 Roy Hallady (Credits below) This article is long. Eff the intro. I’ll make euphemisms about the pitching rubber and condoms next week. For now, here is the extra-long first edition of The Rubber 2012. 1. Roy Halladay (Philadelphia Philles, ADP among SP: 1) 2. Cliff Lee (Philadelphia Phillies, ADP: 4) 3. Clayton Kershaw (Los Angeles Dodgers, ADP: 3) 4. Justin Verlander (Detroit Tigers, ADP: 2) 5. Zack Greinke (Milwaukee Brewers, ADP: 11) By a couple measures, Greinke was the best pitcher in baseball last year as he led the league in both xFIP and K/9. He also had an excellent walk rate with a 2.36 BB/9 (4.47 K/BB) and a nice groundball rate of 47.3%. Unfortunately, his ERA (3.83) didn’t match up with his 2.56 xFIP. But the reasons for that were out of his control. His BABIP was on the unlucky side at .318, his strand rate was a touch below league average at 69.8%, and his HR/FB rate was an inflated 13.6% (league average is about 10%). There is no reason to expect the bad luck to continue, and a luck-neutral Greinke is capable of being a top 5 pitcher. 6. Cole Hamels (Philadelphia Phillies, ADP: 10) 7. David Price (Tampa Bay Rays, ADP: 12) Price’s xFIP from 2009-2011: 4.46, 3.85, 3.27 Price’s K/9 from 2009-2011: 7.15, 8.11, 8.75 Price’s BB/9 from 2009-2011: 3.79, 3.41, 2.53 Price’s improvement is not as noticeable when looking at more traditional numbers like ERA. But looking at those peripheral numbers you should see a very good pitcher on the edge of becoming a great pitcher. Price is ready to enter elite territory as he enters his prime. 8. CC Sabathia (New York Yankees, ADP: 8) 9. Felix Hernandez (Seattle Mariners, ADP: 5) 10. Dan Haren (Los Angeles Angels, ADP: 9) 11. Tim Lincecum (San Francisco Giants, ADP: 6) 12. James Shields (Tampa Bay Rays, ADP: 16) 13. Jered Weaver (Los Angeles Angels, ADP: 7) Weaver’s career BABIP is .276. He’s capable of sustaining that lower-than-normal number because he’s a flyball pitcher with the ability to miss bats. But last year’s BABIP of .250 is probably not repeatable. It’s just more likely that the number will return to his mean. Kind of like his K/9 did last year (7.56) after a big uptick in 2010 (9.35). In the same way, expect his strand rate (82.6%) to return to something close to what it was the two years prior (76%). Returning to all those numbers doesn’t mean Weaver will be a bad pitcher, but it does mean he won’t be the pitcher he was last year. 14. C.J. Wilson (Los Angeles Angels, ADP: 17) 15. Ian Kennedy (Arizona Diamondback, ADP: 19) 16. Madison Bumgarner (San Francisco Giants, ADP: 21) 17. Matt Cain (San Francisco Giants, ADP: 14) 18. Jon Lester (Boston Red Sox, ADP: 13) 19. Yovani Gallardo (Milwaukee Brewers, ADP: 15) Like Price, Gallardo is entering his age 26 season and has seen improvement in key areas over the last few years. His xFIP has dropped three straight years and though his K/9 has dropped in each of the last two years his BB/9 has declined along with it. All that sounds like things I’d say about a guy I had ranked higher than his ADP, but if you’ve ever owned Gallardo, you know he’s not the most consistent pitcher. His first start of the season is a fine example of that (3.2 IP, 6 ER, 7 H, 5 BB, 4 HR, 3 K). In the end, all that really matters is his totals, but as a H2H player, I’d rather not have Gallardo blow up my ERA and WHIP a few weeks each year. 20. Mat Latos (Cincinnati Reds, ADP: 25) 21. Matt Garza (Chicago Cubs, ADP: 30) 22. Anibal Sanchez (Florida Marlins. ADP: 41) I guess this is becoming a theme of this article, but Anibal is another pitcher who has been improving over the last few years. His xFIP has gone from 4.58 to 4.04 to 3.25, his BB/9 was 4.81 in 2009 but dipped under 3.00 last year, and his K/9 jumped over 9.00 as well. The strikeout jump may not be completely for real, but the other numbers probably are. His roto numbers