Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Keeper Analysis #12 - This Guy's Team

See all the other analysis here and the grid alignment here.

For the final team's analysis, I need to preface it with the fact that this team is the league's whipping boy. He tends to say and do stupid things but he firmly believes that whatever he does will make his team better. So without further ado, what follows will be an interesting case.

Rule #1: Never keep a first rounder. This eliminates Russ Martin (1) and Dan Haren (1). This does not eliminate Alex Rodriguez (1).

Rule #2: Never keep a catcher. This eliminates no one since Martin is already eliminated.

Rule #3: Never keep a closer above round 5. This eliminates no one.

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is unknown or won't get the majority of the playing time. This eliminates no one.

Rule #5: Never keep a veteran on the decline. This eliminates Giles (16), Matsui (7), Damon (16), and Mussina (16).

This leaves us with

Hitters:
Alex Rodriguez (1)
Youkilis (16)
K. Johnson (5)
Keppinger (16)
Ellsbury (11)
Ludwick (16)
Byrd (16)
Votto (15)

Pitchers:
Chamberlain (12)
Matsuzaka (3)
Price (16)
Cueto (16)
Lohse (16)
Marcum (16)
W. Rodriguez (16)

Right off the bat we can eliminate Marcum (16) because he went under the knife for Tommy John surgery. We can also eliminate Matsuzaka (3) because even though he will give you wins, his WHIP is way too high and his ERA is largely based on luck right now.

I would next eliminate Chamberlain (12) because I'm not 100% sure he's going to be a starter. I think there is a good chance he could end up staying in the pen which would severely limit his value this year for fantasy purposes.

So that leaves us with a bunch of guys who are round 16. In situations such as this, I tend to take the most talented pitcher because pitchers are so variable anyways. I think this is clearly Price and so that's who I would keep out of the pitchers.

Hitters:

I think we can automatically eliminate Kelly Johnson at 5. He's been a bit of a disappointment and is way too high at round 5. I think you can easily pick him up near round 9-10 at least. Out of the group of hitters at round 16, I think Youkilis is the most talented and the most likely to give you great return. That leaves us with:

AROD (1)
Youkilis (16)
Ellsbury (11)
Votto (15)

I think we can eliminate Votto (15) because at that range Youkilis is better at that spot. So I think it comes down to ARod (1), Youkilis (16), and Ellsbury (11). Ellsbury, even though he steals bases left and right, simply does not help out in the other areas enough to warrent being a keeper. His OBP, RBIs, and TBs simply are not high enough compared to Youk and ARod.

With everything considered I would keep Youk (16) over ARod at (1). Yes ARod may have another season like he did a couple of years ago, but if Youk gives you even 75% of what ARod does, he will be a steal at 16.

Summary: Youkilis (16) and Price (15).

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Buy Low/ Sell High Summary

Well here it is finally playoff time and I wanted to look at how I did at the end of the year. I created a spreadsheet here for everyone to see and compare different scenarios.

Looking at everything, I did win basically every category that the player can control. FIP - ERA for pitchers have a swing of close to 4 tenths of a point in ERA. The WHIP is better by close to .06 and more than 1K/9 better in the buy group. My pitchers also gave up less HR and had a higher average gamescore.

The hitters have a slightly worse HR/AB but everything else is better even nominally so.

Looking back on things, I realized I made three mistakes in my evaluations even though I have come out on top.

  • The superstars that I recommended had it in them to do that for that period of time. For instance, Berkman and Uggla with their power for the month or so after I suggested them. Yes their HRs did decrease over the second half, especially near the end.
  • I focused too much on benchmarks focusing on a batters eye (HR/FB to some extent, P/PA, and BB/SO) instead of focusing on metrics that focus on the skill of swinging the bat/throwing the ball and compare that to the league average (expected BABIP to BABIP, EQA, k%, LD/GB/FB rates, #"No doubt" and "Plenty" HR according to Hittrackeronline.com).
  • I put too much emphasis on general trend (downward trending of Gb/FB for instance) over the years instead of looking at the other metrics showing that he's turned the corner (such as a concurrent increase in K%).
I'm going to look long and hard at this, because even though I was successful, it wasn't nearly to the extent that I wanted. In the off-season there are going to be many different articles and discussions with the other authors from RotoSavants.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Keeper Analysis #11 - The Great Giambino Mustache Ride

See all of the previous analysis here and the grid here. This one will be somewhat special as it is the guy who just won the league (Troy).

Rule #1 : Never keep a first rounder. This eliminates Howard (1), Dunn (1), and Beltran (1).

Rule #2: Never keep a catcher. This eliminates McCann (4) and Iannetta (16).

Rule #3: Never keep a closer above round 5. This eliminates noone.

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is undefined and not going to get majority of playing time. This eliminates Masterson (16) and Broxton (16).

Rule #5: Never keep a veteran player in decline. This eliminates Maddux (16), Giambi (16), and Glaus (16).

That leaves us with:
Figgins (13)
Iwamura (16)
S. Drew (16)
McClouth (16)
Quentin (16)
Reynolds (16)

Kuo (16)
Volquez (16)
Guthrie (16)
Lackey (2)
Slowey (16)
Cain (6)
Soria (9)

I think right on talent alone we can eliminate Figgins (13), Iwamura (16), and Reynolds (16). Looking at the remainder of the group, all of them are 16th rounders. S. Drew (16) has an OPS+ of 111, McLouth (16) has an 124, and Quentin has an 149. Drew and McLouth both have seen about 1300 AB while Quentin has seen about 800ish but McLouth is the oldest of them at 26.

All of their HR/BIA isn't consistent and all of their BABIP are within the normal limits and fairly consistent with their past. Quentin has the highest GB% at 41.4%, Drew and McLouth have identical 34.2% GB%. McLouth has the best P/PA at 4.00 (and has increased each year), while Drew and Quentin have both decreased slightly from last year at 3.80 and 3.62.

In terms of contact, Quentin is slightly below average at 79%, Drew is average at 82%, and McLouth is the best at 88%. Quentin however has some question marks about the health of the wrist so that needs to be considered.

Based on this I choose McLouth. He has progressed the most, has the best GB%, highest P/PA, seen the most AB, and has an ever improving OPS+. While I no longer have questions about Quentins shoulder, I do have serious doubts about his wrist and the effect it will have on his power next year. Drew seems to be average or less in this group.

