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Organizational Talent Rankings via Baseball America 2012 (10) | 2011 (17) | 2010 (5) | 2009 (13) | 2008 (2) 2012 Affiliate Records MLB: [69-93] AL East AAA: [79-65] International League – Pawtucket AA: [68-73] Eastern League – Portland A+: [68-69] Carolina League – Salem A: [66-73] South Atlantic League – Greenville A(ss): [36-40] New York-Penn League — Lowell Arizona Fall League PlayersSurprise Saguaros Chris Martin (RHP); Pete Ruiz (RHP); Michael Almanzar (3B); Bryce Brentz (OF) Graduated Prospects Will Middlebrooks (3B); Ryan Lavarnway (C); Pedro Ciriaco (INF); Felix Doubront (LHP); Junichi Tazawa (RHP) The Run Down With impact talent at nearly every level of the farm, this is a deep system, and a good one. Xander Bogaerts, a top-10 overall prospect, headlines the group and will arrive within the next year-and-a-half as a big time fantasy asset. Behind him, Boston features a great mix of high-ceiling guys and high-floor guys, making this system not only high-impact, but rather safe as well. The Red Sox might be another year or so away from contending again in the crazy-competitive AL East, but the club has done a quality job of trimming some fat, and setting itself up for long-term success in the process.

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See all of today’s starting lineups

# MLB Starting Lineups For Wed 5/21
ARI | ATH | ATL | BAL | BOS | CHC | CHW | CIN | CLE | COL | DET | HOU | KC | LAA | LAD | MIA | MIL | MIN | NYM | NYY | PHI | PIT | SD | SEA | STL | TB | TEX | TOR | WSH | OAK | SF
As suggested by you (yes, you!), I’m long overdue in covering a batch of “good” OPS values, as Better Than Ezra would say. To be Frank Francisco with you, I’m going to hit you with a chair, if by chair I mean knowledge. I’m not going to restate some players I’ve recently fawned over, like David Ortiz, Josh Willingham, Corey Hart, Ike Davis, Kevin Youkilis, Todd Frazier, and SAGNOFs. I’m also going to stay away from players in the first couple rounds (don’t hate the playa, hate their draft position!) because you don’t need me to tell you that Joey Votto and Giancarlo Stanton are awesome, do you? If so, then please seek medical assistance. Anyway, as I mentioned last week, some of the Razzball writers are participating in a mock draft and you can follow the chaos at #RazzballMock (though Sky conveniently posted a recap). Without further delay, here are some of the players I’m looking forward to drafting in OPS leagues after the first couple rounds:
Truth be told, I almost made Logan Morrison my discount double check post for first basemen but decided 'nah, I'll cheap out and go with an already draftable commodity in Kendrys Morales cuz I'm lazy like that'. Then Grey said 'only one OF? Seriously, how lazy can you be? Give me three posts about outfielders. And put the lotion in the F@#$ing basket!'. And so I obliged on both counts but still got the hose again for some reason. But we're not here to talk about playing lambs with Albright, we're here to dissect LoMo's current draft day ADP of 219 and whether it's a discount or a steal for 2013 fantasy baseball...
Writing these posts where I look at the differences between my 2013 fantasy baseball rankings and ESPN's fantasy baseball rankings gives me severe agita, but I want to be calm. I don't want an ulcer. So, for this post, I put on the Dixie Chicks's cover of Landslide... Children get older, I'm getting older too... Unfortunately, I hunt and peck on my keyboard and it took me that entire song to type up the first sentence of this paragraph and iTunes shuffled to N.W.A. Right about now, N.W.A. court is in full effect. "Judge Grey presiding in the case of Razzball vs. ESPN." "Prosecuting attorneys are MC Grey, Ice Grey and Eazy-mother*******-Grey!" "Order, order, order... Ice Grey, take the mother******** stand. Do you swear the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth so help your stupid ass?" "You goddamn right!" "Well, won't you tell everybody what the eff you gotta say?"
This is a post for the fantasy baseball drafters who use Excel, Google Docs, or some other war room software that automatically totals a drafted team's stats while in the middle of a draft. Or perhaps for those of you who do mock drafts or simulated drafts. The below grid represents my projected 75% mark in each stat category across 10/12/14/15/16 team ESPN and Yahoo default roster format leagues.
We at Razzball realize that exporting our views across the country has damaging consequences on the blogosphere. To help make amends, we are reaching out to leading team blogs and featuring their locally blogged answers to pressing 2013 fantasy baseball questions regarding their team. We feel this approach will be fresher, more sustainable, and require less energy consumption (for us anyway). The 2013 Rays Fantasy Baseball Preview comes courtesy of Jason Collette from The Process Report.
You might've heard this guy's name before as one of the guys I want in every league per my pitchers pairings post (say that fast 117 times!). So, how did it all start? Well, I was looking at Marco Estrada's peripherals and I fell in love. I couldn't figure out what I was missing because it all looked so good. Like good good. Like Barefoot Contessa in a negligee with Jeffrey locked out of the house good. Like going to Supercuts and actually getting a super cut good. Like not having to spell out your name after you order a latte at Starbucks good. I will now blow your mind. For starters with 130+ innings, Estrada had the 7th best K-rate in the major leagues with a 9.30. That usually comes with a ton of walks or a top ten starter price tag. Estrada had the 14th best walk rate (1.89) in the major leagues. For K/BB, he had the third best rate in the majors behind only Cliff Lee and Kris Medlen. Not that these things can be done by petting a rabbit's foot, but he was actually unlucky last year with a 3.64 ERA and a 3.48 xFIP. He had an above-average first pitch strike percentage, above-average with swings generated on pitches outside the strike zone and above-average percentage of swings and misses. In his career as a starter in 176 innings, he has a 8.85 K-rate and 1.99 walk rate. His peripherals match those of an ace. Estrada's Down Side, "Are you choosing to ignore me or just not seeing it?" I don't see any down side whatsoever. So what can we expect of Marco Estrada for 2013 fantasy baseball and what makes him a sleeper?
