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FAAB & Waiver Wire Report (Week 11)

In the article, I cover the players using CBS’s (about 40% or less initial roster rate) and Yahoo’s ADD/DROP rates. Both hosting sites have the option for daily and weekly waiver wire adds. CBS uses a weekly change while Yahoo looks at the last 24 hours. Yahoo is a great snapshot of right now while CBS ensures hot targets from early in the week aren’t missed. The players are ordered for redraft leagues by my rest-of-season preference grouped by starters, relievers, and hitters. Read the rest of this entry »


Big Kid Adds (Week 10)

While the NFBC Main Event garners most of the attention, there are a handful of leagues with even a larger entry fee ($2.5K to $15K). They were originally named “High Stakes Leagues” and there are ten of them. With so much money on the line, these fantasy managers try to gain any advantage. Most of the time, these managers will be a week or two ahead of everyone else on their adds. Here are the players and some information on the ones added in five or more leagues. Read the rest of this entry »


Lineup Analysis (6/7/24)

American League

Angels

Kyren Paris (.466 OPS) and Luis Guillorme (.728 OPS) are splitting time at second base.

Kevin Pillar (1.039 OPS) and Mickey Moniak (.429 OPS) are splitting time in center field.

Astros

• Over the last two games, Jake Meyers (.777 OPS, 6 HR, 4 SB) has hit cleanup.

• Since returning to the team, José Abreu has not started three or more straight games. Over that time frame, he’s hitting .174/.208/.304 with 1 HR.

• In the 15 games since returning from the IL, Chas McCormick has only started in seven of them.

Athletics

Tyler Soderstrom (.616 OPS), J.D. Davis (.642 OPS), and Aledmys Díaz (.182 OPS) are splitting time at first base.

Blue Jays

• No changes.

Guardians

Kyle Manzardo (.608 OPS) is the DH unless one of the good regulars needs a break.

Daniel Schneemann (1.000 OPS) has started three straight games since being promoted at three different positions (2B, SS, CF).

Mariners

Josh Rojas (vs RHP) and Ryan Bliss (vs LHP) are in an infield platoon.

Luke Raley (vs RHP) and Victor Robles (vs LHP) are in a left field platoon.

Dominic Canzone (vs RHP) and Mitch Haniger (vs LHP) are in a right field platoon.

Orioles

Cedric Mullins (.539 OPS) has only started in six of the last 10 games. The outfield is crowded with Mullins, Colton Cowser (.748 OPS), Austin Hays (.591 OPS), Ryan O’Hearn (.814 OPS), Kyle Stowers (.775 OPS), and Anthony Santander (.754 OPS).

Connor Norby (.700 OPS) has started in three of four games since being promoted.

Rangers

Nathaniel Lowe (vs RHP) and Ezequiel Duran (vs LHP) are still in a platoon.

Robbie Grossman (.570 OPS) is only facing lefties.

Rays

• Besides Yandy Díaz, Randy Arozarena, and Isaac Paredes, everyone else is in some form of timeshare.

Red Sox

Enmanual Valdez (.597 OPS) has played second base and hit second over the last two games vR, sitting the other two vL.

Dominic Smith (.908 OPS over the last two weeks) has started six straight games at first base including one against a lefty.

David Hamilton (.276/.339/.410, 2 HR, 9 SB) only starts against righties. Who starts against lefties has been rotating.

Royals

Nick Loftin (.264/.328/.264) has started six of the last eight games at second base. Out of 14 Hits, 0 XBH. 0% Barrel%. 99.9 mph maxEV. With the complete lack of power, he’s trying to hit more flyballs (45%) than groundballs (34%).

Tigers

• Since being promoted, Justyn-Henry Malloy (.700 OPS) has started three games, all at DH.

Mark Canha (.717 OPS) has started the last three games at first base after Tork’s demotion.

• Outfield and third base are getting crowded with Matt Vierling (.792 OPS), Gio Urshela (.668 OPS), Akil Baddoo (.761 OPS), Wenceel Pérez (.741 OPS), and Zach McKinstry (.561 OPS) fighting over three spots.

Twins

• It has been three games since Royce Lewis has returned from the IL. Alex Kirilloff and Carlos Santana both have started only two of three games during that stretch.

Byron Buxton (.639 OPS) has started six of seven games in center field.

White Sox

Corey Julks (.912 OPS) has started in 11 of 12 games.

Nicky Lopez (vs RHP) and Danny Mendick (vs LHP) are in a platoon.

Yankees

• Steady but the Juan Soto injury will shake things up going forward…. if he hits the IL. Early indications suggest he won’t, but stay tuned.

National League

Braves

Brian Anderson (career .685 vs LHP, .757 OPS vs RHP) might be on the short side of the platoon with Jarred Kelenic.

Brewers

Andruw Monasterio might be on the short side of a platoon with Brice Turang (career .505 OPS vs LHP, .664 vs RHP).

