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CAIRO’s 2011 Sleepers

5 Comments
January 10th, 2011 by
Categories: Projections, Sleepers

I always find it interesting to scan through the first projections of the year, because there are always a few players with positive dollar values whom I know nothing about. These guys are not usually the big name prospects, but they are guys who could provide a little value for an end-game selection, if their situation looks promising in the spring.

I’ve discovered the past two years that it’s pretty safe to ignore the no-name catchers who crop up on the Price Guide rankings; catcher is a weak position offensively so its possible to have MLB-caliber batting (and be lacking the MLB-caliber defense).

The other type of player who tends to show up are Rockies, whose hitting projections look better because the ballpark is factored in. They aren’t good hitters; they are just projected in a good ballpark.

Ignoring those guys, the top couple of sleepers I see are:

Zack Cozart (Cin – SS) $12
Looking at Cincinnati’s depth chart, shortstop looks like a depressing position for 2011. Early on, it looked like Paul Janish would be getting the primary nod, but the recent signing of Edgar Renteria changes that a bit. Renteria hasn’t had much fantasy impact over the past couple of years, but it seems likely he’ll be seeing time at short, regardless.

The projections, however, like Zack Cozart better than either Janish or Renteria. Cozart’s lack of contact hitting would make him a liability in AVG, but CAIRO puts him at a decent bet for a 20-20 season if given playing time. (A line oddly similar to fellow-Red Drew Stubbs‘s skillset, except at SS.)

I’m not holding out for Cozart to get a fulltime job with the major league team, though. Especially not with a veteran (and World Series MVP!) like Renteria earning a paycheck from the Reds. He’s more of a name to know in case of injury or a hot start in the minors.

Brandon Belt (SF – 1B) $10
Unlike Cozart, Brandon Belt has actually turned into a decent prospect. He’s a fifth round pick from 2009 who, after a solid year in the minors, has become the Giants’ #1 prospect. He’s got a bit of pop and a bit of speed, which would make him a well-rounded, low-end player for 2011. In keeper leagues he has the upside to be even more valuable beyond 2011, as well.

One issue with Belt is the presence of Aubrey Huff at firstbase. Huff, however, could be used in the outfield if Belt is pushing for a job. Belt has also been moved quickly through the minors, so I could see the Giants starting him off in AAA to begin the year. A good spring could mean Belt comes up sooner than later, though.

What’s Changed for 2011?

17 Comments
January 6th, 2011 by
Categories: Projections

As the fantasy baseball draft season gets underway, I’d like to survey the landscape and see what has changed since last year.

Playing Time Projections
Community playing time projections were an eyeopener for me last year. Combining computer projections for rates with a human understanding of each team’s situation was a huge step forward for accuracy. I’d like to add the ability to adjust any projections for playing time, and I’d like to find some way to get playing time estimates earlier this year.

No more CHONE
Sean announced he has a gig for a real team, which means there won’t be any 2011 CHONE projections. CHONE has been a staple here for the last couple of years. Not only was it a very accurate system, it typically came out early (December) and gave valuable projections for guys coming from Japan’s NPB league (e.g. Colby Lewis in 2010). Losing CHONE affects the composite projections, and so I’m going to be needing to look for new sources this year.

Oliver Improvements
The Hardball Times has definitely improved their Oliver projections for 2011, adding in a dollar value calculator similar to what the Price Guide is doing. They had already been doing custom playing time projections, which I mentioned above as a key element for accuracy. Yeah, it’s $15, but, of the various non-free options, I think it has the most going for it. Even without the price difference, I’d much rather have THT’s Forecasts than Baseball Prospectus’s Fantasy package ($20; with PECOTA surviving on reputation) or Shandler’s Baseball Forecaster ($25; with rehashed articles and no custom calculator).

What else has changed for fantasy drafts in 2011?

The First Projections of 2011: CAIRO

4 Comments
January 5th, 2011 by
Categories: Uncategorized

Early fantasy drafters get ready: The Price Guide has its first 2011 Projections, SG’s CAIRO projections. Yankees fans already know about the excellent Replacement Level Yankees Weblog where SG posts. We non-Yankee fans can still find some great projection info at RLYW, like SG’s explanation of the CAIRO methodology and his 2011 projected standings (updated throughout the preseason).

