Sports Wunderkind » roto Tue, 26 Apr 2016 18:18:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.9 Final 2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings /final-2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings/ /final-2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings/#comments Sat, 30 Mar 2013 19:53:27 +0000 /?p=610 The time has finally come. Opening Day is almost upon us and our 2013 fantasy baseball season will begin the long march. While most of you have probably already used my 2013 fantasy baseball rankings of the individual positions for your drafts, I have finally competed my overall 2013 fantasy baseball rankings for the 2013 fantasy baseball season. There are over 400 ranked players in these 2013 fantasy basebal rankings, so I have you covered for both AL and NL only leagues as well as very deep mixed leagues. I’m going to go away from the standard format of these posts because there are just too many players to cover in one 2013 fantasy baseball rankings post. Therefore, the best way to read this post is to see which players I ranked significantly higher than my Fantasy Pros Expert counterparts. Guys like Giancarlo Stanton, Edwin Encarnacion, Yoenis Cespedes and others are the type of players to pay attention too. Enjoy the final version of my 2013 fantasy baseball rankings!

The 2013 fantasy baseball rankings are here to set you up for Opening Day.
The 2013 fantasy baseball rankings are here to set you up for Opening Day.

2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings

 


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2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings, courtesy of Fantasy Pros.

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2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings for Relief Pitchers /2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings-2/ /2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings-2/#comments Sun, 10 Mar 2013 20:00:36 +0000 /?p=409 The fantasy industry loves to pick on Matthew Berry, but he does have one thing totally correct in relation to 2013 fantasy baseball rankings. “Don’t Pay For Saves” is some of the best advice a fantasy baseballer can get. When looking at the overall 2013 fantasy baseball rankings picture, closers make up such an insignificant part of team construction. Saves frequently come into the league as a result of injuries and trades. Paying top dollar for someone like Craig Kimbrel is reasonable, but behind the Braves All-Star, there is not a closer who is worth breaking the bank on. In the general scheme of the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings, many experts overvalue closers, which hurts the rest of your team. The ratios and counting stats that closers and middle relievers post just aren’t enough to warrant spending on them. It’s better to look further down into the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings for better options, to allow for smarter spending.

Greg Holland is chronically underrated in the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings for relief pitchers.

That’s why deep analysis of the lower ends of the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings is so important. Identifying lower end closers or middle relievers is incredibly important to not allowing your team to fall behind in saves. Some closers I really like for their ADP and price are Greg Holland & Jason Grilli. Holland has much more job security than many outsiders recognize and has absoulutely filthy stuff. Once he beings to gain saves, his value will increase. Grilli is going to get 1st crack at a Pittsburgh job that could end paying crazy dividends. Some setup men that have the potential to gain starting jobs that are worth drafting are Vincent Pestano, Ryan Cook & Drew Storen. Value those players higher than their less skilled middle relief counterparts. n general, we don’t know enough about this position until Spring Training comes closer to its’ end, so monitor my posts here as well on The Fantasy Fix and Fantasy Trade 411. Some situations to watch is the Los Angeles Angels, Boston Red Sox & espeically the Detroit Tigers. Monitoring these situations in the spring can make your season much more enjoyable, as you watch your saves category rack up without spending too heavily to acquire them.

The ageless wonder, Mariano Rivera, is a hard case to evaluate for the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings.

