Sunday, May 10, 2009

Week 5

Coming off yet another 5-5 tie in week 4 (opponent 1.90 ERA, 0.88 WHIP), I realized that I may be the unluckiest mothafucker in this fantasy planet. If you were to calculate the ERA and WHIP of opponents, I would bet that they are the lowest when facing me.

This week was going to be a test as well. My opponent was tossing out two aces, Cole Hamels and Jake Peavy, plus some decent starters behind them. Add in his three-and-a-half closers, and here was a team setup to challenge my pitching. Offense had no real speed threats; however, more than a handful of his guys will steal some bases here and there.

My pitching was not outstanding this week, but they did enough to get the job done. The other manager stole WHIP from me, but I cruised to a win in batting average and stolen bases- giving me the 6-4 win overall.

Rickie Weeks continued his power stroke this week with his 6th and 7th homeruns. He still has only attempted 3 steals this season, converting just 1. The frustration built up, and so I spent this week shopping him around. I offered up Weeks for Alexei Ramirez (6 steals), hoping to buy low, but that was ultimately turned aside.

The frustration also carried over to a few other moves. Despite stashing him on my bench (DL spot occupied), I dropped Hiroki Kuroda. This may come back to bite me, but I didn't want to pass up the opportunity to grab a young stud in his first major league stint- Brett Cecil. This guy was considered by some to be destined for the pen, but injuries have put him on the fast track to a starting gig this time around. His 14 scoreless innings in his first 2 starts was too tempting to leave on the waiver wire. I may bench him when he's in the division (Rays, Sox, and Yanks all offensive powerhouses), but it's better a healthy starter on my bench rather than an injured player (given my 9 starting pitchers has yielded 3 DL'ers, and 1 closer).

Current Record:
23-26-1 (8th place)

Due Up:
My week 6 opponent, "Baden Baden", has built an offensive team that has carried him to first place in the league. This is the kind of opponent that this strategy is designed to take down. Sports 3 late-round caliber closers, the kind who could grab some saves but will only hurt his peripherals, and some scrub starters with his ace being Javier Vazquez- and then all downhill from there. With Brandon Morrow healthy I'm back to 5 closers (I count Rafael Soriano and Scott Downs as 1 closer combined). I like my chances, and I expect to walk away with another win. Outlook: 6-4.

Recent Moves:
-4/26/2009: Dropped Randy Winn (OF - SF) for Nyjer Morgan (OF - PIT). Morgan looks like he's getting the green light a little more.
-5/9/2009: Dropped Carlos Gomez (OF - Min) for Juan Pierre (OF - LAD). Manny's suspension opened the door for Pierre, and that little man can run! Meanwhile, Gomez is batting in the dreaded 7/8 area- when he's actually getting play time.
-5/10/2009: Dropped Hiroki Kuroda (SP - LAD) for Brett Cecil (SP - TOR). As mentioned before, I'm taking a chance on a talented young guy. Inconsistency is expected, so I'll play the matchups.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

First Update

Well, it's been a while since my last post, so here's my first update!

Today marks the end of the third week of real and fantasy baseball alike. After 5-5 ties in both weeks 1 and 2, I am taking a thumping by my opponent this week. I'm losing 2-7, and it appears that will be the final.

What's going wrong? Outside of my teams lack of steals this week, nothing. My pitching was clicking on all cylinders- 5 wins, 7 saves, 1.86 ERA, 1.08 WHIP, with 71 strikeouts! Unfortunately, every now and again there is a clusterfuck week, where you hit a team that is even hotter... my opponent's pitchers (anchored by the strong Zack Greinke and Rich Harden) were dominant. His roster had 46 innings pitched, with only 6 earned runs yielded. Fuck me!

So, while I still grabbed saves and strikeouts, I reluctantly handed him ERA and WHIP. We pushed with 5 wins apiece. The wheels fell off my offense this week- a fact that I will attribute to a low .238 AVG (and an assumed low OBP, which meant few basestealing opportunities).

Bottom line- my pitching would have gone 5-0 against 9 of the other 10 teams in the league this week (4-1 against another). My 3 steals would have actually won that category more often than not, meaning that in any other matchup the potential to go 5-5 or 6-4 was there. Sometimes matchups dictate otherwise... That is the joy, and pain, of head-to-head leagues.

Current Record:
12-17-1 (8th place)

Due Up:
My week 4 opponent has a battered pitching staff, but has some speed potential with both Ellsbury and Jose Reyes on offense. With 0 closers on roster (1 SV to date as a team), and 5 inconsistent starters, I should take all 5 pitching categories. It will be a dogfight for steals. Outlook: 5-5.

