Archive for ‘Rankings’

Thursday: 06.9.2011

SP List Update – 40% Mile Marker

As we creep toward the 40% marker in the season (24 teams have played at least 38% of their games, the Yankees are the low mark at 36%), I feel it is time to offer up a revamped starting pitcher list so you can assess your arms with more than half of the season left.  There is still plenty of time to make a move so unless you have a team ravaged by star player injuries, don’t give up.

In the SP Guide, I broke the arms down in five tiers ranging from aces to deep prospects.  For the update, we’re just going 116 arms deep with fantasy-usable guys.  These 116 were broken up into four tiers and the tiers are just a little different than you will remember from the guide.  With the pitching-heavy landscape the way it is, tier three as it was constructed this preseason would be too large so I broke it up into two with the new tier four essentially bumping down the old four & five into five & six.  Is that confusing enough?

Tier 1 is still ace-level guys.

Tier 2 is near-ace-level guys.

Tier 3 is all single & deep mixed league must-start guys.

Tier 4 is matchup guys is most formats except the deeper single leagues.

I will also soon post a “Watch List” of guys who aren’t currently in rotations or even in the majors, but could make an impact during the summer.

Tier 1

There isn’t much change her and that’s on purpose.  This tier is reserved for the truly elite and two-plus months isn’t enough to boost someone up unless they were already toting a rock-solid skills profile and were Tier 2 arms from the preseason.  There were only four changes within this grouping from the preseason: two in, two out.  (Note: I’m not going to comment on everyone in this update, espec. w/the elite guys.)

Roy Halladay (PHI) – Duh.

Felix Hernandez (SEA)

Tim Lincecum (SF)

Cole Hamels (PHI) – I did my best to get y’all on the Hamels Train.  I put him here in the preseason; hope you’re reaping the benefits.

Cliff Lee (PHI) – Oh my jeezorz, his ERA is 3.62!  And because of that he is probably my #1 pitching trade target.  Why?  How about a 5.0 K/BB.  Sure it isn’t last year’s otherworldly 10.3 K/BB mark, but he does have a 10.3 in his profile this year: his K/9.

[T1 Addition] David Price (TB) –I had a little concern about his draft day cost given his tendency for walks, but that hasn’t been a problem at all this year (down from 3.4 to 1.4 BB/9) leading to a 5.9 K/BB.  He reversed his ERA/FIP trend whereby his FIP is now 2.71 (3.42 last year) and his ERA is 3.35 (2.72 last year).  Invest.

Dan Haren (LAA)

Clayton Kershaw (LAD)

Justin Verlander (DET)

Tommy Hanson (ATL)

Jon Lester (BOS) – He moved down a bit within the tier, but nothing in his skill set has me particularly worried.  The home runs are more a product of a high HR/FB than anything else.  The bump down is more of a reward to the others than a disparagement of Lester.

[T1 Addition] James Shields (TB) – The second T1 addition is another Ray.  His results are finally starting to match his elite skills.  His 83% LOB% rate will dwindle, but there is a strong chance that his 14% HR/FB will as well thus any ERA deterioration should not be too drastic.  This is why we draft skills and not previous season ERAs.

Jered Weaver (LAA) – His ERA is 3.29 since posting a 0.99 in six sparkling April starts.  The former should be the expectation going forward with anything better being a bonus.

Matt Cain (SF)

CC Sabathia (NYY) – The strikeout rate continues a three-year decline, but a walk rate decline in concert has left the K/BB rate intact.  He’s always been good at limiting home runs, but his 0.4 HR/9 so far this year is inflated by a 4.4% HR/FB so I wouldn’t bet on a continuation.  Still a bankable stud, but toward the bottom of that class.

T1 Roundup: Price, Shields added; J.Johnson, Carpenter dropped

 —

Tier 2

Plenty of change here.  Most of the movers in and out of this tier have shown significant skills growth or deterioration that isn’t completely out of left field thus a move could reasonably be made after just 40% of the season.

Ricky Romero (TOR)

Shaun Marcum (MIL) – The reverse split from last year seems to have been an anomaly two months into this season allowing him to go from good to great in his debut NL season.

Yovani Gallardo (MIL) – Caused a panic for some back in April, but skills are back in check over his last six starts.  Expect him to keep chiseling away at that 3.72 ERA over the summer.

Zack Greinke (MIL) – The career-best strikeout and walk rates may not hold, but the 62% LOB% definitely will not hold meaning his 4.83 ERA will improve dramatically.

 [T2 Addition] Chris Carpenter (STL) – He was squeezed out of Tier 1 because the massive amount of hits allowed is at least partially due to factors beyond his control: the defense, but the skills remain very strong so he is still a strong Tier 2 and the buying window is rapidly closing if it hasn’t already.

Ricky Nolasco (FLO) – Are we going to have another season where his elite skills don’t yield equivalent results?  How does he give up 15 hits to the Dodgers??  I still love the talent enough to bet on him.

Ian Kennedy (ARI)

Daniel Hudson (ARI)

[T2 Addition] Josh Johnson (FLO) – Dropped from Tier 1 because injury concerns hang overhead and threaten his value.  This ranking is still a bet on Johnson, to be honest.

Chad Billingsley (LAD)

Ubaldo Jimenez (COL) – He drops within the tier, but it was laughable to see him getting dropped in leagues throughout May.

Mat Latos (SD)

Matt Garza (CHC) – The stuff is still ahead of the results, but he’s been punished by ugly .364 BABIP and 63% LOB% rates, too.  I was worried about his flyball ways in Wrigley, but a drastic change from 36% to 50% groundballs has been paired with a miniscule 5% HR/FB to avoid gopheritis issues thus far.  Regression to his HR/FB rate will almost certainly be mitigated by BABIP and LOB improvements which could make him an excellent second half bet.

 [T2 Addition] Jaime Garcia (STL) – For some reason this Cardinals groundballer hasn’t been bitten by the drop in defensive quality like Carpenter.  That doesn’t mean it won’t happen at some point, but skills improvement has driven his big start.  If it weren’t for an 11-run thrashing in 3.3 innings at the end of May, he’d be a strong contender for NL starter at the All-Star Game.

[T2 Addition] Josh Beckett (BOS) – All the bad luck suffered in 2010 has come back to him in the first two-plus months of 2011.  Skills remain strong, but not 2.01 ERA strong.   

[T2 Addition] Anibal Sanchez (FLO)

[T2 Addition] Jhoulys Chacin (COL) – Traded some Ks for a ton of groundballs (from 47% to 59%) and has become one of the more underrated arms in the game.

[T2 Addition] CJ Wilson (TEX) – Cut more than a walk off of his rate so far while adding some strikeouts.  His skills now match the 3.35 ERA he posted in 2010.

[T2 Addition] Trevor Cahill (OAK) – He has added strikeouts, but also walks.  His skills still say his ERA should be nearly a run higher than it is right now.  Last year he managed to avoid regression, be careful if you bet on a repeat going forward.

[T2 Addition] Gio Gonzalez (OAK)

Max Scherzer (DET) – His skills are intact when compared to last year’s.  We have seen him go on these skids before, hopefully this one doesn’t require a trip to Toledo.  Stay the course.

Hiroki Kuroda (LAD)

Gavin Floyd (CHW)

T2 Roundup: Carpenter, J.Johnson, Garcia, Becketter, Sanchez, Chacin, Wilson, Cahill, Gonzalez added; Oswalt, B.Anderson, Lewis, Lilly, Dempster, Danks, Baker, Myers, Liriano dropped

 

Tier 3

The T3 from the preseason was 78 players deep and now this T3/T4 breakup is 79 deep.  Like I said, I basically just split the two as there is a new pitching landscape that we are dealing with now.

Michael Pineda (SEA) – The skills say he is no doubt legit, but he has also had luck on his side, too.  That combined with the dreaded “second time around the league” and the threat of an innings cap later in the year bump him down a little lower than most probably would’ve expected to see him.

Jordan Zimmermann (WAS)

Brandon Morrow (TOR) – Filthy stuff remains, but the rest of his skills profile is out of whack.  I’ll bet on the Ks and near-3.0 K/BB rate yielding better than a 4.50 ERA the rest of the way.

Roy Oswalt (PHI) – He has lost nearly three strikeouts per game.  His 7% rise in groundball rate (to 53%) isn’t enough to alleviate fears of those lost Ks.  Plus in innings cap leagues, it is tough to trot out 5.3 K/9 for 170+ innings.

Ted Lilly (LAD) – Ks have dipped a bit, but BBs have come down in concert meaning the ERA should trickle down soon as well.

John Danks (CHW)

Wandy Rodriguez (HOU)

Scott Baker (MIN) – Home runs are a bit higher than usual for Baker as are his walks, if both regress toward the mean his 3.86 ERA should see some worthwhile improvement.

Erik Bedard (SEA) – It’s never been about talent, only health.

Brian Matusz (BAL) – Only two starts so far this year, but I’m sold on the talent.

Ryan Dempster (CHC) – Skills are intact from last year, but an ERA 2 runs higher?  That’s coming down.

Madison Bumgarner (SF)

Justin Masterson (CLE) – He was my favorite Indians pitcher before the season and remains so now.

Jair Jurrjens (ATL) – Count me as a non-believer in his 1.75 ERA.  The skills just don’t support it.  Sell now.

Bartolo Colon (NYY) – Durability is my only concern.  Honestly, if he was 32, he’d be in Tier 2 with these skills.  You may want to sell just to avoid the unknown.

Tim Stauffer (SD)

Bud Norris (HOU) – Walks were down nicely in the first month, but have since bumped back up to four.  The Ks remain intriguing enough to roster what amounts to a below average ERA at this point (yes, a 3.67 ERA yields a 99 ERA+).

Chris Narveson (MIL) – Is that you, Dave Bush?  Needs to learn how to work with runners on (66% LOB%) and the ERA will plummet.

Edwin Jackson (CHW) – Absurdly high BABIP is really hurting him at this point.  The skills are exactly in line with last year.  Second half surge is in order.

Jeremy Hellickson (TB) – The ERA and WHIP match the lofty expectations, but the skills sure don’t meaning the regression could hit hard unless his skills jump back toward his 2010 levels.  Keeper leagues hold strong, re-drafters sell.

Johnny Cueto (CIN) – Ks have slipped yearly since his rookie season and while the groundball rate has risen from 42% to 53%, I’m certain the 2.27 ERA can’t hold barring major changes.

Clay Buchholz (BOS)

Jonathan Sanchez (SF)

James McDonald (PIT)

Colby Lewis (TEX) – Holy home run, Batman!  His 2.0 HR/9 should decline, but you know how it can get in Arlington during the summer.  Plus the strikeouts haven’t held from last year.  Tread lightly.

Alexei Ogando (TEX) – He may well pitch a full season without issue, but it won’t be at a 2.10 ERA.  The skills control is elite (2.0 BB/9), but other than that it’s been a lot of favorable circumstance (.210 BABIP, 88% LOB).

Kyle Lohse (STL)

Tim Hudson (ATL)

Rick Porcello (DET)

Jonathon Niese (NYM)

Ryan Vogelsong (SF) – Ks were slipping throughout May, but then got seven against Colorado in first June start.  Skills support success, but not a 1.68 ERA.

Charlie Morton (PIT) – Disgustingly elite groundball rate can sustain success, but probably not this much. And while it can also cover low strikeout rate, that doesn’t do innings-cap fantasy leaguers much good.

Aaron Harang (SD)

Derek Lowe (ATL) – K’d 5+ six times in first nine starts, just once in last five.

Dillon Gee (NYM) – Drastic home/road ERA splits, yet strikes out 1.3 more batters per game on the road.

Doug Fister (SEA) – Not just a Safeco product so far this year.

Chris Capuano (NYM)

Randy Wolf (MIL)

Jake Arrieta (BAL) – Could have a big second half a la teammate Matusz last year.

Jeff Karstens (PIT)

Jason Hammel (COL)

 

Tier 4

For mixed leagues these are the kind of guys you can stream with good matchups and who are at least one skill away from being full-time options.  These guys are owned in just about every AL/NL only league.

Chris Volstad (FLO) – A lot of skills improvement early on being hidden by disastrous 16% HR/FB rate.  Monitor.

Edinson Volquez (CIN) – A strikeout an inning guys should be on a roster so if you have a reserve spot, he’s worth holding to see if the control improves over the summer.

Philip Humber (CHW) –This is not a sub-3.00 ERA pitcher barring a skills change.

Ervin Santana (LAA)

Derek Holland (TEX) – Remember, he is still just 24 so he is still growing.  This is his first season as a full-time starter.

Zach Britton (BAL) – There will be ups and downs all summer.

Jeremy Guthrie (BAL)

Brett Myers (HOU)

AJ Burnett (NYY)

Brian Duensing (MIN) – Knew he’d regress from last year, but skills have held better than I thought so the 4.73 ERA should come down.

Randy Wells (CHC)

Rubby de la Rosa (LAD) – I really like this kid.

Travis Wood (CIN)

Carlos Carrasco (CLE)

Mike Leake (CIN)

Paul Maholm (PIT)

Jason Vargas (SEA)

Josh Tomlin (CLE) – Regression Monster go NOM-NOM-NOM!  Last 3 starts: 18 IP, 16 ER.  Great control, but little else.

Carlos Zambrano (CHC)

Francisco Liriano (MIN) – Fantasy Russian Roulette.

Zach Duke (ARI)

Danny Duffy (KC) – Been crushed just once, I think he could have a nice summer.  Watch him carefully.

Fausto Carmona (CLE)

Nick Blackburn (MIN) – I just don’t get it… this guy has an endless supply of smoke & mirrors.

Jeff Francis (KC)

Phil Coke (DET)

Brad Penny (DET)

Kevin Correia (PIT) – 6th in the NL for Starting Pitcher Run Support, but in fairness, also 8-of-14 quality starts and has allowed 2 or fewer in all eight.

Joel Pineiro (LAA) – If he can get back to his career 5.5 K/9, he is a lot more usable.

Wade Davis (TB)

Josh Outman (OAK)

Tom Gorzelanny (WAS)

Matt Harrison (TEX)

Juan Nicasio (COL)

Javier Vazquez (FLO) – Strikeout an inning the last five starts, but two 6 ER outings.  Tough to figure out right now, but I’d still monitor.

Carl Pavano (MIN) – Sub-4.0 K rate… innings-cap league or not, that’s tough to roster for more than a matchup here & there.

Tuesday: 06.7.2011

ESPN Franchise Draft: Just Missed

Last week, I revealed my top 30 picks if I were building an MLB Franchise from scratch.  The hardest ones for me were Harper and Trout.  As minor leaguers, there is just so much risk tied to them and to start a franchise with them is really tough thing to do, but having seen Harper and having read so much about Trout, I feel like they are as close to sure things as prospects can get.

I want to do this exercise again in the offseason and see how things shift & change.  I also wanted to share those who hit the cutting room floor as it were.  I did a lot of shifting up and down throughout the process to the point that I even did some while I was doing the write ups.  It’s a tough exercise, but tons of fun for sure.

Here are 10 guys who just missed:

Matt Kemp (CF) – This one was really hard for me as I’ve been a Kemp fan for years.  If he continues to have a great season, it will be almost impossible to leave him off when I run through this again.

Cole Hamels (SP) – He doesn’t get the love he deserves as far as I am concerned.  Even though he didn’t make my top 30, I still have him as the 6th-best starting pitcher in baseball with this ranking.  He’s great and continues to improve.  I get that Roy Halladay and Cliff Lee overshadow him a bit this year, but I still don’t get how Eric Karabell doesn’t see him as an ace.  Teams can have more than one ace.  Philly just happens to have three and maybe four depending on your definition.

Brian McCann (C) – A remarkably consistent backstop with a great bat.  If the two young catchers, Posey & Santana, hadn’t emerged in the last year, McCann was a shoo-in for this list.

Brandon Phillips (2B) – At 30, he’s a bit older for a franchise starter, but a middle of the order bat and brilliant glove at second base make this late bloomer someone to consider.

Clayton Kershaw (SP) – I had him in, took him out, put him back in and eventually ended up with him just out.  It is more the depth of high quality arms in the big leagues than it is anything against Kershaw.  There’s a good chance we haven’t seen anywhere near his best work yet which is scary… for the rest of the NL West.

Drew Stubbs (CF) – What he lacks in his bat right now, he makes up for it with dynamic defense and stellar base-running. Still, that’s not enough to earn him the nod over the likes of Andrew McCutchen and Carlos Gonzalez, my top two CFs.

Dustin Pedroia (2B) – Not quite himself yet this year, but I’m not forgetting him because of 57 mediocre games.  He didn’t make the cut because of better options ahead of him, not necessarily anything within his profile.

David Wright (3B) – If I’m not going to bury Pedroia over 57 games, there’s no way I can ditch Wright after 39.  I will reserve judgment for when he’s fully healthy.  For now, I’m betting on the track record and that says he’s a top 40 player at a very thin position.

Matt Holliday (LF) – Scoff at the age of 31 for a franchise foundation, but how do you ignore this bat?  He is simply one of the best middle-of-the-order bats in baseball.  If you started a franchise with him, you’d lean toward winning right away instead of youth and prospects, but that isn’t necessarily a bad thing.  Especially since there would still be plenty of talent to balance your approach if the entire pool of baseball was re-drafted.

