Brad Johnson Baseball Chat 12/12/2017
Here’s today’s chat transcript which included plenty of fun dynasty talk, a discussion of MLB league parity, and a variety of other topics.
2:56 |
: Odds i’m traded? Might see a HR spike away from Marlins Park?
|
2:56 |
: Oh, hi there folks, let’s begin
|
2:57 |
: Yelich is very likely to be traded by midseason. Given his consistently high HR/FB ratio, I don’t think we’ll see more homers in another venue.
|
2:58 |
: Where does Machado end up? And what do the Orioles get in return?
|
2:59 |
: A little early to get a clean read on this. I’ll say St. Louis or San Francisco. Package led by Jack Flaherty or Tyler Beede plus another decent but unexceptional prospect. One year of Machado is valuable, but it’s not worth a monster haul.
|
2:59 |
: Francisco Mejia… Will he start 2018 in the Minors or as Cleveland everyday catcher? Trade possibility?
|
2:59 |
: The Indians have a deep group at catcher. I’ll bet on Triple-A until he forces the issue.
|
3:00 |
: ottoneu FGPoints question for you Brad. Keep $4 Folty and $5 Davies? Rotation is $40 Scherzer, $25 Greinke, $19 Cole, $18 C-Mart, $15 R. Ray and $14 G. Richards. How about a $20 Marte? Thanks!!
|
3:00 |
: I’m not a big fan of Starling Marte in FGpts. He’s kind of a $3 OFer. Too much of his fantasy value is tied up in SB and batting average.
|
3:01 |
: As for Folty and Davies, they’re decent fliers at those costs, especially Davies. Depends on your budget constraints though, you may be better served hoping to find similar assets for $1.
|
3:02 |
: How much of a boost does Machado get in your rankings if he plays SS next year?
|
3:02 |
: None.
|
3:02 |
: Really
|
3:02 |
: He does get a small boost in ottoneu since there is a MI but no CI slot,
|
3:03 |
: Creates some MI scarcity relative to CIs
|
3:03 |
: But a normal league is just as deep at SS, MI, 3B, and CI
|
3:03 |
: Kiermaier has about a 20/20 projection for next year. Do you think he can reach that?
|
3:04 |
: Smells pretty high. 15/15 is closer to my median expectation.
|
3:04 |
: Do you think Aaron Hicks can put up a .350+ wOBA again or will be settle in around .330? Thoughts?
|
3:05 |
: I’ll take the middle at .340 wOBA
|
3:05 |
: Padres have been active – do you see them making more deals or staying put? Other than Hand, who is most likely to be traded?
|
3:06 |
: Seems like they’re trying to put a better product on the field. I don’t think we’ll see too many more trades for them aside from Hand. However, don’t be surprised if they sign someone like Zack Cozart.
|
3:06 |
: What are we thinking about Trevor Rosenthal for next season?
|
3:06 |
: He’s out.
|
3:06 |
: Dynasty league, keep forever, uses Ottoneu’s FGPts scoring. Gerrit Cole or Joey Gallo?
|
3:06 |
: Gallo
|
3:07 |
: These Winter Meetings have been a snoozefest.
|
3:07 |
: Have they? Maybe I’ve just been lulled for so long by this current market, but they’ve felt pretty busy to me
|
3:07 |
: over/under on 35 Matt Olson dongs?
|
3:07 |
: Easy under
|
3:08 |
: Not to say he can’t get to 35 home runs, but it requires a lot of faith in his ability to stay healthy and adjust to scouting reports.
|
3:08 |
: If Rosenthal is out in STL, who’s in?
|
3:09 |
: They haven’t signed that player yet. A free agent or trade acquisition of some kind
|
3:09 |
: Was Rendon’s last season a career year, or does he still have another step forward to make? On a related note, who would you say is 2018’s Rendon? ie, solid player who takes a step forward.
|
3:11 |
: That will probably go down as his best season. He could mostly repeat the offensive numbers with some modest regression in OBP. I don’t think another step forward is likely. He already drank Daniel Murphy’s kool aid.