Evaluating 2010: Kelly Johnson

2 Comments
August 30th, 2010 by
Categories: Projections, Sleepers

There’s no doubt about it, 2009 was an awful year for Kelly Johnson. After two solid seasons for the Braves, his .224 batting average last year cost him his starting gig and caused Atlanta to non-tender him after the season. He latched on in Arizona as the replacement for free agent 2B Felipe Lopez. It seems that many fantasy baseball owners had given up on him, as well. Coming into 2010, Yahoo, for example, didn’t have Johnson ranked in the top 25 fantasy second basemen. The Price Guide, by contrast, had him at a very draftable $7 price.

Kelly wasn’t quite the sleeper that Colby Lewis was, however. Analysts who were aware of good projection systems didn’t ignore him: Grey at Razzball had a very reasonable analysis (although he hedges by leaving Johnson out of the top 20 2B). Tim Dierkes, likewise, had him as an undervalued hitter, worth $6 despite being drafted in the 26th round. And, of course, I included him on my All-Bargain Team back in March.

So I wasn’t the only voice shouting in the wilderness, but Kelly Johnson was still a cheap pick coming into the season. That would change quickly, though: Johnson’s torrid April no doubt resulted in a lot of waiver wire adds in leagues where he wasn’t drafted. He knocked 9 homers while batting .313, even hitting for the cycle for good measure. He’s cooled off since then, but his season line will probably end up as a pretty normal Johnson-esque season: Double-digit HR and SB with a average around .270-.280. That’s a good, middle-tier 2B after Cano and Utley.

I see one big lesson here:

Don’t write a player off after one bad year.

Johnson had a history of being a good ballplayer. He was young — 28 coming into the season — so there was no reason to expect his poor 2009 was age-related decline. While you certainly take 2009 into account, you can’t discard the sustained success he had in the two years before.

Example #2 for this lesson is Geovany Soto: How did fantasy owners forget about a good 2008 after a poor 2009? Like Johnson, he’s under 30 and presumably still in his prime. The smart choice is to consider a player’s full history — giving the most weight to the most recent season, yes, but not neglecting to consider earlier successes.

Evaluating 2010: Colby Lewis

1 Comment
August 27th, 2010 by
Categories: Projections, Sleepers

Colby Lewis was probably my favorite sleeper coming into 2010. His signing with the Rangers from the Japanese NPB league was completely unnoticed by fantasy magazines. Yahoo had him ranked as the 339th best player for 2010 — irrelevant for mixed leagues. I’ve searched back through articles and posts from this winter, and I didn’t find much hype from Internet writers, either. (Consider the lack of optimism from this Fantasy Roundtable in early April, although even that was too late for drafting.)

Yet in January 2010, I wrote a post entitled “Johan Santana, Josh Beckett and…Colby Lewis” highlighting a projection that put Colby Lewis in the ballpark of those two perennial stars. Lewis was the most surprising name to me when I ran the initial CHONE projections through the Price Guide. CHONE predicted a 3.96 ERA, 1.20 WHIP, and 8.0 K/9 (although Sean later adjusted it more conservatively to account for Lewis’s poor MLB seasons from several years ago).

Although my post was not as strong a recommendation as that title makes it sound, I did conclude with this line:

Even using the more pessimistic ZiPS, I feel pretty good about paying at least $5-6 for Colby Lewis. At that price, it’s not a big deal to cut him if he doesn’t work out. If it turns out CHONE is right, then that’s a cheap bet that could pay huge dividends.

Basically, Colby Lewis is the kind of risk you take that helps win your league. He offered little downside as a late round, $1 pick, and he had plenty of upside. That $1 pick has (to date) netted about $12 of value in a standard league in 2010, and great keeper value for 2011 and beyond.

What are the lessons here?

Pay attention to NPB stars coming to MLB.
Sure, everyone notices guys like Daisuke Matsuzaka and their huge posting fees. Watch for guys (like Hiroki Kuroda recently) who might not project as stars but who do look like fantasy contributors, especially since these guys will come so much cheaper at the draft than the Matsuzakas will. Note: As in the case of Lewis, the guys without Japanese-sounding names may even get less attention.

Don’t be afraid to use your final picks on high-upside players
At the end of the draft, you are basically just rounding out your roster or filling your bench. You can target reliable veterans — maybe this year it would be guys like Vicente Padilla or Tim Wakefield — who have clear flaws but don’t project to be horrendous. Or, you can take a gamble on a player who might be terrible, but who also has a good chance of turning a profit.

