As you may have noticed, things have been a little busy in the land of Hippeaux. I apologize for the fact that, at the time of year when many are itching for preseason predictions and analysis, I've been busy with my day job. Over the weekend, I'll get out the "ouija board" and continue my series on Tout Wars. I will obviously have an unfair advantage in my predictions, having already watched a game or two of Milwaukee v. Cincinnati. In the meantime, here's a lineup of guys I'm "touting" for breakout campaigns in 2011. I know it's belated, but there are still plenty of drafts on the horizon.
Russell Martin - C - New York Yankees
What's new, right? Martin's always been among my favorites and it's going to pain me dearly to see him in pinstripes, but as a fantasy owner, this is a dream come true. For one thing, Martin's popularity has absolutely tanked. After his first three seasons, when Martin was averaging 14 HR and 16 SB a year, we probably got a little giddy, ranking him alongside the McCann's and V-Mart's of the world. Now, coming off two seasons in which he was dogged by injuries, buried in a mediocre lineup, and discouraged by an unsupportive organization, he's been more or less forgotten (he's the 17th most popular catcher in ESPN standard leagues). The argument for Martin goes like this:
1.) He's a high energy player and excellent defender who Joe Girardi is going to fall in love with. So long as his hip is fully healthy, I think he's a synch to start 140 games.
2.) Even in his worst years, he's shown good plate discipline. He's going to get on base. Batting at the bottom of New York's lineup, that should mean solid runs and probably solid RBI as well (for his position).
3.) He's the only catcher in fantasy baseball who gives you any steals (double-digits in 4 out of 5 seasons and was on pace for that again last year before his injury).
4.) He's still just 28.
(P.S. In BLOGZKRIEG! I insured myself by adding Jesus Montero for a surprisingly cheap price. I recommend this course of action in deep leagues. If Martin goes down or fails to perform, you can bet Montero will be his replacement, either behind the plate or at DH, with Posada moving as well.)
Kila Ka'aihue - 1B - Kansas City Royals
I've been promoting the Kila Monster for three seasons now, ever since he posted a 1085 OPS and a 104/67 BB/K ratio in the high minors in 2008. The Royals, of course, would seem to have botched his development, flipping him back and forth between leagues and never giving him a prolonged look in the majors. This year, he has until July (by which time Super Two eligibility will have expired and K.C. might be tempted to promote Eric Hosmer). Ka'aihue showed how serious he was about taking advantage of his opportunity by hitting .397 with a 1307 OPS this spring. Obviously, we can't read a ton into those numbers, but I think it suggests that he's chomping at the bit to show off his skills for teams who might free him from baseball purgatory. Don't reach, but as a cheap corner infielder or utilityman, Kila has a lot of upside and not that much downside.
Rickie Weeks - 2B - Milwaukee Brewers
You're going to be reading quite a bit about the Brewers in these pages in the coming months, just as you did about the Rangers in 2010. Hopefully, I can spur them to the same sort of luck. Many will question Weeks ability to duplicate what he did last year (.269 AVG-112 R-29 HR-83 RBI-11 SB-830 OPS), but I think that's just the beginning. It feels like Weeks has been around forever, but that's just because he was such a high profile prospect and got promoted at such a young age. He's still just 28, with plenty of room for improvement, if he can just stay on the field. Oh...you say...well, isn't that his problem? Let me just name a few guys getting drafted ahead of him: Chase Utley, Ian Kinsler, and Dustin Pedroia. You want a bastion of health at this thin position? Get in line.
Pablo Sandoval - 3B - San Francisco Giants
Kung Fu Panda's incredible offseason health regimen has turned him into a preseason favorite for Comeback Player of the Year. In BBA BLOGZKRIEG! I had to go all the way to $19 to roster him, which I was more than willing to do. Let's face it, you can't hit .330 with a 943 OPS over a full season at the age of 22 as a "fluke." It just doesn't happen. His belly has disappeared. His skills haven't.
Mike Aviles - 2B, 3B, SS - Kansas City Royals
Aviles has a strong chance of being this season's Martin Prado. Don't overestimate his value, but don't ignore the fact that he's hit .298 over three big-league seasons, despite hitting only .183 in his injury-shortened 2009 campaign. Aviles is a legitimate .300+ hitter who throws in double-digit power and double-digit speed and, perhaps most importantly, will qualify at three shallow infield positions in most leagues. Like Prado and Placido Polanco before him, he's great insurance against injury and batting average protection. Buy with confidence.