Joe Mauer  (C) – Despite being the cornerstone for my favorite team’s rival, I love Mauer, but I also realize that this isn’t fantasy baseball.  There is no certainty that he remains a catcher going forward given this spate of injuries that has limited him to nine games.  Beyond that, I love the batting average, but I’m not starting my franchise with someone who hits nine home runs a year despite being a middle-of-the-order hitter.  Still, I don’t want to be clouded by these past two months so I still considered him right down to the end.

Friday: 06.3.2011

My Top 30 Franchise Picks

On Wednesday I wrote a bit about the ESPN Franchise Draft whereby they had a one round draft under the premise of who you would start a franchise with if every single player was thrown back into a pool and the league essentially started from scratch.  That piece focused on Doug Glanville’s ludicrous selection of Wilson Ramos and I proceeded to name 50 guys off the top of my head that I would definitely have taken ahead of Ramos.

Now I want to put myself within the draft and offer up my top 30 picks for a draft like this.  There are so many things to consider in this exercise.  Apart from the obvious of pure production on the field, there is age, position, health and marketability.  I’m not sure how many people considered that last one within their equation, but I think there is at least a shred of it in the pie chart.  After all, I’m building my franchise from the ground up, it doesn’t hurt to start off with a star on and off the field.

So here are my top 30 players to select if I was starting a major league franchise.  Let me know what you think or what your own top 30 looks like in the comments or on Twitter (@sporer).

1. Evan Longoria (3B, 25 years old) – I think it’s a really a coin toss between Longo and the next guy as both play strong defense at premium positions with massive bats.  Both are budding superstars with their best years ahead of them and while I’m not sure you can go wrong, my preference is for Longoria.  I’m trading the step down in position importance (but better defense at it) for an extra year of age with this guy…

2. Troy Tulowitzki (SS, 26 years old) – Both of these first two guys have three elite seasons under their belt so far and are en route to a fourth and as I mentioned Tulow also plays elite defense at a cornerstone position.  It’s also smart to build up the middle, except if it’s with Wilson Ramos, so that’s another checkmark in the pro column for Tulow.  I can’t stress enough how close these first two are for that top spot and if I were picking second in this kind of draft with Longo going first I wouldn’t be the least bit upset “settling” for Tulowitzki.

3. Miguel Cabrera (1B, 28 years old) – I’m sorry, was hitting not a factor in ESPN’s draft?  Cabrera DID NOT GET PICKED among the 30 selections in their draft.  Look, I realize that first base is neither a premium defensive position nor a particularly thin one, but this isn’t an good-but-not-great first base type like Gaby Sanchez, Paul Konerko or Ryan Howard (and truly no offense to any of those three, they’d be pretty high round picks), this is a top three or four hitter in all of baseball who is just starting his prime.  I realize my fandom for Tigers will make many think that’s where I’m coming from on this, but rest assured I’m really not.  It’s common sense.

4. Jason Heyward (RF, 21 years old) To be honest, I wouldn’t destroy someone for taking him #1 overall.  This is a franchise foundation without question: he’s 21, he’s shown he can hang in the majors already over a reasonable sample (123 OPS+ in 187 gms) and he plays an important position.  It’s not as important as the up the middle positions, but it’s not exactly left field/first base, either.  Did I mention he can barely drink legally?  This is a superstar in the making and in case you missed it, he’s five years younger than Tulowitzki.

5. Felix Hernandez (SP, 25 years old) – It might go a bit unnoticed because it is almost expected at this point, but Hernandez has done something a lot blue chip prospect starting pitchers or rather any position of blue chip prospect for that matter fail to do: he’s living up to the hype.  Hype is a dangerous thing in today’s sport culture.  The more you get heaped upon you, even if you didn’t ask for it, the shorter amount of time you have to live up to it.  Hernandez began living up to it right out of the gate with a 2.67 ERA in 84 innings at age 19 back in 2005.  He followed it up with a 4.52 ERA as he struggled with gopheritis (1.1 HR/9), but has shaved his ERA down significantly every year since: 3.92-3.45-2.49-2.27 all while adding innings.  With a rock solid skill set and the proven capability to handle workloads easily exceeding 200 innings, King Felix is the kind of pitcher you can build a franchise around with minimal risk (not zero risk, ALL pitchers have risk… it’s an unnatural motion of the body).

6. Albert Pujols (1B, 31 years old) – I, for one, am not going to let two months of hitting like a mere mortal lead me to believe that Pujols is still the best pure hitter in the game and possibly ever.  Even at 31, I think he gets back on track this year and then still has at least two more years among the elite and then another three or four as an All-Star stud.  (See also: Rodriguez, Alex)

7. Justin Upton (RF, 23 years old) – It was a shock to see Upton last until the 29th pick in the ESPN draft.  He is 23 years old with three above average seasons including one elite season (2009) and very strong defense in right field.  A legitimate knock against him would be the fact that the has yet to play more than 138 games in his three full seasons, but his track record of nearly 2000 plate appearances of above average play at such a young age with legitimate defense is too much to pass up.

8. Andrew McCutchen (CF, 24 years old) – This is an overlooked budding star who plays an elite defensive position pretty well already and continues to improve.  He is an across-the-board contributor offensively, too, capable of marked improvement as he gets older.  He can bat first or third, too.  He was another snub that surprised me.

9. Carlos Gonzalez (LF/CF/RF, 25 years old) – Currently a left fielder, CarGo can reasonably play any of the three outfield positions which increases his value for the team drafting him as both of the other positions are more valuable.  His 2010 campaign showed us his upside with the bat while his downside is probably something like .280, 25 bombs and 20 steals with runs scored & driven in depending on the team you put around him.  He was a three time top 32 (18th, 22nd, 32nd) prospect by Baseball America and he is showing why day after day.

10. Ryan Zimmerman (3B, 26 years old) – Perhaps he was forgotten because he is currently on the disabled list, but he was yet another stunning snub in ESPN’s draft.  What doesn’t he bring to the table?  Brilliant defense and excellent offense all wrapped up in a 26-year old package.  If he wasn’t playing in Washington, he would definitely have a higher profile and perhaps get the recognition he deserves as an all-around star player.  Harper & Strasburg get all the press, but Zimmerman is the franchise leader right now.  Those two will join him and Jayson Werth to give them a great foundation for competing in the near future.

11. Joey Votto (1B, 27 years old) – I am a huge fan of Votto.  I was before his MVP breakout last year and remain so now, but I don’t think he is  a high-30s home run hitter going forward, not with the skills he has displayed throughout his career.  That doesn’t mean he isn’t an elite force in middle a lineup, though.  What he lacks in home runs, he makes up for with plenty of other base hits (.317 career hitter including a yearly rise since 2008: .297-.322-.324-.338) and a ton of doubles.  Plus he is just 27 so he could realistically deliver a sustained power jump in the coming years.

12. Ryan Braun (LF, 27 years old) – His bat is so overwhelmingly awesome that his below average defense at a low-impact position barely matters.  He plays an offense-heavy position and yet still outclasses his peers by no less than 30% in any given season (career 141 OPS+; low: 130, high: 161 so far in ’11, but 154 for a completed season).  Throw in a tremendous work ethic and great personality and you have a superstar cornerstone to build your franchise around.

13. Tim Lincecum (SP, 27 years old) – It is frightening to think that he might be “boring” at this point as the next class of ace-potential young arms is making its presence felt in Year 2 of The Pitcher.  Ho-hum all The Freak does is continue to strike out the world (three straight K titles) and post excellent, Cy Young-caliber numbers.  After an un-Freak-like 3.43 ERA and 1.27 WHIP in 2010, Lincecum appears to have taken steps to ensure that doesn’t happen again and has come out with a career-best 2.6 BB/9 so far this season with very little cost to his strikeout rate (down from 9.8 to 9.5 K/9).

14. Mike Stanton (RF, 21 years old) – Taking a guy who hasn’t yet reached 600 plate appearances at the major league level is risky but his off-the-charts power potential, youth and big time defense are worth taking the plunge to build around.

15. Jay Bruce (RF, 24 years old) – Between he and Stanton it’s another coin toss tradeoff where personal preference plays a big role.  Would you rather have more of a track record yet keep the power potential and star defense?  OK, it only costs three years.  Some would trade the years for the comfort of certainty.  I went the other way in this instance.

16. Bryce Harper (RF, 18 years old) – It’s really hard to take any player who has yet to see a pitch in the major leagues and build your franchise around him, but everything I have seen from this kid suggests he is worth it.  Still it’s a little scary starting your organization with someone who hasn’t even been to AA yet and then take him 17th overall, let alone 9th which is where Eric Karabell took him in ESPN’s draft.

17. Mike Trout (CF, 19 years old) – The only other prospect in my 30, Trout was also selected in the ESPN draft (12th) despite having never played in the majors.  His potential is slightly more realized with a season and a half (spread across 3 years) of professional ball under his belt and 47 games of mashing AA (.306/.413/.514).  He should no doubt hit AAA this year and could even debut for the Angels at some point in ’11.  He is a tick below Harper for me, but like a few others, this one could go either way.

18. Jose Reyes (SS, 28 years old) – Kind of forgotten after the last two years in which he totaled just 169 games, but he was still an above average player at a great position to build around.  He has only once been an elite defender, but he’s not a stone-handed, no-range shortstop, either.  I prefer someone who can make plays as I would definitely favor groundball/strikeout pitchers so I need my infield to be able to pick it.

19. Stephen Drew (SS, 28 years old) – This one will no doubt surprise people, but he has an above average bat with good-to-great defense (higher defensive value than Tulowitzki last year) at the premium position.  I would prefer as well-rounded a player as I can get depending on pick and who is available and Drew fits the bill nicely.  As I mentioned with Reyes, my infield defense needs to be tight or else they will hurt my franchise’s pitchers so I will bypass this next guy, who might not even be a shortstop soon, for the non-elite, but still very good Drew.

20. Hanley Ramirez (SS, 27 years old) – His ranking here is not an overreaction to his struggling two months, it is because we aren’t doing a fantasy draft here so his horrible defense matters.  Like I said, it might not even be sensible to leave him at short in a year or two which would cut into his overall value.  The offensive numbers are great, but dwindling and we may have seen the best of Ramirez with his .342 average in 2009 and 33 home runs in 2008.

21. Jose Bautista (RF/3B, 30 years old) – He was tough to slot.  He’s definitely become one of baseball’s best hitters in short order, but the track record remains scant with exactly a year and three months (starting in Sept. of ’09) of elite-level production.  Alas nothing in his profile suggests he can’t continue to be a great player and he has the flexibility of right or third base.  He is much better in right, but improvements at third suggest he wouldn’t kill you there if you acquired a big time right fielder later in the draft.

22. Adrian Gonzalez (1B, 29 years old) – Was his first basemenness (new word!) really enough to dissuade all 30 ESPN drafters from his five full seasons of 141 OPS+ coming into this season and a 149 mark so far this season now that he is out of Petco?  I’m sorry, but aren’t we in a power drought these last two years?  OK, enough questions… there is no question that Gonzalez is a top 30 pick for me.

23. Robinson Cano (2B, 28 years old) A major-impact bat at an up-the-middle position is a premium get and Cano is in the midst of such an impressive prime with the bat that his lagging defense isn’t as concerning.  What is somewhat concerning is a worry that second basemen fall off the table without warning as they reach their early 30s (Roberto Alomar and Brian Roberts to name a few; some fear Chase Utley is next) because of the strains the position puts on the body.

24. David Price (SP, 25 years old) – We are in a peak period for excellent young arms so I’m not inclined to chase one in with the first round pick, especially given the inherent risk associated with them, but there are still some who are a cut above and would earn my pick depending on slotting.  Price is just scratching the surface of his potential and I think he is going to be something truly special.

25. Justin Verlander (SP, 28 years old) – The definition of a workhorse, Verlander piles up the innings with relative ease.  With two no-hitters already to his credit, many believe he could add more as his career progress (more as in multiple, not just another one).  Averaging nearly seven innings a start keeps him long enough to give up some garbage runs at times as he is very good at pitching to the situation, but it also has kept his ERA in the 3.00s throughout his career when he definitely the talent to post a sub-3.00 season or two and make a huge push for a Cy Young Award.

26. Carl Crawford (LF, 29 years old) – Unless I was playing somewhere like Fenway Park that robs a ton of his defensive value, Crawford is an elite all-around asset with plenty left in the tank.  Had he stormed out of the gates in the first two months of the season, I’m sure he’d have been taken in the ESPN Draft, alas you only have one chance to take a closer or a backup catcher in the first round so Crawford was left out.

27. Shin-Soo Choo (RF, 28 years old) – This is a superstar from a pure numbers aspect, but playing for a last place team (until now) like Cleveland the last few years leaves him overshadowed and without the due he deserves.  He is the classic .300/.400/.500 guy with power, speed and defense.  A little older at 28, but hardly too old to build around at 28.

28. Buster Posey (C, 24 years old) – A pick here assumes that his recently-suffered injury won’t incapacitate him anymore than this year or cause a move out from behind the plate because that’s where his value is best, of course.  He will never be a pure slugger contending for home run titles and that is what you would want out of a first baseman being picked to start your franchise.

29. Roy Halladay (SP, 34 years old) – Yes, he is the best pitcher in baseball right now, but I can’t only be focused on the here & now.  He is 34 years old and I’m not sure it is the smartest thing to start a franchise with an arm that old.  Of course, if I was saddled with a later pick in the first round, I would take Halladay and the build my team with a lean toward trying to win immediately.  That doesn’t mean I’d take all old guys, but ties would be broken on who can help more immediately.

30. Carlos Santana (C, 25 years old) – He won’t last at catcher, but that’s OK because his bat is so great that you don’t want him automatically losing games due to the wear and tear of that position.  However, he does have less value at first base because he isn’t a true slugger, at least not yet.  I’ll take him now and enjoy another 2-3 years of him as a catcher/first base hybrid and then hopefully I’ll have a catcher in my organization to take over just as Santana enters his prime as a fully developed hitter.

 

So that’s my list.  I’m sure there are disagreements, perhaps some agreements and plenty of thoughts so feel free to share them.  For reference, here is the ESPN Franchise Draft & Chat.

Wednesday: 06.1.2011

With the 30th Pick in the MLB Restart Draft, Doug Glanville Selects…

When I first heard of the Franchise Player Draft at ESPN, I was intrigued by the idea.  To be honest, I only heard about in passing on Tuesday and knew it was going to be released to the public on Wednesday with a chat to discuss the picks.

If you’re unfamiliar with it, basically they took 30 members somehow tied to baseball whether writers, reporters, talking heads, analysts, etc… and did a one round draft under the premise of “If you were starting a franchise from scratch, you would take…” and they eliminated financial concerns from the equation.  Of course it is tough to think of players independent of their current financial and team control situations.

On the whole, it’s a pretty innocuous exercise that can be fun to discuss and think about on your own and wonder who you might take if you were given the chance to make a pick.  At least it’s better than those fake press conferences they used to do years ago.  Unfortunately, Doug Glanville had to ruin it.  There are more than 30 great players in baseball for whom you could make a case as a franchise starter, so there were going to be snubs regardless, but Glanville made a joke of the whole thing.

Let me say up front that I quite like Glanville.  I have his book in queue to read on my iPad later this summer, I like that he is a huge Strat-o-Matic fan (a recently adopted hobby of mine that has actually cut into my book reading in the last two months) and I respect his thoughts and opinions on the game.  The Penn educated former outfielder is no dummy and he knows and loves this great game.

All of that said, his pick in this draft was stupid.  It’s 100% indefensible and makes absolutely no sense no matter how you slice it.  With the 30th pick in this draft he took Washington Nationals catcher Wilson Ramos.  Say what???  Glanville is the only person in the world who would start a major league franchise with Wilson Ramos.  Wilson Ramos’ mom wouldn’t take him with her first pick.  Ramos probably wouldn’t take himself if he was player/GM of a franchise.

Glanville’s rationale for the pick was that he wanted an up-the-middle presence to be the foundation of his team.  See?  I told you he was smart.  That is smart thinking.  If you’re building a team from the ground up, you want the best players you can get at catcher, shortstop, centerfield and second base.  Of course, his execution of an otherwise smart plan was an egregious misfire.  Ramos isn’t a complete shlub of player, he would eventually get drafted if this thing went several rounds, but there is no way he is the 30th guy off the board.

My first thought when I saw Glanville’s pick and justification was “I can think of 50 players of the top of my head, fulfilling his up-the-middle desires, that I would take ahead of Ramos.  And I could no doubt reach 200 if I veered from the middle of the field strategy instead just going for the best player.”  Alas, I went with my first thought and began punching up the 50 names.  Here are my results:

Ranked in Order of Preference by Position

I’m not trying to be smug or arrogant when I say coming up with that list wasn’t hard at all.  I also want to be clear that I wouldn’t necessarily take all 50 of those players with the #30 overall pick in a draft like this just that I would take every single of them over Ramos.  Ramos is a three time top-100 prospect with a reasonably bright future and the Twins would kill to have him back (they’d trade 3 Matt Cappses at this point), but there is simply ZERO justification for Glanville making that pick.  It’s like when someone takes their 10th-13th round sleeper in round 4 of a fantasy draft.  Sure, the player isn’t a completely worthless bum or anything, but there was no need to take him there as he’d have been available several rounds later even as a reach.

