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Friday, February 27, 2009

AL EAST STUDS AND DUDS: Toronto Blue Jays

By The Phantom Scout www.profantasybaseball.com

As we continue to delve into the intricacies of fantasy projections and who should produce this year and who won't, fantasy owners need to remember that projections are just that, projections. When drafts start, many fantasy owners put on the blinders and look at what a player might be projected for in the next season. Rarely do fantasy owners ever start to consider roster breakdowns, batting lineups and injury histories when they draft. Looking ahead into the 2009 season for the Toronto Blue Jays, you have to wonder who is really going to produce consistently this year. The lineup looks to be shaping up quite well as both Vernon Wells and Alex Rios look healthy and prepared for the season. For Wells, he will produce as he has in the past, forget the 2007 season, injuries for wells are an aberration. Rios took a rather large step back after signing a lucrative deal in the off season last year. It seemed as though he was trying to live up to that contract with every swing of the bat. He should rebound nicely this year. Rios picked up the pace last year towards the end of the season and showed the Blue Jays faithful a glimpse of what they could expect in the future and I don't think he'll disappoint. So here are my picks for fantasy stud and dud.

STUD: Alex Rios - It is difficult to try and pick between Rios and Vernon Wells this year, but Wells has started this spring with a hamstring injury, requiring an MRI, and might cause him to start off slower and less prepared than he have wanted to be. Rios was truly disappointing this past season as he struggled with even the most pedestrian pitching. He often looked as though he was trying too hard to produce and live up to the multi-year contract that he received before the season started. With all that being said, I am going with Rios. Rios has power and run producing potential and can hit for average. His speed is a definite plus and it shows in his base stealing potential, swiping 32 bags last season. If Rios rediscovers his power swing, evidence suggest that he has, he could easily put up a 30-30 season. Expect a .300 / 30 HR / 95 with 25-30 SB.

DUD: Scott Rolen - Stay away from Rolen. He continues to battle shoulder injuries and although he has been tinkering with his swing to make it more compact and quicker, it won't help him that much. For a position that requires power, Rolen has stepped back and his ability to hit for power has declined gradually over the past four seasons. I like Rolen and think he is a gritty player who would
rather have his arm fall off than give up on his team. Unfortunately there is no fantasy statistic that favors the makeup of a player.

So, there you have it. The Blue Jays will not contend for the division crown this year but they have a good lineup and young talent is on the way up. Take Rios early in the draft and avoid Scott Rolen like hepatitis.



Thursday, February 26, 2009

2009 FBS Breakout Player: Carlos Gomez

Team: Minnesota Twins
Bats: Right
Position: OF

Gomez had a tough rookie season in 2008. Not only was it his first full season in the majors, but he was traded to the American League. Everyone knows Gomez is a speed demon, but his average is a major liability. However, in 2009 we think his average will go up due to the fact that he has gotten settled in Minnesota and he will cross the 1000 at bats plateau this season. Last year his average improved 26 points in 2008. Also, speed players will take advantage of the turf in Minnesota and run out more infield hits. It does take time to master that skill. Gomez also showed some power belting 7 homeruns. Consider him a poor man's Jose Reyes, a very poor man.

Prediction: .270 average, 9 homers, 61 RBI, 89 runs scored, 44 SB

To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

2009 FBS Breakout Player: Francisco Liriano

Team: Minnesota Twins
Throws: Left
Position: SP
Coming back from Tommy John surgery last season, Liriano was once one of the most feared young pitchers in the game. His absolutely bone chilling slider and suite of pitches buckled the knees of most batters. In 2008 he came back from his surgery to make 14 starts going 6-4. His 3.91 ERA was high, but actually quite good for a pitcher coming off of a year long injury. He also had 67 Ks in 76 innings, which surprised us after he was ordered by the doctors not to throw more then 10-13 sliders a game. 2009 should be a very good year for Liriano. At 25 and a year removed from surgery, Liriano should be back to full strength and has is best years ahead. We expect him to pitch 150 innings or more and have a solid season.
The True Guru Projections: 14 wins,136 Ks, 2.89 ERA, 1.20 WHIP

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our breakouts here


To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.


Wednesday, February 25, 2009

2009 FBS Breakout Player: Jonathan Broxton

Team: Los Angeles Dodgers
Throws: Right
Position: RP (closer)
Broxton is the closer in LA. After the Dodgers let Saito go to the Red Sox they promoted the 25-year old Broxton as the closer for now and the future. Broxton has all the makings of a great closer and should easily become one of the dominating closers in baseball. He throws very hard and has tremendous movement on his pitches. The thing I like the most about Broxton is he is not only mentally ready for the job, but he has the attitude to go with it. The only thing we don't like about Broxton is he gets a little wild and is susceptible to run scoring innings. Last year nearly every time he walked a batter, a run crossed the plate. Broxton is one of the best value's for a top closer in the draft. We see no issue with him getting 40+ saves and averaging 1K per inning in 2009. Get Broxton as soon as you can in your draft.
The True Guru Projections: 5 wins, 86 Ks, 2.92 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, 45 Saves

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our breakouts here


To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.


Pitchers That Could Surprise, Disappoint

By Scout C.P. Staley (Pro Fantasy Baseball)


5 Reasons you can wait to build a pitching staff


These guys aren’t known as fantasy studs, but they have the potential to pitch like one. The best part? Most should be available after round 10, meaning you can use early round picks to build your offense and STILL have a solid pitching staff-as long as some of these pitchers make it onto your roster:

  1. Ricky Nolasco-Nolasco was fantastic for the Marlins last year, ending the season 15-8 with a 3.52 ERA, 186K, 42 BB, 1.10 WHIP. His wins may fluctuate (10-4 pre All Star Break, 5-4 post All Star Break), but amazing peripherals after the break placed Nolasco among the top pitchers in fantasy baseball ( 95 IP, 3.29 ERA, 98 K’s, 12 BB, 0.99 WHIP, .232 opponent’s batting avg.). 25 other pitchers might be taken before his name is called on draft day, but Nolasco has a chance to pitch like a top 10 SP. Expect 14-16 Wins, 3.75 era, 160+ K’s and a WHIP south of 1.20.
  2. Matt Cain-A quick look at Cain’s 15-30 record over the last two years and it’s easy to view him as a young pitcher struggling to find his way. A closer look reveals that Cain is on the verge of a break out. Aside from Wins/Losses, his 2008 numbers were terrific: 21 quality starts, a 3.76 ERA and 186 strike outs in 217 innings. Cain needs to continue to improve his control (91 BB), but with his skills, he could easily win 14+ games this year. Expect 14-16 Wins, a 3.70 era, 170 K’s and a WHIP around 1.30.

  3. Scott Baker-Baker is on the cusp of becoming a household name in fantasy circles, but he’s still someone you’ll be able to grab in the middle rounds of your draft. Despite missing most of May, Baker ended the season with an 11-4 record, 172 IP, 3.43 era, 141 K’s, 43 BB, 1.18 WHIP. Factor in an average month’s stats to make up for the time he missed in May, and Baker would have been close to 15 W’s, a 3.60 era, 160 K’s, and a WHIP around 1.20. Expect that same level production in 2009.

  1. Brett Myers-The last 2 seasons have been tough on Myers. He bounced between the starting rotation and the bull pen in 2007, then returned to the starting rotation and pitched horribly to start 2008 (3-9, 5.84 era). After the All Star break though, Myers found himself. Post Break he was 7-4, 3.08 era, 75 K’s, 21 BB, 1.16 WHIP; much closer to the way Myers pitched from 2005-2007. 14-16 wins, 3.80 era, and 160+ K’s are reasonable expectations for 2009.

