Author Archive

Playing Hide and Seek with Aramis Ramirez

Aramis Ramirez hasn’t always been this kind of hitter. He has occasionally been productive in April and May over his long career — but that’s an exception to his rule. In his career, and especially over the last several seasons, Ramirez has had a serious case of Jeckyl and Hyde.

In 2010, it very much looked like Ramirez was finished. Over the course of the first half of the 2010 season, Ramirez hit .178/.243/.296 with six home runs and just seven doubles. Ramirez was hitting the waiver wire all over fantasy baseball, but patient owners were rewarded. From that point on, Ramirez hit .294/.338/.583 with 19 home runs, 14 doubles, and 60 RBI – vintage Aramis Ramirez.

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We’re All Going Streaking

You know it affects you. April, that is.

One or two of your players go out there and they really stink it up or they really light the world on fire and despite the fact that you’re a rational human being with faith in the sample size of the marathon instead of the sprint, reliance on our collection of nerds that try to preach patience when warranted — it messes with you.

We have the luxury now of looking at the stat line and having, most categories considered, stable numbers. So when Ryan Zimmerman falls off the face of the earth and then cortisone suddenly rejuvenates him into Clark Kent, well — we’ve still got a steady .280/.349/.451 which is just vintage Ryan Zimmerman.

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Has the Real Brett Wallace Stood Up?

Brett Wallace was drafted in the first round of 2008, and he subsequently compiled an impressive minor league career line of .307/.381/.491 over 400 games. 315 of those games were at the AAA level for five different teams, and peppered in between was one short and disappointing debut and one long and mostly disappointing season. Brett Wallace could very well be the poster boy for the quad-A label. And yet he was very useful for a period of time in 2011 and his recent performance for the Houston Astros has me wondering if he’s going to make this an annual occurrence.

In his first 31 games in 2011, it looked like the Wallace that many fantasy enthusiasts were waiting for had finally arrived. He had a .353/.421/.500 triple slash with a pair of home runs to go with nine doubles and ten runs batted in. Small sample size mavens were quick to point out his over-.400 BABIP but even when it started to regress, Wallace continued to produce. Over his next 38 games, he hit .287/.396/.417 with another pair of home runs, nine more doubles, and 11 RBI.

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Dumb Luck and You

I’ve often stated that I was going to run a fantasy baseball team simply by rotating players in my lineup coming off of terrible offensive weeks. I’ve never spent enough time to actually formulate a plan (and frankly, when I spend any time on it at all, the whole thing blows up in my face) but you know where I’m going with this. The idea is simply to play the regression game, for better or for worse.

Would it work? Probably not, because as a dedicated reader, you know there’s a lot more behind a BABIP than whether a ball happened to be a frozen rope right at the third baseman or if a ball Texas-leagued itself in the Bermuda triangle between the 5, 6, and 7. Or if you get your hits like this.

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Starting Pitcher: Target the Soft Schedule

It’s mid-August and if you’re in the top third of your league, you’re either trying to figure out how to wriggle your way up the standings or better yet, hold on to your top spot. This is about the time when managers start getting tricky about the standings, trying to maximize games played and targeting roto categories where they might topple someone ahead of them. If you’re chasing wins, one of the things you could do is look ahead at the strength of schedule. In particular, you could target teams that struggle (sometimes struggle mightily) to win baseball games that also have an anemic offense.

While the Colorado Rockies might not have that many wins, they also might bludgeon the opposing pitcher in the process of losing, which is why you might want to set your sights on pitchers facing the Houston Astros, Chicago Cubs, or the Seattle Mariners. For purposes of simplicity, when I put a percentage after a player name, it’ll be Yahoo ownership percentage, okay?

The Astros face the Diamondbacks, Cardinals, Mets, Giants, Reds, Pirates, Cubs, Phillies, and Brewers over the remainder of the season. However, if you want to plan strategically, they face the Cardinals in three separate series and they face the Reds and Pirates both twice. This could bring pitchers into play such as Jake Westbrook (36%), Jaime Garcia (38%), Erik Bedard (30%), Bronson Arroyo (13%), Mike Leake (11%), Homer Bailey (31%), and maybe even Jeff Karstens (10%). If you’re cautious, err on the side of home games for your starters as well.

The Chicago Cubs face the Reds, Brewers, Rockies, Giants, Nationals, Pirates, Astros, Cardinals, and Diamondbacks from here on out. They face the Pirates, Reds, Rockies, and Brewers twice. So in addition to the names above from the Reds and Pirates, you might want to consider Marco Estrada (7%), Randy Wolf (3%) and then absolutely nobody from the Colorado Rockies, please. If you do consider Wolf, I’d encourage you to try to get him at home where he’s been considerably more successful (K rate 20% at home, 9% on the road).

The Mariners face the Twins, Angels, Athletics, and Rangers all twice going forward, each one getting the chance to play at Safeco Field. The Angels and Rangers have staffs comprised of high-ownership starters, of course, but between the Twins and Athletics, you could consider Samuel Deduno (3%), Anthony Swarzak (0%!), or Bartolo Colon (29%).