2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings For Relief Pitchers


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2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings: Third Basemen /2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings-third-base/ /2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings-third-base/#comments Tue, 29 Jan 2013 16:16:13 +0000 /?p=199 The infield is now finished with the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings for third basemen. While doing these fantasy baseball rankings for third basemen, what became very apparent is that this is a position in dire straits. After Manny Machado at 18, the general quality of players at the hot corner falls of dramatically. The top is very heavy with Cabrera and company but dramatically falls off after Ramirez at 4. Coming into his 16th season, Adrian Beltre has lost quality hitters around him in the lineup to be on base and to drive him in. There are 3 players that you should be targeting in the middle rounds of your draft if you aren’t able to nab my 2013 fantasy baseball rankings #1 third basemen. Martin Prado is my fantasy baseball man crush. His positional versatility, contributions in all 5 of the hitting categories, and his durability are all reasons to have him on your team. When another one of your players goes down and you are able to replace them with Martin Prado, it is a signifcant advantage. Most likely, Prado will end up on all of my fantasy baseball teams and he should be on yours as well. If you miss on Prado or want more power out of your third base or corner infield slot, scan down the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings to slots 13 and 14.  Mike Moustakas and Kyle Seager both his exactly 20 home runs last year. The Royals lineup is going to be improved as a result of age progression and Jeff Francouer either playing well or getting demoted. The fences at Safeco are coming in and the lineup around Seager is going to be much better with the acquisitions of Micheal Morse and Kendrys Morales. The value that these two could offer if all things break right are the reason that they are ranked so high. There was a period last year when Moose was hitting well over .300 and Seager doesn’t just have power, but contributes in stolen bases as well. Both of these young players should be on your radar for 2013. This year is not a year to wait and wait and wait on third base, so form a strong opinion and decide on  your guys early.

2013 fantasy baseball rankings
Evan Longoria is near the top of these 2013 fantasy baseball rankings despite injury concenrs
Rank Player 2012 Finish
1 Miguel Cabrera, Detroit Tigers 1
2 Evan Longoria, Tampa Bay Rays 28
3 David Wright, New York Mets 6
4 Hanley Ramirez, Los Angeles Dodgers 8
5 Adrian Beltre, Texas Rangers 2
6 Chase Headly, San Diego Padres 4
7 Ryan Zimmerman, Washington Nationals 7
8 Brett Lawrie, Toronto Blue Jays 17
9 Martin Prado, Arizona Diamondbacks 9
10 Pablo Sandoval, San Francisco Giants 26
11 Aramis Ramirez, Milwaukee Brewers 5
12 David Freese, St. Louis Cardinals 12
13 Kyle Seager, Seattle Mariners 13
14 Mike Moustakas, Kansas City Royals 24
15 Pedro Alvarez, Pittsburgh Pirates 16
16 Will Middlebrooks, Boston Red Sox 30
17 Todd Frazier, Cincinnati Reds 21
18 Manny Machado, Baltimore Orioles 56
19 Trevor Plouffe, Minnesota Twins 33
20 Kevin Youkilis, New York Yankees 31
21 Lonnie Chisenhall, Cleveland Indians 68
22 Matt Dominguez, Houston Astros 71
23 Jeff Keppinger, Chicago White Sox 27
24 Micheal Young, Philadelphia Phillies 22
25 Chris Johnson, Atlanta Braves N/A
26 Alberto Callaspo, Los Angeles Angels 37
27 Placido Polanco, Philadelphia Phillies N/A
28 Ian Stewart, Chicago Cubs N/A
29 Mike Olt, Texas Rangers N/A
30 Ryan Roberts, Tampa Bay Rays N/A
2013 fantasy baseball rankings
With the fences moved in at Safeco, Kyle Seager could break these 2013 fantasy baseball rankings and move up towards the top.
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2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings: Shortstops /2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings-for-shortstops/ /2013-fantasy-baseball-rankings-for-shortstops/#comments Sat, 26 Jan 2013 14:49:00 +0000 /?p=185 The fantasy baseball rankings community is hard at work; these 2013 fantasy baseball rankings for shortstops are just another brick in the wall. We’re getting pretty close to being done with the fantasy rankings and we aren’t even out of January! It is a deep, deep degeneracy that has led to the completion of these 2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings for shortstops before February 1st. While rankings will change as spring training begins and positional battles heat up, getting a general consensus is very helpful. Shortstop is a position of the haves and have-nots, with the top players being very valuable, but after that, there is basically no useful production. My rankings are indicative of my general style; namely, go for broke. Many fantasy websites probably won’t have Troy Tulowitzki as their number 1 shortstop. That’s pure lunacy. When healthy, in that ballpark, you know that you have a truly elite fantasy player; worth the likely first or early second round choice you have to use on him. Additionally, despite his defensive miscues, Starlin Castro is an offensively elite player, one who I fully expect to have 20-20 season in combination with a decent batting average. Danny Espinosa is a personal favorite, as mentioned in my second base ranks, but his atrocious batting average keeps his ranking low. My low ranking of Derek Jeter will probably raise a few eyebrows from the casual fan, but last years .347 BABIP is enough to convince anyone that some serious regression to the mean is in line. Also, Jeter’s HR/FB ratio was up 9% from the year before and 4% higher than his career average. Those who overdraft Jeter will be sorry.