5.Ted Lilly-Never flashy, and often overlooked, Lilly is the type of veteran that you don’t appreciate until he’s on your fantasy staff. Since arriving in Chicago in 2007, Lilly has averaged 16 wins, a 3.96 era, 179 K’s, and a 1.18 WHIP. Patience is required on days when the wind is blowing out at Wrigley, but at the end of the year, it will all be worth it. Expect 15 Wins, an era around 4, 160+ K’s, and a WHIP around 1.20.


5 Comebacks that can be had for a discount


  1. Eric Bedard-Coming into last season, Bedard was among the top 5 pitchers in fantasy baseball. However, his season lasted just 81 innings before a shoulder injury shut him down for the season. There was some worry that Bedard had a torn labrum, but that was not the case. Instead, Bedard had off season surgery to remove a cyst from his shoulder and some scar tissue from around his labrum. So far this spring, Bedard has been throwing without pain, and looks like he’ll be ready to contribute at or shortly after the season starts. Keep an eye on his progress, because a healthy Bedard can give you 14-16 Wins, 190+ K’s, an era under 3.5, and a sub 1.2 WHIP.




  1. Aaron Harang-Coming off back to back 16 win 200K seasons, big things were expected of Harang last year. Instead his 2008 season was a disaster. He finished 6-17, 4.78 era in 184 innings. Part of Harang’s struggles can be attributed to shoulder problems that flared up in July. To his credit, Harang tried to pitch through the pain, but ultimately landed on the DL. He showed signs of life after returning from the DL in mid-August, posting a 3.00 era, 25:9 K:BB ratio, and a 1.14 WHIP for the month of September. If he can regain the form he showed from in 2006 and 2007, Harang will be in line for a 15 Win, 180+K season.




  1. John Maine-Maine missed 10 starts in 2008 due to nagging shoulder problems, and then had off season shoulder surgery to remove bone spurs from his throwing shoulder. Maine is not a fantasy ace, and has occasional bouts of wildness, but he can be a very useful fantasy pitcher that should be available in the latter half of most drafts. A return to his 2007 numbers (15-10, 3.91 era, 180 K’s) isn't out of the question, making Maine a nice late round choice.




  1. Josh Johnson-Johnson missed all of 2007 and half of 2008 recovering from Tommy John surgery, but his performance in the second half of 2008 showed that he was all the way back. Johnson went 7-1 with a 3.61 era, 77 K’s, 27 BB in 87.1 innings after the All Star break last year. Still just 25, Johnson could take another step forward and establish himself as a solid SP2. If he’s healthy, a 14 W, sub 3.70 era, 150+ K, 1.30 WHIP season is within reach.


  1. Fausto Carmona-Carmona was a big disappointment in 2008 after a breakout 19 Win season in 2007. A hip injury, coupled with serious control issues, kept Carmona from helping fantasy owners last year. Carmona seems to be over his hip injury, and his control issues may be solved as well. A flaw in his delivery, which contributed to his control problems, was reportedly fixed during the off season. If he’s healthy, 14 Wins, 130 K’s, sub 3.5 era, and 1.35 WHIP are all within reach. If Carmona is still available during the late rounds, he’s worth the gamble.

5 Surprises from the Second Half of ‘08


  1. Randy Johnson-Post All Star Break numbers: 5-3, 2.41 era, 78 K’s, 16 BB, 1.05 WHIP in 86 innings. Johnson was outstanding during the second half of 2008. The concerns are well known: he’s 45, and has a history of back problems. Still, with reports that his back is healthy, and a move to pitcher friendly AT&T park, Johnson could be in line for a nice season.




  1. Ubaldo Jimenez-Post All Star Break numbers: 8-3, 3.68 era, 78 K’s, 42 BB, 1.30 WHIP in 85.2 innings. Jimenez, who just turned 24, struggled in the first half of 2008. He owned a 4-9 record at the break, with poor control. That he managed to finish the year with a 12-12 is a testament to just how well he pitched in the second half of the season. The difference came from improved control. Jimenez cut his walks and increased his strikeouts. He ended the second half sporting an 8.23 K/9 ratio, and struck out better than a batter per inning in September with 35 K’s in 31 innings.




  1. Paul Maholm- Post All Star Break numbers: 3-4, 3.40 era, 64 K’s, 31 BB, 1.28 WHIP in 87.1 innings. Maholm’s record after the break won’t get anyone excited but consider this: From August 1st through the end of the season, Maholm went at least 6 innings in 9 of 10 starts (the other he went 5.1), and held opponents to less than 3 runs in 8 of those 10 starts. Playing for Pittsburgh means wins could be tough to come by, but Maholm could take another step forward and become a very useful fantasy pitcher this season.




  1. Jorge De La Rosa-Post All Star Break numbers: 7-3, 3.08 era, 68 K’s 38 BB, 1.33 WHIP, in 73 innings. De La Rosa was traded to Colorado at the end of April in a deal that few paid any attention to and his 7.26 era before the All Star Break showed why. But something strange after the All Star Break. De La Rosa got a shot in the Colorado rotation, his command improved, and he started winning. The biggest difference? Opponent’s batting average. Before the All Star Break opponents hit .300. After the break, they hit just .228. If he can sustain his improved command, De La Rosa makes a good candidate to round out a fantasy rotation.




  1. Bronson Arroyo-Post All Star Break numbers: 8-4, 3.47 era, 70 K’s, 27 BB, 1.19 WHIP in 96 Innings. One performance was stuck in the minds of Arroyo owners: 1 inning, 11 Hits, 10 ER, 1K, 1BB. That was Arroyo’s line from a June 24th game against Toronto. He had already struggled in the first half of 2008, but this game proved to be the final straw for many Arroyo owners. Yet from that start until the end of the year, Arroyo was terrific. He went 11-4 with a 3.45 era. Usually thought of as an innings eater, Arroyo has been a surprising source of strike outs as well averaging 167 in his three years in Cincinnati. You could do a lot worse than Arroyo at the back end of your pitching staff.

5 Risky Pitchers


All five of these pitchers have value, and all 5 should absolutely be drafted. However, concerns surrounding each pitcher mean that if you draft them too early, you could be left disappointed.


  1. Carlos Zambrano-Before the All Star Break, Zambrano was on the short list of Cy Young candidates posting a 10-3 record, 2.84 era, 78 K’s, 38 BB, 1.23 WHIP in 120 innings. However things fell apart in the second half as Zambrano battled tendonitis and inflammation in his right shoulder. He managed a second half line of: 4-3, 5.80 era, 52 K’s, 34 BB, 1.41 WHIP in 68 innings. Zambrano’s talent is undeniable: he threw a 9 inning, 110 pitch no hitter against Houston on September 14th. However, even WITH the no-hitter, his era for the month of September was 7.08. Draft with caution.




  1. Gavin Floyd-Floyd enjoyed a break out season for Chicago, finishing 2008 with a 17-8 record and a 3.63 era. However, Floyd’s performance down the stretch is cause for concern. Take a look at opponent’s batting average against Floyd for the last three months of the season:




July: .234


August: .268


September: .292





Not surprisingly, here is his era for those same three months:





July 3.34


August 4.29


September 4.81





Look for this trend to continue, and for Floyd to take a step back this year: 13-11, 4.40 era,


135 K’s, and a 1.35 WHIP.





  1. Cliff Lee-Lee was hands down the biggest fantasy surprise of the year going from a fringe 5th starter to Cy Young award winner. Of course, since his fantastic season came out of nowhere, what kind of value does Lee have next year? Prior to his disastrous 2007 season, where he made just 16 starts and was sent to the minors, Lee averaged 15 Wins, a 4.51 era, 144 K’s and a 1.37 WHIP. Taking that information into account, the most appropriate projection for Lee next year would be a slightly better version of Andy Pettite: 15 Wins, a 4.20 era, 160 K’s, 1.30 WHIP and 200 innings. Still useful, but not a fantasy ace.