The clear #1 on that list of 50 for me is Andrew McCutchen.  He meets the up-the-middle criteria, he’s young and he’s also a very good hitter with across-the-board production.  Who would I have picked regardless of position had I been in that #30 spot?  You’ll have to wait until tomorrow for that.  I’m going to post my top 30 picks for this kind of draft.

 

Tuesday: 03.22.2011

18 of My Favorite Pitchers for 2011, Part 2

Here is the second half of my favorites for this year:

Part 1

10. Kevin Slowey – Without a spot in the rotation his value is going to plummet, but it’s a buying opportunity.  Don’t draft solely for April.  It’s a 6-month grind and skills almost always win out.  Slowey has more talent than Nick Blackburn and Brian Duensing, but to start the season both will have rotation spots while Slowey will work out of the bullpen.  Slowey will be an afterthought even in AL-Only leagues and I would be more than willing to slot in him as your 8th or 9th pitcher for a few bucks and wait for him to win a spot that he deserves.  A 4.6 K/BB rate doesn’t lie.  He’s long been one of my favorite pitchers and a poor decision by Minnesota at the beginning of the season isn’t going to change that.

11. Tim Stauffer – The former #4 pick overall took a while (29 y/o in 2011), but it looks like he’s finally paying dividends on that lofty draft status.  He plays in the perfect park for pitchers, showed a major uptick in groundballs last year (up to 55%) and has seen his team add strong middle infielders (Jason Bartlett & Orlando Hudson) to field those grounders adding up to a potential breakout season.  There is a slight premium on anyone in PETCO for obvious reasons, but Stauffer seems to be firmly entrenched off the radar in most standard drafts.  He went for $8 in NL Tout Wars and could easily return twice that when you consider what PETCO did for someone with lesser skills than Stauffer in Jon Garland.

12. Chris Narveson – His near-5.00 ERA from 2010 (4.99 in 168 IP) is sure to scare most away, but he pitched much better than that.  He doesn’t have the groundball tilt I usually like out of my pitchers, but with Milwaukee’s horrendous infield defense, that might not be such a bad thing.  He has nice base skills, the next step is learning to work with runners on so he can strand a few more guys.  Part of that is cutting down the long balls, too.  I think he takes a step forward in 2011 and ends up as one of those $1-3 glue guys instrumental in a team’s success.

13. Bud Norris – Like Narveson, his skills were better than his 4.92 ERA indicates, but many will pass based on that figure and the team name on his jersey.  I’d caution strongly against that as Norris has the kind of stuff that “out-of-nowhere” seasons are made of starting with his 9.3 K/9 rate being overshadowed by unimportant factors.  Are you one of those owners dying for an upside pick?  Norris is your guy.  The lofty strikeout rate is matched with an average groundball rate and a BABIP and LOB% combo worse than league norms that could be in for positive regression.  Even if he doesn’t take that major step forward this year, his sub-$5 price tag is at worst an even investment with all of the strikeouts.

14. Carlos Carrasco – We could have a budding Sporer Trifecta of Excellence (patent pending) profile on our hands.  It was only 45 innings of work last year, so temper the expectations a bit, but he had a 7.7 K/9 with an elite 57% groundball rate and his changeup was the best pitch in his arsenal.  This is a 3-time top 54 prospect (2007: 41, 2008: 54, 2009: 52) according to Baseball America so the pedigree is there, too.  Like Norris, his jersey will have some shying away or ignoring him completely, but his first full season in the majors could be a big one.

15. Derek Holland – It seems like I have been touting Holland for so long that he should be older than 24.  Alas, he doesn’t even have 200 major league innings under his belt yet here I am again espousing the virtues of this man’s abilities.  He started to come together in a 57-inning sample last year, but the loss of Cliff Lee opens an opportunity for him to finally prove it over a full season.  Although the sample was tiny, it was nice to see him greatly improve on 2009’s ugly 1.7 HR/9 down to 0.9 a season ago.  That’s about the limit for him if he is to have that breakthrough season many see as a possibility.  He’s one of those popular sleepers so be careful if his value gets too high in your league.

16. Jason Hammel – Similar to several guys on the list whereby he has above average base skills, but is missing one ingredient that keeps him from legitimate success.  For Hammel, it’s an ability to work with runners on as he his LOB% actually got further from league average 2010 leaving him with an ERA a half run higher despite improved skills.  You could easily be looking at $10+ profit out of Hammel if leaves a few extra men on base and continues or improves his already impressive skill set.

17. Chris Tillman – Remember when Tillman was the 22nd-ranked prospect in all of baseball?  It was alllll the way back in 2009.  He then proceeded to dominate AAA for 97 innings posting a 2.70 ERA and 1.15 WHIP with 9.2 K/9 and a 3.8 K/BB.  Later that season he was knocked around in 12 starts in his major league debut resulting in an ugly 5.40 ERA and 1.55 WHIP.  The skills were nothing like his minor league pedigree at 5.4 K/9 and 1.6 K/BB.  It was essentially rinse & repeat for 2010 with 121 strong innings at AAA then 54 ugly ones in the majors.  He turns 23 on Tax Day this year.  Too often the fantasy community gives up on top prospects if they don’t set the world afire right away a la Ryan Braun or Jered Weaver.  This is a post-hype play going for as little as a dollar in some AL-Only leagues who could end up as a tremendous keeper for 2012 and beyond.  Worst case is he is still not ready in 2011 and you cut bait with little invested.

18. Ross Detwiler – This is my biggest spec play of the bunch.  I just think there could be something here with Detwiler.  He has 278 innings of minor league success suggesting he is better than the 106 innings of major league work thus far.  He is the left-handed Tillman with less fanfare and a few years older (OK, I guess there are a enough differences to make that a bad comp).  Point being he showed enough in the minors to be something of a top prospect and though he hasn’t put it all together at the major league level yet, there is reason to believe he still can and will.  Furthering his spec play status is the fact that he’s not going to have a rotation spot on Opening Day, but the four surrounding Jordan Zimmermann are neither bastions of health, nor particularly skilled at pitching so he will get a shot at some point.  If he doesn’t win a bullpen spot, just monitor him.  But if he does make the team out of camp, he could be a high strikeout $1 reliever as he bides his time for a rotation chance.

So there they are, my favorite 18 for 2011.  There is something in here for everyone regardless of what kind of league format you play in.  I guess the only thing missing is minor league prospects, but I posted 50 from each league just a few weeks ago, so you know who I like there.  I know it’s a big draft/auction week for everybody so I’m trying to get as much material out as possible for your last minute prep.  I have a draft tonight, but hopefully I can get another piece up shortly after it finishes.

Monday: 03.21.2011

18 of My Favorite Pitchers for 2011, Part 1

Any fantasy baseball magazine, book or website is bound to have a sleepers section somewhere.  They are a fantasy staple loved by all and for good reason as everyone is looking to get the next big thing at a great price that will propel them to a title and help them for years to come if they play in a keeper league.

Of course in the Information Age we live in these days, it is really hard to get anything by your leaguemates in terms of a legitimate sleeper.  The more obvious sleepers turn up in seemingly every one of these articles all of sudden making them overvalued or at least just fairly priced sapping the value.  I am not here to bash sleeper articles as I have done them for the last five or six years whether here or at the various outlets I have worked for in the past.  I wanted to try a different approach this year.

Instead of worrying about sleeper label and pretending like we are pulling a fast one on our leaguemates, let’s just look at some guys I like for 2011.  These aren’t necessarily sleepers as many will be firmly entrenched on the radar of your opponents.  Nor are they necessarily breakout candidates, either.  After all, who really knows what defines a breakout?  It can mean 10 different things to 10 different people.

If you read the Starting Pitching Guide then you won’t be surprised by some of these guys as I made it clear how much I liked them there by suggesting you aggressively buy in or go the extra dollar or a host of other ways I used to convey my excitement for them.  Essentially if they are on this list, I like them more than their current projection meaning there is profit to gained.  There isn’t a uniform theme to this piece so let’s just get started with the names and you’ll see what I mean.

1. Cole Hamels – Seeing Hamels on a list like this might come as a surprise after all he doesn’t fall too far out of the top 10 starting pitchers in most drafts.  His inclusion is due to the fact that I have him as a top 5 guy for 2011.  He has Cy Young-quality stuff.  It was a travesty that his pitching led to just 12 wins, but that’s why judging pitchers on wins is foolish.  He is a bit overshadowed by teammates Roy Halladay and Roy Oswalt, but I think he’s the best bet from a production-to-cost ratio.

2. Tommy Hanson – Like Hamels, this is a superstar in the making, but an overreaction to a 10-11 record from 2010 is depressing his value a bit.  Guys like Hamels and Hanson are the ones who will be my aces in 12-team mixed leagues because I refuse to pay the premium attached to the Lincecums and Felixes of the world.  If you’re looking for guys to take Ubaldian leaps from good to great, target Hanson and this next guy…

3. Chad Billingsley – Noticing a trend with these first three guys?  Billingsley also had a record that belied his true value going 12-11 for the second straight season masking his return to 2008’s 2.5 K/BB and a career best 0.4 HR/9.  Are you surprised to learn that he is just 26 years old?  In a standard 12-team mixer, I’m building my hitting base filling in some scarcity fields like shortstop (if I can get Hanley or Tulow), third base and outfield (remember, we need five) while taking advantage of the first base depth with those first 6-8 picks then pairing Hanson and Billingsley as my 1-2 punch.  My offense is going to be better than the guy who took Halladay in round 1 or 2 and my pitching is going to nearly on par and potentially better even if he paired a Sabathia or Weaver with him using yet another early round pick.

4. Brandon Morrow – I think he is getting a little trendy raising his value, but that doesn’t dissuade me.  Last year, I loved Gio Gonzalez and Jonathan Sanchez to make big leaps forward and they didn’t let me down.  Morrow is my guy of that class this year.  If he can shave a full walk off of his rate like Gonzalez did, he would be near 3.0 and if it didn’t cost him over two strikeouts in the process (as it did Gonzalez), he can be truly elite.

5. Ricky Romero – I love me some Blue Jays this year.  I will lift a quote from myself from the Guide re: Romero, “Romero meets the three criteria of Sporer Trifecta of Excellence (patent pending) with a strong strikeout rate (7.5 K/9), a truly elite groundball rate (55% career) and an above average changeup (though it was valued higher in ’09)”.  He has the stuff to take a step forward, but even a 2010 repeat has value at the cost I’m seeing for him in the two drafts I have already done and the expert leagues that have already taken place.

6. Hiroki Kuroda – A victim in the W-L column going just 11-13 last year despite a very strong skill set.  He has managed three straight sub-3.80 ERA seasons in the majors despite failing to reach even 70% LOB% let alone the league average 72% mark.  His age (36) undoubtedly scares some off, but nothing in his profile warrants fear (50%+ GB rate, 2.2 or better BB/9 and improving K/9 reached 7.3 last year).  He comes cheaper or at the same cost as the likes Matt Garza and Tim Hudson despite a more stable set of skills and even a tick of upside if that LOB% bumps up to average.

7. Edwin Jackson – Not much love out there for Jackson for some reason.  Maybe because it took him so long to begin paying any sort of dividends on his elite prospect status (4th in baseball in 2004) or because he teased and tantalized with so many false starts prior to that breakout year in Detroit back in 2009.  In Don Cooper I trust.  In 75 innings he righted Jackson’s season from the disaster it was in Arizona assisting Jackson to eight quality starts out of 11 including a run of three in which he struck out 11, 10 and 11.  I think Cooper and the Sox will finally extract the best out of Jackson for a full season returning a sharp profit on his current value.

8. James McDonald – This is the third year of me driving the McDonald Bandwagon.  He’s just getting going after a trade to the Pirates finally got him into a rotation so I’m not going anywhere now.  He went for $4 in NL Tout Wars over the weekend.  He is the kind of endgame play that can yield $10+ dollars of profit and be integral to a championship run.  Frankly I’m surprised he was so cheap as he has popped up on a lot of sleeper lists this offseason, much to my chagrin.

9. Jordan Zimmermann He got a nice little 71-inning (31 in the majors) tune up last year coming back from Tommy John Surgery displaying 99% of his velocity from 2009 (92 of 93 MPH) and posted some decent stats albeit in smallish sample.  I am quite intrigued by what he can do in a full season (though a full season this year may mean  approx. 170 innings) having displayed strikeout an inning stuff throughout his minor league career as well as the 91 innings from his rookie year.  Injury returns are often a great source of profit and Zimmermann will be a prime candidate in this field for 2011.

Tomorrow’s portion of the list will feature nine names geared more towards single leagues and deeper mixed leagues.  That doesn’t mean they are entirely out of play for 10 and 12 mixed leaguers, especially if you have a reserve roster or taxi squad, but a lot of those leagues will have several of these guys on the waiver wire after the draft.

Ed. Note – if you’re wondering where Dan Haren is on this list, I figured he was too obvious to include.  If you’ve been reading my work at all this offseason, participated in the chat I hosted a few weeks back or talked with me via Twitter, you know how much I love this guy for 2011 (and beyond for that matter).  He is an unheralded ace with one of the best and most stable skills profiles in all of baseball.  He was tied with Max Scherzer as the 6th most expensive starter in AL Tout Wars ($20), a bargain in my book.  I have him 3rd-best in the AL behind Felix Hernandez and Jon Lester, just ahead of Justin Verlander.

Thursday: 03.17.2011

2011 Closer Tiers

Here’s a look at my 2011 closer rankings.  I’m going to do my Middle Reliever article soon so the top 7th and 8th inning guys will get their coverage there.  I mentioned a few in here, but none of them are ranked unless they are in a committee to close.

Stat consideration in order of importance: Strikeouts, Saves, ERA, WHIP.  I would take a few less saves for a ridiculous strikeout rate.  Closers can impact ERA a decent bit (at the truly elite levels), but their WHIP impact is often insignificant (even at its worst, more on that later).

Tier 1

Joakim Soria – He has an incredibly rock solid skills profile over the past four seasons and yet he is still just 27 years old.  His inferior team hasn’t prevent him from two 40+ save seasons and in non-40 save season he struck out 69 in 53 innings (he wasn’t the full time closer in the first of his four seasons).

Carlos Marmol – Too many outlets greatly overrate the impact of a reliever’s WHIP (and ERA for that matter) on your team’s bottom line.  Take Marmol’s awful 1.46 WHIP in 2009 and add it to a standard team with 1250-1300 innings and it increases the WHIP by 0.01.  You can’t tell me that his otherworldly strikeout rates for a reliever don’t more than cancel out that negligible impact.

Heath Bell – Similar to Wilson, he’s on a team that can win, but when they do it’s close because they aren’t powered by offense.  This has led to 42 and 47 save seasons the last two years for Bell.  He’s also notching better than 10 strikeouts per nine with elite ERA and WHIP totals to boot.

Neftali Feliz – After a back-n-forth Spring Training and rampant speculation about whether or not he was going to start or close, he has finally been locked down as the closer again.  He was brilliant last year and I expect no different in 2011.  He has devastating starter’s stuff which plays pretty well in one-inning bursts.  Remember that with the tiers, I see everyone within a tier relatively similarly.  So if you wanted to take Feliz first in an AL-Only (or mixed for that matter), I support that.  I ranked them how I prefer them, but there’s little difference one to the next.

Mariano Rivera – He’s a freak, even at 41. The Ks dropped last year (6.8 K/9), but ratios remained absurd and I’m not betting against him.  K rate dropped to 6.6 in 2006 and then he reeled off three straight seasons above 9.0 at ages 37 through 39, so don’t let the 41 years make you believe he can’t bounce right back again.  He almost deserves his own second tier because there is a little risk with anyone his age, but I’ll give him the T1 respect.

Tier 2

Brian Wilson – He’s just on another level right now delivering near-Marmolian strikeout rates (10.3, 11.2 last two years) with great ratios and high save counts (on a team that wins, but not with offense meaning more close games).  Update: Injuries move him down, but still worth drafting pretty high.

J.J. Putz – Last year Putz looked a lot like the guy who notched 36 and 40 save seasons back in 2006 and 2007.  Once an elite closer, Putz quickly earned a closer’s role this offseason and there is no reason to believe he won’t once again become a big time stopper.  He’s being a little overlooked so far this draft season.  If you want to skip the first wave, jump on Putz a few rounds after.

Matt Thornton – Rightfully given the job to start the season, Thornton has been an elite reliever for three years now though many might not realize it as he has just 13 saves in that time.  Posted a ridiculous 12.0 strikeout rate last year, but even if he’s “only” at the 10.6 he averaged the two years before, he is still an excellent investment.

Jonathan Papelbon – For all his issues (ascending walk rate, ERA and WHIP; dropping save totals), his strikeout rate is actually ticking up yearly since 2008 (10.0, 10.1, 10.2) and at 29, he’s still well within in his prime.  As annoying as Papelbon can be personally, he could be an undervalued fantasy asset this year as his demise is being overrated.

Francisco Rodriguez – We are seeing a lot risk in this tier which says a lot about the state of closers in the 2011 preseason.  K-Rod is no different, but it’s hard to deny the talent.  The main concern is that if the Mets don’t trade him, they might game his playing time to avoid a vesting option for 2012 (needs to finish 55+ games).

Tier 3

Jonathan Broxton – He is inexplicably being written off for three bad months.  He was brilliant through June 26th with a sub-1.00 ERA and 48 Ks in 33 innings.  The wheels came off the next day with a 4-run outing and he was never the same the rest of the year.  No way I’m going to write off a 27-year old with as much talent as Broxton just yet.