As always, please leave your comments or tweet me @davismattek to discuss ranks!

2013 fantasy baseball rankings
Troy Tulowitzki is at the top of these 2013 fantasy baseball rankings

2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings: Shortstops

Rank

Player

2012 Finish

1

Troy Tulowitzki, Colorado Rockies

38

2

Hanley Ramirez, Los Angeles Dodgers

6

3

Jose Reyes, Toronto Blue Jays

1

4

Starlin Castro, Chicago Cubs

5

5

Ben Zobrist, Tampa Bay Rays

10

6

Elvis Andrus, Texans Rangers

11

7

Ian Desmond, Washington Nationals

2

8

Asdrubal Cabrera, Cleveland Indians

15

9

Danny Espinosa, Washington Nationals

13

10

Jimmy Rollins, Philadelphia Phillies

4

11

Alcides Escobar, Kansas City Royals

7

12

Erick Aybar, Los Angeles Angels

12

13

J.J Hardy, Baltimore Orioles

18

14

Derek Jeter, New York Yankees

3

15

Alexi Ramierz, Chicago White Sox

14

16

Andrelton Simmons, Atlanta Braves

53

17

Jed Lowrie, Houston Astros

33

18

Everth Cabrera, San Diego Padres

16

19

Marco Scutaro, San Francisco Giants

9

20

Dee Gordon, Los Angeles Dodgers

25

21

Zack Cozart, Cincinnati Reds

22

22

Josh Rutledge, Colorado Rockies

28

23

Johnny Peralta, Detroit Tigers

27

24

Yunel Escobar, Tampa Bay Rays

24

25

Stephen Drew, Boston Red Sox

54

26

Jean Segura, Milwaukee Brewers

56

27

Eduardo Nunez, New York Yankees

46

28

Rafael Furcal, St. Louis Cardinals

19

29

Mike Aviles, Cleveland Indians

N/A

30

Hiroyuki Nakajimia, Oakland Athletics

N/A

Leave your comments on the 2013 Fantasy Baseball Rankings for shortstops below!

Despite being old and cantankerous, Jimmy Rollins still plays an important role in the 2013 fantasy baseball rankings for shortstops.
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Kansas City Royals Fantasy Baseball Preview /kansas-city-royals-fantasy-baseball-preview/ /kansas-city-royals-fantasy-baseball-preview/#comments Wed, 09 Jan 2013 21:51:30 +0000 /?p=140 I did a short little piece on the Kansas City Royals for my friend FantasyTrade411 . It will appear on his site on Janurary 25th, here is a little preview. For the full article, go to www.fantasytrade411.com.

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At least one of Moose or Hoz will reward your fantasy team.

The Kansas City Royals have been the laughing stock of the AL Central for the last 25 years. However, it is a team with legit offensive options for fantasy baseball. Billy Butler, Eric Hosmer, Mike Moustakas, Alex Gordon, Salvador Perez, Alcides Escobar and Lorenzo Cain all have potential to be serious offensive contributors to your roto squad. Last year, Hosmer had a terrible sophomore slump but all of his peripheral numbers signal a comeback; he has become the off-season poster boy for BABIP regression. Billy Butler is as solid as it gets to slot in your corner infield position. Other than Gordon and Butler, it is a very young offense. James Shields and Greg Holland will most likely be the only fantasy relevant pitchers, unless Felipe Paulino comes back throwing fireballs from his Tommy John surgery. In general, the Royals are a potential sleeping giant with all of the young talent that has a chance to unload.