Sal Frelick (vs RHP) and Jackson Chourio (vs LHP) are in right field platoon.

• Since Rhys Hoskins returned from the IL, Jake Bauers has started in three of six games, all against righties.

Blake Perkins (.690 OPS) has started in 14 of 15 games.

Cardinals

Masyn Winn has only started in four of the last six games. Wynn hasn’t slumped (.888 OPS over the last two weeks) while Brandon Crawford has been garbage (.495 OPS).

Cubs

• Since being recalled Pete Crow-Armstrong (.598 OPS) has started in five of seven games.

• The team is loaded with 1B/3B/DH types with at least one and sometimes all three of this group sitting.

Name: OPS
Michael Busch: .765 OPS
David Bote: .000 OPS (5 PA)
Patrick Wisdom: .780 OPS

• Mike Tauchman (career .708 OPS vs LHP, .732 OPS vs RHP) sits against lefties.

Diamondbacks

Jake McCarthy (.732 OPS), Pavin Smith (.859 OPS), and Randal Grichuk (.732 OPS) are sharing one outfield spot.

Dodgers

• The lineup’s bottom third remains garbage with three different third basemen in the last three games. There isn’t anyone rosterable out of the group.

Giants

Luis Matos is back in the minors. After the greatest weekend ever (11 RBI in two games), he’s hit .153/.190/.153 and earned his trip back to AAA. The center field position is in the air right now with Austin Slater and Mike Yastrzemski filling in.

• Another position up in the air is shortstop with Brett Wisely (.813 OPS), Casey Schmitt (.698 OPS), and Tyler Fitzgerald (.736 OPS) all playing there this past week.

Heliot Ramos (.918 OPS) has started in 24 straight games.

Marlins

Dane Myers (vs LHP) is now platooning with Jesús Sánchez (vs RHP).

• With some movement involving first base and the DH, Nick Gordon (vs RHP) and Emmanuel Rivera (vs LHP) are in a platoon.

Mets

Jeff McNeil (vs RHP) and Jose Iglesias (vs LHP) are in a second base platoon.

Nationals

Ildemaro Vargas (vs LHP) and Luis García Jr. (vs RHP) are in a platoon.

• One of Joey Meneses (.589 OPS), Eddie Rosario (.594 OPS), and Joey Gallo (.616 OPS) sits every game.

Padres

Donovan Solanon (vs LHP) and David Peralta (vs RHP) are in a platoon.

Phillies

• It’s tough to know exactly what is going on with three straight lefties to start the week; Brandon Marsh to the IL, and the promotion of David Dahl (two starts in three games).

Johan Rojas (.572 OPS) and Cristian Pache (.551 OPS) are sort of in a platoon. Pache only starts against lefties, but not every one.

Pirates

Oneil Cruz (career .844 vs RHP, .487 vs LHP) is sitting against lefties. Nick Gonzales changes position and Jared Triolo faces those lefties.

• By moving around the DH, Edward Olivares (vs LHP) and Rowdy Tellez (vs RHP) are in a platoon.

Reds

• Two outfield spots and the DH are in platoons. Jake Fraley, Will Benson, and Jacob Hurtubise start against righties. Stuart Fairchild and Blake Dunn face lefties. The DH spot against lefties is a little random but Tyler Stevenson has hit there the last two times. Ed. note: Remember when they had “too much” offense and *haaad* to trade one?!

Rockies

• Besides Brenton Doyle, the other outfielders are in a timeshare and I’d rather be sold a timeshare than roster them.

• With Kris Bryant on the IL, Elehuris Montero (.570 OPS) has taken over the first base job.


Mining the News (6/6/24)

• Driveline has adjusted its Stuff model with a major change boosting up sinkers.

Again, this can likely be tied back to the fact that the purpose of these two pitches is different. 4-seams are generally better at generating whiffs, while sinkers are better at generating ground balls. With whiffs being harder to get as batters have adjusted to higher velocity around the league, the sinker profile becomes more valuable than 4-seam at lower velocities.

• Eno Sarris discusses the pitch mix changes for five starters including Tylor Megill.

The single most predictive stat for a pitcher’s success is fastball velocity. Then you go through all the other things that matter like extension (how close to the plate the pitcher releases the ball), vertical movement (or ride), release point height, spin and the rest. But if you make the fastball go brrr, you can mitigate a lot of flaws on the rest of the list. In Megill’s past couple starts, the fastball was going brrr again.

Whenever Eno says “brrr” on a podcast, all I can think of is this classic from Maddox.

null

American League

Angels

Nolan Schanuel has been playing with a thumb injury for a couple of weeks.

Schanuel recently said he injured his thumb while hitting in the batting cages in Houston during the Angels’ three-game series from May 20-22. He has been in a slump recently, going 2-for-23 over six games before missing the series in Seattle. He said he tried to play through the injury but it wouldn’t get better and it was affecting his swing. An MRI revealed there was no structural damage.