  1. Jake Peavy- Peavy is a widely considered a fantasy ace who is just entering his prime. As he demonstrated in 2007, Peavy has the ability to be a Cy Young caliber pitcher in any given year. However, a look at Peavy’s Home/Road splits show some reason for concern.

2006 HOME 6-7, 3.75 era, 1.15 WHIP, 137 K in 117 innings


2006 AWAY 5-7 4.57 era 1.35 WHIP, 78 K in 84 innings


2007 HOME 9-5, 2.51 era, 1.07 WHIP 139 K’s in 125.1 innings


2007 AWAY 10-1, 2.57 era, 1.05 WHIP 101 K’s in 98 innings


2008 HOME 5-5 1.75 era, 0.97 WHIP, 99 K’s in 98 innings


2008 AWAY 5-6, 4.28 era, 1.46 WHIP, 67 K’s in 75 innings

It’s not surprising that Peavy's numbers are better at pitcher friendly Petco Park. What


IS surprising is how poorly he has pitched away from Petco in 2 of the last 3 seasons. Add a cranky elbow (that forced Peavy to the DL in 2 of the last 3 seasons), and playing for perhaps the worst team in baseball, and doubt begins to set in. Again, Peavy is an extremely talented pitcher, but when drafting a fantasy ace, you want someone you don’t have to worry about.





  1. Scott Kazmir- It’s easy to forget that Kazmir is still just 25 years old. As he demonstrated in 2007, when healthy, he’s among the best pitchers in fantasy baseball. However, Kazmir has dealt with elbow trouble that required stints on the DL in 2 of the last 3 seasons. Of added concern were his struggles pitching deep into games towards the end of last year. He pitched 7 or more innings just 5 times in 27 starts. Of those 5 starts, he pitched exactly 7 innings in 4 of them (the other was an 8 inning performance).


In fact, from July 26th through the end of the season (including the playoffs), Kazmir never pitched more than 6 innings. He reached exactly 6 innings in 7 of his last 17 starts (5 of his last 12 regular season starts, and 2 of 5 post season starts). In that same span, Kazmir failed to go 5 innings in 5 of his last 17 (3 of 12 regular season games, 2 of 5 post season games). Kazmir has definitely has value, but be weary of counting on him to anchor your fantasy staff.

Player Spotlights - Jacoby Ellsbury and Heath Bell

Jacoby Ellsbury and Heath Bell February 25, 2009

Live Fantasy Baseball Mock Drafts, Fantasy Baseball Player Rankings, Player Trade Calculator, Fantasy Forums and more ! at FantasyBaseballXtreme.Com


OF Jacoby Ellsbury,Red Sox, Of course, the big secret is out on Ellsbury, as he proved last year that he has the potential to become one of the more exciting base stealing threats in the league. Although he did struggle through a minor dry spell in June/July 2008, hitting only about .245 with 9 SBs during this stretch, he had an amazing May, with 18 stolen bags, and he finished the season strong, with 15 SBs in the last 2 months, and producing a .340 average in September 2008. As a left-handed batter, another interesting trend that emerged last year was Ellsbury's effectiveness against lefty pitchers, he actually hit .295 vs. lefties, compared to .275 versus righties. While this emerging Red Sox centerfielder won't help you much in the power and RBI categories, he compares favorably to Jose Reyes in terms of stolen base potential, and you should be able to get him in the 4th or 5th round.
RP Heath Bell, Padres, - Anyone who has played fantasy baseball for a while knows that trying to forecast the saves category is usually very tricky, and in some years you will be able to get them from fairly unexpected sources. Heath Bell could be one of those under-rated closers in 2009 who can pleasantly bolster your fantasy saves total. With the legendary Trevor Hoffman packing his bags for Milwaukee, Bell is considered the leading candidate to assume the closer role for the Padres, and he has a pretty good history of excelling in the late innings. Heath Bell normally comes at hitters with his 92-94 MPH rising fastball, and he complements this pitch with an effective slider. He works efficiently, consistently throws strikes, and has been durable over the past two years. If you need to reach for a potential closer late in your draft, it looks like Heath Bell is a nice value in the 15th round area.

Player Spotlights By Junkyard Jake JunkyardJake.Com 

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

2009 FBS Sleeper Player: John Baker

Team: Florida Marlins
Bats: Left
Position: C

John Baker will enter this season as the Florida Marlins starting catcher. At 27 years old (28 now), Baker made his major league debut last season and in 197 at bats he batted .299 with 5 homeruns. Baker has a great compact swing and by hugging the plate he will be able to extend his bat and get plenty of extra base hits. 19 of hit 59 hits were extra base hits. He has OK speed, but we don't expect too much running. He has solid power, but we expect him to hit more for average and RBI potential then anything else. Still, if you need a catcher late, John Baker is a guy to grab.

Prediction: .286 average, 14 homers, 61 RBI, 57 runs scored, 3 SB

To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

Todd-o-logue #4: No Draft Prep, No Championship

No Draft Prep, No Championship. The title says it all. Maybe I'm talking beneath some of you and certainly not above. Draft preparation is absolutely critical to your fantasy team. It single handily can end your fantasy season before it has even begun. OK, maybe I'm over exaggerating a tad, but I need to get you attention! Allot of managers this season will forget to properly prepare for a draft. You don't want to go into the draft room basing all your hopes and dreams on the decisions you will make from the draft room rankings? Are you loony, doped up on some wacky juice? Also, you don't want to depend on those out-of-date magazines with below average content. On the contrary, you don't have to kill yourself with months of research either to have a champion draft. This Todd-o-logue would go far to long if I covered all the draft preparation techniques, so I'll covered a few I think are indispensable and if I feel like it share more with you at another time, TBA.

1. Mentally Prepare - This is probably the most overlooked factor in draft preparation because its not on a piece of paper or in the news. I will always try to get to my computer at least 15 minutes prior to the start of the draft. At this point you have to relax, clear your mind of everything but baseball. You don't want anything on your mind during the draft that might delay your pick or distract you from making the right pick. Heck, if your the type that needs to do the "Something About Mary" thing to clear your mind and relax, then unload the gun. The clearer your head is, the more focused you can be on each pick.

The maximum amount of thought and consideration normally happens when it really matters, like when you have 60 seconds. Your pick should be made before you get to your turn based on a list you have prepared. If you don't believe me, in your next draft spot the guy who makes the bad picks because their mind was saturated with distracting thoughts and they were unable to focus on the task at hand. Those are the guys who run out of time and either get a computer pick or someone they really didn't want. That same type of guy will comment "I really didn't want this guy! My computer locked up on me!" No, your brain locked up on you.

Maybe he was thinking of paying bills, or in Ryan's case all the bad picks he's made directly before then or how I won his is home football league? Either way, the bad pick was made and your draft is damaged from that point.

You don't want to be THAT guy. You know, the guy who is probably very good at fantasy baseball but has to spend half the season repairing his team because he couldn't focus and concentrate on his fantasy baseball draft.

2. Have a ADP (Average Draft Position) and a Cheatsheet - Doesn't that sound so simple and so wise? Cheatsheets, ADPs they are like cereal and milk. C'mon Primetime, give me a Internet high-five at the speed of light for that one. If I took a survey today, I would find that most people probably just take a set of cheatsheets into the draft and depend on the preset draft ranking as a tandom. That's like having two sets of cheatsheets, how does that help except to give conflicting information.

