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Week 2 Mixed-League FAAB Estimates

Last season, I started collecting FAAB bids from the NFBC Main Event to help estimate the player costs. It’s time to start the 2019 estimates for week two. The process is far from perfect but it does provide a bidding guideline. I use the NFBC Main Event because it contains 37 15-team leagues but each individual league is going to have its own unique dynamics. Understanding and trackings the differences are key for each owner. Owners need to take these player guesstimates and see how they compare to their own league. It may seem like too much work but can really help to determine how much to spend.

In our book, The Process, Tanner Bell and I broke down the 2018 FAAB bidding in detail going over the various trends. We found that player bids fit into three types:

  1. Minimum bids: These are $1/$0 bids for players only the person bidding desires. Owners need to find the corresponding ownership rates and the bids which won these players and stick to it. So many dollars are wasted on early season overbids on players only one person needs to fill in for an injured player.
  2. Middle ground: I feel this area is where leagues are won and lost. Owners see players with new skills and/or playing time. The key with these players is to understand they can’t be had for $1 but an owner doesn’t need to drop >10% of their budget on them. It’s more of an art when bidding in this range.
  3. Wallet openers: These players are going to go from anywhere between 10% to 50% of a budget. Usually, these players are rookie call-ups or new closers. The key may not be winning the bid as much as setting a limit to not cripple your team in the future.

Here are this week’s estimated FAAB with the ownership percentages from CBSSportsline and bid estimates for the NFBC Main Event ($1000 Budget, low bid of $1). I use CBS’s ownership rates since they divide the ownership by weeks but also allow daily pickups. An early player demand rate can be seen from these daily pickups.

 

Week 2 FAAB Estimates for Hitters
Name Previous Ownership% Current Ownership% Change% Cost
Kolten Wong 2B | STL 6% 15% 9% $34
Chad Pinder LF | OAK 11% 17% 6% $31
Tim Beckham SS | SEA 17% 53% 36% $146
Enrique Hernandez CF | LAD 15% 50% 35% $138
Brandon Lowe 2B | TB 20% 33% 13% $50
Greg Bird 1B | NYY 17% 27% 10% $41
Adam Frazier 2B | PIT 22% 25% 3% $33
Ryon Healy 1B | SEA 22% 33% 11% $46
Jung Ho Kang 3B | PIT 27% 40% 13% $55
Joc Pederson LF | LAD 27% 43% 16% $64
Austin Barnes C | LAD 31% 40% 9% $49
Jorge Alfaro C | MIA 29% 34% 5% $41.
Kole Calhoun RF | LAA 30% 34% 4% $40
Troy Tulowitzki SS | NYY 30% 40% 10% $51
Jonathan Lucroy C | LAA 32% 35% 3% $40
Niko Goodrum 2B | DET 37% 54% 17% $79
Adam Jones CF | ARI 36% 42% 6% $48
Fernando Tatis SS | SD 56% 88% 32% $184

 

Week 2 FAAB Estimates for Pitcher
Name Previous Ownership% Current Ownership% Change% Cost
Taylor Rogers RP | MIN 5% 14% 9% $51
Matt Shoemaker SP | TOR 6% 13% 7% $27
Bryse Wilson RP | ATL 8% 20% 12% $31
Greg Holland RP | ARI 14% 46% 32% $133
Eric Lauer SP | SD 14% 57% 43% $98
Jordan Zimmermann SP | DET 9% 18% 9% $28
Pablo Lopez SP | MIA 12% 32% 20% $41
Wily Peralta RP | KC 14% 20% 6% $49
Frankie Montas SP | OAK 10% 20% 10% $29
Jeremy Jeffress RP | MIL 16% 24% 8% $52
Dakota Hudson RP | STL 21% 39% 18% $40
Domingo German SP | NYY 27% 42% 15% $37
Kyle Wright RP | ATL 24% 37% 13% $34
Caleb Smith SP | MIA 26% 38% 12% $33
Wade Miley SP | HOU 29% 40% 11% $33
Trevor Richards SP | MIA 32% 54% 22% $49
Matthew Boyd SP | DET 30% 38% 8% $31
Matt Harvey SP | LAA 35% 44% 9% $33
Freddy Peralta SP | MIL 37% 81% 44% $110
Jake Junis SP | KC 38% 49% 11% $35
Brandon Woodruff RP | MIL 39% 63% 24% $56
David Hernandez RP | CIN 2% 3% 1% $25
Cory Gearrin RP | SEA 1% 1% 0% $25
Blake Parker RP | MIN 11% 14% 3% $26