|
3:11 |
: He looks maxed out to me.
|
3:11 |
: Ok, with all of the infield moves for the Yankees…does Gleyber Torres have a clear shot at a starting spot when they break camp?
|
3:11 |
: Sure looks like it. We’ll see who else they add over the winter.
|
3:11 |
: They are far from done.
|
3:12 |
: Keep forever league 17 MILB 42 total normal formatting: offering Corey Ray or Tyler O Neill is reasonable for a backend starter right? Low4 era type pitcher.
|
3:13 |
: Smells fine. However, I would wait until the start of the season to make that move. Prospects are basically bonds. At some point in the future, they mature or default. When trading bonds for pitchers, I prefer to dodge Spring Training injuries.
|
3:13 |
: Curious why the queue opens an hour early if those questions are planning on getting ignored 🙂
|
3:14 |
: I’ve actually already answered a third of them. In the winter, the chat queue sometimes hits a lull so I’ll go back and answer a few early ones
|
3:15 |
: During the season, I don’t open the queue early because I get way too many questions to answer
|
3:15 |
: Are the Blue Jays going to become sellers at anytime this offseason?
|
3:15 |
: Chances of Donaldson getting traded?
|
3:15 |
: So, feels like it’s 100% that he’ll get traded
|
3:16 |
: hard to imagine the Jays actually contending
|
3:16 |
: that said, an offseason trade doesn’t sound very likely. They may jump on one of the Machado losers though
|
3:16 |
: Who are some under the radar MLB SP to buy for 2018 (dynasty format, 400 MLBers kept)? Thanks!
|
3:16 |
: What is the deal with Trevor Williams? Does he have the chance to put it together this season?
|
3:16 |
: Trevor Williams is one of the under the radar guys I like. Let’s start with him
|
3:17 |
: For one, he’s already put it together
|
3:17 |
: This is what he is, a back end starter with a low-4s ERA
|
3:17 |
: Doesn’t have any of the weapons to exceed that. Small chance he’ll buff his ground ball rate, but that’s the only path to more value
|
3:18 |
: Great back end flier or streamer, not a ton of breakout potential
|
3:18 |
: Better fit for dynasty where pure volume is useful
|
3:18 |
: I like a Jerad Eickhoff rebound – if he’s healthy
|
3:18 |
: he wasn’t last season
|
3:21 |
: Kevin Gausman’s always worthy of a dice roll. Could solve for X at any time. Like Perdomo, Beede, both Montys, Tyler Anderson, German Marquez, McCarthy, Josh Tomlin, and Eduardo Rodriguez
|
3:21 |
: Those are obviously of varying quality. If you believe Steamer, Anderson will be the best value in baseball
|
3:23 |
: Chad Kuhl, Seth Lugo, Robert Gsellman, Kyle Gibson, Kendall Graveman, Tyler Chatwood, Jake Junis, Hyun-Jin Ryu, Jose Urena, and Adam Conley are probably worth a look too.
|
3:23 |
: I’m going to assume trendy pitchers like Luiz Gohara and Luis Castillo are not any kind of available
|
3:24 |
: Those are all lotto tickets of some sort
|
3:24 |
: Morton?
|
3:24 |
: Morton is a stud. If anybody is sleeping on him, they’re a fool
|
3:24 |
: Who’s your favorite rookie on the season? Torres, Acuña? Want some names…
|
3:25 |
: Definitely Acuna followed by Calhoun and Torres. I haven’t hunted much for upcoming rookies yet – I only do one redraft league so all these guys have been owned for years in my formats
|
3:25 |
: Is there anything wrong with the Sox that a better year from Hanley, a full year from Devers and a better bench can’t solve? It seems to me that people think they need JD Martinez, but that they really don’t have a place for him.
|
3:26 |
: What’s wrong with 1B/DH?
|
3:26 |
: I wouldn’t count on anything from Hanley, he’s rarely healthy.