I'm sure you will do alright with just cheatsheets as it's not a death sentence for your draft. However, if you combine it with a ADP and formulate the two into a rhythm Kids Incorperated style you will have a fantastic draft with steals throughout it. Everything has a rhythm to it. Think about it your car engine, air condition, fan, heart beat, and even a finely tuned draft. Just remember that the steal doesn't have to be one admired by the others in the draft. Let the season play out and determine what a steal is and not what the guys who you stole the pick from think!

To grab hold of the rhythm, your job from the beginning is to pick the right player at the right time nearly every pick. Sounds easy right? It's a tad easier said then done. As a matter of fact, it's rarely done for more than a few picks in a row, so its a big challenge. By using your handy dandy 100% trust worthy cheatsheet from your favor expert or yourself as a guide, start assessing where the players are ranked on the cheatsheet and then the ADP. For example, your cheatsheet might rank Matt Kemp 22, but his ADP is 40. That is a average variance, so its not much of a risk or surprise. Even better, Cliff Lee is ranked very low on allot of cheatsheets, say 35, but his ADP is at 70. Right there could be a steal if Cliff Lee performs at a high level like he did last year and you get him with the 68th pick.

The point is get your players at the time where it costs you the less, but gives you the most value. The only way to do that is to pit your cheatsheet against the ADP. Get a subscription to Mock Draft Central and know your ADP like you know your wife's dress size! Ahh, bra size?

The difference between winning and losing in fantasy baseball isn't based on just math, statistics, and timely pick ups, it starts with a solid foundation of research, focus and absolute preparation.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Key To Victory: Playing By The Rules

By Scott Berardi, www.profantasygames.com

Every fantasy season, there's one thing that few people seem to take note of, that eventually destroys them. And it's quite simple: The league settings.

Hopefully by the title I put on this, you don't mistakenly assume that I think you should be playing ethically or something. The opposite is true. Exploit everything you can. Lose friends if you have to. This is fantasy baseball we're talking about.

No, instead what I mean is that you should know the settings of your league like the back of your hand. Know the situations. Know the scoring categories. Because all the cheat sheets in the world won't help you when your crazy league uses holds instead of strikeouts and triples as the only hitting category.

Another problem, though, is that people who know their league settings don't know how to exploit them. Let's have a gander at some of the hot-button issues that can come up in custom leagues when the rules are tweaked.

Relievers. Some leagues only allow you to start a certain amount. Some count holds as a stat. No matter what, when the rules aren't your typical 5x5 standard joints, the odds are relievers are going to be effected in some way. But how? I'm glad I asked.

In a deeper league (like 18 or 20 teams and if you're playing with more than that you're a nutjob), as long as saves are counted, closers are going to be one of the most valuable commodities in the game. You should either target them as such or punt the category entirely, because with the talent spread that thin, most teams are going to be lucky to pin down one guy, much less two. Moreso than other leagues, this is going to require a keen eye on the waiver wire because consistent saves are just that rare.

What's that? You want a fantasy nugget? Try this on for size. Wait for it--wait for it--If your league counts holds, it greatly devalues your starting pitching. I never thought starters were worth much, but if you're in a 6x6 or something where the pitching categories look like K-W-SV-HD-ERA-WHIP, then you shouldn't be thinking about any of the high-priced starters. This one is simple math; in a normal 5x5 league, Tim Lincecum can help you in four of the five categories. 80% if you're a math major. In a league where holds count, that's another category where Lincecum, despite his amazing torque, can't help you. Which makes him less valuable. About 13% less, in fact.

Check the rules even closer to see what kind of minimums there are, because you might be able to virtually disregard starters by fielding a ton of cheap middle relievers and closers and dominating ERA, WHIP, HD and SV. Is this cheap? Yes. Is this effective? Yes. Especially in H2H.

Also make sure you check how many starters there are at each position. If your league only starts, say, 5 starters and 2 relievers, with say, 12 teams, then you can afford to wait on closers because you can figure that only 24 closers can start, maximum, at a given time. If someone wants to grab four closers, that's their problem. You can trade when they find out Frank Francisco and Bobby Jenks are worthless to them.

In a league like that, too, the dirty little secret is grabbing closers with SP eligibility. Those guys are worth their weight in gold.

Rules differ in other places too, especially in On-base percentage versus batting average. This makes a huge difference in the case of one country-strong new Washington National. The biggest fantasy knock on Adam Dunn is his low batting average. When you replace it with his upper-tier OBP, suddenly he's Albert Pujols. People don't seem to notice this.

Just like in the case of pitching, when there are extra categories (like a 6x6 league), it changes some players' value drastically. Let's say your extra category is OPS. All of a sudden, guys like Kevin Youkilis and Grady Sizemore are monsters that get on base under your bed while you sleep.

There are countless examples of common non-standard settings that throw a wrench in even the most meticulously drawn up cheat sheets. Most (if not all) of the big sites for fantasy baseball allow you to sort players by the points they would have put up last year in your league, so take advantage of that. On top of all your research, just make sure you take a glance at the settings and notice where you can take advantage.

Good things can happen to you when you play by the rules.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

2009 FBS Sleeper Player: Dallas McPherson

Team: Florida Marlins
Bats: Left

Position: 3B

Once the most feared power hitter in the minors while in the Angels' farm system, back injuries and a horrible batting average finally caused Anaheim to part ways with him. Catching on with the Marlins, McPherson has reinvented his career in the same mold as before.....as a tremendous power hitter. In 2008, Dallas crushed 42 balls over the fence at AAA in just 127 games. While his average was stalled in the lower .200s in the few chances he got at the major league level, McPherson was able to hit .275 last year. Now, there is no guarantee that he will see the majors this season, Jorge Cantu will play third and the Marlins look to start the year with rookie Gaby Sanchez at first. However, if one of them were to struggle or go down with injury, either of which is possible, McPherson will be on the first plane to Florida and immediately be in the starting line up. If that were to happen, a major power hitter would be in the free agent pool and you would be wise to try to make that move. If he can stay healthy and catch a break or two, McPherson could get his second chance at the major leagues. A little more polished and a little more mature, he would certainly look to make the most of that opportunity.

Prediction: .271 average, 25 homers, 71 RBI, 56 runs scored, 99 games

To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

2009 FBS Sleeper Player: Chris Dickerson

Team: Cincinnati Reds
Bats: Left

Position: OF

After a fairly successful minor league career, Chris Dickerson joined the Reds on August 12th and really never stopped hitting. Dickerson got off to a hot start, as he had six hits, a homer, and steal in his first three games. In his 31 games he hit .304, six homers, drove in 15 runs, and stole five bases. So many fantasy players who are out of their race stop paying attention in the last month or so of the season, so many might not be hip to the kind of impact that Dickerson had. There is a strong possibility that Dickerson will hit second for the Reds this season, which would be ideal for his fantasy production. He will be able to drive in a decent number of runs, steal some bases, hit for a little bit of power, and score a ton of runs. If you are wondering if his numbers are for real, go back to his minor league career, and you will see that this was not smoke and mirrors. Before his call up Dickerson had hit 11 homers and stole 26 bases in his 97 games at AAA-Louisville. The batting average might be a little bit high to hope for again, but Dickerson certainly has the talent to be a potential 20/30 player and a guy I would like to have as a low end third or high end fourth outfielder. He should certainly produce again and is a great guy to target later in drafts.

