Here is a look at the 2012 value of shortstops in OPS fantasy leagues. This is meant to help illustrate their relative value with OPS as a component. They are listed from highest to lowest OPS. Note that I only included players with at least 300 plate appearances in 2012. Please, blog, may I have some more?
See all of today’s starting lineups
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ATH | ATL | CLE | COL | DET | HOU | LAA | MIL | NYY | PHI | PIT | SD | SEA | TEX | TOR | WSH | ARI | BAL | BOS | CHC | CHW | CIN | KC | LAD | MIA | MIN | NYM | OAK | SF | STL | TB |
I'm not sure what the L stands for, but Josh Hamilton obviously felt LAA was a good fit for him. What I'd like to know is how is California a bankrupt state? The Dodgers and Angels' salaries combined are equal to the GDP of every country, except China and Switzerland. Mozambique couldn't afford just Pujols and Hamilton. Forget Greinke, Hanley, Vernon Wells, Matt Kemp and Carl Crawford. Alone, Arte Moreno could sell the Angels and buy Africa. Africa Moreno, that's what they would call it. Burundi would become Aybarundi, Djibouti would become Dbootyhole and Chad would stay the same name, because that's a badass name for a country, but Arte would put a country-wide golf course there, because anything named Chad and golf go hand-in-hand. The Angels now have Trout, Aybar, Pujols and Hamilton at the top of their lineup. October 1st called and said Aybar just scored his 197th run. Batting fifth, Kendrys could hit .220 and drive in 100 RBIs. Howie Kendrick... Well, he'll still disappoint, but this is slightly bizzonkers to have three of the top hitters in baseball all in the same lineup. Trout, Hamilton and Pujols alone hit 103 homers last year. The Astros whole team only hit 146. Specifically about Hamilton, I could throw a lot numbers at you about about how his June through September were well short of his April/May. How his BABIP in April/May buoyed his season average. How not quoting these exact numbers but saying how I could quote them is a lot easier. Honestly, none of these numbers matter. I'd take six months straight of 5 homers/month and a .280 average. I don't need a .380 average month with 12 homers. The bigger issue for me is you have no idea what you're going to get from Hamilton year-to-year. One year, he hits 10 homers; one year, he misses 30 games; one year, he misses 55 games. Last year, his K-rate wasn't good and his homer/fly ball rate was obscene. His swinging strike rate was the worst in the majors. This wasn't just bad for this year. He had the worst rate since 2002. Mark Reynolds set a strikeout record one year and had a better swinging strike rate. Oh, and he's 32 years old as of May 21st. He could be in for a huge year, but he'll probably be drafted before I'm willing to look at him. For 2013, I'll give him the line of 92/29/109/.277/7. You think adding a top hitter to an already stacked lineup will make it exponentially better, but for fantasy it just spreads out the wealth, as the Angels and Dodgers should do. Anyway, here's some more offseason moves for 2013 fantasy baseball:
Organizational Talent Rankings via Baseball America
2012 (21) | 2011 (24) | 2010 (29) | 2009 (8) | 2008 (16)
2012 Affiliate Records
MLB: [94-68] NL West
AAA: [74-70] Pacific Coast League – Fresno
AA: [70-71] Eastern League – Richmond
A+: [75-65] California State League – San Jose
A: [69-70] South Atlantic League – Augusta
A(ss): [32-44] Northwest League — Salem-Keiser
Arizona Fall League Players — Scottsdale Scorpions
Ryan Bradley (LHP); Jacob Dunnington (RHP); Chris Gloor (LHP); Heath Hembree (RHP); Dan Runzler (LHP); Ricky Oropesa (1B); Joe Panik (SS); Gary Brown (OF)
Graduated Prospects
Hector Sanchez (C); Brett Pill (Util)
The Run Down
I can't help but think that this system would look a whole shizzload better if it still included Zack Wheeler. Sorry, Giants fans, but that Wheeler-for-Beltran swap was for naught, and more than a year removed from it, I'm sure you're all wishing that Gary Brown had been the guy sent to the Mets. I feel your pain, San Francisco. But then y'all went and won the World Friggen Series, and all wounds have been healed. Still, though, this farm system isn't tremendous. Brown has crashed back down to Earth, and there doesn't seem to be much high-impact talent beneath him. Big years in 2013 from guys like Kyle Crick and Chris Stratton will fill that void, but until then, the Giants will have to rely on their big league roster... which happens to be quite good, actually.