For the pitchers, I think we can eliminate Lackey (2), Cain (6), Soria (9), and Kuo (16) as either costing too high or the talent isn't on par with everyone else. So we're left with Volquez, Guthrie, and Slowey, all 16th rounders.

  • To start with, Volquez has an ERA+ of 140, Guthrie has a 122, and Slowey owns a 105. Neutralized according to baseball-reference.com shows Volquez to have a 2.59 ERA and a WHIP of 1.259. Guthrie has a 3.23 ERA and a 1.152 WHIP while Slowey owns a 3.75 ERA and a 1.112 WHIP.
  • Volquez also owns the best in play % where the lower is better and his is at 15.7% and has improved each of the last 3 years. Guthrie and Slowey are both around 20% and thus they are more reliant on their defense and luck.
  • Volquez also has the highest GB % at 46% over Guthrie and Slowey's at 43% and 34% respectively. Everyone's BABIP is in line with their norms. K% also goes to Volquez at 23% where the norm is 16%. Guthrie is at 15% and Slowey is at 18%.
  • BB% goes to Slowey at 3.68% where the norm is 8%. Guthrie is at 7% while Volquez is 11%.
Finally directly from Statcorner.com
SwStr% (SP: 7.8%, RP: 9.5%)The percentage of pitches thrown that are swung on and missed. These have a direct linear relationship with a pitcher's strikeout rate and are often a good leading variable for how a pitcher will perform in the future.
  • Volquez is at 10.9% and has increased each of the last 3 years. Guthrie is at 7.6% and Slowey is at 8.7%
With all that, I would recommend Volquez at 16. The one concern everyone has is his walks. I strongly think that his other categories more than make up for the increased walks, especially when the BABIP is within normal limits. If he was in Dice-K mode and walking everyone in sight but not giving up runs, then I'd be worried. Guthrie I think is in the middle of the road and Slowey may end up being a Maddux type in the future but right now you have to go with Volquez who is above many of the metrics I see.

Summary: I recommend keeping McLouth (16) and Volquez (15).

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Keeper Analysis #10 - The Franchise

See all previous analysis here and see the grid here.

Even though I already know who he's going to keep, I'm going to run through everything as usual.

Rule #1: Never keep a first rounder. That eliminates Miguel Cabrera (1), Jose Reyes (1), and Vlad (1).

Rule #2: Never keep a catcher. That eliminates Soto (9).

Rule #3: Never keep a closer above round 5. That eliminates Rodriguez (5). Especially now that he set the record and will be overpriced next year.

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is not well defined and guaranteed playing time. That eliminates Weeks (4), Ziegler (16), and Lannan (16).

Rule #5: Never keep a declining veteran. This eliminates Lee (2), Delgado - another renaissance man (15), and Swisher (2).

That leaves us with

Hitters:
Sizemore (9)
Pence (13)
LaPorta (16)
Tulowitzki (2)

I think it's pretty obvious who he's going to keep. Sizemore at round 9 is an absolute steal as he's going to provide first round talent for years to come.

Keep Sizemore (9)


Pitchers:
M Parra (16)
T Lincecum (12)
C Zambrano (2)
G Meche (16)
G Smith (16)
J Weaver (9)
J.R. Johnson (16)



We can eliminate Zambrano (2) because it's way too high. Based on talent level we can eliminate Meche (16 and not good enough), Smith (16 and not good enough yet), and J.R. Johnson (16).

So based on Parra (16), Lincecum (12), and Weaver (9) who would everyone choose. That's correct Lincecum at 12 is another amazing pick for him and this could easily set up this owner for several years to come.

Summary: Sizemore (9) and Lincecum (12)

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Keeper Analysis #9 - The Benchwarmers

Check out all my previous analysis here and then the round cost here.

Rule #1: Never keep a first rounder. This eliminates Morneau (1), David Wright (1), and Carlos Lee (1).

Rule #2: Never keep a catcher. This eliminates Mauer (5).

Rule #3: Never keep a closer above round 5. This eliminates no one.

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is not well defined and guaranteed majority of playing time. This eliminates no one.

Rule #5: Never keep a declining veteran. This eliminates Orlando Cabrera (16), Miguel Tejada (10), Randy Johnson (13).

Unfortunately this doesn't eliminate a lot of people but this is what we're left with.

Hitters:

Pedroia (12)
A. Hill (16)
B. Hall (16)
Milledge (15)
Kemp (6)
Wells (4)
Fukudome (8)
Taveres (16)
Adrian Gonzalez (9)

Pitchers

Harang (3)
Garza (16)
Chris R Young (2)
Duchscherer (16)
Davies (16)
Harden (15)
Sanchez (16)

For the hitters I think it's safe to assume that we can eliminate Kemp (6), Wells (4), Fukudome (8), B. Hall (16), Taveras (16), and A. Hill (16) as their cost is too high or the talent level isn't on par with the rest. So that leaves us with:

Pedroia (12)
Milledge (15)
Adrian Gonzalez (9)

Milledge (15) has the above average talent but he only has given you average production so far. Also he plays for the Nationals so his RBIs and Rs will be hard to come by. So because of this I eliminate Milledge (15).

That leaves us with Pedroia (12) and Gonzalez (9). Both have had breakout seasons and both would be very good value where they are drafted. Pedroia's wOBA+ is 112 vs. Gonzalez's 113. Dustin's OPS+ is 124 while Adrian is 136. Pedroia's BABIP is .325 while Adrian's is .310 so both have enjoyed slightly higher than normal "luck".

One difference though is the trending of LD% which to me shows a different approach at the plate. Pedroia's has decreased each of the last 3 years while increased his FB% indicating to me that he's trying to hit more HR and use the wall in left field more often. Adrian has mostly maintained his LD% throughout the time meaning his success isn't a fluke. Adrian's HR/BIA is much better at 13.4% and has increased each of the last several years. Dustin's, despite having a phenomenal season, only has a 5% HR/BIA.

Plate discipline is almost important to me. I need to see whether or not a player is making progress at recognizing pitches and determining whether or not they can hit the ball hard. Dustin's overall % of pitches taken hasn't moved much in the last couple of years. Adrian's though has increased each of his years in the league and is now up to 53.8%. The key though is whether or not they were good pitches to take or bad ones.

Dustin's % of pitches taken that were balls has increased each year to a present 65.8% while his % pitches taken that were strikes has decreased to 34.2%. So even though he's not taking an overall greater # of pitches, he's recognizing them better and is producing more as well. Adrian's % of pitches taken for balls has really stabilized the last 3 years roughly around 74% as has his % of pitches taken for strikes around 26%.