lagged behind his peripherals because of a little bad luck, but if the bad luck doesn’t happen again, then Anibal is going to provide a ton of value for those who drafted him. 23. Jordan Zimmermann (Washington Nationals, ADP: 34) 24. Josh Beckett (Boston Red Sox, ADP: 27) 25. Matt Moore (Tampa Bay Rays, ADP: 20) 26. Adam Wainwright (St. Louis Cardinals, ADP: 23) 27. Josh Johnson (Florida Marlins, ADP: 28) 28. Stephen Strasburg (Washington Nationals. ADP: 18) The starting point for analyzing Strasburg is also the limiting factor. Strasburg just isn’t going to pitch more than about 160 innings this year. So the sub-3.00 ERA, stellar WHIP, and strikeout-plus per inning are desirable, but they’d be more desirable if they came with 200 innings. And when you throw in the risk that Strasburg misses time due to injury as he has done previously, that inning total is potentially even more limited. And thus so is Strasburg’s value. Got the itch for daily fantasy baseball? Check out these highly recommended sites! 29. Yu Darvish (Texas Rangers, ADP: 33) 30. Daniel Hudson (Arizona Diamondbacks, ADP: 24) 31. Brandon Beachy (Atlanta Braves. ADP: 35) 32. Tommy Hanson (Atlanta Braves, ADP: 31) 33. Michael Pineda (Seattle Mariners, ADP: 32) 34. Shaun Marcum (Milwaukee Brewers. ADP: 37) 35. Ubaldo Jimenez (Cleveland Indians, ADP: 29) 36. Jaime Garcia (St. Louis Cardinals. ADP: 44) 37. Ricky Romero (Toronto Blue Jays, ADP: 22) Romero has seen marginal gains in walk rate and SIERA, but, for the most part, his numbers have been fairly constant over the last three years. What hasn’t been constant is his luck. His BABIP and strand rate were well outside normal ranges last year which allowed his ERA to get under 3.00 and his WHIP to be an excellent 1.14. But the peripheral numbers pretty clearly peg Romero as a guy with a 3.70-is ERA, 1.25-ish WHIP, and a K/9 a little over 7.00. That’s good, but it isn’t great. 38. Ricky Nolasco (Florida Marlins, ADP: 77) Normally you’d see Nolasco’s 3.55 xFIP and 4.67 ERA from last year and assume he was due for some positive regression. But if you raise your gaze an eighth of an inch while looking at his Fangraphs page, you’d see these xFIP/ERA combos from 2009 and 2010: 3.23/5.06 and 3.37/4.51. There comes a point where you have to stop assuming a player will regress to the mean in one direction or the other and assume the difference between their peripheral and roto numbers is status quo. So are we at that point with Nolasco? Given that I have him ranked 38th as opposed to his ADP of 77, it should be obvious that I don’t think so. But let me explain why. Nolasco’s two biggest problems have been a high strand rate and a high BABIP. The strand rate has partially been Nolasco’s fault as he had trouble keeping balls in the park in 2009/2010. He was easily above average in that department last year (0.87 HR/9), but a lower-than-normal strikeout rate kept his strand rate below the mean. It’s safe to say Nolasco’s BABIP probably isn’t going to be below .300 at any point (.309 career), but it was high even by Nolasco standards at .331. All these numbers led to more numbers one of the weirdest seasons in baseball history. Nolasco was just the 13th pitcher in the last 75 years to have a BB/9 under 2.00 and a WHIP of 1.40 or higher in the same season. And only one of those 12 other pitchers had a strikeout rate anywhere close to Nolasco’s 6.47 K/9 from last year (John Burkett in 1997). Nolasco’s underperforming roto numbers were his fault in 2009/2010. But last year he really was unlucky. So if he can maintain the level of performance from last year, particularly limiting the long ball, and the BABIP luck swings in his direction a little bit, his roto numbers might finally look as good as his peripherals. 