Archive for Tout Wars

The Sleeper and the Bust Episode: 533 – The Tout Wars Review

3/20/18

The latest episode of “The Sleeper and the Bust” is brought to you by Out of the Park Baseball 19, the best baseball strategy game ever made – available NOW on PC, Mac, and Linux platforms! Go to ootpdevelopments.com to order now and save 10% with the code SLEEPER19!

Follow us on Twitter

Notable Transactions/Rumors/Articles/Game Play

Read the rest of this entry »


Am I Crazy? My 2018 Tout Wars Team

Last year, I filled in for Stephania Bell at Tout Wars. This year I was invited to to join Tout Wars in the H2H league. I responded by putting together a team (that I think) is unlike any other that has ever been assembled on that kind of stage. Read the rest of this entry »


I Happily Paid $56 For Mike Trout in Tout Wars

This past weekend I was again honored to be asked to participate in the 15-team Tout Wars auction held bright and early on Saturday morning at Staten Island’s Richmond County Ballpark. After a short ferry ride, I caught up with old friends and then auction began. Like last year, it rolled at a fast pace and ended in about four hours later. While my final team’s roster doesn’t resemble any team I’ve previously rostered, it has a nice chance to compete.

Prep

The biggest decision I made when constructing this team happened months ago when I looked back at my 2017 fantasy teams and found my pitching way outperforming my hitting.

To help offset this final imbalance, I decided to go with a 70%/30% hitter/pitcher split. Over the past few seasons, this league’s split has been 67.8%/32.2%. The difference works out to a $6 difference. I am not married to reaching this exact mix at the auction but it gives me a general guideline to follow. It had a side effect I didn’t fully understand but the anomaly ended up driving my auction.

Read the rest of this entry »


2018 AL-Only Tout Wars Recap

On Saturday, fantasy baseball nerds across the land gathered inside the clubhouse at Richmond County Bank Ballpark in Staten Island, for our first in-stadium Tout Wars extravaganza. It was a cool experience, and four auctions were completed in one day! As usual, I participated in the AL-Only league, but this time, I was returning as the defending champion. Now if only my leaguemates would have allowed me to win Aaron Judge for $3 again.

Read the rest of this entry »


Draft Day Talent: 2017 Tout Wars Example

It’s tough to create a perfectly balanced team on draft or auction day. Owners are feeling the push-and-pull of trying to balance all five categories in a roto league. Mid-draft, many owners decide to drop a category with the hope of finding the needed stats on the waiver wire. Knowing which stats can be found can be tricky. By looking back at last season’s Tout Wars leagues, a decent idea of available stats can be determined.

One feature of the OnRoto.com fantasy league website computes the league’s final standings using just the drafted teams (nine pitchers, 14 position players). I took these draft values and compared them to the actual final values for each of the four roto leagues (12-team AL and NL-only and the two 15-team mixed leagues).

Some specific notes on these leagues. First, they are deeper than most leagues so every player who might be good is already owned. As for the timing of the mixed draft (the other three were auctions) happened a few weeks before the other three. Additionally, only the 23-man rosters were used used for the projected standings. Each team had an additional five or six-person bench.

Read the rest of this entry »


Tout Wars Mixed Auction: A Year of Mistakes

After squeaking out the top finish in the inaugural 2016 Tout Wars Head-to-Head league, I moved to the 15-team mixed auction league. It was an interesting season and here are some of my “highlights”.

  • To the frustration of auctioneer, RotoWire’s Jeff Erickson, I was just pulling names out of the air during the end game. The room lost its lighting (the sun) and my paper draft list was useless.
  • Buster Posey and Chris Davis were my most expensive hitters ($57 combined). I’m pretty sure I got no more than $15 of value out them.
  • On the pitching side, I spent $26 combined on Rick Porcello and Danny Duffy as my #2 and #3 starters. I may have been lucky to get positive value from them.
  • Additionally, I found it necessary to roster Adam Wainwright, Shelby Miller, and Rubby de la Rosa on auction day.
  • For my first waiver wire splash, I spent over a quarter of my FAAB on the recently anointed Nationals closer Blake Treinen. And release him a few weeks later once he lost his job.
  • Got ravaged by injuries. In late May, I sent four players to the DL in one week.
  • Around mid-season, I traded my Elvis Andrus for Nomar Mazara because I need some more power. In the season’s second half, Mazara hit one fewer home run, had 14 fewer R+RBI, five fewer stolen bases, and an on-base percentage 16 points less.
  • Right after the Andrus trade, I lost my other stolen base threats, Kevin Kiermaier and Eduardo Nunez, to the disabled list.
  • Picked up Zach Davies and Mike Clevinger off waivers and just let them go waiting for Rick Porcello to catch fire.
  • Spent over 10% of my FAAB and Matt Chapman, watched him struggle on my team, and then released him. He hit 14 home runs in the season’s second half.