Prediction: .279 average, 21 homers, 71 RBI, 82 runs scored, 27 steals

To get more from The True Guru and the other gurus Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

2009 FBS Sleeper Player: Roy Corcoran

Team: Seattle Mariners
Throws: Right
Position: RP (closer)
Ray Corcoran is the front runner in Seattle to become their closer when the season starts. Last year in 50 appearances, the 28 year old rookie (16 total appearances before 2008) had an outstanding season with a 3.22 ERA and 3 saves for the Mariners. Last year he had some great streaks, one in August where he had 10 straight appearances with a 1.59 ERA and a save. If he can hold the closer position through spring training he will hold the job for awhile. The Mariners want to competitive, but they will not be scoring much and they could have 50-55 save opportunities.
The True Guru Projections: 5 Wins, 45 Ks, .320 ERA, 1.27 WHIP, 32 Saves

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our sleepers here


To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

2009 FBS Breakout Player: Yunel Escobar

Team: Atlanta Braves
Bats: Right
Position: SS
After a fantastic shortened rookie season, Yunel Escobar had a solid sophomore season. He batted .288 wth 10 homeruns and 2 stolen bases. At 27, Escobar will get better with this year and should have a breakout season. At 6-2 and 200 pounds, he's not your average sized shortstop. He didn't display much power in the minors, but over the past two years he has been developing it and we expect more homeruns from him. He is not very fast, so don't expect many SBs, and has his patience at the plate improves he will continue to make contact and drive his batting average. He should easily get 600 at bats this season and we predict he will bat over .300. He is a semi-stud int he making. A more powerful version of Placido Polanco. You can certainly wait to get him in the drafts this year as his ADP is around 174. Get him late and start him at SS if you don't get Hanley.

The True Guru Projections: 15 Hrs, 64 RBI, 79 Runs, .304 Avg, 3 SB

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our breakouts here

To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

2009 FBS Bust Player: Jason Varitek

Team: Boston Red Sox
Bats: Right
Position: C

This is probably no surprise to anyone reading this, but Jason Varitek is done as a fantasy player. As a Red Sox fan it is sad to say, but he has little left to offer from a offensive standpoint. Even the Red Sox feel the same way as they barely signed him back and were trying to trade for or sign other catchers. Varitek's primary skills are behind the backstop, and not in the batters box. We expect Varitek to barely see 400 at bats. He will get frequent rests and they will pitch hit for him much more often this year.

Prediction: 9 Hrs, 40 RBI, 33 Runs, .238 Avg

Saturday, February 21, 2009

2009 FBS Bust Player: Gil Meche

Team: Kansas City Royals
Throws: Right

Position: SP

When Gil Meche signed a five year, $55 million contract two seasons ago, no one thought that he was worth that kind of money. However, if you take away his win-loss record, his other statistics haven't been that bad. He has been very durable, and his wins and strikeouts have been going up. Meche was especially good in the second half of the season, as he was 11-3 after June 10th. Fantasy players will be looking at him and the slowly improving Royals as a possible third or fourth pitcher on their rotations. We urge you not to look at Meche too soon. He has had a couple decent seasons for the Royals, but his previous four years his ERA was between 4.50 and 5.09, and he wasn't striking people out at nearly this rate. I know some pitchers struggle in the beginning of their careers and then eventually figure it out, but Meche is 30 years old not the time when most pitchers get better. The Royals might have made some moves to improve their team, but Meche is still a average to below average pitcher and should only be considered in the final rounds of drafts.

Prediction: 10-14 record, 4.56 ERA, 1.29 WHIP, 165 Ks, 85 BBs

Player Spotlights - Troy Tulowitzki and Chien-Ming Wang

Troy Tulowitzki and Chien-Ming Wang February 21, 2009

Live Fantasy Baseball Mock Drafts, Fantasy Baseball Player Rankings, Player Trade Calculator, Fantasy Forums and more ! at FantasyBaseballXtreme.Com


SS Troy Tulowitzki,Rockies, After his breakout season in 2007, where we saw Colorado's young SS hit .291 with 24 HRs and 99 RBIs, Tulowitzki and his unlucky fantasy owners suffered through a dreadful 2008, where he missed over 60 games with quadriceps and hand injuries and finished with only 8 HRs, 46 RBIs and a disappointing .263 average. As a consequence, Tulowitzi has gone from an approximate 4th round fantasy pick in 2008, to around a 9th round pick so far in 2009. At that kind of ADP, Troy Tulowitzki makes an excellent player to target in the mid-rounds of your draft.Word is that he is almost fully recovered from his troublesome quadriceps injury and there is every reason to believe that the 24-year old can recapture the productivity we saw out of him two years ago. Our early projections have Tulowitzki hitting over .280, with 19 HRs and about 80 RBI in 2009.
SP Chien-Ming Wang, NY Yankees, - Chien-Ming Wang was cruising along as his usual productive self in 2008 until he was afflicted with a foot injury before the All-Star break, and forced to miss the remainder of the season. Understandably, he is presently being ignored in many fantasy drafts, typically going after the 16th round. At this kind of ADP Wang makes an ideal addition to your fantasy pitching corps, as a value pick who can easily deliver 15 plus wins. When Wang is on, he throws a pretty good combination of pitches consisting of a power sinker, and a late-breaking slider. His sinker is considered one of the leagues best, and it allows him to work deep into many games by virtue of the groundouts he produces. While he usually won't produce more than 4-5 strikeouts per game, Wang still looks like a great value player to grab in 2009 for Wins, a sub-4 ERA and good WHIP ratio.

Player Spotlights By Junkyard Jake JunkyardJake.Com 

2009 FBS Bust Player: Mike Gonzalez

Team: Atlanta Braves
Throws: Left

Position: RP

Back when he was on the lowly Pirates, Mike Gonzalez was quietly one of the better relievers in all of baseball. For three straight seasons he posted an ERA of 2.70 or better, and his last year in Pittsburgh he was a perfect 24 of 24 in save opportunities. Then, he went to Atlanta and it has all been downhill from there. He was off to a stellar start before an elbow injury derailed his season, and it required Tommy John surgery. Gonzalez missed an entire year of action before coming back to pitch late in 2008, but he wasn't nearly as effective. He didn't blow too many saves (14 of 16), but his walks and ERA flew through the roof. I know the cliche about pitchers coming back from Tommy John is that in the second year they are back to normal, but it is still a very risky proposition. He seems to be higher up people's draft boards than he should be, as he is being drafted just after some pretty reliable closers. He isn't going among the elite, but higher than a guy with an over 4.00 ERA last year should be. He appears to have the job locked down, which is one positive, but think of this. Are you sure he is fully back from the surgery, and ready to make 70 appearances? How good are the Braves? Did they really do anything to make you think that they will contend this offseason? What, bringing back Tom Glavine is exciting? Lowe and Vasquez are OK, but that doesn't make them much more than a .500 team. Gonzalez will get some saves, but he won't get to 30, and his other statistics won't help you win any categories.

Prediction: 3.74 ERA, 56 Ks, 24 saves, 1.34 WHIP

2009 FBS Bust Player: Luis Castillo

Team: New York Mets
Bats: Switch

Position: 2B

It was a long time ago, but this was a guy who once stole 62 bases in a season. Castillo was one of the more feared leadoff hitters when he was with the Marlins, and a top 5-7 option at second base in the prime of his career. A few years, injuries, and cold streaks later, Castillo is teetering on the brink of fantasy irrelevance. We are considering him a bust this year because it still seems that fantasy players are thinking of his old days and the fact he plays a shallow position. I am here to tell you to push him over that irrelevant cliff. The Mets seem to be hell bent on giving him a chance to redeem himself this season (and earn his four year, $25 million contract), and have even talked about him leading off. Here are a couple of reasons to stay clear of Castillo, even though he plays a position with a limited number of good options. First, he is constantly hurt. He played in just 87 games last year, and hasn't played 150 games since 2004. Second, he just doesn't run anymore. Since stealing 48 bases in 2004, he has only gotten back to 25 once since then, and three of the last four years he has failed to even steal 20 bags. Even if the Mets bat him at leadoff, which I will believe when I actually see it, Castillo is still not worth a draft pick, even in the last couple rounds. His average is usually in the .290s, which is OK, but it isn't enough to compensate for a complete absence of power (11 HRs in the last four years), very few RBI, and 20 steals or less. Even at the end of your draft, there are better options than Castillo