Shin-Soo Choo makes the Reds lineup look pretty. No more will they have to search for a lead-off hitter with a solid OBP. I do feel bad for the guy in charge of explaining to Dusty why Choo's OBP should be coveted and they shouldn't mourn the loss of Stubbs. "Oh bee pees are fine and dandy...If you're a dandy. I play a man's game where hitters swing the bat like they mean it. You ever see George Foster take a walk? He would have preferred someone walk on his face. Hence... His face!" "But, Dusty, if Choo gets on base--" "I get on base by swinging!" "Choo not you." "How about 'Choo' stop confusing me?!" Hitter-wise, this is about as good a fit as I've seen from a fantasy and real baseball perspective this offseason. (Pitching-wise, I did like Greinke going to the Dodgers.) I've never been excited about Choo (no offense), but never fully against him either. Indifferent, if you're not trying to use unnecessary words, which is the least succinct way to say succinct. This slight tick up in value for Choo has me excited. It's a small sample size, but he has four homers in nine games in Great American. So, for 2013, I'll give him 67 homers? Nope, but a terrific lineup and ballpark sure won't hurt. For 2013, I'll give him the line 108/23/79/.296/20. Anyway, here's some more offseason moves for 2013 fantasy baseball:
When looking for possible candidates for a 2013 fantasy baseball sleeper post, do you know how I found Jeff Samardzija? No, I didn’t look up the most difficult player names to spell. That might’ve have taken me to Samardzija. Not to mention, Saltalamacchia or Avisail Garcia. Please, blog, may I have some more?
Doozy's on line two. Doozy, "Yeah, I got no words for this trade." Holy Crapballs on line three. Holy Crapballs, "What's there to say?" You've Got To Be Kidding's on line four. You've Got To Be Kidding, "Hey, I'm here with Doozy... Hold on, I'm gonna merge the calls with Holy Crapballs. Okay, HC, you there? You're on with Doozy and You've Got To Be Kidding. What do you make of this trade?" Holy Crapballs, "Well--Shoot, Are You Effin' Joking is buzzing in." Recently, I went over my Wil Myers 2013 fantasy. Yeah, that's pretty much toast. Set a fire to it. Not literally. It's on your computer. The Royals are basically the guy who held onto his virginity for thirty years then woke up one day and said, "Eh, I'm going to a hooker." Wow. I'm speechless. Sure, they have Frenchy. But, um, it's Frenchy. Jake Odorizzi and Mike Montgomery were only, what? A few months away? Sure, Montgomery's lost some luster, but Odorizzi's still a top prospect. He could be Wade Davis this year. Maybe Shields next year. Wil Myers, though, well Wil (almost stutterer!) is the meow's cat. I wonder if the Orioles wish they had Erik Bedard still to trade for Myers and others. Wil Myers is ready to contribute and the Rays don't hold back their prospects. He's starting on Opening Day in the majors unless something unforeseen happens. As I said in that Wil Myers fantasy post, he's a number three hitter, and a damn good one. He's not going to give us a Trout-type rookie year, but those only come around once in never. He doesn't possess blazing speed like Trout. He's a 30+ homer, 110+ RBIs, .300+ average guy in his prime. Think easily fantasy 2nd round value numbers when he hits his groove. In October when I thought he'd start the year in Triple-A, I gave him the line of 40/18/50/.280/5. Now, I'll up that to a full season of at-bats and 62/24/72/.277/8 with upside for more. Yeah, he plays in shallow, three-outfield fantasy leagues. Anyway, here's some more offseason moves for 2013 fantasy baseball:
The Twins said goodbye to Ben Revere, that troublemaker! (Not really accurate, but I'm trying to make the Winter Meetings seem exciting. Revere seems like anything but a troublemaker. Either way...) The Twins just couldn't handle his gamesmanship and play-by-the-rules attitude. Makes them wish they could get back Delmon Young (they probably could; all they have to do is ask or simply put a cupcake near the entrance of their stadium and he'll wonder back). If the world had a nickel for every time Revere caused a disagreement, the world would be in a deep recession. Coincidence? I don't think so. Yo, Macro Economics Professor, I blame Ben Revere! So, Revere on the Phils is great for the Phils, finally finding that big bat to fill-in for Juan Pierre. If you graphed out Revere's homers over the last five years side-by-side with Pierre's, you'd have a big waste of graph paper. Revere's over/under for power is 1 homer. His steals, runs and average are above-average, with the steals his biggest asset. His power is such a clusterfudgiethewhale that he's nothing but SAGNOF and shouldn't be owned for longer than a month or two if you're lagging in speed, otherwise you will start to lag in power. For 2013, I'll give him the line of 82/1/30/.291/45. Remember, my projections are a plus/minus two homers, so he could hit one foul pop 400 feet backwards behind home plate and get a negative homer. Anyway, here's some more offseason moves for 2013 fantasy baseball:
