Author Archive

The FanDuel Daily Grind 3-29-14

Today’s Episode
1. A word from our sponsor
2. What is this?
3. FanDuel scoring
4. FanDuel league types

100% Deposit Bonus at FanDuel for FanGraphs Readers

MLB Opening day is just around the corner – and that means fantasy baseball season on FanDuel starts NOW! FanDuel has the biggest one-day fantasy leagues for Opening Day, with over $286,000 in guaranteed prizes.

Check out the $100,000 MLB Strikeout, FanDuel’s first marquee baseball league of the season. The league only costs $25 to enter a team, and first place is taking home $15,000 in cash, THAT NIGHT! With a great first deposit bonus from FanGraphs, why not see how much money you can win?

Click here to deposit & get a HUGE 100% deposit bonus up to $200.

Read the rest of this entry »


The FanDuel Daily Grind: 3-28-14

Kicking Off the Grind

If you play daily fantasy baseball or tinker with your traditional fantasy team, knowing park factors is a part of success over the long haul. FanGraphs Guts! has all kind of factors, but I prefer to focus my attention on the Basic, HR, and HR by split factors. Winning in a daily fantasy league tends to depend on home runs more than other types of production (at least on the offense side).

100% Deposit Bonus at FanDuel for FanGraphs Readers

MLB Opening day is just around the corner – and that means fantasy baseball season on FanDuel starts NOW! FanDuel has the biggest one-day fantasy leagues for Opening Day, with over $286,000 in guaranteed prizes.

Check out the $100,000 MLB Strikeout, FanDuel’s first marquee baseball league of the season. The league only costs $25 to enter a team, and first place is taking home $15,000 in cash, THAT NIGHT! With a great first deposit bonus from FanGraphs, why not see how much money you can win?

Click here to deposit & get a HUGE 100% deposit bonus up to $200.

Read the rest of this entry »


Five Potential Breakouts

My colleague Blake Murphy just got done telling you why the Dewan method for finding spring breakouts isn’t all that successful. Even when Blake tried to control for quality of opponent, it turns out that small samples are just small samples. In the regular season, ISO takes 550 plate appearances to “stabilize.” That requirement doesn’t change just because it’s Spring Training.

Read the rest of this entry »


Two Expert Drafts, Minimal Starting Pitching

Mike Podhorzer wrote about the $9 pitching staff yesterday, which was coincidental because I had just finished two expert drafts in which I punted starting pitching. The leagues in question are the FOX Sports Expert League and Blog Wars. The drafts and formats differ, so it’s a little surprising that my strategy barely changed. Both leagues do allow streaming, which makes it easier to under-draft starters.

I’ve used my drafts and mocks to offer lessons learned throughout the draft season. We’re at the point where it’s probably too late to do any major learning. In presenting these rosters and draft strategies, I’m only aiming to give you a look under the hood. I hope you find something actionable.

Read the rest of this entry »


Thoughts About Speed, ISO, and Fantasy Baseball

A couple weeks ago, Jeff Zimmerman wrote about how speed affects ISO for The Hardball Times. The takeaway was that for each additional point in speed score (a stat we carry here on FanGraphs), a player’s ISO on doubles and triples will increase five points (.005). Incidentally, running quickly can’t effect home run ISO, unless we’re talking about those super rate inside the park types. Here’s the article and here’s a table from the article.

Read the rest of this entry »


21 Players Whose Fielding Could Affect Their Fantasy Value

Do any of you use fielding in your fantasy leagues? No. If by some fluke that’s incorrect, the stat being used is something asinine like errors. So it’s not surprising that we utterly ignore fielding when it comes to fantasy baseball analysis.

Major league teams are not ignoring fielding. When it comes to building a competitive roster, they’re relying on fielding more and more – especially teams like the Tampa Bay Rays and Oakland Athletics. Those teams are using fielding values to set playing time, and while fielding is meaningless to fantasy owners, playing time is potentially the most important stat (even though it’s not directly counted). Out there, lurking in your player universe, are guys with solid hitting stats and terrible fielding numbers. In some cases, real world teams will catch on and use a defensive replacement or more-than-occasionally sit the bat-first player.

Read the rest of this entry »


10 Fantasy Relevant Predictions (Not Very Bold)

Let’s make something clear in case the heading doesn’t, these are not bold predictions. The below predictions are things that I expect to happen. I perceive other people – readers and writers alike – to disagree.

1. Chris Owings‘ strikeout rate won’t exceed 17 percent

The Arizona Diamondbacks are supposedly leaning towards starting Owings at shortstop. Whether that is true or not is pure speculation. Assuming Owings does start, our projection systems and the Fans expect a strikeout rate around 20 percent. While a similar strikeout rate is part of his minor league track record, his combined total between Triple-A and the majors last season was just 17.1 percent. While most people are aware that he’s a free swinger, his scouting profile has more in common with Michael Young or a low-power Pablo Sandoval than a Drew Stubbs type. Aggression can work in a hitter’s favor when it comes to strikeout rate, and I fully expect a ton of early count balls in play from Owings.

2. The Diamondbacks will call on Archie Bradley by mid-May

Let’s double down on the D-Backs. The injury to Patrick Corbin leaves Arizona without an obvious ace. Having a bonafide ace is overrated, but the rotation also lacks quality depth. Should any of the current candidates find themselves banged up, Bradley will be on the short list to fill in. The Corbin injury set the club back on our depth charts page, they’re now projected to 34 WAR, which puts them in a virtual tie for third place in the division.

Most analysts expect Arizona to hold out until Bradley won’t qualify as a Super Two. I think that will be too late to resurrect the D-Backs season. If the club is aggressively pursuing a playoff berth in 2014, then they should wait just long enough for Bradley to miss a year of service time.