|
3:27 |
: Let yourself be pleasantly surprised by him rather than counting on him to be a mid-lineup presence
|
3:27 |
: Could the Sox move Haney for “something” to open up DH/1B? Seems like they are “counting” on him to rebound.. not sure I feel that confident in him for anything, maybe DD doesn’t either.
|
3:27 |
: Oh hey.
|
3:27 |
: No, I think you keep Hanley on the roster and just juggle it all.
|
3:27 |
: Injuries will very quickly “solve” any redundancies
|
3:28 |
: Who do you prefer for 2018: Matt Olson or Greg Bird?
|
3:28 |
: Oh. That’s the tough one.
|
3:28 |
: In both cases, I’m looking at them as sell-high candidates. You want to wait for irrational love to kick in then sell high
|
3:29 |
: I think Bird can get you more, but he’s also more likely to completely bomb. He seems to need some very major adjustments.
|
3:29 |
: Odds that Gleyber
|
3:29 |
: odds that Gleyber is in the opening day lineup now that Headley is
|
3:29 |
: gone? I’m thinking Boone brings him in on day 1 like Torre did w Jeter
|
3:30 |
: I’ll set the line at 60%. It really depends on 1. who they sign over the rest of the winter and 2. how he performs this spring.
|
3:30 |
: Dee Gordon had about 5% of the steals that were rosterable in the NL last year. How much does his switching leagues cause Hamilton’s value to go up in NL only leagues?
|
3:31 |
: Well, let’s see if/where Hamilton is traded. Seems semi-likely
|
3:31 |
: Beyond that, if he stays in the NL, I don’t think Gordon leaving really affects his value. On the one hand, it makes it much easier to win the category. On the other hand, every other owner has a path to second place.
|
3:32 |
: Why not let one person overpay for 1 category Hamilton and shoot for second or third in the category with better values?
|
3:32 |
: Are current baseball economics creating a handful of super teams and everyone else scrambling for a Wild Card? Seems like 8-10 buyers and everyone else ‘rebuilding’.
|
3:32 |
: This is a fun one, let’s spend a little time on this. Feel free to interject as I share some thoughts
|
3:33 |
: I think what we’re seeing right now is a symptom of a few things that happened about five years ago
|
3:33 |
: data quality and analytical resources suddenly took a huge leap forward
|
3:34 |
: a few rebuilding first movers – the Astros, Cubs, Dodgers, and Yankees were able to fully leverage new data to build super teams. Other franchises are playing catch up, but they’re mostly on the same page now
|
3:34 |
: a few clubs like the Marlins notwithstanding
|
3:35 |
: Baseball has also become hyper saturated in cash. Even a tiny market club like the Brewers can consider making a play for a top free agent
|
3:36 |
: The only thing holding every club back from fielding over a $100MM roster is their own debt burdens (incidentally, that’s why the Marlins are in fire sale mode)
|
3:37 |
: This combination of information and resources should help league parity long term. Presently, we do have a handful of super teams. Luckily the 2 wild card format has encouraged most teams to field a competitive roster into the summer months. You never know when you’re going to find a miracle or two
|
3:38 |
: Actually, the 2017 Yankees are a pretty good example
|
3:38 |
: The Red Sox were much worse than anticipated, and they got more than they could have hoped from breakout performers
|
3:39 |
: Of their entire roster, only Bird underperformed projections
|
3:39 |
: Maybe Tanaka too, but he was good enough
|
3:39 |
: The Rays got Jose De Leon for Logan Forsythe last winter. What kind of a return can Cesar Hernandez bring the Phillies this winter ? What other pieces would be needed for a CeHe for Tyler Skaggs deal ?
|
3:39 |
: The Angels are short on pitching depth as it is, so I don’t see this as an effective framework
|
3:40 |
: Also worth noting that Hernandez is considerably better than Forsythe
|
3:40 |
: He’s just as cheap too
|
3:41 |
: Personally, I think the Phillies would be very foolish to trade Hernandez. I know the fans are clamoring to see Scott Kingery, but it’s very unlikely he’s a better player than Hernandez. Just sit on the depth for now.