So what we have are two players who have produced at a high level this year. One is a tiny second basemen and one is a big first basemen. One is improving his plate discipline while one is keeping his excellent level up.

So I think this comes down to the position they play. Dustin Pedroia has the highest VORP (62.1) of any 2B this year and does it in a position in which there are really only 4-5 good players. The drop off after this is large and you'd be stuck with roughly an average or slightly above average player. Adrian's VORP of 43.0 is top 10 of the 1B but it's still nowhere nears Pedroia's. It's also at a position where while those numbers are great, they don't stand out as much from other players at his position.

For this I eliminate Gonzalez (9) and keep Pedroia (12).

Pitchers:

We start out with this:
Harang (3)
Garza (16)
Chris R Young (2)
Duchscherer (16)
Davies (16)
Harden (15)
Sanchez (16)

I think we can safely eliminate Harang (3) and Chris R Young (2). These guys simply cost too high for their round cost. I think based on talent we can eliminate Davies (16). I also think that we can eliminate Duchscherer (16) based on his arthritic or pre-arthritic hip condition.

That leaves us with:
Garza (16)
Harden (15)
Sanchez (16)

All of them have been good pitchers this year and Harden has been simply amazing this year. All of them are young with Harden being the oldest at 26.

  • Garza has the highest GB% at 41.8% while Harden has the lowest at 28.6%.
  • Harden has the highest K% at 30% while Garza has the lowest at 16%.
  • Garza also has the best BB% at 7.60% and Sanchez has worst at 10.79%.
  • Harden has the best HR/BIA at around 4.5% while Garza has the worst at 5.66% although his has steadily decreased and could be below 5.3% next year.
  • Harden has the best ERA+ at 210 while Sanchez has the worst at 86.
So I think with all of this I think we can immediately eliminate Sanchez (16). Now I think we need to bring in the health question of Harden. There has never been a question about his talent only his ability to stay healthy. Harden has a long list of injuries which has limited his effectiveness so far. Even with that I think we should choose Harden (15) here.

He is so talented while healthy that he is worth the risk at round 15. You could have an absolute steal here. He could help you dominate the league in K 's, ERA, and WHIP.

Summary: Pedroia (12) and Harden (15)

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Keeper Analysis #8 - Operation Must Not Fail

Here's my latest analysis. For reference review the previous analysis and also the round cost.

Rule # 1: Never keep a first rounder. This eliminates Alfonso Soriano (1) and Jake Peavy (1).

Rule #2: Never keep a catcher. This eliminates B. Inge (16) and R. Hernandez (16).

Rule #3: Never keep a closer above round 5. This doesn't eliminate anyone.

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is not well defined and with regular playing time. This eliminates Stewart (16), Barmes (16), Span (16), and Wheeler (16).

Rule #5: Never keep a player who is a declining veteran. This eliminates Dye (6), Ibanez (9), and Hoffman (8).

That leaves us with:

Hitters:

Atkins (2),
Adam LaRoche (16),
Uggla (4),
Alexei Ramirez (16)
Ankiel (7),

Pitchers:

Cliff Lee (16)
Saunders (16)
Galaragga (16)
Volstad (16)
Eveland (16)
Carmona (13)
Shields (6)
Marquis (16)
Dempster (16)
Wood (16)

I set up another spreadsheet to follow along easier.For the hitters, I think we can all agree that of the group we should eliminate Atkins (2) and Adam LaRoche (16). So now we should discuss Uggla, Alexei Ramirez, and Ankiel. Based on wOBA+ alone, I think we can eliminate Ramirez (16).

So we have Uggla (4) versus Ankiel (7). While Uggla has a improving P/PA and HR/BIA he's not really improving his plate discipline. This is where Ankiel has the advantage. Ankiel is already producing similar power numbers but he's improving his plate discipline as measured by TkB% and TKS%. Also Ankiel is improving both his FB% and LD% unlike Uggla who's decreasing his LD%. So what we see with Uggla is when he hits the ball, he hits a HR. Ankiel appears to actually be a more complete hitter at this time and that's why I'm keeping Ankiel at 7. If I had Uggla in a similar round, I'd give him more thought but I feel that when you draft a hitter in the 4th round he needs to be more of a complete hitter.

We have a lot of pitchers on that list. I think out of the list we can eliminate Marquis, Dempster, Galarraga, Volstad, and Eveland right away. I know that Dempster has had an amazing season but he has come out of nowhere and I have concerns about his workload. So that leaves us with:

Cliff Lee (16)
Saunders (16)
Carmona (13)
Shields (6)
Wood (16)

I think we should eliminate Shields because you can probably redraft him there next year in round 6. That leaves us with:

Cliff Lee (16)
Saunders (16)
Carmona (13)
Wood (16)

I don't really like anything at first glance that says that I need to take him. Wood at 16 with all of the potential saves is very interesting but given his injury history and the fact that you can easily find saves each year late, I'm eliminating Wood (16).

Saunders BABIP is a little below .270 which is slightly low, everyone else's is in the normal range. One of the things I really look for is the GB% and the HR/BIA. Carmona is much better at this than either of them and that looks like he's got a leg up. Saunders K% has decreased each of the last couple years while his walk rate remained the same roughly so I'll eliminate Saunders (16)

Cliff Lee versus Carmona. Honestly it shouldn't have even come to this. The owner should have traded Lee during the height of his streak or at least immediately afterwards and be able to get a great younger keeper. Instead you have polar opposites to choose from. Do you keep Lee who easily could have just had his career year or do you choose Carmona who seemed to have stumbled a bit since the end of the year.

I would choose Carmona (13). Lee's meteoric rise from last year to this year is too suspicious to me and he's easily going to be regressing next year. Many people may easily think about this so you may be able to pick him up around round 10 if you feel really good about him next year. Carmona though has better GB%, LD%, FB%, and BABIP. I think he'll be much better physically next year which should only help his numbers more.

Summary: Ankiel (7) and Carmona (13)

Monday, September 22, 2008

Keeper Analysis #7 - Niko's Other Cousin

See all my previous analysis here and the grid here.

Rule #1: Never keep 1st rounders. This eliminates V. Martinez (1), Rollins (1), and Crawford (1).

Rule #2: Never keep a catcher. This eliminates Navarro (16) and Molina (16).

Rule #3: Never keep a closer above round 5. This doesn't eliminate anyone.

