy and Michael Young are in the lineup. The Rangers will have three 100-RBI seasons this year as two of the above join Hamilton… They will also have no one with 75+ innings posting a sub-3.50 ERA.

Tomorrow, the National League…

Tuesday: 07.15.2008

Middle Reliever Hotsheet: Volume IV

For those of you that know it from the message board, you’ve seen previous volumes of the Middle Reliever Hotsheet, but for many others this may be your first look. It has been two months since I last did an update and I don’t have any particular reason behind why I waited so long to do another one, but it’s basically a comprehensive look at the best middle relievers in baseball for the current season. Before the season, I covered the Middle Reliever Methodology, which is really just the utilization of middle relievers in various quantities to counter stockpiling mediocre or below average starting pitchers just because they are in the rotation.

Determining who the best will be from year to year has proven difficult and nearly as volatile as their parent subset of closers. You needn’t look any further than Rafael Betancourt‘s disastrous 2008 season for proof of this volatility. However, some of the success stories from last year, specifically Heath Bell, have proven to be solid bets once again this season. Anyway, I digress. I put together the MRH to update the middle reliever landscape so that those using the method will know where to look for their next diamond in the rough. Oftentimes players are held onto because of name recognition when better options exist (see: Broxton, Jonathan & Marmol, Carlos). But even when those established middle reliever names are performing, there still may be equal or better options available at a hugely discounted rate and that’s really the benefit of this strategy: top-flight production at a replacement-level cost. Bell & Hideki Okajima have paid dividends for their owners this season, but they were two of the hottest targets with Betancourt, whereas a Kyle McClellan or Matt Thornton was (or still could be) had for nothing as a waiver-wire pickup.

Volume IV turns in the lowest count of “Top Non-Closers” since I started doing this back in April with nine. I’ll show those nine in the charts that follow this writing, but for now I am going to look at some relievers that don’t meet some of the requirements for middle reliever stardom, but have skills that point to potential excellence going forward from now until the end of the season:

(numbered, but in no particular order)

1. Joel Peralta, Kansas City Royals – Peralta has seven strikeouts per nine and just 1.3 walks per nine in his 28 and 2/3 innings pitched for a Royals bullpen with some solid parts in it. OK, what’s the catch? A 5.65 ERA is enough to get Peralta overlooked in the search for a reliable middle reliever. His penchant for the blowup has done in the 32-year old. He has given up two runs in seven of his 23 appearances and that’s just not going to cut it. The quality peripherals point to talent, but perhaps he lacks that mental edge necessary in relieving.

2. Manny Delcarmen, Boston Red Sox – On May 27th, his ERA was 5.14. A month later, his June 27th clean inning had lowered the ERA to 3.27, but then he allowed six runs in his next three appearances spanning an inning and a third bringing the ERA back up to 4.72. That’s the long of saying that he is like Peralta in his gas can-like tendencies that balloon an ERA in a moment’s notice. His strikeout rate is at a healthy one per inning, but the walk rate is a tad high at 3.4.

3. Sean Green, Seattle Mariners – Usually the attention goes to J.J. Putz when you’re talking about the Mariners’ bullpen, but he’s been rendered ineffective due to injuries this season which left the door open. Unfortunately for Green, Brandon Morrow and 12.5 strikeouts per nine innings walked in and snapped up the available attention. That doesn’t mean that Green hasn’t been awesome. In fact, he has a 2.72 ERA despite the fact that he was dumped for nine runs in 13 innings during May (6.23 ERA). Green’s 53 innings are tied for 6th among relievers making his tiny ERA, solid 1.21 WHIP and quality 8.2 K/9 rate that much better.

4. Chad Durbin, Philadelphia Phillies – Until Brett Myers was recently sent down to the minors, the Phillies had the same starting rotation all season long. This gave their bullpen a steadiness in roles that has no doubt contributed to their success. Durbin has been the link from those starters to the sweet back-end of the bullpen headlined by Brad Lidge, Ryan Madson and J.C. Romero. He has the most innings of any non-starter on the Phillies, but given his previous time as a starter the Phillies know they can stretch him out a little bit. He hasn’t disappointed with a 1.89 ERA and 7.4 K/9 in his 52.1 innings.