|
3:41 |
: That’s my advice to the Phillies.
|
3:42 |
: Hernandez was the 8th best 2B by WAR in 2017
|
3:42 |
: His 3.3 WAR was tied with Dee Gordon, .2 WAR behind Jed Lowrie, and just ahead of Robinson Cano and Whit Merrifield.
|
3:42 |
: Fair to say they all tied for 6th-10th
|
3:44 |
: In 2016 which was a mutant year for 2B, Hernandez had 4.3 WAR, good for 9th best (DJ LeMahieu was 10th – also at 4.3 WAR, another tie).
|
3:44 |
: So, more of a first mover advantage into analytics and developing the farm system and not just a payroll/market size issue. Appreciate the input, thanks!
|
3:44 |
: The current luxury tax rules act as a much stronger cap than in past iterations
|
3:45 |
: So most clubs are going to be living between $100MM and $197MM in payroll. With a few teams occasionally going over. And the Marlins, Rays, and A’s languishing
|
3:45 |
: Those aren’t exactly even terms, but it’s close enough for most teams to build a super roster with the right moves
|
3:47 |
: Another matter I forgot to mention, replacement level has increased considerably in recent years. Or more specifically, the supply of 0-2 WAR players has increased substantially
|
3:47 |
: Would you deal Nomar Mazara for Ian Happ in a dynasty? I know hes young but only 2 of 40 career bombs come against leftys.
|
3:48 |
: I think that’s a gamble you can make. Both talented players with flaws and huge breakout potential
|
3:48 |
: Where can I find a dynasty league?
|
3:48 |
: ottoneu is a good entry level option
|
3:48 |
: it’s not as deep as what I consider to be dynasty, but I’ve had people tell me their 10 team, 25 player roster league is a dynasty
|
3:49 |
: ottoneu rosters 480 players leaguewide
|
3:49 |
: It’s a challenge to find those deep dynasty leagues – and they’re usually quite dysfunctional
|
3:49 |
: Luis Castillo or Zach Godley in 2018 and beyond, all else being equal. Nola or Darvish in 2018 only?
|
3:49 |
: Darvish
|
3:50 |
: I’m going to say Godley. I see him as a higher floor asset with only a slightly lower ceiling
|
3:50 |
: As much as I like Castillo, I worry about any young pitcher at Great American Smallpark
|
3:50 |
: How are you valuing Willie Calhoun and his 2B eligibility?
|
3:51 |
: Calhoun is not 2B eligible in most formats. Also, as Jeff Z noted, there is no position scarcity in 2018 (except for catcher).
|
3:52 |
: Calhoun played exactly zero games at 2B in his MLB stint. It’s possible Yahoo will manually add the eligibility (they do that sometimes), but I can’t predict that
|
3:52 |
: I figure it’s unlikely
|
3:54 |
: I got distracted by some trade offers 🙂
|
3:54 |
: I’ll brb
|
3:55 |
: ok
|
3:56 |
: Is David Dahl a breakout candidate this year? Does Ian Dezzymond rebound?
|
3:56 |
: Both are good buy low candidates
|
3:56 |
: I don’t see Raimel Tapia as a big impediment to playing time for Dahl if he’s healthy and hitting
|
3:56 |
: Decent chance Desmond has a dead cat bounce in him
|
3:57 |
: don’t pay to find out though
|
3:57 |
: If it’s not a $2 flier or less, it’s too much
|
3:57 |
: do you see the yankees getting cole or fulmer?
|
3:57 |
: Not really, but I can’t rule it out
|
3:57 |
: they have this hopelessly blocked Clint Frazier on their roster
|
3:57 |
: He’s enough to acquire either pitcher
|
3:58 |
: Tell us about your trade offers!