Thoughts:

  • My FAAB formula has the minimum bid this week at $25 dollars. I know bids can be lower, but teams historically have spent a few more dollars early to get their guy. Last year, over two-thirds of the week-two bids were over $10. The above players are in demand and will not be won for a minimum this week.
  • There could be several wallet openers this week if the players slipped through the cracks and are available (Holland, Peralta, Lauer, Tatis, Beckham, Hernandez). The surprise jump for me is Eric Lauer. While I picked him up in several places as a streaming option, he now has some real trade value with his dominating win.
  • In leagues where Tatis is available, I’d not be surprised at all if he goes for 50% of total FAAB. Personally, I’d max out around 20% to 25%.
  • I added a few closer options, especially with the Hunter Strickland injury. The one arm I’m a little surprised is so low is Blake Parker. He may be Minnesota’s closer and only has a 14% ownership rate. Last week in Tout Wars, I pegged him as Wallet Opener and spent over $100 in FAAB on him. The next highest bid was $37. I should have used my own work to limit my bid and not waste the $70 in FAAB.
  • For reference, here are players picked up the most last season along with the average bids.
2018 Week 2 FAAB Bids
Name Count Avg Bid
Keynan Middleton 30 $70
Hunter Strickland 26 $389
Jordan Zimmermann 22 $31
Martin Maldonado 20 $11
Miguel Andujar 20 $94
Tyler Austin 20 $39
Francisco Cervelli 20 $20
Caleb Smith 15 $23
Ty Blach 15 $27
Joey Lucchesi 15 $30
Brian Anderson 15 $30
Preston Tucker 14 $15
Jon Jay 14 $13
Matt Duffy 14 $28
Nick Markakis 13 $18
Nick Ahmed 13 $16
Brian Johnson 12 $9
Darren O’Day 12 $30
Matthew Boyd 11 $17
Homer Bailey 10 $30
Caleb Joseph 10 $3
Jason Castro 10 $15
Jacoby Ellsbury 10 $19
Adam Frazier 9 $17
Derek Dietrich 9 $37
Kevin Jepsen 9 $6
Ben Lively 8 $12
Yan Gomes 8 $20
Tony Watson 8 $8
Jason Heyward 8 $10
Jaime Garcia 8 $12
Clayton Richard 8 $16
Jake Marisnick 8 $26
Francisco Liriano 8 $14
Jim Johnson 8 $20
Adrian Gonzalez 8 $17
Brad Miller 7 $27
Josh Tomlin 7 $15
Dansby Swanson 6 $21
Kevin Plawecki 6 $12
Andrew Triggs 6 $15
JC Ramirez 6 $12
Andrew Knapp 6 $5
Bryan Mitchell 5 $14
Matt Joyce 5 $13
Amir Garrett 5 $18
Chance Sisco 5 $30
Dillon Peters 5 $19
Kurt Suzuki 5 $19
Seth Lugo 5 $8
Doug Fister 5 $8

Velocity & Pitch Mix Changes (Opening Day)

If any stat can be monitored with a small sample, it’s pitch velocity. Fastball velocity stabilized with a sample of ‘1’. Just one fastball is enough to know a pitcher’s velocity going forward. I collected the Opening Day starters’ fastball velocities and compared them to last year’s values. It’s all we can really do at this point in the season.

Additionally, I compared this year’s and last year’s pitch mix. Mainly, I was hoping to find if a starter dumped or added a pitch. I didn’t mention a pitch if its usage didn’t change by  10% points or more.

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Three Hours of Baseball – Opening Day

I’ve been considering this article’s concept for a while and am going to try it out for a couple of weeks and see if it is useful. I’ll spend three hours catching an hour of three different games and writing my thoughts and diving into deeper into areas of fantasy interest. Here is take #1 and let me know your thoughts.

Orioles at Yankees

  • It was an easy choice for taking this game. Scherzer versus deGrom sounded like a 1-0 game with the Mets bullpen letting deGrom down (I was close but wrong).
  • The top of the Orioles lineup could steal a few bases nothing to play for and Cedric Mullins, Dwight Smith Jr., and Jonathan Villar as those first three. I had to examine Smith and determined why I didn’t know more about him. He’s kind of boring with a projection near 10 homers, 10 steals, and a .240 average. Maybe it will be just Mullins and Villar stealing bases.
  • Like it’s going to matter but Andrew Cashner’s velocity was up a tick.
  • Luke Voit with a bomb (113 mph) to straightaway center. His power is legit and needs to be in the Yankees lineup every day.
  • Additionally, Luke Voit possesses some 80-grade hair.