Kevin Pillar will remain in a part-time role so he doesn’t get “stale”.

Despite his otherworldly start offensively, the Angels have utilized Pillar in more of a platoon role, starting him mostly against left-handers. Pillar hasn’t been an everyday player in nearly three years, and they don’t want to overplay him despite his hot bat. They also are mindful of the development of Adell and Moniak, who both need consistent at-bats this year.

“We need to try to get Moniak going,” Washington said. “Pillar knows he’s not going to be on the field every day. But I’m not going to let him get to the point where he’s stale, to the point where he loses what he had. But there will be times where he has a good night and he’s not playing the next day.”

Stale? What is he? Bread?

Astros

José Abreu plays better with an off day.

Until Sunday, Espada had been coy about Abreu’s playing time and how he plans to proceed at first base. Upon his return, Abreu said he spent his career as an everyday player and had put himself in a position to do it again. Abreu has started five of Houston’s seven games since his return.

All three of Abreu’s hits, including his solo home run on Saturday, arrived in games that immediately followed an off day. During Abreu’s resurgence last October, team officials and coaches cited the plethora of postseason off days as one factor for Abreu’s increased production.

I examined this quote in more detail in a previous article.

• Without being prompted, the GM mentioned A.J. Blubaugh and Jake Bloss as rotation options.

Lauer and Henley would likely be the first calls if Houston needs another starter in the immediate future, but Brown also bragged about both AJ Blubaugh and Jake Bloss. Bloss has made just six starts above High A. Blubaugh has made just 10 appearances and tossed 45 innings at Triple A.

Blue Jays

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. will get more starts at third base.

“It’s really going to be a lot of fun today to see Vladdy playing third base, but that’s been something we’ve been working on collectively. He’ll get some starts there,” GM Ross Atkins said Sunday on MLB Network Radio. “He’s got an incredible ability and feel for the game of baseball. I think his arm and his hands will allow him to play some third base for us. That’s another way to deploy a lineup that maybe creates a little more offense.”

Manager John Schneider said Guerrero could start at third “a couple days out of a week and a half,” but he reiterated that this isn’t a position change. So many factors outside of Guerrero’s own plan need to line up for it to be a third-base day — particularly a good matchup for Turner and Vogelbach — but it looks like the Blue Jays are now comfortable with Guerrero’s side of the bargain.

Guardians

Daniel Schneemann worked on raising his launch angle.

Schneemann decided to focus on lifting the ball more this winter, which has resulted in a noticeable change in power and pop. His 10 homers in Triple-A were the second most by any of Cleveland’s Minor League players, so it was no surprise when he finally got his chance to play in the big leagues on Sunday.

Here are his launch angles from the past two seasons.

Year (Level): LA
2023 (AAA): 8.0
2024 (AAA): 14.7
2024 (MLB): 15.8

Mariners

Victor Robles will only be used against lefties.

Robles was not in Tuesday’s starting lineup, but is expected to be installed as soon as Thursday’s series finale against lefty JP Sears — or if any favorable matchups surface before then, as manager Scott Servais indicated.

“He told me to just be ready, especially when we’re facing a lefty,” said Robles, who will be in the mix with righty-hitting outfielders Mitch Haniger and Dylan Moore, the latter of whom is seeing more time at second base while Jorge Polanco is sidelined.

Over his career, Robles has a .727 OPS vs LHP and .642 OPS vs RHP.

Rangers

Wyatt Langford only faced fastballs during the offseason and struggled with pitchers who threw him other pitch types. Additionally, he has struggled as the DH.

“There was a lot going on, a lot more than I like [with my swing],” Langford said. “I’d say the biggest thing is kind of getting back into playing. Guys start throwing different pitches at you. In the offseason, you’re used to just hitting one pitch, and it’s a fastball, really, so getting back on time, fixing the timing of everything and seeing pitching, I think that definitely played a part in it throwing off my timing a little bit. So I’m just getting back to that.”

With Evan Carter, Leody Taveras and Adolis García mainly holding down the three outfield spots, Langford has been the Rangers’ designated hitter in 20 games compared to 15 appearances in left field, entering Sunday. The 22-year-old acknowledged that DH-ing almost every day has been an adjustment for him, especially at this level.

He has struggled against slower pitches with curves, changeups, and splitters having between a 14% and 19% SwStr%.

The DH quote is malarky with him posting a .656 OPS as the DH and .502 OPS when in the field.

Red Sox

Ceddanne Rafaela has been reworking his swing.

On Tuesday in Baltimore, Rafaela tried something different to spark his offense. For the past month in the batting cage, Rafaela had been practicing a new stance in which he brought his hands down a bit, angling his bat upward, rather than holding his hands above his head and his bat flat, almost parallel to the ground. The new stance was designed to allow him to get into his swing quicker and catch up to fastballs. The process of getting a feel for the new stance, locking in cues and timing was gradual, but Tuesday, hitting coach Pete Fatse suggested to Rafaela he was at a point to try the adjustments in batting practice.