|
3:58 |
: People in this league tend to get grumpy when I write about their offers
|
3:59 |
: I can tell you a fresh new tale called:
|
3:59 |
: The Disaggregation of Josh Donaldson
|
3:59 |
: Once upon a time (i.e. earlier today), a guy owned a Josh Donaldson. He solicited offers from all over the land and ultimately traded his Donaldson for a Nick Williams and Raimel Tapia
|
4:00 |
: Donaldson’s new owner brought him home and placed him in his field
|
4:01 |
: Then his neighbor brought over a Shane Baz, Alex Jackson, Adrian Morejon, Luis Robert, and Josh Naylor. He left those and stole away Donaldson
|
4:01 |
: And that’s the end of the story
|
4:01 |
: there’s no moral. He was traded twice today. That’s all.
|
4:02 |
: So we have a pretty sweet dynasty league. 12 team, roto. Keep 5 guys per year with escalating cost based on where they were originally drafted. Can keep 1 MILB from our MILB draft as long as the player is still MILb. We have previously allowed for trading picks and it seems like we have a tanking issue. One player accumulated an insane amount of high round picks last season and basically started punting the season last year at the draft but is loaded this year. Some people want to now limit how many picks you can acquire even if the trades you are making are fair, but others think we should have higher penalty for last place. Thoughts on some ways to challenge this?
|
4:02 |
: This is what I was talking about earlier. This is not dynasty league. It’s a slightly complicated keeper format. But let’s plow ahead 🙂
|
4:03 |
: To me, when you introduce complicated rules, it acts as a means to exploit the less savvy owners in the league.
|
4:03 |
: So if you do have some asymmetry with regard to owner quality, it does make sense to scale back the draft pick trading process with limits (or doing away with it entirely)
|
4:04 |
: if your owners are all comparably competent, just let it play out
|
4:04 |
: Some people will make ugly mistakes on occasion, but they’ll learn from them
|
4:04 |
: long term, it should be fine
|
4:04 |
: since you keep so few players, no mistake will have more than a couple years or repercussion
|
4:05 |
: Justin Bour worth hanging onto after the firesale happens in MIami?
|
4:05 |
: Without any other context, sure
|
4:05 |
: He’s a solid hitter. If you’re paying a serious amount to keep him, consider $1 alternative like Alonso or LoMo
|
4:05 |
: How can I stop bad owners from continually making awful trades? The best team in the league continues to give nothing for something with the worst owner in the league. There’s no commish, Scoresheet run public league. Ive been in the league for 7-8 years and don’t want to just walk away from my team but terrible owners make me debate it.
|
4:06 |
: Ugh, sounds like you don’t have any recourse
|
4:06 |
: Ideally, I would boot the bad owner, sounds like they either don’t care or are actively colluding
|
4:06 |
: usually, what looks like collusion is actually laziness
|
4:07 |
: since you can’t boot the bad owner, maybe try getting together a cohort of other long standing owners and threaten the guy who’s taking advantage of him
|
4:07 |
: Just say he needs to stop exploiting that owner or else you’ll all quit
|
4:07 |
: then his league is dead. Could slow him down
|
4:08 |
: feels like a bad option, but without a commish, what else can you do?
|
4:08 |
: Shouldn’t Cleveland be in on Machado? Seems like a great fit, and the Tribe have the farm to get it done.
|
4:08 |
: Probably. Don’t rule them out either. The O’s only started soliciting offers a couple hours ago
|
4:08 |
: I love that Donaldson got traded twice in one day, that’s awesome. Thanks for the story…and I understand the sensitivity of the league as well, that’s totally fair!
|
4:09 |
: Hey Brad, youve helped me a ton before so thanks in advance. Im in a 5×5, keep 5 league (heavy weight on SLUG and OBP). I can keep 5 of Hoskins, Judge, Ramirez (Jose), Bumgarner, Bellinger, JD Martinez, Gary Sanchez, Corey Seager.