Lastly, it’s worth pointing out that the Pittsburgh Pirates have 16 games left against the Padres, Astros, and Cubs combined. They also face the Mets four times in late September, when it’s likely they’ll be resting some of their regulars once the playoff picture becomes clearer (and clear that the Mets won’t be in on it. Sorry, Eno). So not only do the Pirates have something to play for, but their schedule is pretty cushy going forward, which should make some of their available starters a pretty decent play.

The Cleveland Indians and the Miami Marlins have been among the worst offenses in baseball over the last month as well, so if you want to play the schedule, it’s worth taking a peek at who they are facing off with. I’d try to avoid throwing a pitcher out there against a lineup including Jose Reyes and Giancarlo Stanton if you can help it though, even if the supporting cast hasn’t been doing much. If you’re considering matchups vs. the Indians, shy away from using right handed starters as the Indians have been pretty successful against RHP with a team wOBA of .327, which is good for 7th in baseball. But versus left handed pitchers, it drops to .290, which is a stones throw from last in the league.

If your roster is deep, roster moves are free, and you have a revolving door of players you’re willing to cut, you could add a great deal of names to this list of course. But if you’re trying to plan ahead with a handful of starting pitchers, definitely take a peek at the softer schedules and be as assiduous as possible in your pursuit of the pitchers with the highest likelihood of a win.


Last Minute Third Base Trade Targets

Trading deadlines loom across most of fantasy baseball, and let’s just assume your squad is still sniffing contention — or better yet, looking to pull away from the pack. Should third base be one of your glaring problems over these last seven weeks of baseball, I’ve got a few ideas for you. These are almost exclusively ideas for standard 5×5 leagues that are non-keepers.

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Pedro Alvarez More Than Platoon Option?

Ahem, no. Let’s just get that out of the way.

The fact is, Alvarez is hitting .196/.260/.380 off left handed pitchers and his strikeout rate is 37%. For a bigger sample size, in nearly 300 plate appearances in his career, he’s hitting .205/.279/.348 versus lefties with a 37.5% strikeout rate. That’s Lucas Duda territory, and we know where he is right now. You don’t want him in your lineup versus a left handed pitcher if you can avoid it.

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Eric Thames (Might Be) Useful In Seattle

As you no doubt have heard, Eric Thames has traded blue for teal in being shipped to the Seattle Mariners with Steve Delabar going to the Toronto Blue Jays. And while I pray your fantasy roster has better options than Eric Thames at the moment, it’s possible you might want to take a flyer on him at least in the short term.

First of all, Thames ought to play, and play regularly. The Mariners outfield has been a real circus of moving parts in the last few weeks. Ichiro Suzuki was obviously traded. Franklin Gutierrez can’t stay healthy. Sometimes left fielder Mike Carp moved to first base with Justin Smoak banished to AAA. Chone Figgins, Carlos Peguero, and Trayvon Robinson are terrible, horrible, and no-good.

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Michael Young and Benjamin Franklin

In May, Michael Young was the #9 consensus ranked third baseman. In June, he hit .257/.306/.327 with zero home runs and zero stolen bases, which was really only slightly worse than the .280/.306/.372 he demonstrated up until that point. He was still scoring runs, but you could put Carlos Maldonado on second base for the Texas Rangers offense and he’d still score 120 runs in a season.

For the second half consensus rankings, Young’s stinker of a June only dropped him down to a consensus #15 ranking. At 15, he’s still ahead of an ailing Evan Longoria, Chase Headley, David Freese, Kevin Youkilis, Trevor Plouffe, Will Middlebrooks, and a goodly number of other bodies occupying the hot corner who you could probably make a better case for.

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Third Base Trends: Moustakas, Ramirez, Seager

With the second half looming, many of you are going to be looking for players to help you in the stretch run for a title (let’s hope, dedicated readers, that you’re among those in the top half of the standings). If you’re hurting at third base, there are a few opportunities that you might want to inquire about given recent trends.

Mike Moustakas

On the season, Moustakas has hit a very respectable .268/.327/.490 with 15 home runs and 47 RBI and is probably a fringey-tier-two but easily top tier three kind of third base talent. But it’s possible Moustakas owners are fearing an extended slump after he put up a .212/.232/.481 line in his last 56 plate appearances. During that time, he’s walked less than 4% and fell into a funk that started to resemble some of the struggles that he had in 2011. In fact, if you toss out July 2 where he hit his grand slam, there really hasn’t been much in the way of production at all from him.

Should you go knocking on his owner’s door, point out the recent slump, the miserable platoon splits versus lefties (.221/.264/.337) and see if you can get them to overlook how brutal his batted ball luck has been recently (.200 BABIP last 56 PA). He’s not going to be much help in OBP leagues, but in standard roto, you’re probably going to be pretty happy with him.

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