Recent Moves:
-4/5/2009: Placed Ervin Santana (SP - LAA) on DL, added Hiroki Kuroda (SP - LAD) in time for April 6 start. Kuroda currently on roster, but on DL as well.
-4/12/2009: Dropped Dan Wheeler (RP - TB) for Rafael Soriano (RP - ATL). Wheeler has since struggled, while Soriano has pitched 5 quality innings, notching 2 saves.
-4/14/2009: Dropped Lastings Milledge (OF - WAS) for Randy Winn (OF - SF). Milledge was optioned to AAA; up till now Winn has yet to provide any real value.
-4/21/2009: Dropped Grant Balfour (RP - TB) for Scott Downs (RP - TOR). Balfour did not offer any value at this point, while Downs has since stepped in and converted 2 saves.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Six-Four: 2009 Draft Results

Roster:
C - (empty)
1B - (empty)
2B Rickie Weeks (2B - MIL)
3B Chone Figgins (2B, 3B - LAA)
SS Jimmy Rollins (SS - PHI)
OF Lastings Milledge (OF - WAS)
OF Willy Tavarez (OF - CIN)
OF Carlos Gomez (OF - MIN)
Util Michael Bourn (OF - HOU)

SP Tim Lincecum (SP - SF)
SP Dan Haren (SP - ARI)
RP Joe Nathan (CL - MIN)
RP Francisco Rodriguez (CL - NYM)
P Jonathan Broxton (CL - LAD)
P Dan Wheeler (RP - TB)
P Grant Balfour (RP - TB)
BN Felix Hernandez (SP - SEA)
BN Ervin Santana (SP - LAA)
BN Carlos Zambrano (SP - CHC)
BN Matt Cain (SP - SF)
BN Brandon Morrow (SP, RP - SEA)
BN Jered Weaver (SP - LAA)
BN Chris Volstad (SP - FLA)

Round-by-round commentary:
Pre: I landed the 12th overall pick, so unless somebody else reaches I am set to grab both Johan and Timmay.
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1. Santana taken 7th overall. I'm hoping Rollins rolls down, or else I'll be massively reaching.... Rollins it is.
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2. Took Lincecum at the turn. Next picks need to be pitching, and I'll have to leave Ichiro on the board if he's there.
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Pitching is going off the board left and right. Reaches on CC, Hamels... I'm hoping for Webb, Nathan and Papelsmear to reach me.
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3. Dan Haren. He was the best pitcher available at this point, without an injury history.
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4. My favorite closer, and guy I grab every year was available- Joe Nathan. There was an abundance of speed available (Ichiro, Crawford), but I have to remember I can pick it up later for cheap.
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Starting to think pick 12 was actually a curse. Positioning is off. Should have prayed for a middle pick. Mothafuck!
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5. Don't call him Sean, call him CHONEEE!
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6. K-Rod. Eh, not exactly a closer with peripherals, but that'll do pig, that'll do...
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7. King Felix, time to continue towards that potential, son!
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8. Santana on the board! Yeah, Ervin....
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Jesus H Fucking Christ, you would think that everyone in this league is going for a pitching approach. On average pitchers have been taken a full round before their ranking should dictate. I hate you all. Die.
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9. Crazy Z, Carlos Zambrano. I'm hoping for circa- well, circa whenever it was he was putting it all together a few years back.
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10. Loading up on the extra closers, nabbed Jonathan Broxton.
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11. I hope the Giants AAA offense can muster enough runs to improve that "other" SF ace, Matt Cain.
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12. I took Lastings Milledge. What the hell name is Lastings? Anyway, I digress... I was tempted to grab Willy Tavarez 60 slots over ranking, but didn't want to draw too much attention to my slow and steady stockpiling of steals. Good alliteration. Thank you!
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13. The one-tool fool was still around, Willy Tavarez.
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14. Brandon Morrow - could start, could close, could wind up as a setup man. So, I have a 2-outta-3 shot at something valuable.
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***On a totally unrelated note, some guy who goes by "Yuri Sucart" has had the most hilarious draft I've ever seen. In order of selection: Alex Rodriguez, Jose Valverde, Mark DeRosa (lol), Adam LaRoche, Coco Crisp, Oliver Perez, Chris Perez, Ian Snell, Christian Guzman, Nick Blackburn, Ivan Rodriguez, Russ Springer, Max Ramirez (who? 3rd string Texas catcher), Mark Worrell, Arias Joaquin, Ramon Ramirez, Aaron Boone, Wilson Betemit, Josh Geer, Emil Brown, and finished things off with Brad Snyder. I know players pretty well, and I had to look a handful of these guys up. Good luck, bro. "It's a bold strategy, Cotton. Let's see if it pays off for 'em".***
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15. I just grabbed Rickie Weeks, which means I can now bump Chone to 3B.
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16. Swing pick went with Jered Weaver. Was tempted to grab Randy Johnson, but then thought about the prospect of having THREE starters from the Giants- and shuddered.
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Just missed on both Joey Devine AND Brad Ziegler, soon it'll be time to dig up some sleeper closers.
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17. And the raping and pillaging of steals continues, as I come in with Carlos Gomez out of Minny.
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18. Chris Volstad.
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19. Michael Bourn. Need I say more?
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20. I grabbed an expendable player who may pick up some saves in Dan Wheeler. Percival is the man there, but last season 6 Rays players notched saves. Wheeler came in behind Percival with 13, but Grant Balfour may be the better option based on his great peripherals.
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Travis Hafner just went with the 3rd to last pick in the final (21st) round. Wow, how this guy has fallen.
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21. I convinced myself to grab Balfour after the last comment. I'll see who comes off strong as a the #2 option, and drop the other.