Tigers

Mark Canha is playing through a hip issue.

However, Canha’s status is also a question mark after he was scratched from Friday’s lineup due to soreness in his left hip.

“It’s been bothering me for a week or so,” Canha told reporters, including Chris McCosky of the Detroit News. “It was getting worse and worse and today was the pinnacle. It got to a point where I had to shut it down.”

Twins

Jose Miranda will play all over the field with Royce Lewis back.

Though he’ll lose playing time at third base to Lewis, who is a superior defender, Miranda is healthy again and one of the team’s top performers hitting with runners in scoring position. The Twins can rotate Miranda between both infield corners and designated hitter to keep him in the lineup.

“We’re going to move him around and find ways to get him in the lineup most days,” Baldelli said.

• The team’s high-leverage pitchers will only throw one inning at a time. The rest of the arms are expected to throw multiple innings.

During those previous MLB stints in 2024, Twins manager Rocco Baldelli had been firm in asserting that any relief pitchers not in his leverage group would have to throw multiple innings — even Alcala, who was coming off nearly two full seasons lost to elbow and forearm issues — and Minnesota used the right-hander accordingly in lower-leverage situations.

But in Alcala’s last two outings, the Twins have used him for one-inning stints to protect leads — and, notably, he’s been pulled after only one inning each time.

“He’s working his way into the leverage mix,” Baldelli said. “That’s it. What he was throwing [Thursday] was — and I think the outing before, too — that was not what we had seen from him previously.”

“Three weeks ago, his fastball was 92, 93, 94,” Baldelli said. “And then he was throwing 99 [Thursday], touching 100. If we want the guy to throw 99, we probably shouldn’t be throwing him 45 pitches an outing expecting him to come in when we need him to.”

White Sox

• Players on the team like to “pick Pham’s brain”.

Young White Sox players often pick Pham’s brain, which he appreciates and understands, as he is considered a consummate professional for his preparation and focus.

“Guys are still learning what it takes to be a big leaguer, how to be a better big leaguer,” Pham told me during the White Sox previous homestand. “Guys are asking me a ton of questions, which, I look back at when I was in their shoes — I was asking Matt Holliday a ton of questions.

The four most popular discussion points are:

  1. Dollar-for-dollar, what are the best strip clubs.
  2. How to fight an assailant who is wielding a knife.
  3. The in-and-outs of high-stakes fantasy football leagues.
  4. Best gyms to get into fighting shape.

Yankees

• The team thinks Anthony Rizzo’s struggles are timing-related.

Both Boone and Rowson believe Rizzo’s struggles at the plate are timing-related. Rowson said Rizzo’s inconsistent timing has led to him being unable to square the ball up. Poor timing is what led to Aaron Judge’s struggles in April. That’s why the Yankees think Rizzo can still turn around his numbers.

“When your timing’s not right, you would expect some of those things to not be right in line with your norms,” Rowson said of Rizzo’s numbers. “That means you’re not getting the ball right where you want to or you’re a little early or you may be a little late, and all of a sudden that’s gonna affect how you hit the ball, how the ball comes off the bat. All those things will be results of your timing being a little inconsistent.”

• The team is expecting Clarke Schmidt back in August.

Boone said Schmidt will be shut down from throwing for four to six weeks. Rehab will follow as the Yankees build him back up. Realistically, the earliest Schmidt could return is August.

National League

Braves

• The team believes Jarred Kelenic’s swing is almost right.

“As far as the evolution of [Kelenic’s] swing since he’s had our uniform on, it’s really heading in the right direction,” Seitzer said. “I like where it’s going. I feel like with his strengths and vulnerabilities, it’s putting him in the best position to where he’s able to barrel balls more often. And to leave off-speed, leave chase pitches alone more often, which I’ve already seen since he went to this stance in Chicago. I wasn’t there, but I watched the first freakin’ game and I was like, ‘On my gosh, what’s he doing, that looks awesome!’”


“Way better,” Seitzer said. “For me, all the tinkering and adjustments are heading in the right direction. He’s a little taller, a little narrower with his stance, hands are a little lower. He wanted to get the tension out of his shoulders to stay looser, to where he could stay on the ball more. And it looks so much better.”

Kelenic said with the adjustments he’s made, he’s in a better position to let the ball travel deeper and still drive it up the middle or the other way.

Cardinals

Andre Pallante added a two-seamer.

The difference now, as opposed to earlier in the season when the 25-year-old reliever had a 6.30 ERA in nine relief appearances, was a two-seam fastball that consistently ran in on the hands of righties and kept them from leaning out over the plate looking for his curveball and four-seamer.