Ryan Braun - LF - Milwaukee Brewers
There are different breeds of "sleepers." Mike Aviles and Ryan Braun are definitely not of the same species. That said, every year there is a premier player (or two) who consistently fall to far. Last year's examples were Miguel Cabrera and Josh Hamilton. This year I think that distinction belongs to the two Brewers sluggers, Braun and Fielder. A popular new crop of young, high-upside outfielders, led by Carlos Gonzalez, Jason Heyward, Andrew McCutchen, and Mike Stanton have seduced fantasy leaguers into believing there is a panoply of five-tool options in the outfield. When you have to fill five slots, as is the case in most leagues, that's simply not the case. If Braun is still around at the end of the first round or goes for less than $40 in a standard mixed league auction, you'll regret letting him go to somebody else. This is a guys who's 162-game averages are .307 AVG-111 R-36 HR-118 RBI-18 SB-918 OPS. Yes, please! Oh, and he just turned 27.
Delmon Young - LF - Minnesota Twins
For some reason, people hate Delmon Young. I don't know exactly why it is. Maybe it dates back to that minor-league fracas he got himself into. Maybe it's because he often looks a little lackadaisical, even a little confused, in the spirit of J. D. Drew and B. J. Upton. To me, he seems like a quiet unassuming kid. I emphasize kid because last season, prior to which a whole lot of pundits were ready to declare the former #1 pick a bust, Delmon Young was 24-years-old. Remember what you were doing when you were 24? Who's the bigger "bust"? Delmon proceeded to hit .298 and drive in 112 runs. Now, I'm the first to admit, he got a lot of RBI chances. I wouldn't expect him to match that total. But I see no reason why he can't improve in every other category, as he continues to cut down on strikeouts and improve his power and discipline. I'll guarantee you this, he's better than the 25th best outfielder in fantasy baseball.
Jay Bruce - RF - Cincinnati Reds
I know, I know: "BANDWAGON!!!" Sometimes the conventional wisdom is simply wisdom. Bruce has made strides in each of his first three seasons. Everybody knows he's a industrial-strength toolbox. Last year, he started to lay off pitches that even the catcher couldn't reach. And, really, that's about all he can't hit. Second half splits in 2010: .306 AVG-30 R-15 HR-34 RBI-0 SB-951 OPS. Don't be the fool who takes him ahead of Ichiro or Shin-Soo Choo, but don't be the idiot who believes he'd be better off with Corey Hart.
The following pitchers I covered in the most recent edition of "21st Century Cys," so I won't belabor the point with more than a few additional words:
Francisco Liriano - SP - Minnesota Twins
Say hello to the 2011 AL Cy Young.
Chad Billingsley - SP - Los Angeles Dodgers
Could be the Ubaldo of 2011, which doesn't mean he won't suffer from a second-half slide.
Ian Kennedy - SP - Arizona D-Backs
Yankees fans will be cursing the trade that sent Kennedy to Arizona about every fifth day.
Here are the underrated veterans:
Carlos Zambrano - SP - Chicago Cubs
No more Lou Pinella. No more Derrek Lee. No more Carlos Silva. No more Milton Bradley. Perhaps Big Z will get pissed off be somebody else, but in the second half of 2010, he showed what he could do with a little anger management: 8-0, 1.58 ERA, 1.27 WHIP, 64 K, 74 IP. I'm obviously hoping for more of the same in 2011. As an added bonus, Z's meltdown from a season ago has made him eligible as a relief pitcher in many leagues. Depending upon your scoring system, that could dramatically increase his value.
Fausto Carmona - SP - Cleveland Indians
In 2007, Carmona was the best pitcher on a staff that also featured C. C. Sabathia and Cliff Lee. The following two seasons, things went terribly wrong. Last year, Carmona recaptured some of that former glory and earned himself an All-Star bid (the truly pathetic quality of his teammates didn't hurt). Carmona won't pile up strikeouts, but he keeps the ball on the ground and has the potential to pitch deep into games, giving you significant aid in ERA and even WHIP. Victories may be few and far between in Cleveland, but even with some bad luck, he got 13 in 2010. This is a very strong pitcher who is almost always available in the late stages of your auction or draft.