Organizational Talent Rankings via Baseball America 2012 (11) | 2011 (3) | 2010 (1) | 2009 (4) | 2008 (1) 2012 Affiliate Records MLB: [90-72] AL East AAA: [66-78] International League – Durham AA: [74-63] Southern League – Montgomery A+: [55-79] Florida State League – Charlotte A: [80-60] Midwest League – Bowling Green A(ss): [52-24] New York-Penn League — Hudson Valley Arizona Fall League PlayersPhoenix Desert Dogs Lenny Linsky (RHP); Tim Beckham (2B); Hak-Ju Lee (SS); Richie Shaffer (3B); Kevin Kiermaier (OF) Graduated Prospects Matt Moore (RHP); Jake McGee (LHP) The Run Down The Rays' player development systems have always been top-notch, and for the past several years, they've maintained one of the better farm systems in the game. As a matter of timing more than anything else -- some bad luck, too (see Beckham) -- the system was a little lighter than usual in the high-impact department near the end of last season. They were growing older, and more expensive at the big league level. It appeared that they were deviating from Andrew Friedman's operational model -- a patient, bottom-up approach that had discovered and nurtured talent better than just about any other organization -- that had made them a year-to-year contender in baseball's toughest division. And then the James Shields deal happened and the natural order was restored to the baseball universe. All of a sudden, Wil Myers became a Ray, and the once-lacking high-impact department was replenished with one of the more high-impacty dudes in the minors. Beyond Myers, Tampa added MLB-ready pitching depth in Jake Odorizzi. They also nabbed Mike Montgomery on the cheap -- sure, he pitched like a pile of hot garbage in 2012, but one year does not ruin a prospect. When considering this top ten back in October, I was kinda worried about having to cover a slew high-upside 18-year-olds who hadn't yet played outside of instructional league. Thank you, Andrew Friedman, for making this post more interesting.
With the season growing eerily closer, I sit back today and examine the closer situations for some teams that aren't as cut and dry as others. Some of these teams have a great situation if one guy can take the reigns and run with, the others, well, as the Fresh Prince said, "that's not that simple." So have a gander, minus the goose, at the closer situations that you will want to monitor for your upcoming drafts and who to be proactively drafting just in case.
For most of you, been there, read this shizz already, but there's Razzball newbies (Razzbabies?) that need some coddling occasionally. If you know PEDS, skip ahead into the comments and discuss my mustache. For the Razzbabies, c'mon here and let Uncle Grey burp you. Maybe I can get you to spit up everything you learned at ESPN. So, there's a BRAN (Balanced Roster After Nine) Drafting Strategy by Rudy "The Fro Knows" Gamble. He's also touched upon some fantasy baseball drafting tips. It's a year or so old, but it's timeless so when you read it don't bother looking at the clock. There's also a LIMA Plan (Low Investment Mound Aces) by Ron Shandler. There's been a ZIMA Plan by Matthew Berry; it involves a lot of stumbling around, groping and the hiccups. There's been a Punt One Category draft strategy. There's been a Punt Two Categories draft strategy, which was conceived by a leaguemate of Punt One Category who just couldn't stand being upstaged. And there's the Forget When Your Draft Is So Your Team Is Autodrafted strategy. I love when my leaguemates use that one. Then there's my fantasy baseball draft strategy, Performance Enhancing Draft Strategy or PEDS. PEDS has five basic steps. If you follow these steps, you will place near the top in all of your leagues. No plan is foolproof because, unfortunately, they still have to play the games, but PEDS puts you in the best position possible to win coming out of your draft. Actually, this plan is foolproof and you should ignore the previous sentence that said no plan is foolproof. No sentence is foolproof, that's more accurate. Okay, onto the steps:
As the old adage goes, 'Spare the rod, spoil the child'. Hrm, I was going to make a reference to 'caning' and 'Singapore' here but it seems I've fumbled it worse than Mark Sanchez did with his slide into the backside of Moore. Yes, that was a football reference. Deal with it. You're reading the works of none other than the main editor/writer for Razzball fantasy football so some pigskin is gonna leak over no matter what I do. But more to the point, I've been bringing the Discount Double Check series to you this pre-season in the hopes we can find some potential sleepers for 2013 fantasy baseball and what better way to do that then to revisit a former Grey love in Lorenzo Cain. Grey really wouldn't leave this man alone in 2012. At some point I'm sure he got addicted to Cain...SUGAR! The fact he didn't land on Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew is a bit surprising as he was snorting lines of confectionery by late March. At least that's what he told me when I asked about the white powder caking his nose. But back to the point, we're here today to look at Lorenzo and see if his current ADP of 196 is warranted or if he's going at a discount for 2013 fantasy baseball...