At 2010 drafts, guys like Colby Lewis were the exact kind of sleeper to target if you wanted endgame players who could push you towards a winning season.

Posts on the Way

7 Comments
August 27th, 2010 by
Categories: Site News

You may have noticed that it’s been quiet around here… I have had some real-life issues going on this summer that have kept me from the site.

First off, I apologize to those who have sent me emails over the past couple of months, most of which have gone unanswered. I’m afraid at this point I can’t go digging back through to reply to them all. So, if you still have a question or a problem to report, please email me again. I will be trying to reply to everything sent from this point forward.

Secondly, I hope to write a few posts this week accessing how well the projections did in 2010. I have a feeling the preseason dollar values did very well this year. I’m planning on highlighting some of the successes and see if there’s anything to be learned from the failures.

Overperformers and Underperformers

4 Comments
May 8th, 2010 by
Categories: Projections

Roughly one-fifth of the season is in the books. Since the Price Guide has daily updates on year-to-date stats, let’s look at who the biggest fantasy overperformers and underperformers are so far this year, relative to the composite projections in March.

We’ll start with the players who have been the biggest fantasy disappointments so far in 2010:

Name Proj. Act. Diff.
Javier Vazquez $28 -$30 -$58
Josh Beckett $20 -$32 -$52
Ben Sheets $9 -$30 -$39
Jake Peavy $17 -$21 -$38
Felix Hernandez $28 -$7 -$35
Edwin Jackson $2 -$33 -$35
Clayton Kershaw $18 -$12 -$30
Chad Billingsley $18 -$12 -$30
Gavin Floyd $3 -$27 -$30
Jair Jurrjens $16 -$14 -$30
Johan Santana $28 -$1 -$29
Wandy Rodriguez $14 -$15 -$29
Aaron Harang $9 -$19 -$28
Ian Kinsler $18 -$9 -$27

I’m noticing a trend here…Lots of SP and an injured Ian Kinsler at the end. I don’t think this is cause for alarm for all of these guys just yet, though: Last year, this list was headlined by CC Sabathia, who ended up as one of the top fantasy pitchers. (Beckett also appeared in about the same spot.)

How about overperformers?

Name Proj. Act. Diff.
Alex Gonzalez -$14 $24 $37
Livan Hernandez -$17 $18 $36
Barry Zito -$7 $27 $34
Ike Davis -$31 $2 $32
Ty Wigginton -$11 $21 $32
Jose Guillen -$12 $19 $31
Doug Fister -$11 $19 $31
Andruw Jones -$10 $20 $30
Fred Lewis -$27 $2 $30
Austin Kearns -$25 $5 $30
Austin Jackson -$7 $21 $28
Reid Brignac -$25 $2 $27
Sergio Santos -$22 $4 $27
David Price -$5 $22 $27
Ubaldo Jimenez $7 $33 $26
Brett Cecil -$13 $13 $26

As with the previous list, there are quite a few SP. Which tells you what you already knew — there’s a lot of variability with pitchers.

Ubaldo has been fantastic, but it was pretty clear before the season that the projections were too low on him. (They all penalized him heavily for playing in Colorado, but his groundball tendencies make the thin air a lesser factor.)

I have the most faith in the prospects on the list — Ike Davis, Austin Jackson, and David Price, especially — to maintain their strong start. It’s not unusual for a young player to improve, and the projections had much less data about these players. I’m much less optimistic about Alex Gonzalez and Livan Hernandez.

At this point in the season, I’m still putting more faith in the preseason projections than on 1+ months of stats. Keep watching the Price Guide, though. Things will start to even out as the 2010 fantasy stats accumulate.

Almost There

5 Comments
April 2nd, 2010 by
Categories: Price Guide, Site News

I’ve got three rather significant updates to mention today. Other than adding year-to-date dollar values once the season starts, these will probably be the final changes for this draft season.

1. Steamer projections have been added.

Steamer is a set of projections produced by Jared Cross and co., who have also done some recent forecast evaluations. I’m not adding it into the Composite projections for this year, but I probably will next year (especially if I can get my hands on it earlier).

Unlike most of the projections which aren’t expecting Aaron Hill to repeat his very good 2009, Steamer has him at $19 in a standard league. Other Steamer sleepers: Nolan Reimold ($17), Colby Lewis ($16), Brett Anderson ($21), and Stephen Strasburg ($17).