39. Jeremy Hellickson (Tampa Bay Rays, ADP: 26) The inexperienced fantasy player will see Hellickson’s 2.95 ERA and 1.15 WHIP and assume Hellickson is a top 25 pitcher. But the more experienced player will notice that he had the biggest gap between ERA and xFIP of any pitcher last year, the lowest BABIP in the league, a very high strand rate, and an unimpressive 1.63 BB/9 and assume Hellickson isn’t even a top 50 pitcher. But if you look even closer, you’ll see that he should probably fall somewhere in between. Hellickson had excellent strikeout numbers in the minors, and it is safe to assume that those K’s will translate better to the majors as he gets more acclimated. And some of those K’s were traded last season for weak contact. Probably the best measure we have for a pitcher’s ability to induce weak contact is infield fly ball rate. Last year, Hellickson had the highest infield fly ball rate in the league (16.2%). And pitching to contact is a good idea when you have the best defense in the league behind you, which Hellickson does. So while there is cause for concern with the young righty, I’d bet the inexperienced player’s first impression is closer to being right in this particular instance. 40. Hiroki Kuroda (New York Yankees, ADP: 43) 41. Cory Luebke (San Diego Padres, ADP: 39) 42. Brandon Morrow (Toronto Blue Jays, ADP: 49) 43. Max Scherzer (Detroit Tigers, ADP: 38) 44. Brandon McCarthy (Oakland Athletics, ADP: 54) 45. Bud Norris (Houston Astros, ADP: 64) Bud’s biggest strength is his ability to miss bats. His K/9 dipped below a 9.00 last year, but it came with a significant dip in his walk rate as well (3.39). If the walk rate continues to trend towards 3.00, then watch out. Wins will always be hard to come by in Houston, but if the walks come down, Norris could see his ERA get below 3.50 and his WHIP get below 1.30. Those rate stats combined with excellent strikeout numbers would be an excellent combination. 46. Derek Holland (Texas Rangers, ADP: 61) 47. Wandy Rodriguez (Houston Astros, ADP: 53) 48. John Danks (Chicago White Sox, ADP: 74) A little bad luck last year kept Danks from being the pitcher we’ve come to expect him to be, which is a guy with an ERA in the high 3.00’s, a WHIP under 1.30, and a decent K rate. In fact, his K/9 went up and his BB/9 went down. Given that improvement in areas he can control, there’s no reason not to expect Danks to be the pitcher we’ve come to expect him to be if not a little bit better. 49. Scott Baker (Minnesota Twins, ADP: 50) 50. Jake Peavy (Chicago White Sox, ADP: 72) 51. Gavin Floyd (Chicago White Sox, ADP: 60) 52. Ryan Dempster (Chicago Cubs, ADP: 62) 53. Juan Nicasio (Colorado Rockies, ADP: 110) Compare the numbers of these two pitchers last year... Player A: 3.43 xFIP, 1.27 WHIP, 3.22 K/BB Player B: 3.95 xFIP, 1.31 WHIP, 1.72 K/BB Player A is Nicasio who was drafted in 1% of ESPN ten team leagues. Player B is Jhoulys Chacin who was drafted in 51% of leagues. I know Nicasio is coming back from a scary injury after being struck by a come-backer, but he’s healthy. He came back strong with this line against the Astros in his first start: 7 IP, 1 ER, 5 H, 1 BB, 4 K. He should be owned in WAY more leagues and in at least as many as Chacin. 54. Justin Masterson (Cleveland Indians, ADP: 48) 55. Gio Gonzalez (Washington Nationals, ADP: 36) The deep fences and ample foul-territory of Oakland Coliseum are no longer a factor for Gonzalez, but the control issues are still present. Until Gio can get the walks well under four per nine, he’s a potential WHIP killer who should be avoided. 