Draft Scheduled for 2/27 at Noon Pacific

My draft is scheduled for tomorrow (Friday, 2/27/2009) at 12:00 Pacific Standard Time. I'm playing through the scenarios, and drawing up a cheat sheet for each round in preparation.

I am hoping for a late first round pick, so I can grab Johan Santana and Tim Lincecum to lock up my aces early on. If my pick falls early in the first round, I may be handcuffed to taking Jose Reyes. It's not the worst thing in the World, but it changes the strategy the rest of the way and will cause me to reach a lot more. I'll update the draft as it happens live in my next post.

Six-Four: Steal a Championship with Pitching

Most managers go into their draft looking to build a balanced team, one that will compete in all ten scoring categories (assuming standard yahoo scoring). Some managers choose to "punt", or ignore, maybe one category at most. For example, if they miss out on grabbing any of the top tier closers, they might just ignore the saves category altogether, and instead focus on strengthening the rest of their team. Six-Four Strategy takes punting categories to a whole 'nother level.

In a standard yahoo head-to-head league there are ten scoring categories: R, HR, RBI, SB, AVG, W, SV, K, ERA, WHIP. If you win six or more categories, you win the week. So, why waste your time trying to compete across the board in all ten categories? Instead, you can put yourself in a strong position to grab six of the ten categories - ignoring the other four - and win each week.

I got this idea in 2006, when a manager in one of my leagues employed this strategy. His idea was to draft only high average hitters, and load up on pitching. With at least ten starting pitchers and three closers he essentially guaranteed himself victories in W, SV, K, ERA, and WHIP. Then, with his high average sluggers, he banked on winning AVG every week.

His idea was good, but raw. First of all, batting average is an extremely unpredictable stat. It's hard to find hitters who will excel in the category EVERY season. On top of that, players are very streaky and have varied averages - batting .500 one week, and .100 the next. Furthermore, the manager did not maximize value with his pitching selections. He took Carlos Zambrano in the first round (ahead of the likes of Johan Santana), then Brad Lidge in the second, then Jason Schmidt in the third, and so on and so forth... he had the right idea, but it just begged for somebody to perfect it.

That person was me. The next year I decided to use this strategy in one of my leagues, with a few tweaks. First tweak = ditch the average. Replace it with stolen bases. Steals are easier to predict, and easier to load up on in the draft. Think of the late rounders that are one-tool base stealing machines: Willy Tavarez, Carlos Gomez, Michael Bourn, Juan Pierre, etc. The second tweak, maximize pitching value. You will have to reach on a lot of pitchers in the draft, but you don't want to overdue things. That's when you start making moves like taking Roy Oswalt in the first round, or a closer in the third who ultimately loses his job. The final tweak, avoid injury-prone players like the plague.

Injuries are completely unpredictable, but you can position yourself better by not touching players who have been on the disabled list multiple times. Rich Harden has a high ceiling, but he's not worth banking on. This is one of the biggest threats to this strategy. In 2007 when I first tried this strategy myself, I picked Chris Carpenter in the second round. This move killed my fantasy season, as he was hurt early on and never contributed the rest of the way. I lost an ace, and couldn't make up for it on the waiver wire.