3. Kenley Jansen will be the best fantasy reliever, if healthy

No disrespect to Kimbrel, but I love the repeatability of Jansen’s formula. We’ve seen an elite reliever succeed for a long time with the same plan of attack – you may remember him wearing pinstripes until recently. Jansen attacks hitters with cutter after cutter, generating whiffs on over 30 percent of swings. His command and control have also improved enough for him to reach his superstar ceiling. This prediction is mostly a matter of expecting mild regression from Kimbrel and none from Jansen.

4. Trevor Rosenthal will be the third best fantasy reliever, if healthy

Again, apologies to Greg Holland and Koji Uehara, they’ll probably be quite excellent. Rosenthal features an elite fastball/change-up duo. His stuff might be the best of all the elite relievers (I’d probably pick Uehara if pressed) and for me, the only frustrating thing is that he won’t be starting. He’s getting more respect in drafts than Holland did last year, but I’m picking him to jump from the top of the second tier to the middle of the first tier.

5. Kevin Gausman will finish the season as the Orioles best starter or closer

I really don’t know what the O’s plan to do with Gausman. There doesn’t seem to be any point in demoting him to Triple-A, and the club has five experienced starters in place. It looks like the final rotation spot will fall to Gausman or Bud Norris, with the loser headed to the pen. While Tommy Hunter was solid in relief last season, he had a 3.68 FIP and 3.63 xFIP. I see him more as a serviceable setup man than a true closer. Meanwhile, Gausman has elite velocity and a dirty splitter. He’s at least one order of magnitude better than Hunter in the pen.

But to hedge my bets, he also has better stuff than the entire O’s rotation. If he finishes the season as a starter, he’ll be the best on the club.

6. Aaron Hill will outperform his draft position, if healthy

He’s actually going fairly early, with an ADP of 116. The “if healthy” caveat is what rigs the deck because it’s the only reason he’s outside the top 100. Hill is seen as a very inconsistent player, but it’s always been a story of BABIP. Of course, his infield fly rate tends to range from high to very high, so poor BABIP’s are a possible outcome. If he keeps that indicator under control, 20 home runs, a .290 average, and somewhere between five and 20 steals are possible.

7. Johnny Cueto already has scapula irritation

I’ve been quietly following Cueto’s spring. Prior to the injury fest that was 2013, I had mild hopes that Cueto could develop into the next Roy Halladay. Most people don’t remember it this way, but Halladay didn’t strike out many batters until his age 31 season, and even then he wasn’t a world beater. Well injuries happened and I’ve since relegated Cueto to my list of mildly interesting players. I was starting to get excited by his spring results – he looked quite sharp. Unfortunately, he was recently scratched from a start with “scapula irritation.” The official word is that it’s not an issue and he would have pitched in the regular. All I heard was “two months on the disabled list sometime in the nearish future.” I guess we’ll see.

8. Jimmy Rollins will play just about every inning he’s healthy

The Philadelphia media has a lousy habit of making news out of nothing. Manager Ryne Sandberg and Rollins may have had a battle of wills earlier this spring, but we could have called that back in November. Rollins was an easy target for Sandberg because it sends a strong message to the rest of the team. And since it’s spring training, it’s no big deal if Rollins sits a couple days.

Now it’s been blown way out of proportion and fantasy owners are shying away. You can probably pick up Rollins for $1 these days. I can’t guarantee that he’ll give you great innings, but I’m confident that he’ll be on the field.

9. John Jaso will be almost elite, part of the time

Jaso is an extremely good hitter against right-handed pitchers, but he’s been hidden from lefties his entire career. He’s set to get a lot of time at designated hitter this season and features an almost Choo-quality on base percentage. If your league has some room on the bench, Jaso is an excellent catcher platoon bat. If the league is deep, he’ll probably still outperform back end options like Devin Mesoraco. Unfortunately, power and speed aren’t part of the skill set. The OBP might result in a high spot in the batting order, which would help his other counting stats.

10. Jesse Biddle is the major league ready pitching prospect that everyone is overlooking

The Phillies rotation is a shambles after A.J. Burnett, which probably means that someone will open an opportunity by pitching poorly or finding the trainer’s room. Even the Phillies’ depth has been decimated, leaving Biddle very close to a regular job. He was charging through the minors before a bout of whooping cough coincided with a sudden loss of control. He didn’t exactly impress in three official innings this spring, so sending him to Triple-A was easy. He’s still knocking on the door with enough stuff to strike out a batter per inning while controlling walks. Keep an eye out.


Drew Hutchison Begs Your Attention

There’s a commonly accepted rule in fantasy baseball circles – “don’t read too much into spring training stats.” I sure do love to break that rule. Every year, something special happens in spring training and with the right approach you can identify and build it into your fantasy draft plan. This year, Drew Hutchison looks like one of those special gems.

Read the rest of this entry »


Top 100 Spring Hitters by OPS

As we know, spring stats are fluky and small samply. Usually any crazy production is statistical noise, but sometimes there is signal hiding in the weeds. Next week, I’ll apply a technique that can thin the herd by providing a short list of players who might be on the verge of a breakout.

For now, here is a manually compiled, sortable leaderboard of the top 100 spring hitters with over 20 at bats. Remember, apply every caveat imaginable. The BABIP column does not include sacrifices, so it could be a little off. The data I exported did not include that stat.
Read the rest of this entry »


The Cruel Power of Suggestion

Last week, Howard Bender wrote about trade bullies, which kicked up some good discussion in the comments. Whereas Bender was categorically against trade bullying, I’m all for manipulating your rivals. After all, they’re “rivals.” They exist solely to be defeated through any means necessary. They’re also probably your friends, family, and co-workers, so try not to get carried away.

Read the rest of this entry »