Prediction: .256 average, 2 HRs, 41 RBI, 22 steals, 54 runs scored

2009 FBS Sleeper Player: Matt Wieters

Team: Baltimore Orioles
Bats: Switch
Position: C
Matt Wieters is one of the top prospects coming into this season. In single A and AA ball, Wieters hammered 27 homeruns and hit .355 in 437 at bats. The Orioles aren't sure if they will being him up right away and most likely wait until late May or early June. They backed up that thought by signing Gregg Zaun. However, we think Wieters will be up this year and he will make a quick impact has a power hitting catcher who can also hit for average. One advantage that he has for getting more at bats, he's a switch hitter. This should give him great matchups and allow the Orioles to use him more often. He would be lucky to 350-375 at bats, but we suspect in his shortened season he will make a great fantasy impact. Don't wait to long to grab this sleeper as his ADP is around 127 (13th round). Remember he is a rookie and he will go through slumps and god and bad days. However, if you get Wieters and everything goes right, you will have a stellar young catcher.

The True Guru Projections: 15 Hrs, 52 RBI, 42 Runs, .298 Avg, 1 SB

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our sleepers here


To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

Friday, February 20, 2009

2009 FBS Bust Player: Heath Bell

Team: San Diego Padres
Throws: Right

Position: RP

It is never easy to be the guy who follows a legend. You always want to be the guy to follow the guy who follows the legend. Well, Heath Bell will follow the legend of Trevor Hoffman in San Diego. I understand that Hoffman was no longer an option for the Padres, but perhaps they could have made a better choice than Bell. He does get good strikeout totals, but only once in his career has his ERA been under 3.33 and for a relief pitcher that isn't very good. San Diego has also been relying heavily on Bell in the past couple seasons (155 appearances in '07 and '08) which COULD eventually cause some strain on his arm. On top of the fact that his stats don't jump off the page at you, but the Padres have pretty much dumped everyone who makes any money or has any time spent in the majors, or has any record of success (outside of Jake Peavy and Adrian Gonzalez). This doesn't lend itself to a ton of save chances for Bell. It is going to be a long year in San Diego, and unless there are very few closers left I would stay away from drafting Bell.

Prediction: 3.19 ERA, 23 saves, 75 Ks, 1.31 WHIP

2009 FBS Bust Player: Raul Ibanez

Team: Philadelphia Phillies
Bats: Left

Position: OF

Ibanez has been a fairly consistent hitter over his career, and has barely gotten the recognition he deserved. He has often hit in the .280-.290 range with 20-30 homers and has driven in over 100 runs in three straight seasons. What? This doesn't sound like a post calling someone a bust? Oh, just wait. Regardless of this career of production, Ibanez is now going to be 37 years old in June and old age doesn't miss anyone (except for Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, but that is a whole other story). He has hit 23 homers or less in five of the last six seasons, and he has been striking out more lately than earlier in his career. He is going to a great hitters park in Philadelphia, but he will now garner some attention from pitchers than he did in the baseball wasteland that is Seattle. Although he will most likely still produce, you should expect a downturn from his statistics from a year ago.

Prediction: .275 average, 20 HRs, 82 RBI, 81 runs scored

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Breakout Prospects: Outfield (Part 1)

Dexter Fowler (S/R) -- Rockies -- There are few players in major league camps this spring that excite me as much as Dexter Fowler. He has all the ability of a young Ken Griffey Jr. with that same likeable personality. He is the Rockies CF of the future and should win the job outright out of spring training. Fowler has great awareness at the plate. His ability to take tough pitches, shorten up his stride, go the opposite way and lay down the surprise bunt are mature beyond his years. Fowler hit .335 witih a .431 OBP and .515 slugging at AA Tulsa last year while swiping 20 bags as well. He has Jose Reyes like ability to hit for double digits in 2b, 3b & HR's year in and year out. His power has been slow to come but at 6'4" and just 190 lbs. he has plenty of filling out to do and with that projects added pop. But as long as he is getting on base and using his plus speed to steal bases and score runs the Rockies nor you who take a chance on him in fantasy drafts will be disappointed.



Travis Snider (L/L) -- Blue Jays -- Nobody rose through the minor leagues in 2008 like Travis Snider. He began the season in High A ball and after making stops at both AA and AAA found his way into the starting lineup on the big league club. Then all he did there was hit .301 with 2 HR's and 13 RBI in 73 AB's for the Blue Jays. Built like a spark plug, Snider will become a true major league power hitter very soon. The only question is whether Toronto will give him that chance right out of the gate in '09 or send him to AAA Las Vegas where Todd Farino can sit in the outfield party deck and haul in Snider's HR's? Either way he will find his way to Toronto this season without a doubt. Many scouts believe Snider's swing and ability to go the opposite way will allow him to hit for a high average but I disagree with that. Most of his power numbers are to the pull field and even more importantly against RHP. Left handers have shown they can get him out especially with low off speed pitches which he chases often. Snider will hit the ball out of the ballpark and for that ability alone deserves to be one of the earlier outfield prospects taken fantasy drafts.



Drew Stubbs (R/R) -- Reds -- This is going to be a critical season for the Cincinnati Reds organization. They have themselves a wealth of young viable talent but a manager who prefers retreads like Jerry Hairston Jr., Willy Tavares and Jonny Gomes. Meanwhile talented young prospects such as Jay Bruce, Chris Valaika, Adam Rosales and Drew Stubbs waste away in minimal roles or in the minor leagues. Stubbs is a plus-plus runner with outstanding base stealing and defensive abilities. He widened his stance last year and saw a tremendous bump in making contact and hitting for high BA. Stubbs is already 24 years old and ready to take the next step in his career and that should be in setting the table in the #2 hole for guys like Jay Bruce and Joey Votto but it will take quite a showing this spring to force Dusty Baker's hand into allowing that to happen.



John Raynor (R/R) -- Marlins -- This is where you can assert your dominance in a fantasy league draft. Raynor is not on anybody's radar heading into spring training and that is just plain ridiculous to me. It seems that most fantasy baseball experts either don't want to do their homework or just live off of ESPN or Baseball America's evaluation of young talent. Raynor is a kid on the come but without the hype of fellow teammate Cameron Maybin. At 25, Raynor has out developed the minor leagues by a long shot and is awaiting his natural place as the leadoff hitter for the Marlins in 2009. He has great patience at the plate and extra base ability though he does strikeout more than he should for a top of the order guy. Most notable is his crazy, and I mean crazy base stealing ability. Raynor has stolen 123 bases in just 3 minor league seasons. He was named the South Atlantic League MVP in 2007 and has hit for the cycle twice in two seasons including in the Arizona Fall League this winter. The bit test will come in camp to see how well he has recovered from a broken wrist this offseason and if ther are any ill-effects as a result. Keep this guy on your radar!



Seth Smith (L/L) -- Rockies -- Smith has has an interesting ride since being Eli Manning's backup QB at Ole Miss. He now has the simple task of replacing Matt Holliday in LF for the Rockies. While Smith has zero chance of replacing Holliday's number all by himself, he does offer a sweet swing fromt the left side and shares Holliday's ability to get on base. While I don't see him hitting for a high average I strongly believe Smith will go for 25+ HR's in the big leagues. He hits with authority to all fields and will murder mistakes made down in the zone. The LF job is all his and the Rockies will give him some time to mature into the quality hitter they believe him to be. Big upside potential in OBP & HR's out of this young left-fielder.