 

Fantasy MVP: Mike Moustakas

The typical fantasy analyst is going to assume that it is Eric Hosmer that will have the huge 30 homer, 90 RBI season and lead your fantasy team. I disagree with this line of thinking. To start, Hosmer plays first base, which makes him less valuable in fantasy in the first place. Moose, however, can be slotted in at third, an absolutely empty offensive position for fantasy. Going in the late teen rounds is going to be a huge boost to his value if he is able to improve on his .242 average. He hit well above .300 for periods of the season, showing signs of improvement in plate discipline and power hitting. If any of the Royals are finally going to break Balboni’s record, the smart money would be on Moustakas. Bank on Moose with one of your later draft picks.

 

Break-out Candidate: Salvador Perez

In just under half a season, Perez hit .301 with 11 homeruns. If Perez manages to stay healthy and extends those numbers throughout a whole year, he will be a huge value. The entire organization is incredibly high on him and if you have ever been to Royals Review, you know that the fan base loves him. His .wOBA of .340 would have had him at 8th overall among catchers had he played a full season and his slugging % of .471 would have had him 4th. Perez is an exceptionally gifted offensive player who is being curiously undervalued. Catcher is a difficult position to fill, but if Perez lives up to all the hype surrounding him, he’ll be a huge value in fantasy leagues.

 

Bust Candidate: Eric Hosmer

There is a chance that last season is who he is. High K% with a very low batting average. If Hosmer can’t bring his batting average up to around .280 he will be basically worthless as a fantasy player. The Royals play in a power suppressing ball park, which means its very unlikely Hosmer will take the leap from 18 home runs to 35 that would be needed to give him value with a similar batting average from the last season. For players like Mark Reynolds or Adam Dunn to be valuable with Hosmer’s 2012 batting average, they have to provide serious power. That, I don’t see coming from the Wizard of Hoz. While I don’t necessarily think Hosmer will be as bad, given his ranking around the 11th round, he has a chance of busting.

 

Closing Time:

Greg Holland is the Royals’ closer and for very good reason. He has a 96 mph fastball and a vicious slider. His slider was actually 21 runs above average in 2012, according to FanGraphs, making it a particularly devastating pitch. He was great in 2011, struggled in setup for half of 2012 and rebounded after Jon Broxton was traded to the Reds with 16 saves and a 2.96 ERA. He will have solid job security and reward teams who wait on saves and draft Holland. The only way he will lose the position is through injury and one of the other young arms in the bullpen steps up in his absence.

 

Down On The Farm:

The best Royals prospect of 2013 will be Wil Myers. Unfortunately, he will be playing for the Tampa Bay Rays. After Myers, there is a real lack of big league ready-talent. Christian Colon may get a look at 2nd point come midseason, but he lacks any skill to make him a special fantasy player. The organizations young talent is already on the Major League roster.

 Bold Proclamation: Mike Moustakas is going to hit 30 homeruns and be a top 5 fantasy baseball third basemen. He’ll avoid his normal slump to kill his batting average and contribute to fantasy teams.

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Five Early Fantasy Baseball Targets /five-early-fantasy-baseball-targets/ /five-early-fantasy-baseball-targets/#comments Sun, 30 Dec 2012 22:24:36 +0000 /?p=107 Most of us should be wrapping a stress-inducing, hair-pulling season of Fantasy Football. While the head to head format, in combination with a limited number of games makes fantasy football incredibly exciting, it is also highly variant. Simply put, alot of what happens in fantasy football is luck, or randomness. Fantasy baseball is not the same game. The 162 game schedule stretching for months on ends allows the truly talented fantasy players to have a significant edge. There is not a more skilled fantasy game than that of roto baseball. As week 17 winds down, we’ll turn an early eye on some players to target in our 2013 drafts.