|
4:09 |
: Let’s see…Judge, Ramirez, and Sanchez are no-brainers
|
4:09 |
: I’d probably do JDM and Seager, but wait to see where JDM signs
|
4:10 |
: Would you trade JDM and Giancarlo for Scherzer and Votto in a dynasty OPS and TB league? Seems like too much power to give up in that format but it’s intriguing to me.
|
4:10 |
: Nope
|
4:10 |
: Have had a standing offer of Scherzer for JDM since the start of the offseason. I’m not taking it. I may reconsider on April 1 depending on my roster composition
|
4:10 |
: Re: Bad Owners- This owner doesnt care, or is just bad at fantasy baseball. I guess I just need to work harder to beat them but it drives me nuts, feels like Im up against a stacked deck
|
4:11 |
: Re: Where would he sign that makes you go “forget it”?
|
4:11 |
: San Fran, Pittsburgh, or any offense with a very low run projection
|
4:11 |
: None of which are especially likely
|
4:12 |
: Since Machado wants to go back to SS, which side says no to Machado+reliever for Schwarber and Russell?
|
4:13 |
: From the queue – the Cubs say no to this
|
4:13 |
: The Cubs say no to Schwarber OR Russell alone for Machado and an arm
|
4:13 |
: If they were getting 2 or more years of Machado, then there might be some traction
|
4:14 |
: It’s hard to justify moving that much future value for just one shot at a WS. The more shots, the easier the justification
|
4:14 |
: What are your thoughts on Tapia and Verdugo for 2018? Do either of them crack the line-up full time? 400 at bats?
|
4:15 |
: I like them both in a general sense. I worry about Tapia’s fantasy profile though
|
4:15 |
: He looks like Alcides Escobar as an outfielder at Coors Field with less speed
|
4:16 |
: He’s more likely to play a lot this year than Verdugo
|
4:17 |
: Verdugo is a much better prospect and well equipped to thrive in the majors. He’s just dealing with a lot of depth ahead of him
|
4:17 |
: I love Tapia next year, if cargo gets traded he will play almost everyday right?
|
4:18 |
: He’s an aggressive, high whiff rate hitter with no plate discipline, no fly balls, and poor SB success rates in the minors
|
4:18 |
: He’ll bat eight while providing almost no fantasy fuel
|
4:19 |
: Re: well now I dont
|
4:19 |
: You are arguing the Yankees have no advantage, right after they add Stanton? If there was no, no trade clause, how many teams could take that on, and still add more talent?
|
4:19 |
: The Yankees have a huge advantage. It’s just smaller than it was during the 90s and 00s.
|
4:20 |
: What’s your favorite kind of league? I personally love redrafts just because it’s starting over from scratch every year. Draft day is like a holiday.
|
4:20 |
: Considering the vast majority of my leagues can be described as a dynasty, I’ll go with dynasty. Means a lot of different things though
|
4:21 |
: Austin Hays put together a big year in high A & AA before getting promoted in September, is he basically ML ready or does he need more seasoning? Not sure what to think of him from a dynasty perspective
|
4:21 |
: He’s a high value lotto ticket
|
4:21 |
: there’s serious risk in the profile, but he could turn into something very impressive
|
4:22 |
: I’m always very wary of high whiff rate prospects. Hays falls into that bucket.
|
4:22 |
: Ok, I’m going to call it a day. Thanks for playing!
|
You can follow me on twitter @BaseballATeam
I’m thinking of starting a league in which most owners aren’t very interested, and don’t want to have a long draft. Keeper league, right? Less players drafted=shorter draft time… right?
Maybe, but that’s also another deadline people might miss. I’d look to keep the rosters short, especially the bench, etc. Deep rosters are more appealing when everyone’s super-engaged.
I’ve done a few fire-and-forget formats in the past. Usually set them up with long drafts but no in-season management and no bench (extra active spots). At the end, you self report whatever stats you accrued and if you say you win, somebody vets your ability to add. I usually set it up so you count best three of five OFers, best 2 of 3 MI, etc. For that reason, it’s a good format for using WAR rather than categories since it simplifies the math. Plus defense! And non-steal base running! In fantasy baseball!