Those are a few of the guys I have on my radar heading into spring training. What are your thoughts? Agree? Disagree? Post your comment below or email me at jeff@fantasybaseballsearch.com

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Todd-o-logue: Do Expert Mock Drafts Have Any Credibility Left?

Expert mock drafts are the latest trend over the past few years. Alex Rodriguez would call them "fashionable" to say the least. Of course, maybe they are the designer steroids for fantasy drafting? Over the past few years, the art of gathering 12 or more experts in the industry and watching them battle it out over 23+ rounds of fantasy baseball drafting is all the rage (no pun intended) . Each pick is carefully considered like a Russian chess match and all the participants are trying to claim check mate with each pick. For the novice to intermediate fantasy manager, expert mock drafts are a wealth of knowledge and useful information. Of course, this is only possible when the experts draft as if it was real world.

I've read some disturbing revelations on blogs that everyday fantasy managers are starting to look at expert mock drafts as jokes. They claim that experts are afraid to use their true draft strategies for many reasons including not giving up their methods or secrets. Another reason I've read is experts don't like to go outside the lines because the draft will be analyzed and examined by so many that it may hurt their reputation. I'm sure I'm leaving out a few other reasons, but you get the point.



I have to agree with the bloggers that those are legitimate concerns of the managers analyzing these drafts for valuable insight. Heck, its' even been discussed in our podcast chat room. Now, I take my expert mock drafts seriously. The only time I go off my strategy is when I want to make a point with a pick. I'll take a guy I probably wouldn't take with that pick in a real world draft, but I do it to make a point on the value of that specific player. I will always be prepared and draft to be the best of my abilities. I will always draft according to my strategy and not go along with the ADP as to not risk looking bad. Like last year, one site puts out a report that Albert Pujols might have surgery and all of a sudden 10 or more web sites are saying Pujols isn't first round material going along with the trending data. Bad advice obviously, and great if you stuck to your guns and drafted him later than usual cause he fell to you.

Now there are some nominee's for Nimrod of the year because of their impressive decisions on how to execute a expert mock draft. These Nimrods or dormin's if you like to it backwards or NimrodEH! in Pig Latin. Actual Nimrodonian experts as I refer to them that will use an expert mock draft as a testing ground for a risky not plausable draft strategy they have devised in their evil lair in expert LaLa Land. Now, that is perfectly A-OK if we are just in a random mock draft, but this is an expert mock draft! There could be novices that are so green they barely know all the roster spots, categories, let alone a sensible draft strategy. So they watch the best-of-the-best go at it, hoping to reach their impossible dream of a championship. Then one of the experts, one of the best-of-the-best drafts 8 pitchers in the first 8 rounds. Wow, please take a moment and ask yourself, what was the Nimrod thinking? This man who clearly is Nimrodonian in every aspect basically just screwed up an entire expert mock draft that the other 11 experts were taken very serious and really ended up making the whole draft a joke. Allot of confused watchers went home that night thinking, what the heck was that all about? That was experts?

I'm sure this expert learned plenty from trying the strategy in a controlled atmosphere, but is this a serious strategy you would ever deploy in a real draft? My, my, my...

Again I stress, practicing strategies is smart, but practice then execute to the public, not the other way around. I think all of us "experts" enjoy being invited and participating in expert mock drafts. Certainly I feel a responsibility to not only draft my proven strategy, but to also draft responsibly. Especially knowing that others are trying to learn from these drafts. If we take expert mock drafts seriously, then they will take them seriously. I for one want to restore the credibility of expert mock drafts. Please for the love of all humanity, no Wacko Jacko draft strategies at expert mock drafts anymore. Can we stop giving good advice, that is really bad advice. Can we stop thinking that in order to be the best expert that we must be creative and spunky with our craziest strategies. Slow down there James Dean. I promise you are the only Rebel without a cause who thinks that a risky experimental strategy during an expert mock draft is a cool idea. Flip your collar down and go home.

Fantasy Baseball Search Site Review: 2009 RotoExperts


Site review by Todd Farino

4/5 Stars


Late in 2008 I had the privilege of reading the articles and content on RotoExperts.com. RotoExperts is primarily a blog and information resource site with several talented writers, all with a different view of fantasy baseball. Their articles cover everything from team reviews to draft strategy. They will give you reviews of video games and magazines at the same time as writings about international players that might come into baseball in the future. I thought they had some of the best team reviews I've read in along time and a stellar draft strategy writer in Scott Engel. Late last year, RotoExperts purchased Diamond Draft. They added excellent draft and projection software to the web site to compliment the load of articles it already provides. It also has a forums, but this is the weakest part of the site.
Its slow and rarely used by site visitors, They do actively answer questions posted in the forums and that service should be taken advantage of. The thing I like the best about RotoExperts is the advice seems real. There is a difference between real opinion and cookie cutter corporate writing. They have several great writers including Jon Williams (FBS Expert League member), Scott Engel, Tommy Landry, Tom Lorenzo, Mike Gilbert and more. 10 writer blogs in all. This is one of a select number of sites I read and it is worth every minute I spend on it. Not everything is positive.
I had a problem with the site being very slow and hard to navigate even after I got use to using it. The level of quality fantasy baseball information certainly outweighs the minor design and technical issues, but hopefully they can be improved. The best part I have to admit is their free draft kit, which is made up of all the articles on their site that have to do with pre-season or drafting information. It is well organized and chalked full of information anyone could use. The cherry on the top of this great site is its completely free, except for the diamond draft software. Let's go over the pros and cons.
Pros
Outstanding fantasy advice.
Excellent writers (10 blogs and nearly 30 writers in all)
High volume of content.
100% free content.
Huge free draft kit.
Featuring Diamond Draft software.
A personal attitude and easy to get to know the writers
No corporate feel to the articles.
Excellent service answering questions.
Wide variety of topics covered.
Great team reports
Very good sorting of articles; by writer, players, draft kit, etc...
Email Newsletter.
Covers multiple sports

Cons
The site is slow most of the time.
The navigation is confusing and hard to follow.
Requires you to logon to read articles
Weak low usage forums.


Overall rating 4/5 stars - Excellent site.
Visit www.rotoexperts.com to try the site and see what you think.



2009 FBS Breakout Player: Kelly Johnson

Team: Atlanta Braves
Bats: Left
Position: 2B
Last year, Kelly Johnson fell to me in the 11th round and I snatched him up. Though he was not at his best in 2008 and for most of the season he was benched against left-handed pitchers, Kelly Johnson had a solid season. He batted .287 with 12 homeruns, 69 RBI, 86 runs, and 11 SBs. That actually is pretty good for an 11th round second basemen. This year Bobby Cox has said that Johnson will face more lefties to build his confidence and to allow him to mature as a hitter and we think he will. Johnson has the power to hit 20 homeruns and speed to steal 20 bases, so getting a possible 20/20 that late in the draft could be a fantastic move if you get him late. At 27, Johnson is in his prime and with 2 full years under his belt and over 1000 at bats, 2009 will be his year to shine.

The True Guru Projections: 18 Hrs, 70 RBI, 85 Runs, .289 Avg, 20 SB

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our breakouts here

To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

Draft Prepartion Tip #1: List Your Picks

One of the biggest problems people have with drafting is preparation. Sure you will have your favorite fantasy sites open to the cheat sheets, magazines ready to go, and some paper to write on. We all study players for weeks before the draft, but the mistake we make is we don't make a list of the players we want to pick in time for the draft. Sort of a dream team with several choices in each position. This blog will discuss the simple, but useful method of making a pre-draft pick list.