Cubs

• The two biggest knocks on Shota Imanaga from scouts were his low-90s fastball and being short.

Ultimately, for some teams, the lack of louder tools made Imanaga feel like more of a risk.

“The availability of pitch data from the Pacific Rim has theoretically made these valuations more sound, but there’s still a leap to take when you can’t hang your hat on high-end velocity,” Zaidi said. “I imagine there are scouts around the game that did see him as a high-end starter in the big leagues, but I suspect that the teams that were highest on him put the greatest stock in their pitch-model valuations.”

But as Cubs manager Craig Counsell likes to say, hitters don’t like anything that they’re not used to seeing, and Imanaga compensates for velocity with a four-seam fastball that drops far less than expected. The effect is often described as “rise.” The rise on Imanaga’s four-seamer is 2.9 inches better than average, per Statcast, so hitters find themselves under the pitch more often than not. That deception has turned Imanaga’s fastball into one of baseball’s best pitches.

Among scouts, there was some concern that Imanaga might not be able to consistently locate that pitch at the top of the zone. He wasn’t accustomed to it because the high strike isn’t called as often in Japan. And if not located well, the pitch will be hit hard. Scouts also flagged workload capacity as a possible issue, given Imanaga’s 5-foot-10 frame and a career high of 170 innings.

Giants

Alex Cobb should be activated in July.

Cobb started taking a nerve medication, gabapentin, and was encouraged last week when he had four consecutive pain-free days and started his throwing progression anew. He hopes to throw off a mound by next week. There’s almost no point in trying to predict a return date at this point, but Cobb is eyeing an activation in July.

Robbie Ray hopes to return around the All-Star break.

There’s no expediting the schedule from here based on team need. Ray will have to keep checking off boxes in order as he eyes a return shortly after the All-Star break in July. The good news is that optimism abounds that he will be the best version of himself when he joins the Giants rotation.

“I think so,” said Ray, who checked in with Giants teammates at Chase Field on Monday. “I feel really good. The ball is coming out really good. All my stuff, I’ve been super happy with the way things have been going. I’m just looking forward to getting into a game.”

Spencer Howard is out of options.

Spencer Howard gave up some loud contact Monday but pitched credibly behind an opener after he adjusted and started to throw early-count offspeed pitches to Arizona’s aggressive, fastball-hunting lineup. Giants manager Bob Melvin said Howard pitched well enough to remain in his role. Critically, Howard is also out of minor-league options.

Phillies

Edmundo Sosa will start getting some outfield reps.

While he’s certainly playing well enough to stick in the lineup, he’s not going to displace Turner when the latter is healthy. Neither Bryson Stott nor Alec Bohm is offering much of an opportunity for Sosa to take over at second or third base. While Sosa has never started an MLB game in the outfield, Thomson suggested over the weekend the Phils could consider playing him in a corner outfield spot once Turner comes back.

“Absolutely [a possibility],” the manager told reporters (link via Alex Coffey of the Philadelphia Inquirer). “If he keeps hitting like this, it’s going to be tough to keep him out of the lineup. So, got to find a spot for him someplace.” The Phils subsequently lost Brandon Marsh to the injured list, leading them to call up the hot-hitting David Dahl to man left field. Nick Castellanos is playing everyday in right field. He has been a rare weak point in the Philadelphia lineup, struggling to a .214/.277/.342 line through 256 plate appearances.

• Teams are using lefty specialist openers to minimize the impact of Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber.

In his 20 appearances this season, Koenig has thrown two innings or more seven times and recorded four or five outs four times. Tuesday marked the fourth time he’s worked as an opener, giving Murphy an option against lineups featuring dangerous lefties up top — such as Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper, for example.

“It’s a strategy — and it’s a strategy because of some of the necessity,” Murphy said. “You don’t want certain guys to face certain guys three times or whatever it might be. You have to have the right ingredients, and I think we do. This might not be the last time you see it.”


Young & Old Hitters Need a Nap

While digging through Mining the News, I found this quote on José Abreu.

All three of Abreu’s hits, including his solo home run on Saturday, arrived in games that immediately followed an off day. During Abreu’s resurgence last October, team officials and coaches cited the plethora of postseason off days as one factor for Abreu’s increased production.

The question opened a Pandora’s box of possible studies but I kept to a simple quick approach to see if extra rest helps a hitter. The findings supported common sense but more should be done.

During the 2023 regular season, Abreu posted a .211 AVG in the second of back-to-back games and a .298 AVG when he got a break. Also, his Basic wOBA (*) was .272 without a break and .359 with one. The struggles have continued this season with a .072 wOBA on back-to-backs and .261 wOBA when he has a break. The team is taking action based on the information so we should also.

For my dataset, I looked at all hitters with at least 50 PA in a season and compared their results when they played back-to-back games and when they didn’t. I only look at 2021 to 2023. So many rule changes happened after 2020, that I wanted to reset the league norms.