56. Ted Lilly (Los Angeles Dodgers, ADP: 52) 57. Ervin Santana (Los Angeles Angels, ADP: 46) Once upon a time, Santana exhibited excellent control (1.93 BB/9 in 2008). But more recently he’s been about a 3.00 BB/9 type of pitcher. Absent BABIP luck, his WHIP will sit around or above 1.30. He got some of that BABIP luck last year and rode it to a 1.22 WHIP and 3.38 ERA. However, his xFIP and SIERA show his ERA should have been near four if he had been luck-neutral. Without more luck, expect Santana to post an ERA just under four, a WHIP around 1.30, and slightly above average K numbers. Solid, but not worthy of a top 150 pick. 58. Jhoulys Chacin (Colorado Rockies, ADP: 79) 59. Colby Lewis (Texas Rangers, ADP: 51) 60. Jonathon Niese (New York Mets, ADP: 76) Niese’s xFIP has dropped the last three years. His strikeout rate has improved the last two years. His walk rate dropped below 3.00 for the first time last year, all the way down to 2.52. And his groundball rate jumped into well-above-average territory (north of 50%). But the problem is that Niese’s BABIP and strand rate have consistently been on the unlucky side of things. If luck is at all on his side, or even if it’s just not against him, Niese cold have a big, big breakout. 61. Chris Sale (Chicago White Sox, ADP: 56) 62. Vance Worley (Philadelphia Phillies, ADP: 66) 63. Tim Stauffer (San Diego Padres, ADP: 56) 64. Chad Billingsley (Los Angeles Dodgers, ADP: 75) 65. Philip Humber (Chicago White Sox, ADP: 127) Humber had a strange 2011. In the first half, he was extremely fortunate. And in the second half, his luck took a turn significantly for the worse. But aside from a rough August, Humber pitched pretty consistently like a mid-3.00 ERA pitcher with a K/BB around 2.50. So don’t be scared off by his 5.02 ERA from July on. He pitched just as well in the second half, if not better, than he did in the first half. 66. Mike Minor (Atlanta Braves, ADP: 57) 67. Chris Capuano (Los Angeles Dodgers, ADP: 98) Capuanohas some legitimate potential to be a surprising spot-start option. His 4.55 ERA and 1.35 WHIP from last year aren’t appealing, but his peripheral numbers were excellent. He posted a 3.60 SIERA and a strikeout-to-walk ratio over 3.00. Only 29 other pitchers who threw at least 120 innings managed a SIERA of 3.60 or less combined with a strikeout-to-walk over 3.00 last year. Not that Capuano is going to be a top 30 pitcher this year, but he should certainly be owned in more than 2.4% of leagues. 68. Trevor Cahill (Arizona Diamondbacks, ADP: 71) 69. Neftali Feliz (Texas Rangers, ADP: 54) 70. Alexi Ogando (Texas Rangers, ADP: 87) Texas has a lot of solid arms at its disposal. And that is great for them, but not so great for fantasy owners because it’s hard to be certain that players will have consistent roles throughout the year. If I had to bet, I’d guess Ogando and Feliz end up with similar inning totals. The slight edge goes to Feliz because he could pick up a few saves along the way, but he was over-drafted and Ogando was undervalued during draft season. 71. Erik Bedard (Pittsburgh Pirates, ADP: 83) 72. Johan Santana (New York Mets, ADP: 58) 73. Francisco Liriano (Minnesota Twins, ADP: 67) 74. Homer Bailey (Cincinnati Reds, ADP: 93) 75. Henderson Alvarez (Toronto Blue Jays, ADP: 95) All ADP’s from ESPN.com. Written by Brett Talley exclusively for thefantasyfix.com. Brett is a law student in Dallas who spent his Sunday night writing this 2,500 word article that nowhere close to 2,500 people will read. You can tell him to cry 2,500 rivers and/or ask him for fantasy advice on Twitter @therealTAL.(April 4, 2012 - Photo by Jared Wickerham/Getty Images North America)
This week Brett Talley ( @TheRealTAL) of TheFantasyFix.com is joined by Ben Duronio ( @Ben_Duronio) of Fangraphs.com and CapitolAvenueClub.com (a Braves blog). Brett and Ben discuss their playoffs and awards predictions, how to best use middle relievers in fantasy, and Ben updates us on the state of the Braves organization. Listen below by pressing play, or head to our iTunes page and download the podcast to listen on your iPhone, iPad or iPod. Be sure to follow Brett on Twitter ( @theRealTal) and also TheFantasyFix.com on Twitter @TheFantasyFix for all your fantasy baseball needs.