Read the rest of this entry »


On Winning AL-Only Tout Wars

Aaron Judge, my thank you card is in the mail.

This was my fourth year in the American League only Tout Wars league after winning the inaugural Tout Wars mixed draft league back in 2013. I’ve had two bottom tier finishes, a second place in 2015, and now…a Yoo-Hoo shower! And since this post is partially meant to give me a pedestal to brag from, I will giddily share that I not only won, but set multiple league records along the way as well. My team scored 109 of a possible 120 points, the most in AL Tout history, while my 26 point victory margin was also the most. In addition, I set a couple of category records, and actually won eight of the 10 categories. It was quite the season.

Read the rest of this entry »


Tout War Evaluation: It’s Not “All” About My Team

The season is at the one-third marker and owners need to evaluate their team moving forward. In roto leagues, the main focus should be future standings gains. I will go over the procedure using my 15-team Tout Wars mixed league as an example.

To start with here is my start of the week Tout Wars standings.

Mixed League Standings (Auction)
Team Name R HR RBI SB OBP W SV ERA WHIP SO TOTAL
Fred Zinkie 13 12 7.5 8.5 15 15 1 12 13 14 111
Al Melchior 8 8.5 11 10 13 11.5 10 14 14 8 108
Joe Pisapia 15 14 15 13 10 9 11 2 4 3 96
Ray Flowers 9.5 8.5 12 8.5 7 6 15 13 11 1 91.5
Ron Shandler 11.5 4 3 15 11 11.5 2.5 10 12 9.5 90
Jeff Zimmerman 9.5 10.5 7.5 14 12 2.5 12.5 7 1 13 89.5
Zach Steinhorn 11.5 15 14 4 4 8 4 8 3 11 82.5
Bret Sayre 7 6.5 13 1.5 14 14 12.5 4 5 4 81.5
Scott Swanay 14 13 10 6.5 8 6 2.5 1 6 12 79
Brent Hershey 5 3 4 1.5 9 11.5 9 15 15 5 78
Gene McCaffrey 6 10.5 9 12 1 2.5 8 3 9 6 67
Derek Van Riper 1.5 6.5 6 6.5 3 6 5.5 11 8 9.5 63.5
Tim Heaney 3 2 1 11 6 11.5 5.5 9 7 7 63
Scott Engel 1.5 1 2 5 5 1 14 5 2 15 51.5
Scott Pianowski 4 5 5 3 2 4 7 6 10 2 48

I’m happy to be involved a nice battle for fourth place after being in last place to start the month around the 60 point mark.

Read the rest of this entry »


Mixing Fantasy & Reality: Alford, Pitching Staffs, & Sage Advice

On Friday the Blue Jays called up Anthony Alford. The move surprised me since he struggled in 2016 with a 29% K% in High-A. He was doing better in Double-A this season (17K%, .393 wOBA) but I figured he would follow a progressive advancement with a Tripe-A stint.

Here’s a quick dive into what we know about his possible production. First here are his available prospect grades.

Scouting Grades for Anthony Alford
Source Year Batting Power (Raw/Game) Speed Defense Arm
FanGraphs 2017 40 60/50 70 55 40
MLB 2017 50 50 70 60 45
MLB 2016 60 45 70 60 45
MLB 2015 60 45 70 60 55
BA 2017 60 50 60 55 40
BA 2016 60 45 70 60 40

Read the rest of this entry »


Mixing Fantasy & Reality: Beltran, Kiermaier, & Gray

Tout Wars Outfield

I knew coming into the season, my Tout Wars outfield would not be the strongest. Usually, I wait on outfielders until they become great values which happen around the $15 mark. The only outfielder I send more than $15 on was Jose Ramirez and he is now at second base with Logan Forsythe on the DL. I need to start four these five with Bellinger taking the other outfield slot.

Tout Wars Outfield Options
Name Cost G PA HR R RBI SB BB% K% AVG OBP SLG ISO BABIP
Kevin Kiermaier $12 33 139 1 15 6 5 10.1% 25.2% 0.205 0.297 0.270 0.066 0.279
Kole Calhoun $8 32 138 4 17 11 0 8.0% 19.6% 0.248 0.319 0.384 0.136 0.287
Carlos Beltran $1 30 121 2 12 10 0 2.5% 24.8% 0.243 0.273 0.357 0.113 0.310
Jayson Werth R 27 110 5 18 10 3 11.8% 27.3% 0.292 0.382 0.479 0.188 0.377
Steven Souza Jr. R 31 136 4 14 19 0 13.2% 27.9% 0.284 0.385 0.457 0.172 0.392

Beltran is easily the odd man out. The 40-year-old had a decent 2016 season with 29 home runs and a .295 AVG (.337 OBP). This year his ability to make contact is gone dropping from 83% to a career low 74%. The lack of contact has driven his K% to 25% (first time over 20%) and his BB% down to 2.5%.

Read the rest of this entry »