First, here are the hitters plotted with the difference and their age.

As I thought, the results are a mess. Here is a different approach that places the info into four age groups.

Batter Results for Playing with Rest Minus No Rest
Age Avg AVG Diff Avg wOBA Diff
<= 24 .009 .009
25 to 29 .007 .004
30 to 34 .007 .002
>= 35 .006 .008

It’s not a huge surprise but hitters play better with rest (.0044 wOBA improvement or ~3% better). I’ll ignore the batting average values since they are too close together.

Generally, the overall wOBA differences make sense with the young players getting used to the grind, regulars thriving off the grind (possible survivor bias), and older players being … well … old.

As for what can be done for fantasy purposes? Not a whole lot but don’t be surprised if older hitters struggle to maintain their stats and need breaks. While I’m not against rostering older players, fantasy managers must know the risks associated with them.

As for more research, finding the year-to-year stickiness of the difference should be the first step. If it is sticky, struggling hitters will continue struggling and won’t be able to bounce back. If the rate isn’t sticky, there isn’t much to add to projections. Besides the stickiness, the years can be expanded to see if the difference changed over time. Another option would be to see one trait cause the difference like power or strikeout rate.  Finally, the difference could be compared when playing three, four, or more days in a row.

With the season going on, I don’t have the time to investigate every possible avenue. If someone else doesn’t dive into the subject between now and then (someone in DFS should or already has), I might relook this off-season.

Most of my studies find jack squat, but this one explains why some young and older hitters might struggle. The production drop could be seen by more bench time or decreased production.

 

 

* Basic wOBA = (.7* (BB + HBP) + .9*1B + 1.25*2B + 1.6*3B + 2*HR)/PA


Sunday Night Waiver Wire & FAAB Chat

7:31
Jeff Zimmerman: Welcome

7:32
Jeff Zimmerman:

7:32
Jeff Zimmerman: Those are the winning bits in the three 15-team Tout Wars leagues.

7:32
Derek: Like everyone, need some hitting.  In a keeper league, drop Bart for Meyers?

7:32
Jeff Zimmerman: Jake, sure

7:32
Bsb: Is cade povich coming up this week??

Read the rest of this entry »


FAAB & Waiver Wire Report (Week 10)

In the article, I cover the players using CBS’s (about 40% or less initial roster rate) and Yahoo’s ADD/DROP rates. Both hosting sites have the option for daily and weekly waiver wire adds. CBS uses a weekly change while Yahoo looks at the last 24 hours. Yahoo is a great snapshot of right now while CBS ensures hot targets from early in the week aren’t missed. The players are ordered for redraft leagues by my rest-of-season preference grouped by starters, relievers, and hitters. Read the rest of this entry »


Lineup Analysis (6/1/24)

Note: The analysis was done looking at the games that ended on Thursday.

American League

Angels

Kevin Pillar (vs LHP) and Mickey Moniak (vs RHP) are in a right-field platoon.

Kyren Paris (vs LHP) and Luis Guillorme (vs RHP) are in an infield platoon.

• Over the last three games, Willie Calhoun (vs RHP) and Cole Tucker (vs LHP) are in a DH platoon.

Astros

Chas McCormick has only started in four of the last nine games.

Jeremy Peña (to fourth) and Jake Meyers (to sixth) have moved up a spot in the lineup.

• In the four games since José Abreu was promoted, he and Jon Singleton have started in three games each.

Athletics

• Since coming off the IL, Miguel Andujar (.883 OPS) has started in five of six games while hitting third or fourth in the lineup.

Tyler Soderstrom (.625 OPS) has only started two of the last eight games.

Blue Jays

Isiah Kiner-Falefa (.729 OPS) has started in 11 straight games.

Kevin Kiermaier (.589 OPS) and Cavan Biggio (.646 OPS) are splitting time with Davis Schneider moving around the infield.

Justin Turner (.652 OPS) and Daniel Vogelbach (.564 OPS) are splitting time at DH.

Guardians

Kyle Manzardo (vs RHP) and Gabriel Arias (vs LHP) are in a platoon with José Ramírez moving around.

Johnathan Rodriguez is now on the short-side platoon with Will Brennan.

Mariners

Mitch Haniger (vs LHP) and Dominic Canzone (vs RHP) are in a right-field platoon.

Luke Raley (vs RHP) and Jonatan Clase (vs LHP) are in a left-field platoon.

Ty France (.255/.327/.415 with 4 HR in May) has started in 11 straight games.

Orioles

Colton Cowser (.784 OPS) has hit cleanup in the last two games.

Cedric Mullins (.564 OPS) is batting eighth and starting only against righties.

Kyle Stowers has only started in five of the last 12 games.

Rangers

Leody Taveras (.270/.343/.427, 3 HR, 3 SB in May) is up to hitting fifth over the last five games.