 John Mayberry Ever been annoyed by the fact that WAR takes into account defense? For fantasy purposes, the defensive component messes up that stat. It would be nice if there was some sort of oWAR where only the number of wins above replacement a player provided with his bat was calculated.
Fortunately, there are metrics that do essentially just that. The best of the bunch is wRC+. It stems from plain old wRC which tells us how many runs a player created for his team in one simple metric. wRC+ tells us how that player’s run creation compares to league average. League average is 100. Every point over 100 is equal to one percentage point better than league average. For example, if a player’s wRC+ is 110, then he created 10% more runs than league average. And if a player’s wRC+ is 90 then he created 10% fewer runs than league average.
wRC+ also happens to be park and league adjusted. Therefore, it allows us to compare players from all years and all locations on an even plane. As you can see, this statistic is purely an all-encompassing measure of a player’s offensive contribution.
If there is a flaw in wRC+, it is that it doesn’t account for playing time. A stat like WAR is one where a player accumulates his WAR total as he accumulates at-bats. But wRC+ only compares a player’s production to league average for the time period in which that production was achieved. For example, Brett Lawrie’s incredible 171 PA ranked 6th in wRC+ last year but only 98th in WAR.
But this “flaw” can be used to the fantasy player’s advantage. wRC+ can help us identify players who provide above average offensive production that, with extra at-bats, could be undervalued. Here are five guys that are likely on your waiver wire that should be monitored early in the season as potential breakout candidates.
John Mayberry, Philadelphia Phillies (10.0% owned)
In just under 300 plate appearances last year, Mayberry posted a well above-average wRC+ of 133. You have to be careful when searching for potential breakouts based on small-sample wRC+ because small samples are often susceptible to extreme BABIPs. For example, Alejandro de Aza posted a 151 wRC+ in 171 PA last year, but the main reason for that was a .404 BABIP. But Mayberry’s 133 wRC+ was produced with a very normal .293 BABIP.
Mayberry begins the season as the Phillies’ starting left fielder, and Charlie Manuel has even said he views Mayberry as a 500+ PA type of player. Moreover, Mayberry is out of options, so at the very least he’s likely with the Phillies all season. Assuming Mayberry gets off to an at least decent start, he shouldn’t have any trouble getting to 500 PA.
You could speculate that Mayberry’s production will decrease in an everyday role as opposed to a more platoon-based role, but he actually held his own against righties last year. A .250 average with seven homeruns and a 10% walk rate are good enough to keep the wRC+ well above 100 even if he doesn’t reach 133 again.
Nolan Reimold, Baltimore Orioles (0.4% owned)
As we learned in the Mayberry analysis, we’re really looking to check three boxes when mining the wRC+ list for breakout candidates. The first box is solid production in limited time last season. Reimold posted a respectable 112 wRC+ in just over 300 PA last year. Check! The second box is the solid production was not a result of extreme good fortune. If anything, Reimold was slightly unlucky with a .264 BABIP last year. Check! And the third box is a projected increase in plate appearances this year. Like Mayberry, Reimold is out of options. He’s also slated to hit leadoff (maybe not the best idea) and has little competition for his outfield spot. Check!