5. J.P. Howell, Tampa Bay Rays – Though prone to a walk (4.3 BB/9), it is due more to stinginess than a lack of control (6.0 H/9). This stinginess has suited Howell quite well as he’s become a true middle relieving ace for one of baseball’s best teams in 2008. He strikes out nearly a batter per inning (8.7 K/9) and has yielded a meager 2.68 ERA in his 57 innings (3rd-most amongst relievers). He is the least likely of these five to be available in your league, but he is the perfect anchor for a team using the MR Method.

To the charts we go:

You should aim to land one of the “Nifty Nine” found on the right if you’re employing the MR Methodology on your team. They represent the middle relievers with best, most complete skills to date. And given that we’re at the midpoint of July, sample size issues are eliminated from the equation meaning these are rather sturdy bets for at least the balance of the ’08 season.

The following two lists present the top skills in power and control regardless of anything else. These are just your premier flamethrowers and pinpoint control artists absent filters of innings pitched except that they reside in the top 200 relievers in terms of workload.

Finally, we filter down the top strikeout and walk rates based on workload. Using the top 200 innings-loggers, we get an average of 36 and a 1/3 innings which is what I used as the requirement to make either of these lists.

And finally, a look at how some combos of middle relievers have performed against some of the best starting pitchers in baseball:

Sunday: 07.13.2008

Post-All Star Break Producers, Part II

Yesterday I posted Part I of a two-part piece on some historically strong performers in the 2nd half. For the study, I looked at post All-Star Break numbers from the years 2005 to 2007 and picked out the instances of players posting an .850 OPS or better. From there, I took the players that did it more than once and isolated them. The group that pulled the hat-trick were in yesterday’s list, while today will cover the remaining bunch that did it two out of three times. In the upcoming chart, you will see the three-year totals and averages for the 43 players that had an .850 or better OPS in two out of three seasons, meaning the season that they didn’t make it is factored in, too.

The email response to the first portion was great and I really appreciated it, thought some readers point blank asked what they are supposed to do with the information. You don’t have to do anything with it if you don’t want to, but it can be used for reference when entertaining trades for a stretch. It is by no means wholly predictive so don’t blindly follow it to the point of taking a bad trade because you think Player X is going to have a bust out second half. But if you are deciding between a few players, this information might lead towards the right guy to help your team from here until October. The Elite 16 list was filled with stars, but there were plenty of stars not listed meaning maybe you trade some stars you currently own for these ones that have shown a penchant for stepping it up during the dog days of summer.

The second list is decidedly less star-laden meaning you could find some real value by acquiring some of these players at a severely discounted price. Some of the players on the list are already having great seasons (Jason Bay, Milton Bradley, Adrian Gonzalez), but some others have seen their stock tumble based on a horrific first half (Robinson Cano, Matt Diaz, Todd Helton). Baltimore’s Luke Scott is having a breakout season of sorts due in large part to his job security, but if he holds to his usual pattern, he’s in for an even bigger 2nd half which would truly make 2008 a breakout season for him. He has the biggest pre to post All-Star Break delta in OPS at 261 points! Speaking of opportunity as a breeding ground for breakout potential, second to Scott in OPS improvement is recently traded Matt Murton. He should get a chance in Oakland to repeat his 194-point OPS improvements after the break especially given the fragility of Ryan Sweeney and suckiness of Emil Brown & Travis Buck. He’s batted second in back-to-back evenings since being recalled on July 11th.

Some other potential gems exist in the form of Carlos Delgado, Travis Hafner, Paul Konerko and Adam LaRoche. Althought Delgado and LaRoche have both been strong in July, so the window to acquire them cheaply might be closed.