So all the exciting Winter Meetings deals are gonna come on the last day? It's like Frank and Zach from MTV's Challenge have taken over the Winter Meetings and ruined them too. Give me back Evan and Kenny and CT! In the words of T.J. Lavin, they killed it! Sorry, I didn't have any balloons set up to fall when Sean Burnett signed a deal. Maybe Greinke will finally sign somewhere today, or, dare to dream, Josh Hamilton. So far the Winter Meetings have given a run to your co-worker's PowerPoint presentations on the Yawn-o-Meter. The biggest value change for fantasy thus far would have to go to Dan Haren. A guy who's got a bad hip (or is it back?). He signed with the Nats. Solid deal for them. If Haren does nothing, whatever. They have plenty of pitching in place. If he does something, then score, or, ya know, no score vs. him. It's the equivalent to a late-round gamble in fantasy, which appropriately enough is what Haren is. If he's drafted prior to that, then people are looking at his name-value more than reality. I don't trust him at all to stay healthy. One trade to the Cubs already fell through, due to his hip (back?; I don't know -- he's injured in some way.) Sure, he's only missed three starts in nine years, but presumably his health caused his fastball to bottom out at 88 MPH last year, and the hip (back, whatever) injury sounds like it's still an issue. I can almost guarantee someone will draft him before I do. I'm guessing at best he misses at least a month of the season, and at worst he gets shut down for a few months. I'll put his 2013 line at 7-6/3.95/1.27/120 in 150 innings. I'm sure there will be points during the season he is usable, and I will quote that line verbatim the day after he pitches a gem. And that's me quoting future me! Anyway, here's some more offseason moves for 2013 fantasy baseball:
Organizational Talent Rankings via Baseball America
2012 (22) | 2011 (25) | 2010 (27) | 2009 (28) | 2008 (27)
2012 Affiliate Records
MLB: [88-74] AL Central
AAA: [60-84] International League – Toledo
AA: [57-84] Eastern League – Erie
A+: [73-58] Florida State League – Lakeland
A: [72-68] Midwest League – West Michigan
A(ss): [35-40] New York-Penn League — Connecticut
Arizona Fall League Players — Mesa Solar Sox
Tyler Clark (RHP); Matt Hoffman (LHP); Luke Putkonen (RHP); James McCann (C); Aaron Westlake (1B); Nick Castellanos (OF)
Graduated Prospects of Note
Jacob Turner (RHP); Drew Smyly (LHP)
The Run Down
With a stacked roster at the big league level, it’s not necessarily debilitating to have a shallow farm system beneath it. Please, blog, may I have some more?
The Yankees' extra-bat-off-the-bench in the playoffs, Alex Rodriguez, will be out for six months, following surgery on his hip that is set to take place in January. Guess A-Rod doesn't want to be out of service for the holiday season. "Hey, I got a date with this smoking hot, butchy female and she wants me to dress up as Santa and sit on my lap. Can we do this whole hip-ma-whosie Jan one?" That's A-Rod talking to his doctors. Yes, A-Rod says Jan instead of January. BTW, I Googled A-Rod surgery and the first article was at Latino dot Fox. A-Rod is as Latino as Taco Bell. On the fo' really tip, why can't he go into surgery right now? He's getting paid approximately four hundred million this year and he wants to delay surgery so he misses an extra month of the season? The $17 million that went to Russell Martin just shook its head, incredulous. If there's a legitimate reason for the delay that I didn't read about, there's no legitimate reason, so don't bother telling me about it. Maybe if Pasta Diving Cap'n Jetes would get hip surgery in December than A-Rod would, as well. Well, even before Rodriguez came down with the appropriate hip problem, he shouldn't have been drafted. He's actually done us all a favor. Now he's pushed himself so far down draft boards that you won't even have to think about it in, say, the 12th round. For 2013, I'll put his line at 40/13/44/.263/6 in 300 ABs. He's firmly in the "Do Not Touch" section of your draft board. Anyway, here's some more offseason moves for 2013 fantasy baseball:
You, "Well, it looks like the right URL. But I don't recognize the site design at all and... ERIC HOSMER AS A SLEEPER?! WHO HACKED GREY'S ACCOUNT?! I wonder if they're letting his mustache get at least 15 minutes of sunlight per day. SERIOUSLY, DUBYA TEE EFF?!" That's right, over-the-internet friend, we've redesigned the site and now we're here to redesign your mind on what you think of Hosmer. So, it's a constant struggle of mine that I think I might be self-defeating. Do I self-sabotage? When choosing people or situations, do I go for the road less traveled not out of excitement, but because it will be more arduous and less likely for success? When I choose a girlfriend, do I try to find one that I know won't work? Or do I find one that will work and sabotage the relationship? Better yet, is this why I'm interested in Eric Hosmer for 2013? Or so I said to my shrink. Luckily, she knows baseball and is familiar with Eric Hosmer. How could she not after last year? Half of my visits revolved around the Royals 1st baseman. "Grey, I want you to go home and write a sell post for Hosmer, then reduce it to two point font size and have it tattooed under your eyelids." And that's why I pay the big money to an non-accredited shrink! On the flip side of that coin, there's an eagle. On the flip flip side, I refuse to draft Hosmer because of his 2012, then he produces in 2013. Well, that's the dilemma: draft a guy that caused me so much pain to get more pain or not draft a guy and watch him succeed on someone else's team. Here we have a crossroads. Maybe we should first look at what he can do next year. So what should we expect from Eric Hosmer for 2013 fantasy baseball and what makes him a sleeper?