Wyatt Langford (.587 OPS) is hitting seventh since coming off the IL.

Rays

Jonny DeLuca (.675 OPS), Jose Siri (.615 OPS), and Richie Palacios (.729 OPS) are splitting time between two outfield spots.

Jonathan Aranda (.661 OPS) and Harold Ramírez (.596 OPS) are splitting time as the DH.

Brandon Lowe (.665 OPS) only starts against righties.

Red Sox

Connor Wong (.823 OPS) is now hitting fifth.

• With Tyler O’Neill on the IL, the outfield Rob Refsnyder (.939 OPS) is starting every game in the outfield.

David Hamilton only starts against righties (career .657 OPS vs RHP, .545 OPS vs LHP).

Vaughn Grissom (.411 OPS over the last two weeks) has started in eight of the last nine games.

Royals

Nelson Velázquez (.686 OPS, 7 HR) has started in eight straight games.

Nick Loftin (.565 OPS) has started three straight games.

Kyle Isbel (.598 OPS) is back in centerfield.

Tigers

• Over the last four games, Matt Vierling (.825 OPS) hit in the top third of the lineup.

• In the two games since being promoted, Akil Baddoo hit sixth with all of the games being against righties.

Spencer Torkelson (.608 OPS) has hit seventh for three straight games.

Javier Báez has only started in six of the last nine games.

Twins

Edouard Julien, Trevor Larnach, and Max Kepler are still just starting against righties.

Alex Kirilloff has only started in six of the last ten games. Carlos Santana in only seven of the last ten.

White Sox

• Does it really matter? They are 30th in the league in scoring and the 29th team, Miami, has scored 50 more runs.

Nicky Lopez (.823 OPS, 0 SB, and HR over the last 14 days) has hit second over the last three games.

Korey Lee (.738 OPS, 5 HR, 3 SB) is hitting in the middle of the lineup.

Yankees

• Since coming off the IL, DJ LeMahieu has started two of three games while batting ninth.

National League

Braves

Michael Harris II is leading off against righties while Ozzie Albies leads off against lefties.

Jarred Kelenic (.727 OPS over the last two weeks) has started four straight games including two against lefties (.720 OPS vs RHP, .364 OPS vs LHP).

Adam Duvall (.663 OPS, 5 HR) has started five straight games.

Brewers

Jake Bauers (.683 OPS) has started seven straight games including two against lefties.

Blake Perkins (.691 OPS) with nine straight starts, all in center field.

Sal Frelick (vs RHP) and Jackson Chourio (vs LHP) are in a right-field platoon.

Cardinals

Masyn Winn (.798 OPS) is now leading off against lefties.

• Expect more changes with the Lars Nootbaar injury.

Cubs

• I don’t have a good understanding of how the Pete Crow-Armstrong promotion will affect the rest of the team. It’s impossible to know if just one person loses their playing time or a combination of players.

Diamondbacks

Jake McCarthy (vs RHP) and Randal Grichuk (vs LHP) are in a platoon.

Blaze Alexander (vs LHP) and Joc Pederson (vs RHP) are in a platoon thanks to Ketel Marte moving around.

Dodgers

• No changes

Giants

Brett Wisely (.945 OPS) and Marco Luciano (.986 OPS) are splitting time at shortstop.

• The full ramifications of LaMonte Wade Jr. going on the IL haven’t been felt. It’s a tough lineup to analyze even when everyone is healthy for an extended period.

Marlins

Tim Anderson (.448 OPS since returning from the IL) has started in seven of the last eight games.

Nick Fortes (.471 OPS) has started in four of the last six at catcher.

Mets

• Mark Vietos (.945 OPS) and Brett Baty (.628 OPS) were splitting time at third base. Baty was just optioned to the minors.

Harrison Bader (.680 OPS) has only started in five of the last nine games.

Nationals

• Since coming off the IL, Lane Thomas is batting second, Jesse Winker is now the DH, and Joey Meneses (vs LHP) and Joey Gallo (vs RHP) are in a first-base platoon.

Luis García Jr. (vs RHP) and Ildemaro Vargas (vs LHP) are in a second base platoon.

Padres

• Steady

Donovan Solano (vs LHP) and David Peralta (vs RHP) are in a platoon.

Phillies

Brandon Marsh (.754 OPS), Cristian Pache (.590 OPS), and Johan Rojas (.570) are splitting two outfield spots.

Edmundo Sosa (.944 OPS) has started eight straight games at short.

Pirates

• More of a mess than usual. Several guys have come and gone and it’s nearly impossible to figure out any patterns.

Ji Hwan Bae (vs RHP) and Michael A. Taylor (vs LHP) are in a centerfield platoon.

Reds

• With TJ Friedl (.476 OPS) off the IL, he’s leading off and Jacob Hurtubise heads to the bench.

Nick Martini (.588 OPS) has started in seven of the last eight games.