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National League Lineup Analysis

As the regular season nears, I’m trying to stay on top of any lineup changes. It’s the National League’s turn to go under the microscope.

Arizona

  • The Diamondbacks lineup is in flux with Steven Souza Jr. possibly having a messed up knee. Adam Jones may have stumbled into some full-time reps and possibly Jarrod Dyson if Jones’s defense is subpar.
  • Ketel Marte has not been playing in the outfield, so the center field experiment may be over before it even started. The problem is that there aren’t enough infield spots to go around. The biggest issue is that Nick Ahmed has played shortstop in five of the last seven games. Eduardo Escobar seems entrenched at third. So the Wilmer Flores experiment may be over at second base (Marte’s spot) and Flores and Jake Lamb will platoon at first.

Atlanta Read the rest of this entry »


Jeff Zimmerman’s BOLD Predictions

It’s time to overly exaggerate some of my pre-season hunches and create some BOLD predictions.

Note: For the rankings, I will use our auction calculator. For ADP, I’m using the NFBC ADP from 12 Main Event leagues which drafted from March 22nd to March 25th.

1. Jung Ho Kang will be a top-10 starting third baseman by season’s end.

He is being drafted as the 26th third baseman off the board this past weekend. This prediction was easy. In 2015, he was the 15th overall third baseman in 467 PA. Why not the same production in 600 PA?

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Who is Being Dropped & Why

I’m experimenting with a new article format this year. Instead of concentrating on the most added players, I’m going to concentrate on those poor souls owners are throwing in the towel on. Most of the discarded players will have been demoted to the minor or dinged up. It’s the few who don’t fit into either of these two categories who I will focus on. Sadly, there aren’t many this first week.

To find which players are being dropped, I’m going to use the NFBC Main Event leagues. They are 15-team roto leagues which have some depth and most of the owners will be trying since each posted a $1K+ entry fee. The league will contain active owners making overall trends easier to spot. This week, I have the adds and drops from only 18 leagues since some leagues haven’t drafted yet and included my top-three choices at the end.

Injured List

Jason Kipnis: 7

Kipnis and the scrubs the Indians are using in the infield should be monitored closely. Kipnis should get his job back once healthy and he could be a reasonable buy a week early for a team needing infield help.

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American League Lineup Analysis

After just going over the National League lineups, it’s time for the American league. Again, my analysis was to focus on the lineups used, not manager speak.

Note: This article was submitted late on Wednesday for editing so the second Oakland-Seattle lineups were not available to analyze.

Baltimore

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National League Lineup Analysis

I decided to dive into the latest Spring Training lineups to see if any possible trends are emerging. Today, I’ll start with the National League.

Note: I just looked through the lineups and didn’t read up on each team. There is probably a good chance the manager has stated a different plan during the season.

Arizona

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Tout Wars Auction & NFBC Draft Recaps

I’m headed back from a weekend in New York City after participating in the 15-team Tout Wars mixed auction and a NFBC Main Event league. It was great catching up with everyone and meeting some new faces such as our first president. The weekend didn’t completely consisit of bagels and beers. I had work to do and compiled a couple of teams. Here are my thoughts which other fantasy owners may find helpful.

Pre-weekend thoughts (written before either event).

  • Historically the Tout Wars hitter/pitcher split has been a steady 70%/30%. With pitchers being taken earlier and earlier this season, I wonder if this split will change. I’m creating my values with the 70/30 split but know I may need to adjust the split on the fly. Read the rest of this entry »

Position Battles: Yankees, Pirates, Indians, & Rockies

I’m going to focus on position battles until the season starts and possibly into the season. Most of the early season breakouts happen because of additional playing time.

Pirates Third Base

Jung Ho Kang vs Colin Moran

Pirates 3B
Depth Chart Spring Training
Name PA AVG OBP SLG OPS AB OPS NFBC ADP
Colin Moran 490 .264 .325 .409 .734 24 0.509 474
Jung Ho Kang 140 .257 .335 .444 .779 22 1.035 442

Other analysts and I probably didn’t give Kang enough love but he’s coming out firing with an OPS twice that of Moran. The 31-year-old Kang had a couple of acceptable seasons with double-digit home runs and an OBP near .350. He didn’t play any last season because of a DUI in South Korea and wasn’t able to obtain a visa. He seems to have not missed a beat.

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