Showing posts with label Jay Bruce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jay Bruce. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Tout Wars Mixed 2011 Pt. 1: Backstops & The Bruce
The 2011 Tout Wars Mixed League Auction began with the nomination of Jay Bruce. Every year a few players generate an abundance of buzz during the fantasy baseball prep season. This year, nobody has been more buzzworthy than Bruce. Not yet 24, the Reds rightfielder is now three seasons into his major-league career and in 2010 he managed to both stay off the disabled list and show enough patience to manage a respectable average (.281). A torrential second half (.306 AVG, 15 HR, 951 OPS) adds to the perception that Bruce is on the verge of superstardom, as many have been expecting every since he broke into the bigs.
So, perhaps, Andy Behrens of Yahoo!, Tout Wars Mixed defending champion, believed Bruce was the perfect player to generate active, maybe even excessive, bidding from the 15 fantasy baseball "experts" who were itching to start spending. Indeed, more than half the assembled players got a bid in before Dave Feldman of MLB.com rostered Bruce for $19. Although by no means an obscene number (the experts do occasionally practice restraint!), it did turn out to be more than was paid for more established outfielders like Curtis Granderson ($18), Shane Victorino ($17), and Corey Hart ($14). It was the first of several cases of Touts going to the mat for popular young "breakthrough" candidates. Clayton Kershaw, for instance, cost Fred Zinkie of FantasyBaseball.com $19, more than former Cy Young candidates like Zack Greinke ($18), Dan Haren ($18), Ubaldo Jimenez ($17), and David Price ($17), none of whom are exactly "over the hill" themselves.
Following a year in which many of the best fantasy producers - guys like Carlos Gonzalez, Joey Votto, Jose Bautista, Jered Weaver, and Jimenez - had been relatively unheralded in the preseason, the temptation to pay for "upside" was even greater. Minor bidding wars developed at some surprising places. The 21-year-old Florida outfielder, Mike Stanton, who, in both his impressive power and his 34.3 K%, is very reminiscent of Jay Bruce circa 2008, somehow managed to cost more than Bruce, and more than Hunter Pence, Delmon Young, or B. J. Upton. Another sophomore uberprospect, Carlos Santana, whose rookie season was cut short by an unfortunate and catastrophic collision at home plate, though he possesses all of 46 games of major-league experience, was Tout Wars second most expensive backstop, topping steady producers like Victor Martinez and Brian McCann, as well as the NL Rookie of the Year and postseason hero, Buster Posey.
Catchers, in general, were nominated early and often. Before the first break, Joe Mauer ($27), Posey ($23), McCann ($21), Geovany Soto ($17), Yadier Molina ($11), Matt Wieters ($10), John Jaso ($7), A. J. Pierzynski ($5), Russell Martin ($4), Nick Hundley ($3), Jesus Montero ($2), and Yorbit Torrealba ($2) had all been rostered. Certainly, this explains to some extent the furious bidding on Santana ($24), Mike Napoli ($20), and others, later in the day, when the backstop pool was getting thin. The Touts took very diverse approaches to the run on catching. Zinkie and Seth Trachtman saw an opportunity to create a large marginal advantage at the position by nabbing two premium players. Trachtman spent nearly 20% of his budget on V-Mart and Mauer. Others, like Scott Swanay, The Fantasy Sherpa, and Nando Di Fino of WSJ.com, more or less punted the position.
But from my perspective, it was Behrens who most stealthily handled the problem. Seven rounds into the nominations, when most of the participants had showed their hands, either by netting backstops or moving into the "scrubs" portion of their strategy, Behrens brought home Miguel Montero for exactly half the price of Santana. Montero is a 27-year-old D-Back, who, when healthy, has shown considerably power and respectable average for the position. And, of course, he falls into that "post-hype" prime, possessing both upside and experience. Near the auction's conclusion, Behrens nominated and won Carlos Ruiz ($3). Nobody gets goosebumps watching Carlos Ruiz, but Chooch has all the advantage of ballpark, lineup protection, and playing time certainty that one looks for in a #2 catcher, and, his excellent bat control (193/188 K/BB for his career) give him a high likelihood of providing a respectable average (for the position). In 2010, he did even more than that, hitting .302. From Montero and Ruiz, Behrens won't get Mauer and V-Mart level production, certainly, but he will get considerably more than 30% of their output, which is the price he paid for his tandem.
Next up...Tout Wars reveals that "Stubs & Scrubs" is still alive and well, and with good reason.