Rockies

Hunter Goodman (vs LHP) and Charlie Blackmon (vs RHP) are in a right-field platoon.

• Since coming off the IL, Kris Bryant has started seven of nine games while hitting .214/.353/.321 over that stretch.


Mining the News (5/30/24)

American League

Rangers

Evan Carter has been playing through his back injury for a while.

He missed time in the Minors with a stress fracture in his back in 2021, so the Rangers have been trying to be cautious with him.

That being said, manager Bruce Bochy said he believes Carter tried to play through this particular back injury without disclosing to the coaching or training staff how much it affected him.

“With Evan, I think he knew, honestly,” Bochy said. “I don’t think he was being totally honest with us. Even the last game, I guess, it was really starting to bother him. It was pretty evident. Now when you look back at some of the at-bats, he just had a hard time getting his swing off.

Rays

Shane Baz might be in the minors to manipulate his service clock.

Though there’s some logic to keeping him in Durham and monitoring him, it will nonetheless have consequences for Baz. The righty came into this season with two years and 14 days of major league service time. Had he stayed on the active roster or injured list all season, he would have finished this year at 3.014, just enough to automatically qualify for arbitration and to be on track for free agency after 2027. If he ends up spending significant time on optional assignment, he could alter both of those trajectories, though he could still get to arb as a Super Two guy even if he’s shy of the three-year mark.

For now, he’ll continue with whatever plan the Rays have for building him up over the remainder of the season. Perhaps his return to the big leagues will be motivated by an injury to one of his teammates or it could just be based on some sort of workload checklist that Baz has to hit.

Yankees

• For now, there are no plans to limit Luis Gil.

Boone said the Yankees are keeping a close eye on Gil. He didn’t rule out a workload limit at some point but said that currently it’s “full steam ahead.”

Pitching coach Matt Blake said the Yankees will use a variety of data points to track Gil’s readiness. In spring training he said the Yankees used workouts to get a baseline of what Gil looks like when he’s healthy, mentioning range of motion and “power output.” The team also uses slow-motion video to judge how his delivery progresses. The footage captures minute details regarding the shapes and speeds of his pitches, his release points and where he’s landing on the mound. The team also consults with Gil.

National League

Braves

David Fletcher is stretching out to be a knuckleball pitcher.

Yes, that David Fletcher.

The utility infielder told team officials several weeks ago that he had a knuckleball, and they agreed to let him show what he could do with it in a game. When they saw it was a legit knuckler, they told him they’d use him at least once a week as a pitcher at Gwinnett and see what he could do. Fletcher was thrilled.

After four relief appearances — two good, two not so good — he got a start Wednesday against the Norfolk Tides and pitched five innings of three-hit ball in a 5-2 win, allowing two runs and one walk with six strikeouts, including a strikeout of baseball’s No. 1 prospect, Jackson Holliday.

No one is getting carried away with it just yet, but the Braves plan to see how far Fletcher can go with his knuckleball-based repertoire. It’s such a rare pitch these days, perhaps he could eventually factor in as a pitcher with the Braves.

• The team has made several moves to work Spencer Schwellenbach into the rotation.

[Schwellenbach] was then informed that his next start was actually coming in Atlanta, less than 13 months after making his pro debut last April.

“I was not expecting it,” Schwellenbach said. “I was totally taken off guard and very happy about it.”

But the Braves had been hatching this plan for a while — really ever since learning the severity of Smith-Shawver’s injury last week. They adjusted their bullpen plans the past few days and leaned on Charlie Morton to eat more innings than they typically would have during Monday’s loss in preparation for Schwellenbach’s debut.

AJ Smith-Shawver was working on his changeup before going on the IL.

Smith-Shawver had two walks and four strikeouts and topped out at 99.3 mph with his fastball. The Braves were especially pleased with Smith-Shawver’s secondary pitches, including his changeup, which accounted for 20 of his 87 pitches. He used the changeup for strike 3 on first-inning punchouts of Mike Tauchman and Cody Bellinger, each swinging.

“I’ve been working on that all year, just trying to throw it more (for) strikes down in the zone, just kind of executing it more often,” Smith-Shawver said.

His 6.10 ERA in eight Triple-A starts didn’t concern Braves officials because they knew he’d been working on his off-speed pitches, rather than just mowing down minor-league hitters with 98-100 mph heaters. “That (changeup) is what I’ve spent the majority of my time down there working on,” he said.


Big Kid Adds (Week 9)

While the NFBC Main Event garners most of the attention, there are a handful of leagues with even a larger entry fee ($2.5K to $15K). They were originally named “High Stakes Leagues” and there are ten of them. With so much money on the line, these fantasy managers try to gain any advantage. Most of the time, these managers will be a week or two ahead of everyone else on their adds. Here are the players and some information on the ones added in five or more leagues. Read the rest of this entry »