Feel free to share your tales of trading for some of these guys as Steve from Iowa did via email. Steve sold high on BbP favorite, Justin Ducscherer in a deal that landed him Matt Holliday. Steve dealt Duchscherer and Bill Hall for Holliday. Like I said, Duchscherer is a huge favorite of Baseball by Paul, but this is an amazing deal for Steve.

Saturday: 07.12.2008

Post-All Star Break Producers, Part I

I’ve never done crack, but I imagine that the withdrawals from quitting the stuff are similar to what I suffer through during the All Star Break. While likely not nearly as dramatic, I suspect many others search for ways to keep themselves engaged, but occupied. This naturally leads back to your league’s homepage in search of ways to shore up the weaknesses for the stretch run. The dust has settled on the “first half” (technically the 81-game mark hit weeks ago) and every fantasy owner should know full well what they need to get to their desired result.

Is your team in need of offense? I have compiled a group of players that have shown a propensity for second half excellence in the past three seasons by registering an .850 or better OPS in at least two of the three seasons. Of the 59 players that qualified, 16 of them completed the hat-trick and the names within that list are unlikely to surprise many. In fact, the entire list is rather star-laden but that doesn’t render it useless. We know that stars are supposed to perform, but if you’re acquiring the high-dollar players from a team dumping and looking at 2009, this list will guide you towards the players you are likely to get the most gains from during the last 2 1/2 months of the season.

I will start with the upper echelon of players. As I mentioned, this group gave .850 or better in each of the three seasons studied (2005-2007). In fact, the lowest three-year average in OPS is Jeff Kent‘s .911. By and large, this group of players will represent the guys you ought to be targeting for the second-half surge. Some of them are in the midst of otherworldly seasons already so a continuation of their post-All Star Break mashing could lead to some record-breaking totals.

Here is a detailed look at the group sorted by OPS. The far right column is their difference in OPS from before to after the All Star Break. The 3-year average column directly below each player is their total line divided by three… pretty self-explanatory stuff there!

Seeing David Ortiz & Ryan Howard top the list should please owners of these guys quite a bit. For Ortiz, it was a painfully slow start followed by an injury currently shelving him that his derailed his season while Howard had delivered little more than raw power until the beginning of July. Even at his worst (like a .234 batting average), Howard’s power production makes him rosterable in just about any format. He is already turning things around in July with both the power (seven home runs in 10 games) AND the batting average (.375, 15-for-40). The time to buy low has probably vanished by now, but he should still be a superstar target, especially if he can be had at ANY amount of discount.

The usual suspects round this list though Kent has been rather “blah” so far this season. The Dodgers could really, really use a hot summer from him considering their lineup’s immense struggles. If he achieves his average output from the past three seasons, he will be very close to last year’s final numbers and that’s pretty darn good for a 40-year old second baseman.

Moises Alou might be done forever with his latest injury likely sidelining him for all of 2008. He is (was?) a truly amazing hitter that would get the job done whenever he was the lineup. Unfortunately, at age 42, his body is just not holding up anymore. I decided to leave him on the list essentially to pay homage to his greatness because I knew he wasn’t going to be a viable target for fantasy owners in the 2nd half of 2008.

Tomorrow I’ll post the remaining 43 players on the list. It is the group of players that reached the .850 OPS or better mark two out of the three seasons I looked at for this study. That list contains top-flight superstars, mid-level semistars, average players and somewhat scrubby players that you might be able to pick up off the heap and speculate on to see if they continue their post-All Star Break hitting trend.

Wednesday: 07.9.2008

A’s Trade Harden; Beane Gets Ripped!

Speculation around Rich Harden being dealt from the Oakland A’s is nothing new for 2008, but it finally happened on Tuesday with the Chicago Cubs stepping up and giving the A’s a four-pack of players including a few major-league ready players. The A’s got Sean Gallagher, Matt Murton, Eric Patterson and Josh Donaldson for Harden and swingman, Chad Gaudin. Fans and pundits alike are criticizing the haul despite the strong track record of GM Billy Beane. I think the criticism is severely misguided and that Beane did just fine in trading the team’s ace.