Jose Valverde – An up and down season in 2010 that was essentially four great months and two horrible ones.  Elbow soreness likely caused some of the issues that led to 8.25 and 7.00 ERAs in July and August, but he bounced back with eight strong innings in September.  He looks good so far in Spring Training so I’d be comfortable investing in a standard Valverdian season.

Andrew Bailey – He might have crept into Tier 1 if it weren’t for the major injury scare a few days ago during a spring outing.  We are being told he’s fine for now and doesn’t need surgery, but the uncertainty of his elbow plus his injury track record make him a frightening investment.  Handcuff Brian Fuentes here.

Joe Nathan – He might ease into the role for a few weeks in April, but I think he will be the full-time closer no later than May given health.  Like Putz, I think we’ll see a quick return to form and Nathan will once again be a reliable premier asset.

Chris Perez – He came into his own last year and started paying dividends on his top 100 prospect status from 2008 (97) and 2009 (91).  Control is the missing element in his game to this point (4.3 BB/9 in 162 career IP), but at 25 years old there is still plenty of time.  His stuff is undeniable and he should feel secure in the job.  You should feel secure when investing.

Tier 4

Huston Street – The skills are there, always have been, but it’s hard to rely on him being there for you all season.  That lack of consistent health is why he has just two 35+ save seasons in his six years in the majors.  Each of the other four has yielded 23 or fewer.

John Axford – Burst onto the scene last year for a huge rookie season taking over for Trevor Hoffman with nearly 12 strikeouts per game and 24 saves in 27 chances.  His control needs work (4.2 BB/9), but that and a deep track record are the only missing ingredients for an elite closer.

Joel Hanrahan – You may be shocked to learn that Hanrahan has improved his strikeout rate each of his four seasons in the big leagues and had a career-best 3.4 BB/9 last year.  He’s been given the job for now, but Evan Meek looms if he fails.  The skills are there, but does he have the fortitude to closer?  I’d bet yes.

Leo Nunez – He had a career year in his first as the full-time closer which is enticing, but can it last?  He makes a strong secondary or tertiary closer on a team with a T1 in mixed leagues.  I also like him as a cheap option in an NL-Only if you don’t like investing a ton in saves.  I like him a lot more than most and I think he’s being a bit underrated.

Tier 5

Brad Lidge – A sore biceps tendon has caused a preseason scare, but Lidge asserts it’s something he has dealt with before and writes it off as no big deal.  Even still, he’s far from “Lights Out” these days despite the still impressive strikeout totals.  Tread cautiously. Update: Injuries also move him down as he’s now set to start the season on the DL.

Frank Francisco – He’s closed before and posted 3.2 K/BB rates or better each of the last three years, but a sore pectoral has cast some doubt over him, especially in light the depth of competition in Toronto.  If healthy, he could be a cheaper option that pans out very nicely.

Francisco Cordero – His eroding skillset belies the gaudy save totals (79 the last two years) as his strikeout rate has dropped in each of the last three seasons coming in below 8.0 each of the last two seasons.  Mix that in with his age (36) and legitimate competition behind him (Aroldis Chapman and Nick Masset) and Cordero becomes a risky proposition.

Craig Kimbrel/Jonny Venters – Listing them together because they are set to share the job for now.  I think one will emerge, but who knows who?  Venters was brilliant in 83 innings so it seems like he’d be more reliable, but Kimbrel really impressed with 40 strikeouts in 21 innings.  I wouldn’t be afraid to invest in either or both if the prices weren’t out of whack.  They only rate this low because saves are the guiding factor of these tiers.  From a pure skills standpoint, both can be elite relievers.

Kevin Gregg – Middling skills combined with legitimate competition on hand (namely Koji Uehara) make Gregg a risky option.  Throw in a mediocre at best team in the league’s toughest division and this could get ugly.  That said, he held on for 37 saves in the same division last year.

Ryan Franklin – Regression popped his ERA last year, but he tightened up the control a lot yielding an even better WHIP than 2009.  Still, I don’t like closers with lame strikeout rates especially if I can’t count on excellent ERA and WHIP.

Tier 6

Alexei Ogando – My main concern is that Ron Washington seems to lack much confidence in him and this whole Neftali Feliz melodrama might not be over yet, either.  Buying Ogando while things remain pretty uncertain could represent a nice bargain as I think he is the clear choice behind Feliz if he does end up a starter (which he should if Texas is smart… and they generally are…)

Jake McGee/Kyle Farnsworth – Manager Joe Maddon is firm on going with a committee marginalizing the value of both of these guys, who would otherwise be pretty valuable if they were the lone closer.  Their skills and team situation is better some of the other committees found in T6 so they still rate above them even as a tandem.

Fernando Rodney – I can’t envision a scenario where he keeps the job all year long.  Any one of Jordan Walden, Kevin Jepsen or Scott Downs would be better options.  Of course, they will probably get their shot in reverse order of how I listed them.  Downs is on the DL right now, but Rodney should at least hold it through April.

Brandon League/David Aardsma – League is a placeholder until Aardsma is healthy after having hip surgery in January.  I loved League heading into last year after his 2009 season, but he pretty much flopped and made his 2009 skills (9.2 K/9, 3.6 K/BB) look like an outlier.  Don’t buy both.  If you buy one, it should only be as a third option regardless of league format.

Drew Storen – A rough spring is putting his grasp on the job in serious doubt as manager Jim Riggleman obviously doesn’t realize how worthless Spring Training numbers are in the grand scheme.  Add in the myriad of options (none particularly good) behind Storen and he becomes a serious risk.

Brandon Lyon – A lesser version of Ryan Franklin on a much lesser team.  Wilton Lopez lingers, too, but I’m not sold he keeps the 0.7 BB/9 he displayed in 67 innings last year.

Wednesday: 03.12.2008

2008 Guide to Middle Reliever Methodology

This was originally posted on Rotojunkie.com, but the board over there has been taken down and moved with the archives disappearing.  I’m posting this years after the fact…

First, let’s get a refresher on the MRM.

The idea is that you acquire three middle relievers amongst your nine pitchers whose stats will combine to give you those of a top flight starting pitcher at 1/5th to maybe ½ of the price. The price you will pay for your “Cheap Cy” as Bod [Bodhizefa, a poster from the board] termed them (and I like it, so I’ll keep it) depends on what echelon of reliever you aim to acquire.

The method is becoming much more prevalent these days (just as Bod predicted back in ’05 when he made brought this to light at RJ), so much so that the Rotoworld.com Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide put a section in their magazine dedicated to specifically to middle relievers. The way for this method to have the most success is to find the next Rafael Betancourt, Jonathan Broxton or Carlos Marmol as opposed to paying the premium for one (or more) of that trio. That said, you don’t avoid these three by any stretch. You will still encounter leagues where middle relievers, even the best, are undervalued. It is rare, but not completely unheard of…

Exclusions for the MRM:
This methodology is not viable in 4×4 leagues unless one of the four categories is strikeouts, though I’ve rarely seen that. It is best employed in standard 5×5 leagues. As the number of categories increases, the methodology will likely decrease in viability because Holds will likely enter the landscape, which automatically shines the spotlight on the landscape of middle relievers.

Tenets for the MRM:
• 3 relievers, 2 is too few unless you get something like Betancourt-Broxton, but then the point of it being a cheap way to improve the pitching is likely eliminated since they’re such high profile. 4 are too many since you’re taking up too many roster spots.

• 1 of your relievers should be a big innings guy. Last year, there were:

o 31 relievers who pitched 70+ IP
o 13 relievers who pitched 80+ IP
o 3 relievers who pitched 90+ IP

• Acquire relievers with high strikeout rates. The bar should be set no lower than 7.0 K/9. Last year, there were:

o 80 relievers who had a 7.0+ K/9
o 51 relievers who had a 8.0+ K/9
o 34 relievers who had a 9.0+ K/9
o 12 relievers who had a 10.0+ K/9
o Those 80 relievers averaged 57 IP
o Those 51 relievers averaged 57 IP
o Those 34 relievers averaged 57 IP
o Those 12 relievers averaged 52 IP

• All three needn’t be above that rate, but the best and most useful will end up there. Don’t eliminate the sub-7.0 K/9 relievers just because of the K-rate.

• That said the 7.0+ K/9 guys are going to be your best bets. With the measure I created to assess relievers, the top 50 middle relievers had an average of 9.1 K/9 and only six of them dropped below the 7.0 mark.

• All of the top 28 were at 7.9 K/9 or above with an average of 9.8 K/9.

• The seven pitchers in the Top 50 that were below 7.0 K/9 had an average of 6.6 K/9.

The List:
• To rank the middle relievers, I ranked the top 126 relievers by ERA, K:BB and K/9. Then I took the rankings of all three categories and weighted the strikeout rates by 1 and the ERA by 2 and divided the total by 3 to come up with a “score”. I don’t know if this is the best system, but I found the results to be viable enough to be useful. Frankly, you could probably just use K/9 and go by that.

Joba Chamberlain’s remarkable 24-inning cup of coffee last year was far and away the best score at 4.7. He ranked 25.3 points above the 2nd place Jonathan Broxton.

• We’re going to look at things from a few different angles. First let’s look at how the Top 50 ranked using the scoring method I devised:

HTML Code:
RK	PLAYER		        TEAM	LG	IP	W	L	HLD	SV	ERA	RK	K:BB	RK	K/9	RK	TOTAL
1	Joba Chamberlain	NYY	AL	24	2	0	8	1	0.38	1	5.67	2	12.75	2	4.7
2	Jonathan Broxton	LAD	NL	82	4	4	32	2	2.85	27	3.96	4	10.87	8	30.0
3	Jensen Lewis		CLE	AL	29.1	1	1	5	0	2.15	13	3.40	13	10.52	9	30.7
4	Rafael Perez		CLE	AL	60.2	1	2	12	1	1.78	4	4.13	3	9.27	28	33.7
5	Rafael Betancourt	CLE	AL	79.1	5	1	31	3	1.47	3	8.89	1	9.10	31	34.0
6	George Sherrill		BAL	AL	45.2	2	0	22	3	2.36	20	3.29	18	11.15	5	36.3
7	Carlos Marmol		CHC	NL	69.1	5	1	16	1	1.43	2	2.74	32	12.50	3	36.3
8	Heath Bell		SDG	NL	93.2	6	4	34	2	2.02	10	3.40	14	9.85	16	36.7
9	Russ Springer		STL	NL	66	8	1	11	0	2.18	15	3.47	9	9.00	32	51.0
10	Damaso Marte		PIT	NL	45.1	2	0	15	0	2.38	21	2.83	30	10.18	12	56.0
11	Joaquin Benoit		TEX	AL	82	7	4	19	6	2.85	28	3.11	24	9.55	19	61.7
12	Juan Cruz		ARI	NL	61	6	1	4	0	3.10	43	2.72	34	12.84	1	63.7
13	Justin Speier		LAA	AL	50	2	3	24	0	2.88	29	3.92	5	8.46	43	67.3
14	Hideki Okajima		BOS	AL	69	3	2	27	5	2.22	16	3.71	7	8.22	51	68.7
15	Octavio Dotel		CHW	AL	30.2	2	1	1	11	4.11	83	3.42	12	12.22	4	71.3
16	Troy Percival		TAM	AL	39	3	0	3	0	1.85	7	3.40	15	7.85	53	72.7
17	Pat Neshek		MIN	AL	70.1	7	2	15	0	2.94	31	2.74	33	9.50	20	73.7
18	Justin Miller		FLA	NL	61.2	5	0	17	0	3.65	64	3.08	25	10.88	7	74.7
19	Chad Qualls		ARI	NL	82.2	6	5	21	5	3.05	37	3.12	23	8.54	42	89.7
20	Bob Howry		CHC	NL	81.1	6	7	22	8	3.32	52	3.79	6	7.99	52	92.7
21	Scott Downs		TOR	AL	58	4	2	24	1	2.17	14	2.38	49	8.84	36	94.3
22	Ryan Rowland-Smith	SEA	AL	38.2	1	0	3	0	3.96	78	2.80	31	9.90	14	97.0
23	Dan Wheeler		TAM	AL	74.2	1	9	18	11	5.30	116	3.57	8	9.95	13	98.3
24	Manny Delcarmen		BOS	AL	44	0	0	11	1	2.05	11	2.41	47	8.39	45	99.3
25	Al Reyes		TAM	AL	60.2	2	4	0	26	4.90	110	3.33	17	10.47	10	100.3
26	Chris Schroder		WAS	NL	45.1	2	3	1	0	3.18	47	2.87	29	8.58	40	100.3
27	Matt Lindstrom		FLA	NL	67	3	4	19	0	3.09	42	2.95	26	8.33	47	101.0
28	Michael Wuertz		CHC	NL	72.1	2	3	8	0	3.48	58	2.26	58	9.86	15	111.7
29	Matt Guerrier		MIN	AL	88	2	4	14	1	2.35	18	3.24	19	6.95	83	114.0
30	Fernando Rodney		DET	AL	50.2	2	6	12	1	4.26	89	2.57	39	9.68	18	116.3
31	Jeremy Accardo		TOR	NL	67.1	4	4	2	30	2.14	12	2.38	50	7.65	59	117.0
32	Bobby Seay		DET	AL	46.1	3	0	10	1	2.33	17	2.53	41	7.42	66	118.3
33	John Bale		KAN	AL	40	1	1	5	0	4.05	82	2.47	44	9.45	21	119.7
34	Rudy Seanez		LAD	NL	76	6	3	4	1	3.79	70	2.70	35	8.64	39	120.7
35	Brian Fuentes		COL	NL	61.1	3	5	8	20	3.08	40	2.43	46	8.25	49	121.7
36	Jon Rauch		WAS	NL	87.1	8	4	33	4	3.61	63	3.38	16	7.34	68	126.0
37	Jimmy Gobble		KAN	AL	53.2	4	1	16	1	3.02	33	2.17	63	8.46	44	129.0
38	Joe Smith		NYM	NL	44.1	3	2	10	0	3.45	56	2.14	64	9.18	29	130.3
39	Andrew Brown		OAK	AL	41.2	3	3	3	0	4.54	97	2.53	42	9.39	24	130.7
40	Tim Byrdak		DET	AL	45	3	0	8	1	3.20	49	1.88	82	9.80	17	131.7
41	Jason Frasor		TOR	AL	57	1	5	4	3	4.58	100	2.57	40	9.32	27	133.7
42	Scot Shields		LAA	AL	77	4	5	31	2	3.86	75	2.33	52	9.00	33	135.0
43	Lee Gardner		FLA	AL	74.1	3	4	9	2	1.94	9	2.89	28	6.32	101	135.0
44	Lenny DiNardo		OAK	AL	34.2	1	2	0	0	1.82	6	3.14	21	5.79	113	138.0
45	Randy Flores		STL	NL	55	3	0	14	1	4.25	88	3.13	22	7.69	58	138.7
46	Aaron Heilman		NYM	NL	86	7	7	22	1	3.03	36	3.15	20	6.59	97	141.0
47	Pedro Feliciano		NYM	NL	64	2	2	18	2	3.09	41	1.97	73	8.58	41	141.3
48	Cla Meredith		SDG	NL	79.2	5	6	10	0	3.50	59	3.47	11	6.70	94	144.3
49	Santiago Casilla	OAK	AL	50.2	3	1	12	2	4.44	95	2.26	57	9.32	26	146.3
50	Joel Peralta		KAN	AL	87.2	1	3	7	1	3.80	71	3.47	10	6.81	89	146.3

• This list gives you the track record guys. Of course, that segues perfectly for me to mention something about this methodology as a whole: relievers are remarkably volatile. From year-to-year, things will change. On the positive, this allows you to find hidden gems. On the negative, you could invest in “sure things” and watch them blow up in your face. This caveat is why it’s smarter to invest less in your trio so that if things aren’t working out by June, then you can cut bait and try another.