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is not well defined and get the majority of playing time. This eliminates Hinske (16), Blake (16), Ethier (16), Scott (16), Church (16), Byrd (16), and Torres (16).

Rule #5: Never keep a declining veteran. This eliminates Hunter (4) and Gregg (13).

Leaves us with:

Hitters:
B.J. Upton (13)
A. Gordon (5)
A. Lind (16)
C.B. Young (11)

Pitchers:
Wainwright (9)
Looper (16)
Billingsley (13)
Floyd (16)
Nolasco (16)
Halladay (6)
B. Wilson (10)

Based on performance alone, I think we can only eliminate A. Gordon (5) off the bat. Everything thing else we'll have to evaluate so this will be a little more in depth than others. For the hitters, I have 2 Charts. Rather than list them out here, I put them in a google spreadsheet that everyone can see.

Looking in the first chart (Niko Event), there's nothing really that jumps out at me. Upton's numbers are down this year because of the shoulder injury and he is the only one above average in terms of wOBA+. The other thing I like about Upton is his LD% which fueled his BABIP.

The second chart (Nike hitter pitch) gives us much better information about whether or not a player is progressing as a hitter. Upton is the only one that is making significant progress in terms of plate discipline. The percentage of pitches taken that were strikes is down 7% from his rookie year while Lind's tkS% actually increased. C.B. Young's TkS% decreased as well but only by 2-3%. TkB% (pitches taken that were balls) appropriately increased for Upton and Young but decreased for Lind. To me this shows that Upton has made significant strides towards his plate discipline. Also, the overall # pitches per plate appearance is over 4 for Upton while a shade under 4 for Young and significantly under for Lind.

Because of this, I will eliminate Young (11) and Lind (16). I'm eliminating Young because he has a higher round value than Upton even though they will likely be similar.

For pitchers, there are a lot of options. Looking at tRA+ (similar to ERA+), we can eliminate Looper (16) and Floyd (16) as both are under 100 (an average pitcher). I think we can eliminate Wainwright (9) due to a combination of injuries and round. For the same reason, I think we can eliminate Halladay. Keeping him at round 6 would be handicapping yourself and buying into the notion that he will have just as good a year as this year. I can't see that happening as he declined in the previous 2 years. So I eliminate Halladay (6).

That leaves us with Nolasco (16), Billingsley (13), and Wilson (10). Of those, I think Billingsley clearly has the best numbers. He has the highest GB% of the three and the highest K% of the 3. He also gives up the lowest HR/BIA. Given those I normally would keep Billingsley (13) but you can't keep two players in the same round, so I choose to keep Nolasco.

Summary: Keep Upton (13) and Nolasco (16).

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Keeper Analysis #6 - My Team Sucks

Our 6th installment is one that's going to make our decisions fairly difficult. To see all of the other ones check here while seeing the round cost here.

Rule #1: Never keep a player in the first round. This one hurts me but it eliminates Hanley Ramirez (1), Fielder (1), and Hamels (1). The one that hurts is Hanley. He gives such and incredible blend of power and speed that it is scary. The one knock on him is that his scoring and RBI opportunities may not be there. Even in his amazing run of two years driven in an average of about 70 RBIs.

Rule #2: Never keep a catcher. This eliminates Shoppach (16) even though he's had a good year. Catchers never play every game and if they do they'll wear down at the end.

Rule #3: Never keep a closer if he'll cost you more than a 5th round pick. This eliminates Putz (4).

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is not well defined. This eliminates Polanco (16), Hawpe (3), Baldelli (11), Jackson (16), and C. Perez (16).

Rule #5: Never keep a declining veteran. This eliminates Willingham (13).

That leaves us with:

Hitters:

Hanley Ramirez (1)
Cano (5)
Rowand (10)
Cruz (16)
Headley (16)

Pitchers:

Maine (13)
Pelfrey (16)
Kazmir (2)

Let's look at the Hitters first. After this season I think it's safe to say that Cano and Rowand are not really keeper material. So do you want to go with youth or experience. I say you'd keep Hanley Ramirez and this is why. This is from Statcorner.com



YearPAwOBAwOBA*lgwOBAwOBA+
200520.000 0.000 0.339 0
20067000.371 0.372 0.338 110
20077060.407 0.410 0.332 123
20086680.407 0.409 0.327 125
YearPtcTkB%TkS%
20051150.0%50.0%
2006280465.6%34.4%
2007256568.7%31.3%
2008276670.5%29.5%


The wOBA+ is fairly straightforward and that is the OBA compared to the rest of the league. Statcorner uses it to compare a player to everyone else. You can see he has improved each of the last 3 years. Currently Headley is a little bit over 100 while Cruz's is in the low 130s but only over 97 PA. To me the biggest thing about Ramirez is looking at the second group of numbers. Each of the last 3 years he has improved his pitch selection. TkB% is the percentage of pitches taken that were balls and has risen steadily. TkS% is therefore the percentage of pitches taken that were strikes has dropped steadily. He's improving his pitch selection and starting to finally take walks and progress as a hitter. I expect a monster season from him next year.

Thus, I keep Hanley (1).

Pitching similarly really isn't that different. Kazmir is a good pitcher but he is not worth a 2nd round pick, at least in our league. He's likely a #mid 3-4 round pick in my opinion based on his late season inconsistency.

John Maine (13) versus Mike Pelfrey (16). Going back to Statcorner.com, tRa+ measures a pitchers effectiveness. "tRA involves assigning run and out values to all events under a pitcher's control and coming up with an expected number of runs allowed and outs generated in a defense and park neutral environment." tRa+ is therefore the difference when compared to others in the league. Maine has a tRa+ of 100 meaning he's exactly league average while Pelfrey is 110.

Another metric is the BB%. Maine's has increased in each of the last 3 years (8.86, 9.26, 11.02%) while Pelfrey's has actually decreased in each of the last 3 years (12.12, 11.15, 7.63%) Pelfrey's BABIP is also a more realistic .302 while Maine's is .266. Pelfrey has a much better GB rate than Maine by 10% and finally the real kicker to me is that Pelfrey has a much better HR%/BIA (ball in air) 3.65% to 6.56% .

Because of all of that, I eliminate Maine and would keep Pelfrey (16). Maine does give a better K% but you can make that up in other places.

Summary: Hanley (1) and Pelfrey (16).

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Keeper Analysis #5 - "I Suck"

You can see the first four here, here, here, and here. You can see what the value would cost here.