Here are the key points, some of which were mentioned above:
1. Draft pitching early, draft it often. You will want roughly ten starting pitchers.
2. Draft elite closers. You aren't just getting them for saves, they will save you in ERA, WHIP, and they'll pitch multiple times a week.
3. Mix some basestealers into your selections. Don't be scared to take Jose Reyes in the first round if you have the chance, that will get you in a good position. If you miss out on a guy like him, don't worry, just grab your pitching instead and hold off on the steals until later.
4. Avoid anyone with recent, or multiple injuries. Francisco Liriano, Josh "Blisterin'" Beckett, and Rich Harden all come to mind.
5. Don't be afraid to skimp on offense. Catchers and firstbasemen typically are not stolen base machines. You might be better suited to not even draft a player for these positions, and instead grab an extra middle reliever or starting pitcher later in the draft.
6. Most of your bench will be pitching. Standard yahoo has 21 roster spots. You'll want roughly 13 pitchers and 8 hitters. Each additional pitcher means more opportunities for wins, more innings eaten, and more strikeouts. Anyone who can pad your pitching categories is a good addition.
7. The waiver wire is your best friend. You will make a lot of moves. Play the hot hands, and look for good pitching matchups. If it's late in the week, and you absolutely need a W to secure the wins category, look at the probable starters and find who's pitching against the Nationals, Royals, Padres, or other poor hitting teams.
8. This isn't a guarantee for every week. Sometimes your basestealers will score runs in bunches and you'll nab that category too, for a 7-3 win. Other times your pitching just won't click one week, and you may drop a few categories there to lose 4-6. On average it will even out, and you should make the playoffs. The nice thing about maximizing pitching is that the tie break in yahoo is ERA. This factor comes into play during the playoffs, where a 5-5 split is likely... but with the quality pitching you throw out you should win based on the ERA tie break more often than not.

So, how do you draft this season? Here is a projected first ten rounds of the draft:

Round - Player
1 - Top 5 pick = Jose Reyes. Anything lower take Johan Santana
2 - Tim Lincecum
3 - If Reyes in round 1, take a SP. If Johan in round 1, take Ichiro.
4 - Elite closer. You aren't drafting for SV's per se, so Nathan > Papelbon > K-Rod
5 - Elite closer. If no Ichiro or Reyes, you could swoop in on Ellsbury, Victorino.
6 - SP
7 - Chone Figgins
8 - SP/Closer
9 - SP/Closer
10 - Basestealer

The rest of the way you want to continue to load up on stolen bases and starting pitchers. In the first 10 rounds I think you should have 3 closers, 5 starters, and 2 offensive players. You can't be scared to reach on players. Johan is ranked 14th overall in yahoo, but he likely will be your first round selection regardless.

I ran a mock draft on www.couchmanagers.com to gear up for my real draft, and here's my team. NOTE: Couch Managers has roster limitations that yahoo does not - I was required to fill every position (including C, 1B) so I took players there that I would have normally replaced with more pitching. Also, they had a smaller roster size than yahoo, which meant less pitchers than I normally would have as well. My squad...

C - Kurt Suzuki (OAK - C)
1B - Paul Konerko (CHW - 1B)
2B - Rickie Weeks (MIL - 2B)
3B - Chone Figgins (LAA - 2B, 3B)
SS - Orlando Cabrera (CHW - SS)
OF - Ichiro Suzuki (SEA - OF)
OF - Lastings Milledge (WAS - OF)
OF - Willy Tavarez (CIN - OF)
Util - Carlos Gomez (MIN - OF)

SP - Johan Santana (NYM - SP)
SP - Tim Lincecum (SF - SP)
RP - Joe Nathan (MIN - CL)
RP - Jonathan Papelbon (BOS - CL)
P - Mariano Rivera (NYY - CL)
P - Jonathan Broxton (LAD - CL)
P - Jake Peavy (SD - SP)
BN - Felix Hernandez (SEA - SP)
BN - Matt Cain (SF - SP)

^With extra roster spots, and without Kurt Suzuki or Paul Konerko, I could have grabbed Aaron Harang, Brandon Morrow, Clayton Kershaw, and others. My goal is usually to eclipse 250 steals with my picks. I brought in 240 with this bunch, but I'm still confident. Last season both Rickie Weeks and Chone Figgins missed considerable time. Given more playing time, I could have easily added 25 steals between these two if they were healthy... which would put me around 265+ for my grand total, and to use as my totally unscientific prediction for 2009.

This strategy is susceptible to one thing - minimum innings. If your opponent catches on to your strategy, he or she may find a way to knock you off. If they get a complete game shutout from a starter, and the minimum innings pitched for the week is 9, then they can bench their pitching for the rest of the week and they should take ERA and WHIP. For this reason you can't let on to your league that you are using the Six-Four Strategy. You have to play stupid, like you're a newbie manager who drafted crazy because you don't know what you're doing.

As usual, I will draft one league under this strategy this season and track the results on this blog. Feel free to follow along as I update throughout the season. Also, try it out, and spread the word. It is a fun strategy in a fantasy game that is typically dominated by hitting, to try to win with pitching. Good luck, and enjoy!