• The next list is those 81 relievers that topped 7.0+ K/9 ranked by strikeouts per nine innings:

HTML Code:
RK	PLAYER		       TEAM	LG	IP	W	L	HLD	SV	ERA	RK	K:BB	RK	K/9	RK	TOTAL
12	Juan Cruz		ARI	NL	61	6	1	4	0	3.10	43	2.72	34	12.84	1	63.7
1	Joba Chamberlain	NYY	AL	24	2	0	8	1	0.38	1	5.67	2	12.75	2	4.7
7	Carlos Marmol		CHC	NL	69.1	5	1	16	1	1.43	2	2.74	32	12.50	3	36.3
15	Octavio Dotel		CHW	AL	30.2	2	1	1	11	4.11	83	3.42	12	12.22	4	71.3
6	George Sherrill		BAL	AL	45.2	2	0	22	3	2.36	20	3.29	18	11.15	5	36.3
53	Derrick Turnbow		MIL	NL	68	4	5	33	1	4.63	101	1.83	84	11.12	6	157.3
18	Justin Miller		FLA	NL	61.2	5	0	17	0	3.65	64	3.08	25	10.88	7	74.7
2	Jonathan Broxton	LAD	NL	82	4	4	32	2	2.85	27	3.96	4	10.87	8	30.0
3	Jensen Lewis		CLE	AL	29.1	1	1	5	0	2.15	13	3.40	13	10.52	9	30.7
25	Al Reyes		TAM	AL	60.2	2	4	0	26	4.90	110	3.33	17	10.47	10	100.3
56	Armando Benitez		FLA	NL	50.1	2	8	11	9	5.36	117	1.97	74	10.24	11	163.0
10	Damaso Marte		PIT	NL	45.1	2	0	15	0	2.38	21	2.83	30	10.18	12	56.0
23	Dan Wheeler		TAM	AL	74.2	1	9	18	11	5.30	116	3.57	8	9.95	13	98.3
22	Ryan Rowland-Smith	SEA	AL	38.2	1	0	3	0	3.96	78	2.80	31	9.90	14	97.0
28	Michael Wuertz		CHC	NL	72.1	2	3	8	0	3.48	58	2.26	58	9.86	15	111.7
8	Heath Bell		SDG	NL	93.2	6	4	34	2	2.02	10	3.40	14	9.85	16	36.7
40	Tim Byrdak		DET	AL	45	3	0	8	1	3.20	49	1.88	82	9.80	17	131.7
30	Fernando Rodney		DET	AL	50.2	2	6	12	1	4.26	89	2.57	39	9.68	18	116.3
11	Joaquin Benoit		TEX	AL	82	7	4	19	6	2.85	28	3.11	24	9.55	19	61.7
17	Pat Neshek		MIN	AL	70.1	7	2	15	0	2.94	31	2.74	33	9.50	20	73.7
33	John Bale		KAN	AL	40	1	1	5	0	4.05	82	2.47	44	9.45	21	119.7
80	Brandon Morrow		SEA	AL	63.1	3	4	18	0	4.12	84	1.32	120	9.41	22	198.0
54	Tyler Yates		ATL	AL	66	2	3	13	2	5.18	115	2.23	59	9.41	23	158.7
39	Andrew Brown		OAK	AL	41.2	3	3	3	0	4.54	97	2.53	42	9.39	24	130.7
64	Taylor Tankersley	FLA	NL	47.1	6	1	16	1	3.99	80	1.69	97	9.36	25	175.3
49	Santiago Casilla	OAK	AL	50.2	3	1	12	2	4.44	95	2.26	57	9.32	26	146.3
41	Jason Frasor		TOR	AL	57	1	5	4	3	4.58	100	2.57	40	9.32	27	133.7
4	Rafael Perez		CLE	AL	60.2	1	2	12	1	1.78	4	4.13	3	9.27	28	33.7
38	Joe Smith		NYM	NL	44.1	3	2	10	0	3.45	56	2.14	64	9.18	29	130.3
83	Jack Taschner		SFO	NL	50	3	1	13	0	5.40	119	1.76	92	9.18	30	201.3
5	Rafael Betancourt	CLE	AL	79.1	5	1	31	3	1.47	3	8.89	1	9.10	31	34.0
9	Russ Springer		STL	NL	66	8	1	11	0	2.18	15	3.47	9	9.00	32	51.0
42	Scot Shields		LAA	AL	77	4	5	31	2	3.86	75	2.33	52	9.00	33	135.0
55	Mark McLemore		HOU	NL	35	3	0	1	0	3.86	76	1.94	76	9.00	34	160.7
65	Trever Miller		TB	AL	46.1	0	0	12	1	4.86	108	2.00	69	8.98	35	176.0
21	Scott Downs		TOR	AL	58	4	2	24	1	2.17	14	2.38	49	8.84	36	94.3
61	Matt Thornton		CHW	AL	56.1	4	4	17	2	4.79	106	2.12	65	8.82	37	172.7
63	Renyel Pinto		FLA	NL	58.2	2	4	16	1	3.68	66	1.75	93	8.66	38	175.0
34	Rudy Seanez		LAD	NL	76	6	3	4	1	3.79	70	2.70	35	8.64	39	120.7
26	Chris Schroder		WAS	NL	45.1	2	3	1	0	3.18	47	2.87	29	8.58	40	100.3
47	Pedro Feliciano		NYM	NL	64	2	2	18	2	3.09	41	1.97	73	8.58	41	141.3
19	Chad Qualls		ARI	NL	82.2	6	5	21	5	3.05	37	3.12	23	8.54	42	89.7
13	Justin Speier		LAA	AL	50	2	3	24	0	2.88	29	3.92	5	8.46	43	67.3
37	Jimmy Gobble		KAN	AL	53.2	4	1	16	1	3.02	33	2.17	63	8.46	44	129.0
24	Manny Delcarmen		BOS	AL	44	0	0	11	1	2.05	11	2.41	47	8.39	45	99.3
92	Jon Coutlangus		CIN	NL	41	4	2	9	0	4.39	93	1.41	117	8.34	46	225.0
27	Matt Lindstrom		FLA	NL	67	3	4	19	0	3.09	42	2.95	26	8.33	47	101.0
52	C.J. Wilson		TEX	AL	68.1	2	1	15	12	3.03	35	1.91	80	8.33	48	151.3
35	Brian Fuentes		COL	NL	61.1	3	5	8	20	3.08	40	2.43	46	8.25	49	121.7
73	Will Ohman		ATL	NL	36.1	2	4	12	1	4.95	111	2.06	66	8.23	50	190.0
14	Hideki Okajima		BOS	AL	69	3	2	27	5	2.22	16	3.71	7	8.22	51	68.7
20	Bob Howry		CHC	NL	81.1	6	7	22	8	3.32	52	3.79	6	7.99	52	92.7
16	Troy Percival		TAM	AL	39	3	0	3	0	1.85	7	3.40	15	7.85	53	72.7
58	Brian Tallet		TOR	AL	62.1	2	4	1	0	3.47	57	1.93	78	7.83	54	170.0
97	Scott Eyre		CHC	NL	52.1	2	1	5	0	4.13	85	1.29	122	7.77	55	233.7
62	Salomon Torres		MIL	NL	52.2	2	4	5	12	5.47	120	2.65	37	7.76	56	173.0
77	Kevin Cameron		SDG	NL	58	2	0	1	0	2.79	26	1.39	119	7.76	57	193.3
45	Randy Flores		STL	NL	55	3	0	14	1	4.25	88	3.13	22	7.69	58	138.7
31	Jeremy Accardo		TOR	NL	67.1	4	4	2	30	2.14	12	2.38	50	7.65	59	117.0
82	Todd Coffey		CIN	NL	51	2	1	7	0	5.82	124	2.26	56	7.59	60	198.7
74	Dustin Nippert		ARI	NL	45.1	1	1	2	0	5.56	121	2.38	51	7.58	61	192.7
66	Jared Burton		CIN	NL	43	4	2	11	0	2.51	23	1.64	100	7.53	62	177.3
107	Frank Francisco		TEX	AL	59.1	1	1	21	0	4.55	98	1.29	121	7.46	63	249.3
98	Juan Rincon		MIN	AL	59.2	3	3	14	0	5.13	114	1.75	94	7.45	64	234.0
102	Luis Vizcaino		COL	NL	75.1	8	2	14	0	4.30	91	1.44	115	7.43	65	240.7
32	Bobby Seay		DET	AL	46.1	3	0	10	1	2.33	17	2.53	41	7.42	66	118.3
75	John Grabow		PIT	NL	51.2	3	2	8	1	4.53	96	2.21	62	7.38	67	193.0
36	Jon Rauch		WAS	NL	87.1	8	4	33	4	3.61	63	3.38	16	7.34	68	126.0
95	Joel Zumaya		DET	AL	33.2	2	3	8	1	4.28	90	1.59	104	7.32	69	233.0
59	Matt Wise		NYM	NL	53.2	3	2	13	1	4.19	86	2.53	43	7.27	70	170.3
71	Tom Gordon		PHI	NL	40	3	2	14	6	4.73	103	2.46	45	7.20	71	184.7
96	Kyle Farnsworth		NYY	AL	60	2	1	15	0	4.80	107	1.78	90	7.20	72	233.3
67	Darren Oliver		LAA	AL	64.1	3	1	8	0	3.78	69	2.22	61	7.16	73	180.0
78	Guillermo Mota		MIL	NL	59.1	2	2	6	0	5.76	123	2.61	38	7.16	74	194.0
110	Brandon Medders		ARI	NL	29.1	1	2	1	0	4.30	92	1.44	116	7.11	75	252.3
90	Jason Grilli		DET	AL	79.2	5	3	11	0	4.74	104	1.94	77	7.05	76	222.3
118	Brian Bruney		NYY	AL	50	3	2	6	0	4.68	102	1.05	125	7.02	77	270.0
101	Jeremy Affeldt		CIN	NL	59	4	3	9	0	3.51	60	1.39	118	7.02	78	236.0
117	Jonah Bayliss		PIT	NL	37.2	4	3	4	0	8.36	126	1.61	102	7.02	79	265.0
99	Sean Green		SEA	AL	68	5	2	13	0	3.84	74	1.56	105	7.01	80	234.3

FYI: The rank on the far left of the above list is their overall rank using my devised scoring method.

The usefulness of the above is list that it is where you are likely to find the diamonds in the rough.

Here is a breakdown of those Top 81 in strikeout rates by League:
o National League: 42
o American League: 39

Diamonds in the Rough (these are the guys most likely to be the next Betancourts and Broxtons):
o 1 Rafael Perez, CLE
o 2 Justin Miller, FLA
o 3 Matt Guerrier, MIN
o 4 Jensen Lewis, CLE
o 5 Santiago Casilla, OAK
o 6 Michael Wuertz, CHC
o 7 Juan Cruz, ARI
o 8 Matt Lindstrom, FLA
o 9 Brandon Morrow, SEA
o 10 Taylor Tankersley, FLA
o 11 Tony Pena, ARI
o 12 Joel Peralta, KC
o 13 Chris Schroder, WAS
o 14 Jimmy Gobble, KC
o 15 Bobby Seay, DET
o 16 Joe Smith, NYM
o 17 Andrew Brown, OAK
o 18 Manny Delcarmen, BOS
o 19 Pedro Feliciano, NYM
o 20 Mark McLemore, HOU
o 21 Justin Speier, LAA
o 22 Tim Byrdak, DET
o 23 Kevin Cameron, SD
o 24 John Bale, KC
o 25 Peter Moylan, ATL

Grandpas (these guys had solid seasons last year, but they are ridiculously old, so it’s tough to bet on a repeat):
o 1 Russ Springer, 39 y/o
o 2 Al Reyes, 37 y/o
o 3 Rudy Seanez, 39 y/o
o 4 Trever Miller, 34 y/o

The Known Commodities (these guys are the premier middle relief aces as well as the steady, unheralded relievers :
o 1 Jonathan Broxton
o 2 Rafael Betancourt
o 3 Carlos Marmol
o 4 Joba Chamberlain
o 5 Heath Bell
o 6 Scot Shields
o 7 Aaron Heilman
o 8 Pat Neshek
o 9 Dan Wheeler
o 10 Hideki Okajima
o 11 Chad Qualls
o 12 Joaquin Benoit
o 13 Scott Proctor
o 14 Bob Howry
o 15 Fernando Rodney
o 16 Derrick Turnbow
o 17 Octavio Dotel
o 18 Damaso Marte
o 19 Jeremy Accardo
o 20 Al Reyes

Examples: (I’ll close with a series of combos from last year to show how the method works)
o Heath Bell, Peter Moylan and Scott Proctor:
o 276.7 IP
o 15-13 W-L
o 2.51 ERA
o 1.14 WHIP
o 229 K

o Matt Guerrier, Justin Miller and Joel Peralta:
o 237.3 IP
o 8-7 W-L
o 3.22 ERA
o 1.18 WHIP
o 208 K

o Rafael Betancourt, Joaquin Benoit and Aaron Heilman:
o 247.3 IP
o 19-12 W-L
o 2.48 ERA
o 1.00 WHIP
o 230 K

o Jonathan Broxton, Pedro Feliciano and Jon Rauch:
o 233.3 IP
o 14-10 W-L
o 3.20 ERA
o 1.15 WHIP
o 231 K

o Cla Meredith, Pat Neshek and Matt Thornton:
o 205.3 IP
o 16-12 W-L
o 3.68 ERA
o 1.30 WHIP
o 188 K

o Scott Downs, Rafael Perez and Justin Speier:
o 168.7 IP
o 7-7 W-L
o 2.25 ERA
o 1.04 WHIP
o 166 K

A few final thoughts:

• Patience can be rewarded, but it’s a method that allows you a choice between patience and knee-jerk reactions. Personally, I give my guys that I target a fair shot to perform. Remember, relievers have small samples so one outing can balloon an ERA, but if they are still blowing batters away, then they are going to hold their bullpen spot and get a fair chance bring that ERA down. If you loved someone in the offseason and acquired them and then they suffer a rough April in six innings of work, but still hold a 9 K/9 or something like that, then I’d stand pat with them.

• Even if you plan to be patient with your initial picks, this method (like scouring for saves) takes in-season leg work. Always be alert of the next big thing. Carlos Marmol didn’t pitch until May 19th last year!

• If you start paying mid-teens in auctions for the upper-echelon of middle relievers, you’re not employing the strategy properly. The point is to get top 15-20 starter numbers for next-to-nothing cost.

• I’ll close with a few DEEEEEP sleepers:
o Kerry Wood, CHC
o Edwar Ramirez, NYY
o Renyel Pinto, FLA
o Vinnie Chulk, SF
o Wil Ledezma, SD
o Jack Taschner, SF
o Jon Coutlangus, CIN
o Guillermo Mota, MIL
o Lenny DiNardo, OAK
o Zach Miner, DET
o Tyler Yates, ATL
o David Aardsma, CHW
o Royce Ring, ATL

There it is, folks. I hope this helps you if you choose to employ what I believe is a very viable strategy. Please feel free to ask any questions or offer any players you think will be useful pieces in this strategy. Enjoy!

Thursday: 03.6.2008

2008 Version of Echelon-Divided Starting Pitchers

(Originally posted at Rotojunkie.com)

I put in a great deal of care and research, but I know these rankings aren’t perfect by any stretch. As such, I invite any and all constructive feedback and discussion regarding the rankings. I’m not yet certain if I will post updates as the Spring progresses. I know I’ll be updating them on my spreadsheets, but I don’t know if there’s much value in me continually shifting players a spot or three here and there throughout March.

In closing, I hope the ‘Pen can glean some value from this and for those that take the 11,000-word journey from start to finish, I thank you in advance.

1. Johan Santana, New York Mets (29) – Here is what I wrote pre-trade: “Don’t get it twisted; Santana is still the best, most reliable pitcher available. He suffered some gopheritis in 2007 and still posted incredible numbers. A trade would only raise his value higher… if that’s possible.” And now post-trade: “Yep, it’s possible, his value has definitely increased. That said, I still won’t take him in the first round myself, but that’s a personal philosophy more than anything else. It could be a magical ‘rebound’ year for Johan.”

2. Jake Peavy, San Diego Padres (26) – Three straight 200+ inning seasons assuages injury fears even the down year in ’06 had plenty to love. Mike Cameron’s departure hurts the outfield defense, but Peavy’s skills can easily overcome the loss. Oh, and he just got company at the NL Cy Young Award party, but his attitude leads me to believe that he’s game for the challenge. You might see two studs go toe-to-toe and race to a pair of sub-2.00 ERAs!

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3. Erik Bedard, Seattle Mariners (29) – Here is what I wrote pre-trade: “Like Santana, a trade only boosts his already sky-high value. A late-season oblique strain derailed the career year that would’ve garnered serious Cy Young consideration. He could even take another step in 2008 as the mileage is relatively low on that golden left arm. He is capable of putting up baseball’s first 250+ strikeout season since 2004. (R.Johnson, 290)” And now post-trade: “He actually didn’t move up to three, I already had him here, but the trade isn’t enough to move him past the two Senior Circuit studs. I’m betting on a full season, which means Cy Young consideration.”

4. Justin Verlander, Detroit Tigers (25) – Sophomore slump this! Verlander followed up a brilliant rookie campaign with an even better second season. He shows absolutely no signs of slowing down and with that lineup up behind him, a 20+ win season wouldn’t surprise. Pay for the skills, though, as wins are almost completely unpredictable. He is my pick for American League Cy Young in 2008.

5. Brandon Webb, Arizona Diamondbacks (29) – He has only had one “bad” year since joining the majors and that was his sophomore slump when he walked 119 men. Even then, he posted a 3.59 earned run average despite a 7-16 record and 1.50 WHIP. Anytime someone puts up four straight 200-inning seasons in this era, people will worry, but Webb hasn’t shown any ill effects.

6. Josh Beckett, Boston Red Sox (27) – Left for dead after the disastrous 5.02 ERA of ’06, but peripherals said he wasn’t nearly that bad. He has shown several flashes that indicated a potential 20-win season and last year everything came together to deliver said season. If health remains, so will remarkable numbers.

7. C.C. Sabathia, Cleveland Indians (27)
– He posted a career-high for innings (241), but that doesn’t mean he will breakdown, but it’s something to be aware of since it’s such a spike (up from 192 in ’06). Enough negativity though, Sabathia has four straight seasons of declining walk totals and with that kind of control, it won’t matter how many batters he has to face!

8. John Lackey, Los Angeles Angels (29) – He has lowered his WHIP for five straight seasons, coincidentally his star has risen in unison with the drop. Perceived as a power pitcher, three straight declines in K/9 say not so much. That said, he still dials it up for 7+ punch outs per nine. Oh yeah, he’s only 29.