Rule #1: Never keep a first rounder, unless Utley and Rodriguez. I need to amend that slightly in this case because he could keep Pujols in the 1st round but I would only do it if he's drafting near the end of the first round. For now, I'm ruling Pujols out though because we don't know where he's going to draft and there is the risk of Pujols getting the surgery. This eliminates Pujols (1), Rios (1), and verlander (1).

Rule #2: Never keep a closer if he costs more than a 5th rounder. He does have Papelbon and it would only cost a 6th rounder so he looks like a very promising choice to keep.

Rule #3: Never keep a catcher. This eliminates C. Snyder (13) and Ivan Rodriguez (16).

Rule #4: Never keep a player whose role is not well defined. That maybe eliminates Blalock (16), D. Young (16) and Wigginton (16).

Rule # 5: Never keep a declining veteran. That eliminates Thome (7), Huff despite a career year (16), Cantu (16), Winn (16), Guzman (16), and Oswalt (4).

That leaves us with:

Hitters
C Kotchman (16)
H Kendrick (8)
R Zimmerman (3)
B Harris (16)
M Ordonez (4)
D Murphy (16)
E Dukes (16)
F Lewis (16)

Pitching:
J Blanton (12)
J Jurrjens (16)
C Ray (16)
J Papelbon (6)


For the pitching side, I think the clear cut winner is Papelbon at 6. In this league closers start to go at the very end of round 4 and early round 5 so we're not getting a huge advantage value-wise but knowing you have those 40 Saves in the bank is very comforting. Also the other options simply are not that good in my eyes.

For the hitters, this is difficult simply because it's so full of crap. Zimmerman at 3 is way to high so we can eliminate him. Ordonez looks to have taken a step back in terms of his power and in round 4 I'd want either a high power guy or someone who goes 20/20 for me. Ordonez doesn't run so he's eliminated. Fred Lewis is barely above average and doesn't project to be a superstar/keeper level so he is eliminated. Brenden Harris isn't anything special and may not be above average at all so he's eliminated. Dukes can't stay healthy and you also can't predict when he's going to explode so he's eliminated. Kotchman has been an average hitter for the last several years and out of your 1st baseman, especially your keeper 1st baseman, you want Ryan Howard/Pujols kind of numbers. Kotchman is now eliminated.

So that leaves us with David Murphy (16) and Howie Kendrick (8). Kendrick is appealing because he has the talent to win multiple batting titles. His problem is that he's having trouble staying healthy. Murphy's problem has been the slow development of his bat but he seems to have turned it around. Murphy will give you a 20/10 which is especially valuable and that's if he doesn't improve from this year to the next. Kendrick offers you high average with some speed. Which do you choose?

I chose David Murphy at 16. To me you never want to really gamble on someone in the single digits. There is a very good chance you could have Kendrick at 8 again if you really like him but there's s good possibility Murphy won't be around at 16. I think you can expect a similar year to Murphy's year right now with the potential to add a few on each of the counting stats.

Summary: Murphy (16) and Papelbon (6)

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

ER Recruiter addendum

I feel ashamed for not even remembering this guy was on my team but I completely forgot about Max Scherzer (16).

This completely changes the dynamic of my pitching keeper. I think Liriano will be much better than in the past now that he's almost completely back from Tommy John surgery, but I was always a little hesitant to use a 6th rounder on him. I think that there is a good chance I can draft him again around there unless Troy and Lee screw me over. Because his numbers were so awful when he first came back, it skews his overall numbers for the year so there is a good chance you can draft him there too.

Scherzer will be a 16th rounder. He strikes guys out by the ton and he has some of the best stuff of any young pitcher in the game. In 45 innings this year he has struck out an amazing 54 hitters while only walking 18. His BABIP is higher than what it should be and that could normalize.

So now I'm really left with Liriano at 6 or Scherzer at 16. Right now as of this minute, I'm now leaning towards Scherzer at 16.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Keeper Analysis # 4 (I Spit Hot Fire)

Looks like my choice of Longoria over Hamilton touched off a few differences of opinion. To review, my previous analysis is here, here, and here.

Everyone's cost is here.

Rule #1: Never keep a first rounder. That eliminates Berkman (1), Ramirez (1), and Holliday (1).

Rule #2 Never keep a closer. That eliminates Marmol (16) and Rauch (16).

Rule #3 Never keep a catcher. That eliminates Napoli (13) and Varitek (16).

Rule #4 Never keep a player whose role is not known. That eliminates Lowrie (16) and Edwin Encarnacion (16).

Rule #5 Never keep a declining veteran. That eliminates Frank Thomas (16), Ted Lilly (12), Khalil Greene (11), Randy Wolf (16), and E.

Byrnes (2).

That leaves a pretty thin crop.

Hitters:

B. Phillips (8)

M. Aviles (16)

J. Bay (5)

P. Burrell (7)

X. Nady (16)

Pitchers:

AJ Burnett (8)

J. Beckett (3)

D. Rasner (16)

God I'm glad I don't own this team. Just my quick general opinion is that you'd keep Phillips at 8 and hope for a rebound. Aviles could end up being the best value at 16 but there's simply too much uncertainty in his future performance. Add in the fact that he plays for the Royals and he won't exactly be driving in a ton or scoring a lot.

Jason Bay at 5 is too high and you could easily draft him there anyways. Finally I just don't think that Nady is that great a hitter.

Let's let the numbers decide though.

To start off with I decided to do a quick OPS+ comparison for the hitters. B. Phillips averaged under 100 over the last 3 years, while Aviles has an OPS+ of 113 this year. Jason Bay has posted an average of over 130 while Burrell has averaged in the low 120s. Finally Nady is having a 130+ season but previously never got above 110. Immediately I see that keeping Phillips at 8 would be a mistake. I would much rather have Burrell or Bay rather than Phillips or Aviles. I would eliminate Aviles (16), Phillips (8), and Nady (16).

So now we have Bay (5) versus Burrell (7). Bay has made improved contact the last couple years while Burrell's is declining. Burrell's LD % is declining each of the last 3 years while Bay's have remained constant. wOBA+ is about the same for each of them. Bay has speed while Burrell doesn't. For me, that's the difference. I firmly believe that you should draft many players that can get you 15 SB rather than 1 guy with 60SB and nothing else. Bay at 5 is my keeper.