So, perhaps, Andy Behrens of Yahoo!, Tout Wars Mixed defending champion, believed Bruce was the perfect player to generate active, maybe even excessive, bidding from the 15 fantasy baseball "experts" who were itching to start spending. Indeed, more than half the assembled players got a bid in before Dave Feldman of MLB.com rostered Bruce for $19. Although by no means an obscene number (the experts do occasionally practice restraint!), it did turn out to be more than was paid for more established outfielders like Curtis Granderson ($18), Shane Victorino ($17), and Corey Hart ($14). It was the first of several cases of Touts going to the mat for popular young "breakthrough" candidates. Clayton Kershaw, for instance, cost Fred Zinkie of FantasyBaseball.com $19, more than former Cy Young candidates like Zack Greinke ($18), Dan Haren ($18), Ubaldo Jimenez ($17), and David Price ($17), none of whom are exactly "over the hill" themselves.
Following a year in which many of the best fantasy producers - guys like Carlos Gonzalez, Joey Votto, Jose Bautista, Jered Weaver, and Jimenez - had been relatively unheralded in the preseason, the temptation to pay for "upside" was even greater. Minor bidding wars developed at some surprising places. The 21-year-old Florida outfielder, Mike Stanton, who, in both his impressive power and his 34.3 K%, is very reminiscent of Jay Bruce circa 2008, somehow managed to cost more than Bruce, and more than Hunter Pence, Delmon Young, or B. J. Upton. Another sophomore uberprospect, Carlos Santana, whose rookie season was cut short by an unfortunate and catastrophic collision at home plate, though he possesses all of 46 games of major-league experience, was Tout Wars second most expensive backstop, topping steady producers like Victor Martinez and Brian McCann, as well as the NL Rookie of the Year and postseason hero, Buster Posey.
Catchers, in general, were nominated early and often. Before the first break, Joe Mauer ($27), Posey ($23), McCann ($21), Geovany Soto ($17), Yadier Molina ($11), Matt Wieters ($10), John Jaso ($7), A. J. Pierzynski ($5), Russell Martin ($4), Nick Hundley ($3), Jesus Montero ($2), and Yorbit Torrealba ($2) had all been rostered. Certainly, this explains to some extent the furious bidding on Santana ($24), Mike Napoli ($20), and others, later in the day, when the backstop pool was getting thin. The Touts took very diverse approaches to the run on catching. Zinkie and Seth Trachtman saw an opportunity to create a large marginal advantage at the position by nabbing two premium players. Trachtman spent nearly 20% of his budget on V-Mart and Mauer. Others, like Scott Swanay, The Fantasy Sherpa, and Nando Di Fino of WSJ.com, more or less punted the position.
But from my perspective, it was Behrens who most stealthily handled the problem. Seven rounds into the nominations, when most of the participants had showed their hands, either by netting backstops or moving into the "scrubs" portion of their strategy, Behrens brought home Miguel Montero for exactly half the price of Santana. Montero is a 27-year-old D-Back, who, when healthy, has shown considerably power and respectable average for the position. And, of course, he falls into that "post-hype" prime, possessing both upside and experience. Near the auction's conclusion, Behrens nominated and won Carlos Ruiz ($3). Nobody gets goosebumps watching Carlos Ruiz, but Chooch has all the advantage of ballpark, lineup protection, and playing time certainty that one looks for in a #2 catcher, and, his excellent bat control (193/188 K/BB for his career) give him a high likelihood of providing a respectable average (for the position). In 2010, he did even more than that, hitting .302. From Montero and Ruiz, Behrens won't get Mauer and V-Mart level production, certainly, but he will get considerably more than 30% of their output, which is the price he paid for his tandem.
Next up...Tout Wars reveals that "Stubs & Scrubs" is still alive and well, and with good reason.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Gold Gloves Meaningless, Laughable...As Usual
For those of you acquainted with the sabermetric argument for defensive statistics, there won't be much news here, but I want to make my annual rant about the Gold Glove voting, which serious students of the game stopped taking seriously a long time ago, but which is still used to incentivize contracts, on Hall of Fame plaques, and by a hoard of ignorant pundits annually. Here's the basics.