9. Dan Haren, Arizona Diamondbacks (27) – The fourth Oakland ace to head to the National League in the Billy Beane era, but the first to be dealt at his peak. The second half might scare some off, but let that be your gain and enjoy an ace entering his prime. Any benefit you give him for moving into the National League should be neutralized by moving from a very friendly home park to a much less friendly one in Arizona. He should see a rise in strikeouts, though as he is now facing the pitcher in each lineup and nine pitcher-like hitters in San Francisco.

10. Scott Kazmir, Tampa Bay Rays (24) – It bears mentioning yearly: He was traded for Victor Zambrano! The control (1.38 WHIP) remains the weakness, but that is skewed by a rough 1st half (1.55). His brilliant 2nd half (2.93 ERA in 111 IP) and the fact that he is 24 years old make him a true ace now and a legitimate cornerstone pitcher for his owners moving forward. Whoever thought we would see a Tampa Bay Ray in the top 10 of a pitcher list?

11. Felix Hernandez, Seattle Mariners (22)
– Ok, THIS is the season! I’ve successfully passed on the Hernandez Hype Train the past two seasons as I felt he’d be remarkably overvalued… and he was. Peripherals say ’07 was much better than 3.93. Pay for the breakout his proponents have been promising for two years. Post-Bedard addition, “This only takes more pressure off of him and allows him to be slotted as the #2-starter.

12. Cole Hamels, Philadelphia Phillies (24)
– Why do I feel like Hamels’ brilliant season was “quietly” achieved last year? Maybe it’s because he started just six times from August on, or perhaps I’m an idiot. His worst months were still top-flight making him a bona fide ace provided a clean bill of health.

13. Aaron Harang, Cincinnati Reds (30) – Chalk another up for Billy Beane, who stole him from Texas and now watches him join the laundry list of arms that have been groomed by Oakland under his reign. Harang’s a true workhorse with four straight years of ERA decline and three straight years of K/9 incline. Death, taxes and Harang.

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14. James Shields, Tampa Bay Rays (26) – A tale of two halves likely due to the nearly 90-inning spike in workload from ’06 to ’07. His skills are legit, make no mistake, but don’t pay ace money. Not because he’s not worth it, but because you just shouldn’t have to at this point.

15. Roy Oswalt, Houston Astros (30) – A very reliable, upper-echelon pitcher, but his peripherals are telling a story of rising ERA while the strikeouts per nine have dropped four straight seasons. That said, few would quibble with him as their anchor. That lineup may be underrated and could lead to another big win total for Roy-O in 2008.

16. Chris Young, San Diego Padres (28) – He is raising his strikeouts per nine while lowering his ERA each year in the majors as he solidifies himself as a top-flight starter. As I don’t with Colorado hitters, I’m not going to punish Young for the fact that he uses his home field to his advantage… a lot! If he can pull his home stats from last year (1.69 ERA in 85.1 IP) and his road stats from two years ago (2.41 in 93.1 IP), he can be a top 5 pitcher.

17. Carlos Zambrano, Chicago Cubs (26) – In the six months of last season, Zamrbano was remarkable for three and plain awful in the other three. Five straight 200+ inning seasons is a red flag to be cognizant of when bidding, but given how brilliantly he pitched in those three good months, I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt. In 442 drafts run at MockDraftCentral.com through 1/25/08, his average draft position was ninth amongst pitchers, I’m not giving him that much benefit of the doubt.

18. John Smoltz, Atlanta Braves (41) – Another freak of nature that has become more and more frequent in today’s sports landscape, as Smoltz actually IMPROVED on his already solid 2006 by posting a 3.11 ERA and 1.18 WHIP while increasing his K/9 for a third straight year in 2007. Perhaps the four years of closing helped stretch out the back end of his career and with numbers like these, it’s tough to bet against him.

19. Daisuke Matsuzaka, Boston Red Sox (27) – The highly touted Asian phenom impressed during his first half of major league baseball, but then fell apart after the break including a dismal September (7.62 ERA in 28.1 IP), but there was plenty to like about the much-hyped debut (specifically, nearly a strikeout per inning). A lack of control was the issue that continually ruined starts in the second half, but even while he was struggling, he managed to strike out 8.4 batters per nine innings, which wasn’t too far off of his 9.3 from the first half. He might be something of a post-hype sleeper in 2008, which could trim a few bucks off of his auction price.

20. Javier Vazquez, Chicago White Sox (31)
– It was his best season since the 2003 campaign that was good enough to get him traded from the Montreal Expos to the New York Yankees. After three years of 1.25 or higher WHIP, he came back down to 1.14 and voila, the ERA dipped below 4.00 once again. If he avoids bad luck with his strand rate and holds or improves upon the four-year uptrend in strikeouts per nine innings, Vazquez is a good bet for a repeat. With a much improved offense supporting him, his win total might not have to rebound like it did in 2007, either (3 wins pre-break, 12 after).

21. Fausto Carmona, Cleveland Indians (24) – I know this means jack to anyone reading and there is no way to even know if I’m being truthful, but I’ve guessed on the last four ages before looking them up and I’m 4-for-4! Just thought I’d share, sorry. Anyway, Carmona’s 2007 season is the kind of season that makes a fantasy championship. He likely cost his owners next to nothing and delivered Cy Young-worthy statistics. Of course, this now sets him up to be a detriment to his 2008 owners in re-draft leagues because he will likely be overvalued. I think he’ll be a fine option, but you have to temper the expectations. In one “expert” mock I saw, he was the 10th starter taken, that’s just absurd. A bucket full of wins, a high 3.00s ERA and an average WHIP (1.30+) will cost too much this year.

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22. Roy Halladay, Toronto Blue Jays (31) – I didn’t guess Halladay’s age, streak over. He is definitely a workhorse, the seven complete games (a major league-best) says so, but his ERA and WHIP are trending up the last three years while his strikeouts per nine are trending down in the same period. Is he becoming a Greg Maddux type of pitcher? Well, he’d need to walk fewer batters for that to be the case, but my point was a low strikeout, decent ratios guy that can still get you a good number of wins. I think he might have one more sub-4.00 ERA year in him, but beyond that, I’m worried.

23. Brad Penny, Los Angeles Dodgers (29) – Did you know he was third in the NL Cy Young voting last year? That doesn’t mean he necessarily deserved it, but he was nonetheless. Penny outperformed his peripherals numbers by a healthy margin, but his fantasy owners for 2007 only care about how his numbers looked when the season ended in October, not what his numbers said he should’ve done. However, his 2008 owners should be more focused on the “should’ve” aspect. Folks, we’re dealing with a 4.00 ERA pitcher, who isn’t striking batters out as much anymore. There’s nothing wrong with that and if he can hold the gains in groundball rate, he might stay below 4.00 again in 2008, but be careful betting that it will be too much below 4.00.

24. Rich Hill, Chicago Cubs (28) – He was very strong in his first full season in the majors. He offered a solid ERA at 3.92, but also threw in a bunch of Ks (8+ per nine) and baseball’s ninth-best WHIP at 1.19. If pressed to complain about something, I’d say that he could definitely stand to get the ball on the ground a bit more and avoid allowing it to get caught up in that Wrigley wind, which could wreak havoc on many an afternoon. But the kid is strong and I like improvements in ERA, wins (though highly unpredictable) and strikeouts while the WHIP holds or experiences a slight bump into the low 1.20s.

25. Yovani Gallardo, Milwaukee Brewers (22) – I have some reservations about slotting the youngster this high, but he is damn good. He was excellent in his 17-start stint with the Brewers in 2007 and nothing in his skill set suggest he won’t get even better. He has dominated the minor leagues since 2005 and the highest level of competition didn’t seem to get to him during a healthy sample of ’07 (110.1 IP), so despite the concerns of placing a 22-year old this high, I’m confident that the numbers back the ranking. Many people are ranking him even higher, but I see that turning into a Felix Hernandez situation where they are setting themselves up for disappointment with unrealistic expectations. In keeper leagues where he has a low salary, do pretty much anything you can to acquire him, but be smart with your dollars in re-draft leagues. If you’re paying a lot above a player’s age and he isn’t a top-flight hitter, it is likely a mistake.

26. Ian Snell, Pittsburgh Pirates (26) – His pitching wasn’t terribly different from half to half when looking at the expected ERA (around 3.90 in both), but the actual results were remarkably different. His breakout first half (2.91 ERA) had many clamoring for his services, but he followed it up with a 4.58 ERA and 1.46 WHIP after the break. Even still, he ended the season by lowering his ERA nearly a full run from 2006 and the breakout looks legit. Draft his skills and don’t worry about the fact that his wins could be scarce on the Pirates.

27. Tim Lincecum, San Francisco Giants (23) – It’s tough not to buy into a power-pitching (9.2 K/9) 23-year old after a strong debut, but I suggest caution. I have seen him in the top 20 in some circles, but I am just not ready to go that high yet. His delivery is conducive to injury and his control was shaky during stretches last year. He will learn from his 146 innings from 2007, but there are still some growing pains ahead for him. Of course as negative as that profile sounds, I still rated him 27th, so I still like the kid plenty!

28. Jeff Francis, Colorado Rockies (27) – I know, a Rockies pitcher in the top 30, am I nuts? No and this isn’t just me buying into the magical run by the Rockies at the end of last season either. Francis really put it all together in his third season as a pro and a little more second half luck would’ve allowed us to see a sub-4.00 ERA on the Rockies’ staff! He is getting a handle on the walks, but could stand to allow fewer hits to enjoy the gains of lowered walks in his WHIP. As I’ve maintained throughout, wins are too tough to predict, but he seems a good bet for at least 15 (if not a repeat of the 17) with a low-4.00s ERA and a mid-to-low 1.30s WHIP.

29. Matt Cain, San Francisco Giants (23) – I didn’t realize that Cain was this young until looking up his age a second ago. Wow, the Giants have a killer 1-2 punch for years to come. Too bad they have very little else. A case study of the “can’t predict wins” issue I’ve been harping on as he posted a 3.65 ERA and 1.26 WHIP yet was 7-16. He cut over a strikeout of his per nine rate from 2006, but that was mostly due to the 6.6 rate in the first half. He finished strong, striking out 8.2 per nine after the break. He’s a 200-inning workhorse that you can count on every five days.

30. Dustin McGowan, Toronto Blue Jays (26) – He was finally a full-time starter last year after splitting time between the rotation and bullpen during his stints with the Jays in 2005 and 2006 and it seems that consistency in role really helped McGowan. He was especially impressive after the break going 7-6 with a 3.67 ERA and 1.14 WHIP in 98 innings. The 191.7 innings pitched was the most of his career and an 80-inning spike from 2006. That said, he has displayed a pretty consistent peripheral skill sets despite varying ERAs over the past five years suggesting that he is the real deal.

31. Brett Myers, Philadelphia Phillies (27) – He suffered an up-and-down season that saw him start in the rotation and end as the closer. He also spent some time on the disabled list with an elbow issue, which is never good. His poor first half was due in large part to bad luck. He came back in late July after the injury and things balanced out so his numbers got much better. Frankly, he is a very good option regardless of where the Phillies put him, but I think you can confidently draft or buy him as a starter for 2008.

32. Adam Wainwright, St. Louis Cardinals (26) – It was most definitely a tale of two halves for starter turned closer turned starter. In the first half, he was 7-7 with a 4.66 ERA and 1.53 WHIP, but in the second half he was 7-5 with a 2.71 ERA and 1.25 WHIP. An even further look shows that only his April and May were problematic while he was did very well from June until the end of the year. Offensive supporting cast be damned, I’m very high on Wainwright. I hated watching him shut the door on my Tigers in the ’06 World Series, but watching him in those playoffs you could see he was nasty. That nastiness has converted nicely back into the rotation. He doesn’t quite have the K/9 displayed in his two AAA seasons, but if he can sustain the 7 per from the 2nd half, then it’s merely an expected regression from making the jump to the bigs (7.7 in the two AAA seasons). Even in AAA, his control was a bit suspect at 1.40 and 1.51 WHIP for the two AAA seasons, so his 1.40 WHIP from last year isn’t out of the ordinary, but at the same time, it’s not very good. He’ll need to hang onto the 2nd half improvement to entrench himself in that solid second tier of starters. As mentioned earlier, I’m very high on him so I like him to build off of the second half by keeping the K’s near 7p9 and balancing out that WHIP in the high 1.20s to low 1.30s. (taken from my write-up for him on the message board Rotojunkie.com)

33. Jeremy Bonderman, Detroit Tigers (25) – After a disastrous second half last year (6.19 ERA), Bonderman is the perfect post-hype sleeper. I think he foolishly pressed through pain last year before being shutdown on September 10th, but he has been given a clean bill of health for the 2008 season and I’m predicting a nice bounce back. Nothing went right for him in that second half, yet the skills were still there. He is on baseball’s best team and I think he will be integral to the Tigers holding onto that distinction. The last five years he has alternated strikeout rates every year with odd numbers being the off years, so he could return to the 8+ level in ’08 if he holds the trend.

34. Francisco Liriano, Minnesota Twins (24) – He lost the 2007 season to Tommy John Surgery, but appears ready for a full recovery as the anchor of their now Johan Santana-less rotation. He drew plenty of comparisons to the aforementioned Santana in his rookie year of 2006, and with good reason. It would be foolish to pay for the excellence displayed in ’06 as there may very well be some bumps in the road as he gets back into the groove. That doesn’t mean he can’t deliver the kind of numbers he did two years ago, it just means that if he does, you should receive them at a bargain if you’re considering getting him.

35. Chad Billingsley, Los Angeles Dodgers (23) – Impressed as both a starter and reliever last year, closing out the year in the former. The ERA lowered in three consecutive months starting in July and ending with September’s 2.59 in 31.1 innings. The only real issue with Billingsley is the control. He walked nearly four per nine last year and that could lead to disastrous games from time to time. Adding it all up, he’s a growing star at age 23 that strikes out almost one per inning and needs to iron out his control. I’ll buy that for a dollar… or even close to $20.

36. A.J. Burnett, Toronto Blue Jays (31) – Is anyone else surprised that he only made 25 starts? Yeah, that’s what I thought. At this point, if you’re paying for more than 25 starts, you’re an idiot. He has pitched over 173 innings twice in his career, so aim for 22-25 starts and take the rest as gravy. All that said, he enjoyed a healthy spike in his strikeouts per nine last year jumping up to 9.6 and had a good second half (3.45 ERA, 1.11 WHIP), which does help raise his stock a bit coming into the 2008 season. Skills say top 25, health says top 40.

37. Tim Hudson, Atlanta Braves (32) – He returned to Oakland-like excellence last year after two “off” years. On the periphery, both of those two seasons carried an expected ERA right in line with his career norms, but a sharp rise in walks doomed the WHIP in each season and bumped the ERA in 2006. After two straight seasons in the 3.0s, he was back down to 2.1 last year and all of sudden he was a $20+ pitcher again. I like more of the same in 2008 for Hudson, so bid accordingly.

38. Ben Sheets, Milwaukee Brewers (29) – It’s a damn shame. It really is. Ben Sheets simply can’t make it through an entire season anymore. After a brilliant 2004 campaign, Sheets has been hurt in each of the last three seasons, topping out at 156 innings. Unlike the first two injury-riddled seasons, last year Sheets showed some flaws in the arsenal. First, his strikeout rate nosedived down to 6.8 from 9.8 in 2006. Worse yet, his walks per nine skyrocketed up to 2.4 from 0.9 in 2006. The closest he was to 2.0 in the past four years was 1.8 in 2003, so the 2.4, while not bad on its own merit, is alarming for someone like Sheets. In the spirit of the 36th ranked pitcher, “Skills say top 25, health says top 40.”

39. Pedro Martinez, New York Mets (36) – He looked strong in his September return, but there is still plenty to prove for aged and frail former ace. The sample size is too small to worry about an inflated ERA spurred by the 41% hit rate. He mowed batters down with more than one strikeout per inning and gave up just eight runs in 28 innings of work. He and teammate Oliver Perez have enough potential to earn full price from someone, don’t let it be you. If either is available at value (or below), then enjoy their services and pray for that full rebound, otherwise pass.

40. Ted Lilly, Chicago Cubs (32) – Lilly enjoyed a career year upon his return to the National League (pitched with Montreal in 1999), but don’t pay for a carbon copy in 2008. After three straight years of 4.0 walks per nine, he was down to 2.4 last year, so the smart money is on a jump at least back into the 3.0s. Even with that regression likely, he will still be a strong option on the mound and he should be able to amass another big win total with that great lineup backing him up.

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41. Oliver Perez, New York Mets (26) – After two absolutely brutal seasons in a row, Perez found a bit of that 2004 magic last year. Many will fall too far in love with him and overpay for a 2008 season that likely won’t be as good. His walks shot back up in the 2nd half (4.6) and the ERA joined (4.06 after 3.13 in the 1st half). Ok, I got that negative stuff out of the way, now I return you to your regularly scheduled man-crush. Perez is still only 26 years old, has a strong 8+ strikeouts per nine trend over the past three years, plays for a great team and in a home park that stifles home runs, a key weakness of his. A return to 2004 excellence isn’t out of the question, paying for it is.

