Archive for Dynasty

What If Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Fails?

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is the best baseball prospect in the world. He’s better than most recent #1 overall prospects. He’s the best offensive prospect since at least Kris Bryant (ROY + MVP), and many would say you’d have to go back much further to Miggy or even Pujols to get a true comparison. For some scouts he possesses the seemingly impossible combination of both an 80 grade hit tool and an 80 grade power profile. His batter’s box skills have HOF lineage and yet somehow he has done nothing but exceed expectations (batting .402 in AA at age 19 helps). He already has the look and potential of an all-time great.  Best of all, Vlad, Jr. will debut in 2019.

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Top 60 Deep Dynasty Prospects By ADP

It’s Prospect Week at FanGraphs, the most exciting “week” outside of the one dedicated for sharks. I’ll have a chat at 4:00pm ET where we can talk all about prospects for fantasy purposes. In the mean time, let’s lay out some food for thought courtesy of the Dynasty ADP Project.

Please note: my standard for “prospect” may be slightly inconsistently applied. I didn’t bother to confirm rookie eligibility for all players with minimal major league experience. I just eyeballed the list. I might have incorrectly included or excluded a name. Feel free to call me out.

Top 60 Deep Dynasty Prospects by ADP
Rank Player Avg Rank Ovr Rank
1 Guerrero Jr., Vladimir 13 15
2 Jimenez, Eloy 34.25 35
3 Robles, Victor 54.75 51
4 Franco, Wander 60.67 56
5 Tatis Jr., Fernando 61.75 60
6 Tucker, Kyle 71 65
7 Senzel, Nick 89.25 80
8 Bichette, Bo 90.5 82
9 Lewis, Royce 94 88
10 Whitley, Forrest 99.75 97
11 Reyes, Alex 105.5 103
12 Rodgers, Brendan 109.75 107
13 Hiura, Keston 118.75 114
14 Adell, Jo 120 117
15 Luzardo, Jesus 128.25 121
16 Honeywell, Brent 134 122
17 Kieboom, Carter 147 131
18 Alonso, Peter 147.75 133
19 Alvarez, Yordan 148.75 136
20 Trammell, Taylor 149.5 138
21 Meadows, Austin 155 144
22 Kirilloff, Alex 160 148
23 Soroka, Mike 165.25 154
24 Urias, Luis 169.5 156
25 Kopech, Michael 185 169
26 Brujan, Vidal 185.33 170
27 Mejia, Francisco 187.25 173
28 O’Neill, Tyler 188.5 175
29 Calhoun, Willie 191.75 179
30 Sanchez, Sixto 195.75 182
31 Puk, A.J. 201.5 188
32 Valera, George 205.33 192
33 Bauers, Jake 207.75 198
34 Robert, Luis 207.75 199
35 Verdugo, Alex 214.75 207
36 Mize, Casey 214.75 208
37 Keller, Mitch 215 209
38 Riley, Austin 215.5 211
39 Gore, MacKenzie 225.25 219
40 Toussaint, Touki 226 220
41 Hampson, Garrett 233.5 230
42 Jansen, Danny 237.25 234
43 Sanchez, Jesus 249.5 247
44 Cease, Dylan 252.5 250
45 McKay, Brendan 257 253
46 Gimenez, Andres 258.75 255
47 Paddack, Chris 268.25 265
48 Lowe, Brandon 272.67 274
49 India, Jonathan 273.25 277
50 Pache, Cristian 276.5 281
51 Gorman, Nolan 277.5 282
52 Mesa, Victor Victor 278 283
53 Stewart, Christin 283.25 284
54 Greene, Hunter 286.5 287
55 Hayes, Ke’Bryan 297.75 298
56 Lowe, Nate 302 301
57 Bart, Joey 302.75 302
58 Anderson, Ian 303.5 303
59 Madrigal, Nick 304.75 305
60 Wright, Kyle 305.25 306
61 Edwards, Xavier 305.67 308
62 Sheffield, Justus 307 310

There appear to be a few areas where prospects clump together. You can think of these as tiers. What stands out to me is that with the exception of Vladito and possibly a few others, there isn’t a lot of difference in (my) perceived value between the early prospect picks and the guys around pick 300.

What do you think? Let’s chat about it here and at 4:00pm.


Ryan Braun Isn’t Done Yet

Looking over the depth chart for the defending NL Central champion Milwaukee Brewers, one is reminded that Ryan Braun, 35 years old and entering his 13th major league season, still projects as the team’s starting left fielder. Some observers, perhaps even Brewers fans, might feel skeptical about Braun’s chances of a bounce-back season, considering how things have gone these last few years:

Ryan Braun, Results (2016-18)
Year AVG OBP SLG wOBA wRC+
2016 .305 .365 .538 .378 134
2017 .268 .336 .487 .347 110
2018 .254 .313 .469 .330 105

Here we see steady decline in every category. After reviewing this table, it would be easy to conclude that age has caught up with Braun, that he will probably contribute nothing more than league average offense in 2019, and that the Brewers should perhaps even consider upgrading in left field. Read the rest of this entry »


2018 Top 100 Prospects: A Fantasy Spin Review

It’s prospect season (thank goodness, as nothing else is happening).  Nearly one year ago I borrowed from the great work by Eric and Kiley here and applied some fantasy context to their overall Top 100 prospect rankings from 2018.  We’ll do something similar for 2019, but before the full frenzy of this season’s prospect rankings reaches it’s peak, I thought it prudent to review prospect perceptions from this time last year to see if we can learn anything.