Obviously, we all prefer the aspects of the game which can be measured with our own eyes. Unfortunately, defense is something that can only effectively evaluated over the long term (even one season is kind of a small sample size). Every athlete in the league is capable of the occasional web gem. We can't allow ourselves to be conned into hyperbolic attestations based on a single play or short series of plays spanning a few games. As a result, nobody can hope to see enough baseball each season to be capable of making reasoned judgements without consulting some form of statistic. If you watch your team everyday, you probably know pretty confidently which of your defenders are good, great, fine, weak, and ugly, and you could probably get confirmation of those observations using statistics. But you can't make a reasoned, objective judgment about how your shortstop or left-fielder stacks up against the rest of the league, because you watch the 29 other teams but rarely. To make the Gold Glove a meaningful award, the voters have to rely of some conglomeration of statistics. Otherwise they are, as I've stated ad nauseum, meaningless and laugable.
I openly admit that no defensive metric is perfect. Every position demands a variety of skills and every player brings a different tools to the table. Vlad Guerrero still has an exceptional throwing arm, but as he showed during Game One of the World Series, he's no longer very flexible or fleet of foot. Juan Pierre has exceptional speed, but has a noodle arm and the tendency to take meandering routes to balls in the gap. Any defensive assessment is, at last, imperfect, regardless of how much observational and statistical data we bring to the table. We should, however, recognize that the advanced metrics (UZR is the most readily available) are based upon the charting of every play that every player is involved in. As such, they do a lot of work that our eyes cannot. There are flaws in the charting systems, certainly, but they get better with every passing year. And, if you are really geeked on defense, you can look at something like John Dewan's Fielding Bible, which will breakdown not only "overall" defensive performance, but analyze how players approach specific types of plays (coming in v. going out, up-the-middle v. in-the-hole, around the bag v. off the line, etc.).
Since no one stat tells the whole story (although UZR comes pretty close), certain comparisons are too close to call. Rob Neyer might suggest that Brett Gardner was marginally better than Carl Crawford this year, but both were extremely good. And Neyer would happily admit that the small difference between them could be related to their ballparks, pitching staffs, and the simple fact that they didn't get exactly the same set of potential chances. As such, I don't think it's all that unreasonable to give Crawford the hardware. He's been an elite defensive outfielder for far longer than Gardner, so we know there's nothing the least bit flukey about his 2010 numbers. The same can honestly be said about the choice of Evan Longoria over Adrian Beltre and Kevin Kouzmanoff, the choice of Troy Tulowitzki over Brendan Ryan, the choice of Albert Pujols over Ike Davis, etc.
All told, I'd say 13 of the 18 Gold Glove recipients were at least modestly deserving this season, which is actually pretty good, so I'm going to reserve my comments for the ones who clearly weren't:
Let's get this out of the way. Derek Jeter won his fifth Gold Glove for his performance in 2010. Jeter has become the posterchild for all that is wrong with the voting process. There's no doubt, in fact, that the exposes which originated out of Baseball Prospectus a few years back actually spurred Jeter to rededicate himself to defense and in '08 and '09 he was better than he'd ever been (though still not nearly the best). At this point, however, his age has merely caught up to him, and even stalwart Yankee fans will admit he's mediocre...at best. He has hardly any mobility on either side and has one of the weakest arms at his position.
What he is, however, is very sure-handed on balls hit directly at him, which explains his league-leading fielding percentage. It also explains why Alexei Ramirez created nearly twice as many outs outside the average shortstop zone and was involved in nearly 100 more plays. According to FanGraphs, all that range (not to mention his incredible throwing arm) helped Ramirez to save his team approximately fifteen more runs than Captain Intangible over the course of the 2010 season.
Jeter's isn't the only Gold Glove causing accusations of Yankee bias...
Obviously, we all prefer the aspects of the game which can be measured with our own eyes. Unfortunately, defense is something that can only effectively evaluated over the long term (even one season is kind of a small sample size). Every athlete in the league is capable of the occasional web gem. We can't allow ourselves to be conned into hyperbolic attestations based on a single play or short series of plays spanning a few games. As a result, nobody can hope to see enough baseball each season to be capable of making reasoned judgements without consulting some form of statistic. If you watch your team everyday, you probably know pretty confidently which of your defenders are good, great, fine, weak, and ugly, and you could probably get confirmation of those observations using statistics. But you can't make a reasoned, objective judgment about how your shortstop or left-fielder stacks up against the rest of the league, because you watch the 29 other teams but rarely. To make the Gold Glove a meaningful award, the voters have to rely of some conglomeration of statistics. Otherwise they are, as I've stated ad nauseum, meaningless and laugable.