Harden, when healthy, is an amazing talent with top-10 ability. Heck, it might even be top-5. The problem is that “when healthy” piece. His 77 innings this year are more than he logged in the past two seasons combined (72.3) and he has topped 128 innings a season just once despite being with the A’s since 2003. That massive concern is why the A’s weren’t able to acquire the kind of package that a talent like Harden would normally net. This is real life and not a video game, so Beane can’t trade based on Harden’s potential should he remain healthy. After all, the Cubs know all about top-flight talents that can’t stay on the hill. They had a pair of arms that were anointed future Hall of Famers in Mark Prior and Kerry Wood, yet they spent more time in the hospital than on the mound. Prior is again going to miss the entire season while Wood has reinvented himself as a closer with the Cubs.

Harden’s value has never been higher in the past two-plus seasons and Beane, known for trading arms that many others would deem “untouchable”, cashed in his chips before things had a chance to go south again. Maybe he noticed that Harden hasn’t really been the same since his eight-inning outing on June 26th, going just five in two starts thereafter with a 1.8 K/BB ratio. It was his longest outing of the season and perhaps he was stretched too far. Maybe Harden is a 6-inning pitcher at this point in his career until he builds up some durability.

Maybe I’m reading too deep into a small sample and Beane realized that Harden’s value may never be this high again so he decided to get three of Chicago’s top-10 prospects and an underrated outfielder in Matt Murton, who has never been given a full opportunity. Regardless of his motive for the deal, hasn’t his extensive track record of success earned him the benefit of the doubt? His most recent trade of a top quality arm has already paid dividends. Over the winter, he dealt Dan Haren to Arizona for Dana Eveland, Carlos Gonzalez, Aaron Cunningham, Greg Smith, Brett Anderson and Chris Carter. Eveland & Smith are 12-12 in 212.3 innings with a 3.56 ERA, 1.33 WHIP, 6.0 K/9 and 4.1 BB/9. Gonzalez came up a little while ago and has a .272/.295/.432 line in 125 at-bats with 16 extra-base hits of his 34 total hits. Cunningham and Carter are both raking in the minors while Anderson is striking out over a batter per inning and earned a promotion to AA earlier this season. And that’s just one trade!

Beane can evaluate talent and that fact shouldn’t be lost on anyone at this point. Not everything he does is a slam dunk, that’s not the case for anyone in the game of baseball, but he’s got some 360-windmills under his belt. Let’s look at some of his more recent moves for the A’s:

Traded Nick Swisher for Gio Gonzalez, Fautino De Los Santos and Ryan Sweeney
Both Gonzalez and De Los Santos are striking out over a batter per inning in AAA and AA, respectively, though both are struggling mightily with their control. Sweeney has been really good for the A’s with a .300/.354/.405 line in 200 at-bats. Swisher has recently turned it up, but overall he’s been a disappointment this season. At 28, he didn’t fit into the rebuilding plan of the A’s.

Traded a PTBNL for Jack Cust
His batting average may never be pretty (currently .221), but he still leads the team in on-base percentage (.361), home runs (15) and slugging percentage (.413) for qualified batters. He has 41 home runs and 125 RBIs since becoming an Athletic in May of last year. That alone is worth a player to be named later.

Signed Frank Thomas twice, once for $500K (2006) and this year for $390K
This most recent time was after Toronto discarded him to the scrap heap due to a slow start. He put up a .933 OPS in 91-at bats before hitting the disabled list with tendinitis in right quad. The first time around was amazingly successful. After two down years eaten up by injury, Beane took a chance on Thomas and watched him put up a .270/.381/.545 line in 466 at-bats with 39 home runs and 114 runs batted in.