From last year’s post, the same purpose applies:

The goal here is simply to each prospect’s grades and scouting reports and then translate those skills into “what could be” for fantasy context (for example where “upside” might represent an 80%+ outcome on a prospect’s potential).

For comparison, last year’s comments are at the top, followed by a value trend and general update on where things appear to be for each prospect heading into 2019.

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Max Kepler’s Not-So-Obvious Breakout

At first glance, Max Kepler had a very Max Kepler year. In several key categories, he was pretty much the same player he’s always been, which is to say that he once again came close to, but failed to achieve, league average offensive output:

Max Kepler (2016-18)
Season AVG OBP SLG ISO wOBA wRC+
2016 .235 .309 .434 .189 .313 93
2017 .243 .312 .425 .182 .315 93
2018 .224 .319 .408 .184 .316 97

Where it really counts, in wOBA and wRC+, Kepler has been consistent—but consistently underwhelming. Skimming over these results, one would be inclined to conclude that the Twins are still waiting for Kepler to break out.

But ask anyone in the Twins front office, and they’d likely say that Kepler broke out last season, beneath our noses. And indeed, looking under the hood, we find several reasons to reach that same conclusion for ourselves:

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Deep Dynasty ADP Project: Initial Release

Hello and welcome. A couple weeks ago, I promised to work on Average Draft Position (ADP) for deep dynasty leagues. It’s a segment of the fantasy baseball community that is underserved by industry resources. Yes, there are a few dynasty specific sites that provide helpful coverage, but nearly all of the analysis is based on a given writer’s personal rankings and preferences.

There’s nothing inherently wrong with that. However, you would always check redraft rankings against ADP, right? Why not do the same in a dynasty league? Today, we take our first step in the right direction.

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The Deep Dynasty ADP Project

Why does redraft get all the nice things like a helpful Average Draft Position (ADP) to indicate the most auspicious time to target a specific player?

To my knowledge, ADP basically doesn’t exist for deep dynasty formats – and probably for a good reason. Deep dynasty is a snowflake ecosystem. Every league has its own unique nooks and crannies. They’re conducted on a variety of different fantasy platforms with offline components. More to the point, there probably aren’t very many first year drafts. Most dynasty leagues have been rolling for years.

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The Increasing Popularity of Deep Dynasty Leagues

Deep dynasty leagues are becoming increasingly popular. Today, I’d like to talk about my experiences with the format, things to look for when joining a league, and what this means for the fantasy baseball industry.

Let’s start by defining a “deep” dynasty league. This is a flexible concept. In a recent poll, I said the following: “Let’s define “deep” as any mixed league that rosters 700 or more players leaguewide or any AL/NL Only with 350 or more players. At least half of players are kept.”

Again, the exact definition can vary. What matters is that the league operates on a completely different level than the most common fantasy formats. Those are 12-team redraft with roto or head-to-head scoring. There are also dynasty leagues with similar dynamics to these more common formats. Participants in these leagues can use existing resources for redraft leagues with a little mental tinkering. The norms of the industry still apply in a general sense even if there are some specific quirks.

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To The Victor Victor Go The Spoils

really wanted an excuse to use that headline. This post isn’t directly about Victor Mesa Jr. and Victor Victor Mesa, although I will be referencing their scouting reports. Also, there’s a fun pun-ish connection between the headline and my conclusion. Layers!

I’ve already botched this intro. Let’s pretend I wrote a normal paragraph laying out today’s topic is a cogent manner. Oh! The topic is “y’all too &@%*ing crazy about prospects.” Proceed.

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Why We Missed: Wendle, Muncy, & Voit

Every season a few hitters come out of nowhere to become major fantasy contributors. And by nowhere, I mean no one targeted them at all during draft season, even in 50-man roster draft-and-holds. This past season, Max Muncy, Joey Wendle, and Luke Voit provided fantasy production for nothing. An interesting trait for each of these hitters is that savvy teams targeted them in trades before the breakout. In recent seasons, these breakouts include Chris Taylor. Jose Martinez. and Jesus Aguilar. While the general public doesn’t have the same resources, scouts, and data as major league teams, I found the general traits some teams are looking to acquire.

I asked for help in creating the list. I end up with many responses but I wanted productive hitters on no one’s radar. I removed a suggestion if the hitter was on any top-100 list (e.g. John Hicks) or if they were ever an MLB regular (e.g. Scooter Gennett). In the end, 12 hitters made the cut: Chris Taylor, Max Muncy, Luke Voit, Joey Wendle, Jose Martinez, Jesus Aguilar, Teoscar Hernandez, Adam Duvall, Daniel Palka, Eugenio Suarez, Mitch Haniger, and Justin Turner.

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