For pitchers I think its straightforward who you would keep if you absolutely had to keep one, AJ Burnett at 8. The problem is that you should probably keep Phillips there. I don't think you should keep Beckett at 3 as you could probably be able to redraft him there unless you have some psycho Red Sox fans. And Rasner is too much of an unknown in order to be kept. So guess what, for the first and probably the last I recommend not keeping any pitcher.

Summary: Bay (5) and no pitcher

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Keeper Analysis #3 (ER Recruiter)

The third installment is my team ER Recruiter. You can see the analysis of 108 Stitches and Emporers VIP Club to see my previous thoughts. You can see each player's cost for next year here.

Remember my first rule, never keep a player that would cost a 1st round choice unless it is Alex Rodriguez or Chase Utley. I don't have either so we can eliminate Mark Teixeira (1), Corey Hart (1), David Ortiz (1).

2nd rule: eliminate all closers who would cost more than a 5th rounder. I should make an ammendment in that you should never keep a closer unless he's an absolute elite closer. That eliminates all of my closers in Wagner (7 and I should drop him anyways), Street (8), and Rodney (16).

3rd rule: Never keep a catcher, ever. This eliminates Laird (16) and Clement (16).

4th rule: Never keep a player whose role is not well defined. This eliminates Jeff Baker (16).

5th rule: Never keep a veteran on the decline. This eliminates Chipper (3), JD Drew (13), and Bradley (16).

So that leaves us with a list of:

Hitters:
B. Roberts (4)
Beltre (15)
Peralta (6)
Bruce (11)
Gomez (16)

Pitchers:
Baker (16)
F. Hernandez (4)
F. Liriano (6)
H. Kuroda (16)
N. Blackburn (16)
U. Jimenez (16)

So this leaves me with quite a little dilemma. For the hitters, there isn't too much of a decision as Gomez (16) still needs more seasoning clearly. Peralta (6) and Roberts (4) both have the production at that position but I could easily draft them in those rounds anyways. In these situations, that's basically like wasting a keeper selection. Beltre (15) is a good value there but overall his production isn't keeper worthy I think. So that leaves me with Bruce at round 11. I'm looking at not only next year but the year after when he's only going to be an 8th rounder for me.

Pitching wise is tough. Looking at the talent levels and the teams that they are on, of all the 16 rounders only Jimenez stands out. This eliminates Blackburn (16), Baker (16), and Kuroda (16). So it's really between F. Hernandez (4), Liriano (6), and Jimenez (16).

Looking at their career trends first with the help of Statcorner.com, I like to analyze 7 main components of a pitcher when deciding whether or not to keep them. K%, BB%, LD%, GB%, % pitches thrown for a called strike, and % pitches thrown for a swinging strike. I break down the strikes because I feel it helps to break down how "good" their pitches are with their movement and control.

This is what we have by each player:

Hernandez
K% BB% LD% GB% ClStr% SwStr%
23.48% 7.01% 13.3% 68.1% 19.6% 10%
21.57% 7.35% 16.9% 58.5% 18.3% 9%
20.45% 6.44% 17.7% 59.6% 18.9% 9.7%
20.97% 9.44% 19.3% 50.9% 17.1% 8.8%

Liriano
K% BB% LD% GB% ClStr% SwStr%
32.56% 8.14% 23.5% 47.1% 15.5% 17.6%
29.71% 7.43% 14.4% 58.1% 19.6% 15.1%
19.61% 9.62% 16.3% 41.3% 15.6% 10.3%

Jimenez
K% BB% LD% GB% ClStr% SwStr%
12% 12% 21.1% 47.4% 16.3% 8.7%
19.21% 10.45% 18.9% 45.3% 17.3% 9.2%
18.91% 11.68% 17.9% 53.8% 16.4% 8.2%

I have to admit, when I ran these numbers I was a little surprised. I knew that Hernandez wasn't exactly as dominating as he was his rookie season but he has declined in every single metric that I look at. Somewhat concerning is that his BB% suddenly spiked this year while his called strike % dropped. Also, someone who supposedly has absolutely dominating stuff, swinging strikes are getting harder and harder to come by, dropping by a full % point this year. This leads me to worry about his health. Control issues are always of a concern with elbow injuries and he has suffered from some in the past. Additionally, he has suffered from multiple lower leg injuries this year which would cause me to be concerned about kinetic chain issues. Lastly, I just don't think the Mariners will be good next year so the opportunity for Wins will be hard to come by.

We all know about Liriano's injury history and while that doesn't worry me a ton, what does worry me is what appears to be a sudden drop in K%. That's deceiving though because he was at such an unreal rate and also the first couple of starts this year. He's just starting to feel comfortable after coming back from Tommy John surgery. His called strikes are back where it was his rookie year while his swinging strikes are definitely down. I think this is definitely the result of slowly improving the movement on his pitches and should only improve next year. He also is throwing more FB and I think this is also the result of the movement on his pitches but also his pitch selection. He and the Twins have been hesistant to call for the slide piece because of the propensity to cause elbow problems. Now that he will be 18 months after the surgery come next year, most pitchers are back to normal at this point.

Jimenez's issues aren't health or velocity. It's always been about his control and thus the only question I have about him is whether or not I think his control will improve next year. His GB% spiked this year so I have to wonder if that is a little bit of an anomoly. After performing pretty well during the middle of the year, he has settled back into an inconsistent pattern. That is one thing I personally don't want out of a keeper is inconsistency. He does have the opportunity to improve as he has only thrown about 250 MLB IP but then again he may not. Most starting pitchers need about 500 IP before settling into their true pattern.

So it comes down to what I'm willing to give up based on my risk/reward value system. I think Felix Hernandez and his injury possibility is too much to give up for a 4th round pick. Offense would be much better suited to be picked there.

So Jimenez (16) or Liriano (6). I have to admit that Liriano is a little bit of my binkie but I also believe that Liriano is much more likely to produce at a keeper level than Jimenez. I usually take the best arm/stuff available but it doesn't always work out that way. I kept Clay Buchholz last year because he was described as having the best stuff and we all see how that worked for me. I really think that Liriano will continue to improve on his string of starts at the end of this year. I am not expecting a repeat of his rookie season where he was better than everyone alive, but I am expecting a much improved version of the 2nd half pitcher we're seeing. I expect 6-8K per game while going 6-7 IP each start. I also expect a WHIP around 1.10 with an ERA in the high 3's. Jimenez may give me the K's and the IP but he definitely will not give me that WHIP and ERA.