42. Philip Hughes, New York Yankees (21) – He gave everyone a taste of what is forthcoming with an incredible September to the tune of 3-0, 2.73 ERA, 1.18 WHIP and 18 strikeouts in 29.7 innings. He is slotted to be the fourth starter and while it will be part of a great team, I will be practicing caution when deciding whether or not to acquire the youngster’s services, especially in redraft leagues. I’m reminded of Felix Hernandez’ 2005 audition when I’m seeing hysteria surrounding Hughes. Hughes’ debut wasn’t as impressive, yet the fanfare is nearly equal. If you’re playing to win this year (and if you aren’t, why play?), be careful when investing your money in a 21-year old arm unless he is going to be your 3rd or 4th starter. Some of them work out at this age, but most do not.

43. Joe Blanton, Oakland Athletics (27) – He is an Oakland Athletic for now, but they are actively shopping him. It seems their asking price is remarkably high, so he might break camp with the team as well. He has been a workhorse for each of his three seasons in the majors averaging 208 innings per, but the other numbers have bounced up and down during his time. He had pinpoint control last year that continued a three-year downtrend. The sharp drop from 2.7 to 1.6 isn’t likely to stay that low, but if he can keep some of the gains he is likely headed towards another solid, yet unspectacular season. Any trade would likely improve win potential since he’d be leaving Oakland and that awful lineup support, but he’d also be leaving a very friendly home park.

44. John Maine, New York Mets (27) – Wowed everyone with a remarkable first half (2.87 ERA), but it did contain a fair bit of luck. His second half luck-o-meter shifted all the way into a bit “unlucky” and he was exposed in the second half with an ERA more than two runs higher. If he can hold the strikeout gains from the second half (up two full to 9.5) and balance out the luck, he is a very viable option on the mound.

45. Chien-Ming Wang, New York Yankees (28) – Back-to-back 19-win seasons, a great lineup supporting him and a repeatable, useful skill (60% groundball rate), yet Wang can’t seem to get much love in fantasy circles. It is probably because he doesn’t rack up the strikeouts, though he did add nearly two strikeouts per nine to his total in 2007 (4.7). Ok, so he won’t be a four-category starter, but two seasons of good numbers in the other three should be enough to merit a higher ranking than he has seen in some projections.

46. Derek Lowe, Los Angeles Dodgers (34) – He is often overlooked, but Lowe has been remarkably consistent the past three seasons. You can count on him for about 200 innings with a high 3.00s ERA and 1.27 WHIP. His ERA faded badly in the second half (5.08) last year, but there was a good bit of misfortune involved there as his peripherals stayed intact. He may not be the flashiest name and at 34, he is unlikely to all of sudden pull a sub-3.00, 20-win season out of his bag, but if you want a reliable #2 for your fantasy roster then Lowe is your guy.

47. Tom Gorzelanny, Pittsburgh Pirates (25) – He had a breakout first half, but fell apart in the second half. He doesn’t strikeout enough batters to mask his walk rate. At 25, there is plenty of room for growth and I expect Gorzelanny to enjoy some in 2008. The key will be maintaining the strikeout gains while bringing his walks back down to the first half level. A low-4.00s ERA is likely, but if everything goes right, he could wind up below that mark as he did in 2007.

48. Jered Weaver, Los Angeles Angels (25) – He missed some time out of the gate, but posted solid numbers once his season got started. If you are paying for his magical 2006, you are wasting your money. He is much closer to mediocre pitcher his brother has been than he is the 11-2, 2.56 ERA stud we saw in 123 innings during that rookie campaign. With Kelvim Escobar starting the season on the shelf, they will be asking more out of Weaver as the #2 starter, the effect of which can really go either way.

49. Zach Greinke, Kansas City Royals (24) – With his life in order, Greinke is back to fulfilling the promise he showed as a highly touted prospect and solid-performing rookie way back in 2004. Back-to-back bombings in early May were the only thing that kept Greinke from an excellent season. His ERA was a solid 3.69 at the end of the season, but would have been 3.02 had those disasters not happened. That said, you can’t pick and choose which stats count and which ones do not. A young, power pitcher coming off of an impressive second half with some decent offense behind him? Sign me up.

50. Kelvim Escobar, Los Angeles Angels (32) – He has long been one of my favorite players who isn’t a Detroit Tiger, which is probably why I get burned by him so often. It’s not that he isn’t good, in fact, he has some top tier stuff, but the man just cannot stay healthy! Even last year, one of his best ever, he was brilliant in the first half but then nagging injuries caused a precipitous second half decline. If you pay the big picks or spend the top draft pick and don’t set up a contingency plan, you have no one to blame but yourself.

51. Joba Chamberlain, New York Yankees (22) – It is reported that the Yankees will go the Johan Santana route with their young phenom in 2008. Chamberlain will be eased into the rotation via the bullpen much like baseball’s best pitcher was in 2002 with the Minnesota Twins. The number being bandied about right now is 140 innings for Chamberlain, but injuries or poor performance (Mike Mussina, Kei Igawa anyone?) could force New York’s hand and increase that total. Honestly, even if he were slotted in the rotation from the get-go, I wouldn’t have rated Chamberlain too much higher anyway. His age, heavy increase in workload and the fact that he hasn’t actually ever started a game in the majors are reasons to tread cautiously when looking to acquire him.

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52. Gil Meche, Kansas City Royals (29) – Everyone scoffed at the lucrative deal he received from the Royals, myself included, but Meche came out and delivered a career year. His ERA, WHIP and walks per nine are all on a positive three-year trend. He is entering his prime so he could push each of those to a fourth year. He does play in one of baseball’s toughest divisions, but he is almost certain to be undervalued in most leagues and will be a nice fit in the middle of your rotation.

53. Rich Harden, Oakland A’s (26) – Fool me once, shame on you; fool me 647 times, shame on me!!! For computer drafts where I have the iTunes on during the draft, I will listening to The Who when Harden comes up for bid because I won’t get fooled again. He has inning totals of 189, 128, 46 and 26 over the past four seasons. In each of those abbreviated seasons, he has flashed signs of his previously displayed brilliance from 2004. He is said to be feeling great (who-Kelvim Esocbar, you don’t answer-isn’t right before and during spring?), but I cannot envision paying the price you are likely going to have to in order to get him. If you can get him for single-digits or late in a draft, then it’s a nice risk-reward proposition. With his potential, that scenario is unlikely, so let someone else ride the rollercoaster.

54. Mark Buehrle, Chicago White Sox (29) – Bounced back from a rough 2006 for a strong year that included a no-hitter. That said, Buehrle is WYSIWYG kind of guy. His numbers scream a 4.00-something ERA, a decent WHIP and low strikeout totals. The wins have a chance at moving up with a much improved offense working for him this year. He has pitched 200+ innings for seven straight seasons, so be aware of the miles on that left arm.

55. Shaun Marcum, Toronto Blue Jays (26) – Marcum joined Dustin McGowan and Jesse Litsch to give the Blue Jays some legitimacy to their rotation last year behind workhorse Roy Halladay and oft-injured A.J. Burnett. Marcum was figured out a bit more the second time around (4.97 ERA post-break), but the experience of pitching a full season in the majors should eliminate the breakdown factor in 2008. Plan for mid-4.00s, a decent strikeout rate and league average WHIP then plant him into the middle of your rotation.

56. Clay Buchholz, Boston Red Sox (23) – Capped off the no-hit parade of 2007 with a gem in Boston against the Baltimore Orioles on September 1st which promptly earned him just seven and two-thirds more innings during the season. The World Series Champions had no reason to over-extend their young ace leaving him primed and ready to be an integral part of their defense of that title in 2008. The injury concerns surrounding Curt Schilling may open the door widest for the youngster, but remember that the signing of Bartolo Colon means time in AAA is also a possibility. Still, dominant strikeout rates, sparkling minor league totals and a brilliant September call-up portend future excellence.

57. Greg Maddux, San Diego Padres (42) – Four straight years of declining strikeout rates would generally be a red flag, but not when it’s paired with three years of ERA improvement as is the case with Maddux. You couldn’t have scripted a better setting for the twilight of a truly remarkable career than Petco Park. Looking to off-set a high WHIP and get ridiculously reliable numbers at a bargain? Acquire Maddux and enjoy.

58. Randy Johnson, Arizona Diamondbacks (44) – Though his twilight hasn’t, on the whole, been bad, it has been decidedly less reliable than Maddux’s. Johnson was in rare form to start the season before his back gave out and led to another surgery. His 2008 (and career at this point) remains in doubt, so tread very carefully. I can’t envision wanting to be the one with my money on red 51 for anything above the $10-mark.

59. Andy Pettitte, New York Yankees (35) – HGH shmHGH, sayeth Pettitte. He doesn’t seem to have let this Roger Clemens/Mitchell Report scandal get him down. His past two seasons seems to suggest he misses his human growth homie, but if you pair him with somebody like Maddux to alleviate the WHIP damage, he is a pretty solid option for your 4th or 5th starting pitcher. Unfortunately for New York, he will likely be their 1st or 2nd.

60. Dontrelle Willis, Detroit Tigers (26)
– If last season’s performance from Willis caught you completely off guard then you’re just dumb. The writing was on the wall… in Sharpie. It was a tad extreme with the plus 5.00 ERA and 1.60 WHIP, but he has been begging for a mid-4.00s ERA for some time now. Perhaps a change of scenery to a winning team will allow him to recapture that Rookie of the Year, Cy Young-contending form. The Tigers, and your fantasy team for that matter, really just need a sub-4.50 ERA with a heap of wins to get a decent return on investment.

61. Scott Baker, Minnesota Twins (26) – It is in this realm of the starting pitchers where I always choose a guy like Baker over someone like Randy Johnson or Andy Pettitte. I’m a sucker for potential. Upside is almost always used somewhere in the sentence immediately following the acquisition of someone like Baker. Beware the downside, though. As a pitch-to-contact sort (10.2 hits/9), he could see some innings snowball on him and watch his ERA balloon in the dangerous American League Central.

62. Wandy Rodriguez, Houston Astros (29) – Rodriguez doesn’t even have to completely fix his road woes (6.37 ERA in 82.7 IP) to be a very solid option provided he remains nearly unhittable at home (2.94 ERA in 95 IP). If he could just come down below 5.00 on the road, he would be a tremendous bargain ready to breakout. Strong improvements across the board including a proven portion of success make Rodriguez a strong buy candidate heading into 2008.

63. Ervin Santana, Los Angeles Angels (25) – Santana doesn’t even to have to completely fix his road woes… OK, maybe he does. I considered just copy-n-pasting the previous entry while changing the names and numbers. It really wouldn’t have been too far off the mark except that Santana was a complete abomination on the road while not shining as bright as Rodriguez at home. Pegged as a breakout candidate, Santana disappointed so heavily in 2007 that he was a jettisoned to the minors for a period of time. That said, he is still very young and his peripherals didn’t abandon him last year. In fact, he improved his strikeout rate over one full from 2006 (up to 7.5 per nine). His poor campaign last year will leave him undervalued and you should be ready to pounce on the positive margin that waits.

64. Shawn Hill, Washington Nationals (27) – In parts of seven minor league seasons, he has a 3.08 ERA in 508.7 innings; a total fit for a reliever yet Hill has started 95 of the 96 games he has appeared in during that stretch of time. He hasn’t pitched over 100 innings in any season since 2003, so he has been unable to cash in his seemingly strong potential. Despite being around since 2000, he is still just 27 making well worth the risk if the price is right. Pitchers notorious for incomplete seasons rarely ever just start completing them (A.J. Burnett anyone?), so temper expectations.

65. Bronson Arroyo, Cincinnati Reds (31)
– When viewing his career statistics on the whole, his 2006 season is clearly the outlier. The 3.29 ERA and 1.19 WHIP on the heels of a 4.51 and 1.30 the previous season no doubt offered tremendous to profit to the owners that were fortunate enough to have him. It also bred a set of lofty, unrealistic expectations that he couldn’t meet in 2007. Owners that were scratching their heads at his 4.23/1.40 season have only themselves to blame when expecting something different from a career 4.22/1.33 pitcher. The 9-win total was out of sorts, but it simply lends more evidence to the unpredictability of that category as a whole.

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66. Kevin Slowey, Minnesota Twins (24) – Put together a brilliant AAA campaign before coming up and posting some mixed results in 66.7 innings with the Twins. Unlike a lot of the entries you will find past the 60-mark, Slowey does not give away bases via the walk. Over 200 innings between AAA and the majors last year, he posted an eye-popping 5.3 strikeout-to-walk ratio. Over parts of three minor league seasons, he has 7.1 strikeout-to-walk ratio in 354.3 innings. This is the kind of skillset you want! If he can use that control to create more groundballs for himself, you could see big improvements in 2008.

67. Andy Sonnanstine, Tampa Bay Rays (25) – Your eyes don’t deceive you, I did rank someone with a 5.85 ERA in the rookie season as the 67th best fantasy baseball pitcher for 2008. Look closer for the primary reason for the ranking: Sonnanstine had a 3.7 strikeout-to-walk ratio! Another problem was that if he left the game with runners on base, they were damn near guaranteed to score because of that putrid bullpen at manager Joe Maddon’s disposal. To wit, when he was out of harm’s way (in this example, the Rays’ bullpen is “harm”), he enjoyed a 2.66 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, 5.1 K:BB ratio and 6-4 record in 71 innings of AAA work. As with Slowey, grab this skillset immediately. Whodathunk that the Rays would be a bastion for fantasy pitching in 2008, yet they will feature their fourth starting pitcher on the list in about three capsules from now.

68. Brian Bannister, Kansas City Royals (27) – As arguably the statistically best rookie pitcher in the American League last year, perhaps you would expect a better rating for Bannister. The problem is that his tools for success last year weren’t strikeouts and groundballs, rather smoke and mirrors. He had a great summer with strong efforts in June, July and August, but the other three months and September in particular, left plenty to be desired. He doesn’t strikeout many nor benefit from a high groundball rate to counter the lack of dominance making him a risky play moving forward. On the plus side, he does have a 107-inning sample of good production to build upon.

69. Homer Bailey, Cincinnati Reds (22)
– While he might have been the highest touted prospect pitcher coming into the season, he was the one that got hit the hardest while his peers like Tim Lincecum and Yovani Gallardo enjoyed plenty of success. Most damaging during the 45-inning stint? How about 28 walks against 28 strikeouts. Yikes. He looked great in 67 and 1/3 innings of AAA work, so don’t let a small sample of major league work scare you off too far. His control issues will continue to serve up heartburn for his owners until he matures.

70. Matt Garza, Tampa Bay Rays (24)
– Speaking of control issues… You will find Garza ahead of teammate Sonnanstine in many rankings and it’s likely due to some appetizing stat sets. For example, he pitched 47 innings of 2.49 ERA on the road and 26 and 1/3 innings of 1.37 ERA in July. Of course, no matter home or away he carried a WHIP over the 1.50-mark. As a much more heralded prospect than Sonnanstine and others, he is likely to be overrated. If he can be had at the appropriate value, I advocate acquiring him.

71. Boof Bonser, Minnesota Twins (26) – Bonser had a remarkable May after a garbage April and quickly showed that it was the outlier, by a longshot. After the 4-0, 2.45 ERA month of May, he never got below 4.70 again or won more than two games in one month. Nevertheless, he has decent strikeout and groundball rates for a 26-year old, so the potential for upside remains.

72. Jon Garland, Los Angeles Angels (28) – From 2005 to 2006, he increased his ERA by a full run yet smoothed it over by booking his second straight 18-win season. From 2006 to 2007, he gave back about 0.30 on the ERA, but at the cost of eight wins. He possesses virtually none of the dominance you would expect from a 6’6” pitcher with fewer than five strikeouts per nine innings each of the past four seasons resulting in a tepid outlook. His 2007 was a tale of two halves and that bad one was the second which you never like to invest in when filling out your rotation. Tread carefully here.

73. Hiroki Kuroda, Los Angeles Dodgers (33) – He is coming to America on the heels of his worst season in the past three and as a 33-year old to boot. Owners dreaming of a Hideo Nomo-like debut will have to remember that Nomo was 26 years old upon his arrival and had that unorthodox delivery as a key part of his arsenal. Kuroda will likely just have to settle for being a back of the rotation, very old rookie.

74. Chuck James, Atlanta Braves (26) – Similar to what I mentioned earlier, when faced with these decisions later on in the draft, I tend to side towards the youth provided there is legitimate upside found within the skillset. This power lefty is by no means brimming with it, but you can certainly envision him enjoying extended periods of success. If he can’t reverse a declining strikeout rate and lower an enormous flyball rate (49%), upside becomes upchuck in a hurry.

75. Dave Bush, Milwaukee Brewers (28) – Both he and James burned me rather badly in 2007, but I haven’t given up on either. By the way, Bush was 12-10 last year with a 5.12 ERA and 1.40 ERA and 12-11 the year before with a 4.41 ERA and 1.14 WHIP lending overkill evidence to the fact that pitching performance will have little correlation with W-L record. Even in a poor season, Bush had his glimpses (specifically a 3.51 ERA in June), but immediately pulled the rug out from under owners as soon as they got excited about a good start or two. He also suffered from Bondermanitis, allowing hitters a .350/.388/.540 line in the first inning last year. Pay for 12 wins and a mid-4.00 ERA while hoping that he can improve the strong peripherals of 2006.