After you have studied all the players or better yet while you are studying the players you think will be the best options for your team, write them done in sequential order for each position. Say for 1B you have the following list:

Mark Texeria
Kevin Youkilis
Chris Davis
Joey Votto
Mike Jacobs

I think 4-5 players is fine. You could go deeper than that if you want to, but over preparing can be just as bad as under preparing. Make a similar list for each infield position and catcher. For outfielders make a list 15-25 outfielders . These guys go in bunches, so having at least 20 outfielders researched and selected will give you the best advantage when your sixty seconds comes up. List 10 closers minimum and for starting pitchers make three lists; Aces, Stable Pitchers, and Sleepers/Breakouts. I would have 10 or more of each. The reason you want to break up pitchers is to balance your rotation for at least the start of the season. You can have all aces and cheap sleepers you can draft, but you also must have your stable veteran pitchers who will do just about what is expected. An even mixture of those types of pitchers is a winning formula.

Once you have the lists completed and ready to go and you enter the draft room, you are now ready for most anything the draft can throw at you. Let's examine the first pick. We will assume you have the 2nd overall pick. Hanley Ramirez is off the board. before the draft you probably determined a draft flow strategy for which positions, player types, and scoring categories you would go for first if the option was available. We will do another blog of Draft Flow Strategy later this month. You determined you want speed and power early and infield if possible. You look at your 3B list ( I assume players only qualify for the position they will play):
David Wright
Aramis Ramirez
Chone Figgins
Edwin Encarnacion
Melvin Mora

You know David Wright is out there and he is speed and power. You check over your other lists and clearly he is the correct choice. Draft David Wright and cross him off your list. Its that simple. Now, let's skip to the 5th round. Your first four picks were 3B, 2B, OF, OF. You pick is up. Lots of players are gone, but your lists are still intact. You check your information, your flow strategy, which was get infield early plus speed and power. You then check the ADP and see guys that are going off the board at this time in the draft. Then you spot your pick looking at you 1B list.
Mark Texeria
Kevin Youkilis
Chris Davis
Joey Votto
Mike Jacobs

There is your pick. In the 5th round you get Chris Davis. This strategy won't make you the best overall draft master, but it will give you an advantage to creating your dream team. In every position there are countless player combinations that can win. If you trust your theories and research then use it along with your pick list to have a great draft. Don't be the guy that makes a critical draft mistake because 60 seconds wasn't long enough to research the best players in every position. Cut that work down into 8 lists and I promise time will be on your side. If you have any questions about draft strategy, email me at toodf@fantasybaseballsearch.com.


http://www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

2009 FBS Sleeper Player: Elvis Andrus

Team: Texas Rangers
Bats: Left
Position: SS

We heard all the malay that was caused when Mike Young got moved to 3B for the 20-year old SS. Elvis is allot of hype, but he potential to make a major impact on fantasy baseball. Andrus has little power, but he has tremendous speed. He has the capability to steal 50 bases similar to Jacoby Ellsbury last year, but we do not think he will do that. He will go through slumps, and will have a major learning curve, but his speed is too great to overlook. Look at Elvis Andrus as a late round sleeper and he could feel your SS slot. He will cost you at average and his strikeout rate is quite high at 20% through his career i the minors. Overall, he's a new version of Juan Pierre.
The True Guru Projections: 4 Hrs, 42 RBI, 71 Runs, .272 Avg, 35 SB

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our sleepers here




To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

Monday, February 16, 2009

2009 FBS Breakout Player: Mike Jacobs

Team: Kansas City Royals
Bats: Left

Position: 1B

Once a top prospect for the New York Mets, Jacobs has come into his own over the last couple of seasons, especially in the power department. In 141 games in 2008, Jacobs hit 32 homers and drove in 93 runs. The thing that will keep Jacobs available in your drafts until very late is his batting average. Since first coming to the majors in 2005 when he hit .310, Jacobs average has been steadily declining, bottoming out at the .247 he hit last season. While he might look like a poor man's Adam Dunn, at just 27 years old, Jacobs still has time to improve his batting eye. Over his minor league career, Jacobs consistently hit better than that, and if he could ever get his average to around the .275 range, he is a fantasy steal. There's no doubt that his power is legitimate, and he will most likely be hitting cleanup for the Royals. He likely won't be drafted until around the 19th round according to MDC, and even if his average doesn't improve he should be a great bench option in case of injury.

Prediction: .265, 38 homers, 98 RBI, 87 runs scored

2009 FBS Breakout Player: Jay Bruce

Team: Cincinnati Reds
Bats: Left

Position: OF

Considering the way that some top prospects fall on their face when they come to the majors (yes you, Alex Gordon), Jay Bruce's rookie season was a fairly successful one. In just 108 games, Bruce was able to pound out 21 homers and drive in 52 runs. The one bad part of his first campaign was his .254 batting average, which was considerably lower than was expected, and he struck out 110 times in those 108 games, which kind of was expected. There is a whole bunch of good news though, if you are thinking of drafting Bruce. First, he will just be turning 22 right when the season starts. That means that there is plenty of time for him to adjust to life in the majors and improve. With the expectations of being a top prospect, I'm sure there were times that Bruce was pressing to be the best that he could and tried to over do it. Second, his average over his final year and a half in the minors was always over .300, highlighted by his final 49 games at AAA in 2008 when he hit .364. Even more good news is that he hit 10 homers over that limited action. Bruce has all the makings of a .300 hitter with 30-35 homers, and well over 100 RBI. He might not quite hit that level in 2009, but he should get close, and if he did meet those numbers not many of us would be surprised.

Prediction: .293 average, 29 homers, 96 RBI, 4 steals, 90 runs scored

2009 FBS Sleeper Player: Daniel Murphy

Team: New York Mets
Bats: Left
Position: OF/3B

Daniel Murphy is another intriguing player for 2009. Last year this September call up did great, batting .313 with 2 homeruns and 17 RBI in 131 at bats. This season he will start the season platooning in right field with Fernando Tatis. He is definitely a deep sleeper, but he has the ability to hit very well to all parts of the field. He has the ability to provide the Mets with plenty of extra base hits and steal a few bases while he is at it. However, he may not score many runs. We feel if he plays to expectations he will take over the left field spot, which is currently a platoon. Draft Murphy very late and hold onto him.
The True Guru Projections: 14 Hrs, 76 RBI, 63 Runs, .291 Avg, 5 SB

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our sleepers here




To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

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2009 FBS Breakout Player: Hunter Pence

Team: Houston Astros
Bats: Right
Position: OF
Hunter Pence has been on the breakout radar for a year or 2 now. He is a player who turns 26 and is clearly in his prime. Last year Pence disappointed us a little with a drastic drop in average do to a tremendous slump early last season. Pence is capable of being a stud. We think his 2009 year will be the year he earns that title. Last season proved why we think this. Pence was mired in 3 terrible slumps last year and managed to jump out of them each time. That is the kind of play you want to see out of your young players. In the last three months of the season, Pence hit 15 homeruns and hit nearly .300 two of the months. Hunter Pence won't achieve the .322 average he did in 2007, but we expect him to shorten the length of his slumps and also the number of slumps he will fall into. Confidence is a big issue with this guy, so that is the key. We would have rated him a higher breakout, but he has already had great seasons, this is as high as we could rank him.

The True Guru Projections: 24 Hrs, 96 RBI, 87 Runs, .298 Avg, 15 SB

We feel he will achieve these projections through our formula based on our secret formula of 11 herbs and spices (its locked at Fort Knox). Of course we are assuming he stays relatively healthy for the entire season.
Check out the rest of our breakouts here

To get more from The True Guru and the other guru's Ryan Hallam and RC Rizza catch our weekly podcast at www.blogtalkradio.com/the_true_guru. Listen to us LIVE every Wednesday at 10pm EST.

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