Summary: Bruce (11) and Liriano (6)

Friday, September 12, 2008

Keeper Analysis Team #2 (Emporer's VIP Room)

We covered the first team (108 Stitches) here but it was pretty straightforward with very few legitimate keepers on her team. Our next team (Emporers VIP Club) has a couple interesting situations.

Following the first rule of never keeping anyone from the first round unless it was Chase Utley or Alex Rodriguez. Even though he might be tempted to keep Johan if he has a low first round pick, I don't think that he is worthy of a definite keeper pick. What hurts him is not the things he controls in Wins and Saves. Compared to a hitter who controls all 6 categories in a first round hitter, 4 categories in my opinion isn't enough. CC Sabathia is a name that could be interesting depending on where he ends up. If he ends up with a team that has a great bullpen, I might consider him with one of the last few picks in the first round but that's a big if. For now though, I'm not going to consider him. We can eliminate Santana, Sabathia, and M. Ramirez(just not a 1st rounder anymore).

The second rule I have is never keep catchers so that eliminates Molina (16).

Thirdly, I never keep veterans on the decline so this eliminates C.Guillen (3), J. Kent (11), M. Mora (16), Ichiro (4), Carpenter (16),B. Abreu (7), and Dave Bush (16).

Fourthly, I never keep closers if they cost more than a 5th round pick or unless they will help in all categories other than Wins. This eliminates Lidge and Capps. Ryan is somewhat interesting but according to the PFX data he has severely fatigued in the 2nd half. He has thrown balls at the second highest rate of his career (37.6%) and thrown the lowest percentage of swinging strikes for his career at 9.2%. A closer that doesn't strike people out enough and throws a lot of balls is a player who I do not want on my team. Also given his injury history, he's basically a time bomb waiting to go off on your fantasy team one way or the other. Morrow would give me serious pause if he was a closer but I believe the Mariners are going to use him as a starter. This gives me a little worry in that it may increase his risk of injury or breakdown. So I will elimate Ryan (9) and Morrow (16).

That leaves us with the following:

Hitters:
•Carlos Pena (5)
•Escobar (16)
•Davis(16)
•Hardy(15)
•Markakis (2)
•Braun (13)

Pitchers:
•J. Johnson (16)
•Sheets (6)
•Kershaw (16)
•Francis (12)
•Harrison (16)
•Ollie Perez (12)
•Maholm (16)
•Wellemeyer (16)

Going over the hitters obviously the only real option is Braun. Everyone else, while it'd be nice to have on the team, isn't keeper material at that price when you have Braun sitting there in round 13. This is his 2nd year being kept so going into 2010 he will be a 9th rounder and then a 4th for 2011. For some reason I don't think I'm going to get Braun anytime soon.

Pitching though I think we have a real dilemma. From a talent level alone, I think we can safely eliminate Francis (12), Ollie Perez (12), J. Johnson (16), and Maholm (16). Matt Harrison is too young and could be next years Clay Buccholz (bad sophmore year) so we'll eliminate Harrison (16). Wellemeyer will be 28 next season so most likely his growth phase is complete or at least relatively complete. Since both him and Kershaw are 16th rounders, I would rather have Kershaw at 16 than Wellemeyer. For that reason, we can eliminate Wellemeyer (16).

So we're left with Sheets (6) and Kershaw (16). Each player's Baseball Prospectus card is linked to their name to provide an excellent projection system. Unfortunately subscription is required, but in my opinion it is well worth it. Sheets is projected to perform very well and could be in the prime of his career. The problem with Sheets has always been his health. Even though this year has been one of his best, he's still battled some ailments throughout the season. Each year he gets older at this point in his career, the likelihood of injury increases.

On the other hand, Kershaw is the opposite in a way. His inexperience could lead to some problems for next year or the year after. He comes in with all the talent in the world but still needs to work on his control a little more. Kershaw throws a ball almost 40% of the time while the average major leaguer throws it about 32-35%. So far he has merely been average in his time here and still needs a lot of growth to reach his potential.

So it comes down to this: Do you want to take the risk on injury history or take the risk on inexperience. Personally I take the injury risk. That may be due to the Athletic Trainer in me but I look at skills. Once you are able to exhibit a skill at a certain level you basically always have that within you. Kershaw still hasn't proven that to me yet at the major league level. He's done it in the minors but it's different than in the show. Sheets' injury history is problematic to be sure but his skill set is amazing. According to Statcorner.com, Sheets has pitched at a level 37% higher than the average pitcher this year while Kershaw has been right at 100. I'd rather take the skill right now. Maybe in a year or two I'd keep Kershaw but I'd keep Sheets at 6 if I was his owner.

Summary: Sheets (6) and Braun (13)

Thursday, September 11, 2008

First Installment of Keeper Analysis

First off I'd like to apologize wholeheartedly to all of the readers. I've had to take care of personnel issues at work that were completely unforeseen and unfortunately forced me to be away from my desk for a while. When you're a supervisor and people resign, unfortunately you're forced to do extra work. Hopefully it is fully taken care of and I can provide the first installment of the series.

Our first installment covers someone who was new to the league this year as she took over for someone else. Because of this, she doesn't have any keepers from the previous year starting with a clean slate.

Looking at the what each player will cost here, let's start analyzing who I think she should keep. To start off with I eliminate all players who would cost a first round pick unless that player is Alex Rodriguez or Chase Utley and even then only if you are drafting near the bottom. She does have Utley so he needs to stay in consideration but let's look at everyone else. This eliminates Webb and Granderson but leaves Utley in possible contention.

I next eliminate all closers that would cost more than a 5th round pick. This is when closers first start to go in our league so I would never choose someone who would cost me more than this. Also I would never choose a closer higher than the 8th round unless they are part of the top 3 elite of Rodriguez, Papelbon, and Nathan. These closers help in all categories other than Wins so they have the most overall value. This team does have Nathan but would cost a 3rd round pick so he is out of the question. None of the other closers meet any of the qualifications so this eliminates Nathan, Jenks, and Grabow.

My third rule is that I never keep a catcher, ever. Regardless of whether or not you have Russell Martin, catchers as a whole don't play everyday and often tire out down the stretch. They often only give you 120-140 games and that's simply not enough games for me. That eliminates Doumit and K. Suzuki.

My fourth rule is I never keep players whose role is not well defined. I call this the Joba Effect. You can eliminate DeRosa and Smardjiza.