A little bit of faith in this man could go a long way.
  • Roy Halladay, SP, Philadelphia Phillies: Before 2012, the last season where Roy Halladay didn’t throw for at least 220 innings was 2005. Over that span, Halladay has been the most effective and dominant workhorse pitcher in Major League Baseball. From 2008 to 2011, his highest ERA was 2.79. 206 strikeouts was his lowest talley in that time period. In 2012, the wheels came off and good ole’ Doc Halladay only threw 156.1 innings while posting an ERA in the 4’s for only the 3rd time in his long career. ESPN has Halladay as the 59th player off the board and the 18th pitcher. That is an absolute bargain. If you believe there is even a 50% chance that Halladay performs to his pre-2012 levels, than not grabbing him at his current price will be complete lunacy; because Halladay pitches so many innings when healthy, he has the ability to totally stabilize your pitching staff in a roto league. Clearly worth the gamble in the 4th or 5th.

 

  • Paul Goldschmidt, 1B, Arizona Diamondbacks: Goldschmidt was a relatively unheralded prospect two years ago, until he started bopping homeruns at an alarming rate. After a disappointing rookie season that saw him strikeout 53 times in 177 plate appearances, he rebounded with a 20 homer sophomore season. His .OBP rose a very respectable .359 and decreasing his K% from 29.9% down to 22.1% and finishing as the 7th best first basemen on ESPN’s player rater. Despite all of the signs indicating that Goldschmidt is on the up and plays in a very hitter friendly park, his consensus ranking is the 12th first basemen. While everyone else spends early picks on Pujols and Adrian Gonzalez, you can acquire talent at more difficult to fill spots such as 2nd base or shortstop.

 

  • Martin Prado, 3B, RF, SS, 2B, Atlanta Braves: Having Martin Prado on your fantasy baseball team is like having a first aid kid in real life. At some point, your team is going to suffer through stints to the 15-day DL and you are going to need gauze and bandages to get through those weeks. That is where Prado comes in. He doesn’t do anything amazing, but he won’t hurt you. He finished 7th on ESPN’s player rater last year and has a consensus rank of 112. It is really hard to find that value at any place in the draft and by just performing at a mediocre level, Prado earns a 8th round selection. Prado, when healthy is not mediocre, but rather pretty good. Last year, in a healthy season, he hit 10 homeruns, stole 17 bases, knocked in 70 runs, hit .301 and scored 80 runs. He comes close to that again, and he will far out earn his draft slot.

 

  • Yadier Molina, C, St. Louis Cardinals: Catcher is a historically hard position to fill for fantasy baseball. Many guys who play the position in the bigs are all-glove, no-bat type of guys which creates intense position scarcity. For quite some time, Molina was viewed as that type of player. Last season, however, Molina swatted 28 homers and hit .315 while owning a K% underneath 10%. His ranking as the 134th player off the board is lunacy. He finished as the number 2 fantasy catcher last year and figures to be able to repeat a facsimile of that performance in 2013. Picking up Molina around the 10th round will help solidify many fantasy teams.

 

A save is a save, no matter the cost.
  • Greg Holland, CP, Kansas City Royals: The underlings of the fantasy industry like to lob shots at ESPN and especially at Matthew Berry, but personally, I do agree with one of the main tenants of his fantasy baseball strategy. You should not play for saves. Finding a good, solid closer to anchor your pitching staff shouldn’t come until you have some serious offensive firepower as well as a least one pitcher who will be a positive for you all year. My personal favorite this year is Greg Holland from Kansas City. After Johnathan Broxton got the closing gig as the result of Joakim Soria’s torn UCL, KC fans waited for Holland to get the job. Eventually, Broxton was traded and Holland responded with 16 saves and a K/9 over 12. Fangraphs and Pitch f/x have his average fastball velocity at 96.1 MPH. That’s not even mentioning his 8.9 runs above average slider that he uses as his outpitch. Holland is an incredibly talented pitcher that should provide some cheap saves in the middle rounds of your draft.
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