76. Chris Capuano, Milwaukee Brewers (29) – After his May 7th start, he was 5-0 with a 2.31 ERA in 39 innings of work. He didn’t win another game the rest of the season, finishing the season at 5-12 with a 5.10 ERA. His skills didn’t disappear all of a sudden meaning he will be remarkably undervalued coming into the 2008 season. He had a strong September (2.81 ERA in 16 innings) and he has over 440 innings of quality work (spanning 2005 and 2006) to show that he is in fact a quality starting pitcher worthy of a roster spot. There is depth in the Milwaukee rotation and as a lefty, Capuano will be coveted by those needing an arm. For the same reason, the Brewers will likely want to hang onto him.

77. Micah Owings, Arizona Diamondbacks (25) – In leagues that count pitcher batting numbers, Owings is a beast! I don’t actually know of any such leagues, but the guy can rake. He put together a .333/.349/.683 line with four home runs and 15 runs batted in over 60 at-bats. On the mound, where his numbers actually count, he is decidedly less spectacular. He should be good for eating some innings with a fair ERA and WHIP, but he isn’t a top-flight prospect that the D-Backs are waiting to see blossom.

78. Jon Lester, Boston Red Sox (24) – Battled back from lymphoma very impressively going 4-0 in 63 innings with a 4.57 ERA. Hopefully he is able to focus solely on pitching with the health in order. If that is the case, he will have to work on his command. He is a young, power pitcher on a great team that can lose the plate at times. This will cause headaches as well as an inflated WHIP, but fixing the problem should come with experience. You have to like his win potential on such a strong offensive team, but don’t assume they will pile up regardless of how he pitches.

79. Doug Davis, Arizona Diamondbacks (32) – There aren’t any surprises when it comes to Doug Davis. What you see is pretty much what you get, and that is a .500 pitcher with a grotesque WHIP and passable ERA. He will likely strikeout around seven batters per nine innings, as well. His WHIP is driven by his love for walking batters; you might call him Anti Sonnanstine. It took a solid second half rebound to land at a 1.59 WHIP. He posted a 1.72 in the first half, but then came back to his career levels with a 1.46 in the second half (career: 1.49). His value lies in the consistency to eat innings and not destroy a staff that he has offered the past four seasons.

80. Ian Kennedy, New York Yankees (23) – Kennedy is being groomed as part of a youthful triumvirate in the Big Apple along with #42 Phil Hughes and #51 Joba Chamberlain. Though better than Hughes with the big league club last year (albeit in a far more limited sample), Kennedy is ranked third on the hierarchy of pinstripers. The other two are thought to have better raw stuff, while many rave that Kennedy better uses what he does have. His 8.8 strikeouts per nine ratio in 34.7 AAA innings a season ago was the lowest rate he had thrown in any minor league stop or during his two seasons with the USC Trojans. The power carried over well in his 19 inning cup of coffee as he struck out 15 batters (7.1/9). Since he is less heralded, he has a chance to provide the best value amongst the trio, at least for 2008.

81. Jeremy Guthrie, Baltimore Orioles (29) – The 4.95 ERA of the second half was much closer to what you should expect from Guthrie than was the 2.45 of the first half. He enjoyed a spike in strikeouts up to 6.3 per nine, but nothing else remained consistent from half to half. I think he can approach 200 innings with a mid-4.00s ERA and a WHIP that won’t hurt your staff. The O’s are going to win 60-something games and 15 of those might be during Guthrie starts, but as I’ve been saying throughout this piece, there’s really no way to tell. Pay for the ratios and take whatever wins you can get.

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82. Aaron Cook, Colorado Rockies (29) – When you strikeout fewer than four batters per nine innings as Cook has throughout his career, it’s a lot easier to throw 75-pitch complete games as Cook did on July 25th of last season. An oblique strain shutdown a career year in the making, but he returned in the World Series to throw six innings against the Boston Red Sox. He does his best to alleviate his miniscule strikeout rate with a huge groundball ratio that nears 60%. Troy Tulowitzki and his defensive crew is Cook’s best weapon. Look for another year similar to last, but be careful with your innings expectation as his totals fluctuate from year-to-year with 2006 as his only season topping 200.

83. Barry Zito, San Francisco Giants (30) – So how much does a 4.53 ERA cost these days? Oh, about $119 million dollars. I can’t recall encountering anyone that thought the deal the Giants gave him last offseason was anything close to worthwhile. My question is how did GM Brian Sabean and his cohorts look at Zito’s trends and think that he was worth anything close to $119 million dollars??? It is simply mind-boggling. That said, no fantasy owners will have to pay such a fee to acquire his services and he will no doubt be a clearance bin pickup. At 30, he is young enough to fix what was broken last year, especially if his devastating curve is working consistently. His ADP has fallen over six rounds from last year to round 17 with his low point being round 20. I can see myself rostering him during the latter or later, but in any round prior to the 20th, I have to leave him to someone else.

84. Nate Robertson, Detroit Tigers (30) – His 2006 season was too good to expect a repeat, but the 2007 follow-up was too poor to expect a repeat, either. He is somewhere in between the two meaning you should look for a near-200 inning season with low-4.00 ERA and 1.30-something WHIP and a pile wins with that amazing offense behind him. The key to heading back towards the 2006 season will be getting lefties out again. He allowed a .181 average against them during his career year, but watched that average balloon to .296 a season ago.

85. Daniel Cabrera, Baltimore Orioles (27) – No matter how good your stuff is, if you walk nearly five per nine, you’re going to struggle. Sadly, the 4.8 walk rate was an improvement from the vomit-inducing 6.3 of 2006. If you believe he will eventually put it together, then he remains an intriguing option. At this point, I think the best you can hope for is 4.50+ ERA with a healthy number Ks and poor WHIP. Maybe you can find an appetizing split and spot start him in daily-move leagues.

86. Mike Mussina, New York Yankees (39) – He showed his advanced age a season ago, but it was surprising given how well he had performed the year prior. He is probably somewhere in between those two seasons, meaning he will be around 4.50 and 1.35 (+/- .10 for both rates). He offers a strong potential for wins as part of the Yankees if he can stay on the right side of 5.00 with the ERA. His best month was September adding some shine to his prospects as late round, semi-reliable option for the back end of your rotation.

87. Kevin Millwood, Texas Rangers (33) – Similar to the Barry Zito situation, it was hard to look at Texas’ acquisition of Millwood and see it as a good move. Of course, they didn’t throw away barrels of money like the Giants did with Zito, but it was still pretty obvious that they weren’t going to get the 2.86 ERA they paid for when buying him from Cleveland. He is better than the 5.16 ERA from a season ago, but not by leaps and bounds because his home park always hurt him. He should come at bargain basement prices in just about all league formats.

88. Andrew Miller, Florida Marlins (22) – Miller zoomed through the minors and ended up pitching 64 innings with the Tigers enjoying little success. He was obviously rushed a bit, but I don’t think it will stunt his growth. Now, he moves to a friendlier park and gets to be part of a rotation that can sustain any growing pains he may incur again this year. As a power pitcher than can induce the groundball, Miller has the tools for success, but may just require more seasoning before being consistently effective. I can envision him going through stretches of greatness multiple times during the season, but he will also suffer his share of starts where he fails to get through the fifth inning (he had four such starts out of 13 last year including his final three) as his control can abandon him at times.

89. Orlando Hernandez, New York Mets (38) – His three year positive trends in ERA and WHIP might overvalue him, but don’t be fooled. His peripherals scream a 4.25+ ERA pitcher, especially with the extreme flyball tendencies. He is getting up there in age as well and it’s tough to predict just how many innings you can reasonably expect from him on a year-to-year basis. Given how much uncertainty is in his portfolio, I’d hesitate to make him anything more than a reserve player or very last pitcher in the starting lineup for your fantasy team.

90. Jason Bergmann, Washington Nationals (26) – There is some goodness within this skillset, but you might have to deal with some growing pains as he develops into a worthy fantasy option. A boatload of second half bad luck inflated the final numbers on Bergmann, but he’s worth a late-round flier.

91. Kyle Kendrick, Philadelphia Phillies (23) – Kendrick was the butt of a hilarious practical joke in which the team informed him he had been traded for a hot dog eating champion. That is probably what he is most known for at this point, but he offers some value as a control-based youngster. A diminutive K-rate (4.0) doesn’t always portend a pitcher that will struggle, especially if it is paired with pinpoint control, as Kendrick does.

92. Jeff Suppan, Milwaukee Brewers (33) – Another pitch-to-contact type that carry much upside. He is your typical innings eater that doesn’t strikeout very many batters. He is trending negatively in ERA and WHIP the past three seasons, which doesn’t do the already non-existent upside any favors. If you pay for a 4.40 ERA and 200 innings without expectations of anything more and the ability to handle slightly less, then you will do alright with Suppan. To truly maximize his value, hold off on acquiring him until after the break. He has a 3.09 ERA in 271.3 post All-Star Game innings since 2005.

93. Paul Byrd, Cleveland Indians (37) – Yet another supreme control pitcher that thrives on being stingy with the free passes and virtually unwilling to strike anyone out. Even if his ERA hovers around the 4.50 range, he is likely to help or stabilize your WHIP while notching a hanful of wins on a good team.

94. Joe Saunders, Los Angeles Angels (26) – If he can get a few more of these batted balls to find his defense’s gloves then he would see a pretty strong uptick in his value. He saw a 0.34 point jump in batting average against last year which led to a 0.10 WHIP jump, as well. As it is, he is a southpaw that the Angels have brought along nicely. After two partial seasons, Saunders looks to nail down a rotation spot for his first full season in the majors as a fifth starter. His strikeout rate from the minors (6.7 in 587 innings) has held pretty well at 6.0 in 187 major league innings. If he could add 0.5 to that total while keeping his walks where they are (2.7), he should be a solid back of the rotation option.

95. Franklin Morales, Colorado Rockies (22) – He pitched extraordinarily well down the stretch for the white-hot Rockies as they streaked into the playoffs and that may artificially inflate his value, so don’t get caught in the trap. He only brought 6 of the 9.7 strikeouts per nine he had in 428 minor league innings, so there is room for growth in that area. Of course, if he starts heading back towards the 9.7 mark, he may also head towards his 4.9 walks per nine ratio from the minors as well. He only had 3.2p9 during his stretch run that spanned 39.3 innings. There is plenty to like about this fireballer, especially his extreme groundball tendencies, but pay heed to the fact that he will suffer growing pains and regardless of all the humidor talk, Coors Field was still a severe hitter’s park.

96. Ubaldo Jimenez, Colorado Rockies (24) – I obviously paired these two together on purpose given their similarities (youth, power, suspect control and team). Jimenez brought more of his peripheral stats with him last year as he struck out 7.5 and walked 4.1 per nine innings (his rates in the minors were 8.8 and 4.5, respectively). As such, we got a clearer picture of what he has to offer and the potential shortcomings awaiting him this year. He is a groundball pitcher like Morales, though less pronounced. Either way, both allow that strong defense to take care of a lion’s share of the dirty work. In order to be consistently valuable for a fantasy team over the course of an entire season, Jimenez needs to be closer to three walks per nine than he is six walks per nine.

97. Randy Wolf, San Diego Padres (31) – He is now part of the “Pitching Excellency Test Center Operative”, commonly referred to as PETCO Park. That alone will spike his value and will likely price me out of the running for his services. He is vying for that 5th starter role on the Padres, but he will have stiff competition (namely Mark Prior and Clay Hensley). Of course, if he continues to fail to complete the first inning of his Spring Training starts (as he has done twice in row through March 5th), he will quickly remove himself from that competition.

98. Jair Jurrjens, Atlanta Braves (22) – On the surface, he fared pretty well during his 30.7 inning call up with the Detroit Tigers last year posting a 4.70 ERA and 1.14 WHIP. Looking closer, you see a 1.0 K:BB and just about lose your lunch. At 22 years old, it is easier to excuse that kind of performance, especially when he has over 500 minor league innings of a 3.3 K:BB ratio. He is probably best served with some time in AAA to start the season, but the Braves’ fifth spot is wide open and he is quickly emerging as the favorite. Something he has done well in the minor leagues is keep the ball in the park with a 0.50 HR/9 rate and moving from Detroit to Atlanta only helps the cause of keeping it that low. Turner Field was slightly in favor of pitchers in terms of home runs allowed last year, rating a 99. Meanwhile, Comerica Park checked in at 114.

99. Justin Duchscherer, Oakland A’s (30) – After posting 188 innings out of the bullpen for the A’s over the past five seasons, Duchscherer is headed back to the rotation for the first time since 2003. He is no stranger to the rotation, with 152 out of 170 of his minor league appearances coming as starts. And by all accounts during the spring, he is extremely happy to be heading back out for first inning action. The question won’t be if he has the skills to succeed as a starter, but rather his surgically repair hip will hold up or not. If it does, he could be a big time sleeper in just about every format. Since he is making a big move and coming off of a major injury, he finds himself on the back end of this Top 100.

100. Tom Glavine, Atlanta Braves (42) – My child will be left-handed, that way he can pitch in the majors forever! Glavine fell off the table in the second half of last year leaving many wondering if age finally caught up to him (prior to last year, he had three straight sub-4.00 ERA seasons) or if he just had a bad stretch. Well there were plenty of negative indicators in his 4.11 ERA first half that suggested he was headed towards the 5.00 mark, so the season at large paints a picture of decline. That said, he is heading back to Atlanta where he might just have one last hurrah left in him and stay on the right side of 4.50 ERA and 1.40 WHIP. His name alone will likely get him drafted/bought in most leagues, but don’t overdo it and reach for him.

Twelve under 30:

Gio Gonzalez, Oakland A’s (22) – This guy gets dealt more than the aces of clubs in the Bellagio, but he might have found his best landing spot yet in the Bay Area. He is still very young and pitched brilliantly in AA last year with 11.1 K/9 and a 3.3 K:BB ratio.

Luke Hochevar, Kansas City Royals (24) – With just 12.1 innings pitched, it was more of a sip of coffee as opposed to a cup, but he did look good in that very limited sample. He didn’t have any clear trends carry over between AA and AAA and he lost over 2 strikeouts per nine innings in the jump. He’ll need more seasoning, but definitely someone to watch.

J.P. Howell, Tampa Bay Rays (25) – A good season in AAA was marred by a disastrous spin around the majors. He lost control as his hits per nine went from 7.7 to 12.2 and walks from 2.4 to 3.7. If he can rid himself of the gopheritis and continue to fan plenty of batters, there could be a strong bargain available here.

Adam Loewen, Baltimore Orioles (24) – You have to wonder if Loewen is best friends with Daniel Cabrera after watching him walk 26 batters in his 30.3 innings last year. Given the sample size and how obscenely horrific that rate is, we can chalk it up as an aberration for now. But even in 2006, he was nearing five walks per nine, so his control as well as how he rebounds from the elbow injury will determine how far he goes.

Paul Maholm, Pittsburgh Pirates (25) – It is always tough to get excited about young guys that don’t blow batters away. Maholm’s 5.3 strikeouts per nine is not going to impress many, but when it is paired with only 2.5 walks per nine it is easier to digest. Though his actual ERA was 5.01, his work suggested something much nearer to 4.00. The potential is there.

Adam Miller, Cleveland Indians (23) – He has topped 70 innings in a season just twice since 2003 and only made it through 65.3 last year. Elbow problems are eating away at his potential, but lucky for him there is more than enough to eat. In his 461 minor league innings, he has struck out 8.9 per nine and walked just 2.7. Health is the key, as it is for throngs of young pitchers.

Scott Olsen, Florida Marlins (24) – This piece of garbage ruined several fantasy teams in 2007 (thankfully none of mine), but he had 180 solid innings under his belt coming into the season, so it might just be a sophomore slump. Off the field issues become a concern now, but a late round/low dollar flier could pay off.

Manny Parra, Milwaukee Brewers (24) – He actually increased his K/9 moving from AAA to the big show, but along with it came a sharp rise in walks and hits allowed which led to a fair, but unspectacular cup of coffee.

John Patterson, Washington Nationals (30)
– He can be a really valuable arm when healthy. How many pitcher profiles start out like that? Tons, I know, but Patterson is Prior-esque in his inability to stay healthy. Honestly, if you pay more than $2 for him or draft him before the reserve rounds, you’re not very interested in winning. Don’t chase, but recognize that he is still just 30 and still has the talent to be a season-changer if he can go 198 innings like he did in 2005.

Mike Pelfrey, New York Mets (24) – A disastrous debut may have taken him off of most radars, but he has a strong groundball rate (48%), but too many were counting for hits and he was walking four batters per nine innings leaving him with a ridiculously high WHIP. As a post-hype sleeper on an excellent team, he could be a strong reserve pick and end-game $1 arm.

Mark Prior, San Diego Padres (27) – Hey, he’s still Mark Prior and only at 27, someone in your league is going to fall in love with the fact that he’s moved to Petco (or “Pitching Excellency Test Center Operative”), the place where pitchers go to succeed. It’s still uncertain when he will be able to get back on the mound (perhaps late May, perhaps mid-summer), but there is intrigue.

Edinson Volquez, Cincinnati Reds (23) – The Texas Rangers just hate having viable pitchers, so they moved Volquez for Josh Hamilton. Volquez owned both AA and AA to the tune of 10.5 K/9 and a 3.2 K:BB ratio before a solid showing in 34 innings with the Rangers. He is a candidate for a rotation spot in Cincy for 2008, but as a flyball pitcher moving from one launching pad to another it is a buyer beware situation.

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