My fifth rule is that I never keep veterans on the decline. Declining players can sometimes just fall off the table and if they don't meet your expectations they are usually well off. This is due to injuries and just lost production. This eliminates Lowell, Jeter, Anderson, Helton, Lowe, Arroyo, M. Young.

So right now we are looking at:

  • J. Loney (9)
  • E. Longoria (8)
  • J. Werth (16)
  • J. Hamilton (11)
  • J. Upton (12)
  • S. Victorino(5)
  • D. Purcey (16)
  • A. Sanchez (16)
  • E. Jackson (16)
  • J. Lester (16)

It's a little thin on the pitching side of things, so really the only one I see worth keeping is Lester. Everyone else either has made enough of a step up or just doesn't provide enough production to really be worth keeping. Lester I feel will make more strides next year in his control and could end up being a #2 pitcher for many fantasy teams. To be able to keep him in round 16 and know that you have a pitcher of that quality that late is invaluable.

Hitting wise, it's a little more of a toss up. Victorino is definitely not a 5th rounder so we can safely eliminate him. I would gladly take Longoria over Loney so we can eliminate Loney. I would take Hamilton over Werth or Justin Upton. I don't think either of those two have made the necessary adjustments to consistently produce at a keeper level.

So Hamilton vs. Longoria. Who do you keep? I think both will put up close to 35HR and 100 RBI next year. Both will likely score 100 runs and both have OBP in the .350-.360 range. (We count OBP instead of AVG in our league). So I think it comes down to simply who do you see a better long range outlook. I think that Longoria can only get better while Hamilton may take a small step backwards, especially if his team around him starts to crumble.

So with that, I say that Team # 1 (108 Stitches) should keep Lester at round 16 and Longoria at round 8.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Keeper Analysis

Every league is different and the main one I am in is no exception. To refresh our old readers and introduce the league to our new readers, Troy and Lee from RotoSavants.com are in a 6x6 league with myself and 9 other friends. This 12 team league is like most leagues with 4-5 consistent competitors for the title, 3-4 in the middle, and then 2-3 at the bottom each year. You can see out latest draft

2008 Draft

We are allowed to keep 1 pitcher and 1 hitter for each league with a somewhat different price for the following year. Everything starts at the round that he was drafted. If the player was not drafted and picked up off waivers or as a free agent, he was automatically assigned as a 16th round. The rules are as follows:

  1. The first year the player is kept, the owner would have to sacrifice 2 rounds higher than he was drafted. (i.e. a 16th rounder, would cost the owner a 14th round pick the first keeper year)
  2. For every year after, add on an additional year of "keeper cost".
  3. Two keepers cannot be kept in the same round.
So as an example of an original 16th rounder:
  • year 1 - 14th round cost (+2)
  • year 2 - 11th round cost (+3)
  • year 3 - 7th round cost (+4)
  • year 4 - 2nd round cost (+5)
  • year 5 - 1st round cost (+6)
This new system ensures 2 things:
  • helps to mix up the player pool and keep owners interested
  • makes the league more competitive. No longer is it simply a quick keeper pick and an owner able to stock pile the best players
So over the next week or so I'm going to break down our league, team by team, and provide analysis of who I think will be good keeper picks in our league.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Carlos Zambrano Injury Explanation

It's been revealed that Carlos Zambrano is suffering from rotator cuff tendinitis but I started noticing a difference in his PFX data as early as June 20th. His delivery changed, his arm slot dropping and by many accounts he started to "sling" the ball in the words of Will Carroll.



The reason why the arm slot will drop down because of rotator cuff problems is an issue of mechanics. The following image is courtesy of athletic scholarship.net.

When the arm raises above the athletes head, the head of the humerus must rotate downwards or the tendons will become pinched between the acromion process and the humeral head. The Rotator Cuff muscles are absolutely key in this process as they have a force couple with the deltoid muscles to keep stability of the shoulder joint and move the arm. The rotator cuff must compress the humeral head into the labrum and rotate the humeral head downward allowing the deltoid to raise the arm above the shoulder. If the rotator cuff is insufficient, the deltoids raise the arm but the humeral head doesn't rotate. The arm cannot raise above the shoulder level without the rotator cuff and the tendons get pinched between the two bones.

Therefore, instead of coming from "over the top" the pitcher must drop down to 3/4 or approaching sidearm. Another adjustment is what Zambrano did by dropping ones elbow and shot-putting the ball up to the plate.

Tendinitis can caused by several things including laxity (looseness) of the shoulder or elbow, muscle imbalances, labrum tears, or overuse. Without seeing him everyday I can't give you an exact reason but normally in power pitchers it's a combination of muscle imbalances and very minor looseness.

Based on how long he appeared to have an altered throwing motion, it will likely take just as long to get him back to 100%. I expect that he's going to be around a week or two away from being able to pitch in an MLB game again. He's probably going to be on a strict pitch limit when he comes back which is the smart things to do. Hopefully this will help set up a Cubs-Red Sox World Series.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Buy Low/Sell High Update

Been a while for the updates so here we go:


ab/hr

ab/h

bb/so

ab/rbi

ab/run


Buy

24.8515

3.5747

0.4987

6.1128

6.719


Sell

25.5126

3.6934

0.5166

6.5431

6.600



ab/sb

BABIP

SLG

OBP

OPS

sb

Buy

153.811

0.3137

0.4685

0.4379

0.9064

37

Sell

121.44

0.3161

0.4565

0.4396

0.8961

25


Not great but I'm still out on top on most of them. Berkman and Uggla are really hurting me in the sell group. If you take them out in a magical wonderland, I have a feeling I'd be ahead significantly.

For the pitchers, I'm doing much better although luck still isn't completely on my side:


ERA

FIP

FIP-ERA

WHIP

K/BB


Buy

4.226

3.951

-0.275

1.296

2.789


Sell

4.118

4.342

0.224

1.345

2.019



BABIP

K/9

H/9

HR/App

GSc

#App/W

Buy

0.293

7.920

8.822

0.574

51.352

3.771

Sell

0.286

6.143

9.058

0.627

50.344

3.616


Here even though my ERA is slightly worse, my FIP is much better, approaching a half a run better. My Buy group also has a better WHIP, K/BB, K/9, H/9, HR/Appearance, and game score. This includes everyone so I'd be curious what would happen if we took out Dempster.


Overall, my as a group my hitters have been slightly been a disappointment but my pitchers are coming through quite well. Next, week I'll compare the groups minus the highest and lowest performers in each group (Olympic Style).