Those are just four recent moves that worked out very well for Beane and the A’s so why is everyone so fearful that this Harden trade will be a remarkable disaster for the A’s? One of the reasons being bandied about is the inclusion of Chad Gaudin. Hats off to Gaudin who has performed well in his role between the rotation and bullpen, but he isn’t much to write home about and will likely be exposed badly in Wrigley Field. Last year, he was masterful in the first half with a 2.88 ERA and 8-3 record in 18 starts. His 4.0 walks per nine screamed “trouble” for the second half. Lo and behold, he was 3-10 with a 6.30 ERA in 90 second-half innings. The control actually got worse with 5.2 walks per nine after the break. He had a 3.99 home ERA against a 4.84 on the road in 199.7 innings last year. This year, it was an even more glaring exploitation of his home field with a 2.25/4.99 split in favor of McAfee Coliseum.

It’s not all bad for Gaudin, though, as he has quelled the control issue for now with 2.4 walks per nine. Even still, his inclusion to the trade does not doom the A’s or the give the Cubs an automatic ticket to the postseason. Given their propensity to develop arms, I’m almost certain that Oakland has several Chad Gaudins floating around their minor league system.

This is the kind of trade that can be a win for both. It doesn’t eliminate the A’s from contention and if Harden continues at pace or something near pace, it most definitely helps counteract the Brewers’ acquisition of C.C. Sabathia thus improving their chances to win the Central. For the A’s, Gallagher will enter the rotation without issue, but more importantly is that Murton may be able to offer their anemic offense a boost. Patterson gives them some depth on the infield that they desperately need given the fragility of Eric Chavez, Bobby Crosby (both of whom are currently DL’d) and Mark Ellis.

Given the limitations Beane deals with as Oakland’s GM, it is imperative that he avoids risk whenever possible. A Carl Pavano situation would decimate the A’s and while Harden is significantly more talented than Pavano, his inability to consistently take the mound was too much for a risk for the A’s. Though still just 26, Harden’s free agency is right around the corner (post ’09, I believe) and he will command a large sum despite that lingering health concern. Beane has decided to let someone else roll the dice with that money and get something in return.

Maybe Harden pitches well the rest of 2008 and does really well through mid-July in 2009 as well giving him highest value yet entering next season’s trade deadline, but a more likely scenario is that he’s frequently in and out of the rotation during that time alternately looking like Pedro Martinez on the mound and Mark Prior on the DL. Regardless of how it eventually plays out (remember, hindsight is 20/15), Beane wisely assessed the situation and made a strong trade for his ballclub.

Monday: 07.7.2008

Midseason Pacing

We’re a good bit over the “true” halfway point of 81 games, but still a week away from the observed middle point of the season, the All-Star Game, so I thought I’d take a look at how the league was pacing in a few statistics through Sunday:

The first half delves into pitching performance while the back-end takes a peek at some pacing in the hitting department, most specifically power. The primary reason I put together the chart was because I had suspected that Complete Games were up this year. Honestly this was probably because last year’s league leader, Roy Halladay, already had six after racking up seven during the entire 2007 campaign. Therefore I thought, perhaps foolishly, that since Halladay was doing it at a more frequent pace, the league must be as well. It is, but hardly at anything close to a record-breaking pace. Furthermore, the 2008 pace is well off the three-year average from 2005-2007 that was undoubtedly much “dirtier” than the game is today.

The league pace is up 8% on Shutouts from a year ago, though I could’ve easily guessed that as a diehard Detroit Tigers fan. Despite having what many believed was one of the best lineups ever constructed, the Tigers have been blanked a vomit-inducing 10 times this season! Their futility alone serves for half of the growth over 2007 and covers all of the difference between the 2008 pace and the three-year average (and then some)!

It was anecdotal evidence that also led me to thinking that pace of Saves was up significantly led by Francisco Rodriguez‘ record-breaking pace as well as George Sherrill‘s bid for 50. I remember seeing Sherrill relieve Felix Hernandez in a Tacoma Rainier’s game against the Round Rock Express a couple years ago. I thought he was pretty good and would eventually be a formidable reliever, but I didn’t think he had 50-save stuff. Of course a look at his peripherals beget that he doesn’t have 50-save stuff (5.1 BB/9). Nevertheless, saves have remained rather static over the past three seasons and this year’s pace is no different.