I openly admit that no defensive metric is perfect. Every position demands a variety of skills and every player brings a different tools to the table. Vlad Guerrero still has an exceptional throwing arm, but as he showed during Game One of the World Series, he's no longer very flexible or fleet of foot. Juan Pierre has exceptional speed, but has a noodle arm and the tendency to take meandering routes to balls in the gap. Any defensive assessment is, at last, imperfect, regardless of how much observational and statistical data we bring to the table. We should, however, recognize that the advanced metrics (UZR is the most readily available) are based upon the charting of every play that every player is involved in. As such, they do a lot of work that our eyes cannot. There are flaws in the charting systems, certainly, but they get better with every passing year. And, if you are really geeked on defense, you can look at something like John Dewan's Fielding Bible, which will breakdown not only "overall" defensive performance, but analyze how players approach specific types of plays (coming in v. going out, up-the-middle v. in-the-hole, around the bag v. off the line, etc.).
Since no one stat tells the whole story (although UZR comes pretty close), certain comparisons are too close to call. Rob Neyer might suggest that Brett Gardner was marginally better than Carl Crawford this year, but both were extremely good. And Neyer would happily admit that the small difference between them could be related to their ballparks, pitching staffs, and the simple fact that they didn't get exactly the same set of potential chances. As such, I don't think it's all that unreasonable to give Crawford the hardware. He's been an elite defensive outfielder for far longer than Gardner, so we know there's nothing the least bit flukey about his 2010 numbers. The same can honestly be said about the choice of Evan Longoria over Adrian Beltre and Kevin Kouzmanoff, the choice of Troy Tulowitzki over Brendan Ryan, the choice of Albert Pujols over Ike Davis, etc.
All told, I'd say 13 of the 18 Gold Glove recipients were at least modestly deserving this season, which is actually pretty good, so I'm going to reserve my comments for the ones who clearly weren't:
| AL SS (9 Q): | UZR | RF | FPCT | ZR | OOZ | RngR | ErrR | INN | Errors |
| Derek Jeter | -4.7 (#7) | 3.78 (#8) | .989 (#1) | 6.63 (#2) | 38 (#9) | -11.8 (#9) | 6.5 (#1) | 1303 (#4) | 6 (#1) |
| Elvis Andrus | 0.1 (#4) | 4.48 (#4) | .976 (#4) | 5.61 (#6) | 46 (#6) | 1.3 (#4) | -2.6 (#8) | 1291 (#5) | 16 (#4) |
| Cliff Pennington | 9.9 (#2) | 4.93 (#1) | .966 (#7) | 5.01 (#9) | 53 (#4) | 9.4 (#1) | 0.6 (#5) | 1304 (#3) | 25 (#9) |
| Alexei Ramirez | 10.8 (#1) | 4.89 (#2) | .974 (#6) | 5.09 (#8) | 67 (#1) | 8.4 (#2) | 1.0 (#4) | 1376 (#1) | 20 (#7) |
Let's get this out of the way. Derek Jeter won his fifth Gold Glove for his performance in 2010. Jeter has become the posterchild for all that is wrong with the voting process. There's no doubt, in fact, that the exposes which originated out of Baseball Prospectus a few years back actually spurred Jeter to rededicate himself to defense and in '08 and '09 he was better than he'd ever been (though still not nearly the best). At this point, however, his age has merely caught up to him, and even stalwart Yankee fans will admit he's mediocre...at best. He has hardly any mobility on either side and has one of the weakest arms at his position.
What he is, however, is very sure-handed on balls hit directly at him, which explains his league-leading fielding percentage. It also explains why Alexei Ramirez created nearly twice as many outs outside the average shortstop zone and was involved in nearly 100 more plays. According to FanGraphs, all that range (not to mention his incredible throwing arm) helped Ramirez to save his team approximately fifteen more runs than Captain Intangible over the course of the 2010 season.
Jeter's isn't the only Gold Glove causing accusations of Yankee bias...
Sunday, April 25, 2010
OOTP Predicts Ubaldo's No-Hitter
In the third part of my OOTP simulation series I'm looking at a lineup of players who piqued my curiousity going into the season. My primary interest had to do with their fantasy profiles, so the stats I tracked were 5 X 5 roto categories.
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