It has no interest in Jair Jurrjens ($1) or Matt Cain ($1), however. I’ll try to remember to check back in October to see how the picks played out.

2. The composite projections have been updated with the final community forecasts.

Voting closed today on the Community Forecast project. In fantasy terms, there hasn’t been a whole lot of change since Monday, but a few players have seen a small increase or decrease:

David Murphy -$7 (+5)
Chris Davis $5 (+4)
Aaron Hill $11 (+3)
Jose Reyes $15 (+3)
Coco Crisp -$6 (+3)
Juan Uribe -$8 (+3)

Landon Powell -$11 (-3)
Ryan Church -$12 (-3)
Carlos Santana -$9 (-3)
Corey Hart $0 (-4)
Jesus Flores -$14 (-5)

Oakland, Texas, and Washington were still low on votes last time, so their players were some of the bigger movers on this update.

It looks like Mets fans are feeling more optimistic about Jose Reyes‘s maladies, as he climbed $3 in the past few days. Corey Hart, on the other hand, is shedding value (down $4) after a terrible spring could cost him a starting job. Although Chris Davis has gained some ground, I’d wager that if voting continued he would probably end up where he started. The Rangers’ acquisition of Ryan Garko means Davis might be losing some AB.

There are a few new names showing up as well, most notably:

Aroldis Chapman -$3
Hisanori Takahashi -$7
Jim Edmonds -$15

3. You can now enter keeper prices without saving stats.

One of the most common questions I am asked is how to enter keeper prices. That’s because that feature has been hidden in with “Let me edit these projections.” But things have changed:

Also, some of you had asked about entering keeper prices without saving the stats as well. Up until this point, it couldn’t be done. Now, you can actually transfer a keeper list across projections to compare, for example, what CAIRO and ZiPS think of your choices.

There have also been a few minor Price Guide bugs cleaned up, like QS and E showing up incorrectly on the Composite projections and inflation prices being left off of Excel.

Community Forecasts Updated (03/29)

4 Comments
March 29th, 2010 by
Categories: Price Guide

I updated the composite projections to include playing time votes from the Community Forecast through this morning.

Reassuringly, there has been very little movement since the early version on Friday. Of the 1081 players listed originally:

11 gained more than $2
37 gained $2
257 gained $1
561 stayed the same
181 lost $1
22 lost $2
12 lost more than $2

Most of those 23 players who changed by more than $2 are of little fantasy interest. Here are the players you might care about:

Chris Snyder -$1 (+8)
Pablo Sandoval $15 (+4)
Torii Hunter $19 (+4)
Jason Bulger -$1 (+4)
Kazuo Matsui -$3 (+3)
Russell Branyan -$11 (-3)
Howie Kendrick $9 (-4)
Carlos Santana -$6 (-4)

The Angels were low on votes last week, and so their players are some of the biggest movers over the weekend. Branyan drops a little on news that he’ll start the season on the DL.

This change also adds 68 new players to the mix, such as fantasy non-factors Livan Hernandez (-$16), Todd Wellemeyer (-$15), and Robb Quinlan (-$26). Of the new players, Jeff Weaver is the highest ranked, at -$7. Nothing to see here.

I’m feeling really good about how the numbers look now. I’ll probably keep updating every couple of days until Opening Day, but I doubt much will change. As vote totals accumulate, any movement will probably be smaller than even this update.

Community Forecasts are Up

11 Comments
March 26th, 2010 by
Categories: Price Guide

Tom Tango has started up this year’s Community Forecasts, a project that recruits hundreds of fans to predict playing time for players on their favorite teams.

I took a snapshot of the PA and IP from the voting as of this evening and added a new option to the Price Guide to use it for playing time. It’s the new default option for the Composite Projections — “2010 Composite (CF)”.

At first glance, this appears to be an improvement over my previous manually tweaked playing time values. Several of the players who seemed too high (Carlos Guillen, David Freese, Matt Diaz) look much more reasonable, now. Garrett Jones, Nyjer Morgan, and Franklin Gutierrez are among the biggest gainers.

The fans are also doing a better job of sorting out the Rockies OF and 2B situations that I was: Seth Smith, Carlos Gonzalez, and Clint Barmes each gain a few dollars. Brad Hawpe, Eric Young, and Dexter Fowler drop a little bit.

Let me know what you think. I plan to keep updating periodically as the voting continues.