Naturally I was expecting that with Shutouts up, Runs per Game would be down. Or perhaps I thought they were down because of the article from a few weeks ago I did on power being down. Either way, my beliefs were confirmed as the RpG is down 0.3 from last year (and from the three-year average incidentally). This is likely due in large part to Home Runs still being down 7% over the three-year average and 3% from a season ago. Doubles are down a tick as well quelling the idea that the would-be Home Runs are turned into Doubles. Triples, a seemingly very unpredictable occurrence, are way down from both last and the three-year average. I haven’t the slightest clue as to what that might mean.

Thursday: 07.3.2008

Player Focus 7.3.08

Daniel Cabrera pulled the first Player Focus reverse jinx by going out and throwing a complete game against the Kansas City Royals last night. I guess he reads the blog! 🙂 I’m still not buying.

June Swoon Continues Downward Spiral for Gutierrez
After smacking 13 home runs in just 271 at-bats and showing the proclivity to obliterate lefties (.919 OPS), many believed Franklin Gutierrez was ready to make the leap in 2008. Instead he has gone from bad to worse to each month bottoming out last month with a .430 OPS! Worse yet is that he can’t even hit lefties (.607 OPS) anymore either. The 25-year old looked ready to offer a solid power-speed mix similar to that of teammate Grady Sizemore, albeit on a lower level. With a disgusting .222/.274/.328 line, he isn’t even getting regular at-bats right now.

Outside of the absolute deepest AL-Only leagues, it is virtually impossible to justify rostering Gutierrez. There are 10s of better outfield options on the wire in mixed leagues and almost as many in 10 to 12-team AL-Only leagues as well. I was a proponent of his coming into the season, but until he learns some discipline at the dish, he will continue to flounder. The minor leagues could also be in his future.

Another Gem Moves Billingsley Over .500
I was also a strong proponent of Billingsley entering the season and that relationship has proven to be much more fruitful. Eight innings of shutout ball against the Astros on Thursday brought his record up to 8-7 and his ERA down to 3.12. Allowing just seven base runners in the outing brought his WHIP to serviceable 1.31. Walks have been a sore spot all season (4.0 BB/9), but he allowed just one this evening. In fact, control has been the hurdle keeping Billingsley from stardom for his entire career (4.4 BB/9), but remember that he is just 23 years old.

He remains destined for superstardom given his career trajectory thus far and he is a primary target of mine if I’m building for the future. Frankly, he’s a target of mine regardless of my team’s chances this year, but he especially becomes someone to seek if he has a desirable price for next year and perhaps even 2010.

Huff Surpasses 2007 HR Total w/2 on Thursday
Earlier this week, CBS Sportsline had an article about Aubrey Huff as their lead on fantasy baseball sites. I didn’t click through and read the piece, but it was no doubt flattering the 31-year old veteran for his excellent 1st half. He made the most of his national attention with a two home run performance on Thursday against the Kansas City Royals. They were home runs 16 and 17, which gives him two more than he had in all of 2007 despite 235 more at-bats than he’s had so far this season. His vintage 1st half could make him prime trade bait for rebuilding O’s.

The surprising first half of the Baltimore Orioles (43-41) has been key to Huff’s success with respect to his runs scored and runs driven in figures. They aren’t the Texas Rangers or Chicago Cubs, but few would’ve guessed that the O’s would have the league’s 13th-best OPS (.746) at the halfway mark. Three other team members (Nick Markakis, Brian Roberts and Luke Scott) have OPS totals above .800 while Ramon Hernandez, Adam Jones and Kevin Millar have had their moments as well. If you’re in an AL-Only league that punishes players traded out of the league, Huff should be considered high risk because even with their pleasantly surprising first half, the O’s are in 4th place in their division. Too bad they don’t play in the NL West. Even 90 cents on the dollar for Huff might be worth it if you’re in the thick of a pennant race where his departure would cause a significant void in your lineup.