Ryan Doumit, Minnesota Twins (3.1% owned)
Things are a bit crowded in Minnesota at the positions you’d expect Doumit to play. Justin Morneau is sure to spend most of his time avoiding concussion symptoms and DH’ing. Joe Mauer will catch and play a fair amount of first base to keep his legs fresh. And Chris Parmelee may play some first when Mauer catches. But right field is pretty vacant and Parmelee may not deliver much from first. So Doumit should be able to find the at-bats at a variety of positions.
And so there is some potential value in the guy who posted a 129 wRC+ in 236 PA last year. Admittedly, his .331 BABIP is a concern, but it came along with a .303 batting average. So even if his BABIP dips back to normal levels, Doumit could still hit .270+. And a guy with catcher eligibility who can hit .270 with 15+ homers will always have some value.
Shelly Duncan, Cleveland Indians (0.3% owned)
We’re going a little deeper down the wire here, but Duncan easily checks all three of our boxes. First, he had a very nice 118 wRC+ in 247 PA last year. And his BABIP was a very normal .297. Most importantly, Duncan figures to get significantly more at-bats than he has had in any prior season. He too is out of options and faces little to no competition for his spot in the outfield. At least until Grady Sizemore returns, which could very well never happen. He won’t hit for much average (.250-ish), but he might have 20 homer pop in him if he gets 500+ PA.
Chris Snyder, Houston Astros (0.1% owned)
We’re officially so far down the wire that we’ve crossed into single league territory. So for NL-only players, consider Snyder as an option. His wRC+ was 115 over 119 PA last season. A very small sample to be sure, but the sample should be much larger this year barring injury. Jason Castro is no safe bet to stay healthy himself, so Snyder could see 350+ PA this season. If he gets to the plate that often, there is double digit homer potential there worth considering, even if it comes with a sub-.250 average.
Written by Brett Talley exclusively for thefantasyfix.com. Brett is a law student in Dallas who proposes we call wRC+ “work up” when actually speaking the term. You can tell him to get a better idea and/or ask him for fantasy advice on Twitter @therealTAL.
Brett Talley ( @TheRealTAL) of TheFantasyFix.com is joined by starting pitching guru Paul Sporer ( @sporer). Paul just released his extensive 2012 SP Guide and he and Brett discuss as many pitchers as they can in 90 minutes. They hardly scratch the surface of the all the analysis contained in the guide, so after you finish listening head over to paulsporer.com and download the guide for yourself. Listen below by pressing play, or search "The Fantasy Fix" on iTunes and download the podcast to listen on your iPhone, iPad or iPod. Be sure to follow Brett on Twitter ( @theRealTal) and also TheFantasyFix.com on Twitter @TheFantasyFix for all your fantasy baseballl needs. Don't Forget to Enter Our FREE $250 MLB Opening Day Contest hosted by Daily JoustRemember to check out our 2012 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, with Ranks, Auction Values, Expert Mock Draft and tons of articles. Click here to learn more or purchase.
Brett Talley ( @theRealTal) of TheFantasyFix.com is joined by the injury expert, Will Carroll of SI.com. Brett brings up the most significant preseason baseball injuries and Will dishes out everything you need to know about the injured players. Listen below by pressing play, or search "The Fantasy Fix" on iTunes and download the podcast to listen on your iPhone, iPad or iPod. Be sure to follow Brett on Twitter @theRealTal, and also TheFantasyFix.com on Twitter @TheFantasyFix for all your fantasy baseballl needs. Remember to check out our 2012 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, with Ranks, Auction Values, Expert Mock Draft and tons of articles. Click here to learn more or purchase.
Brett Talley ( @TheRealTAL) of TheFantasyFix.com talks to Steve Adams ( @Adams_Steve) of MLBTradeRumors.com about the Derek Holland deal and his fantasy value this year, a number of players who could be traded between now and July, and the fantasy value of a whole lot of other names. Plus Brett begins the show with another Talley Tirade. The subject this week: the stupidity that is NHL shootouts. Listen below by pressing play, or search "The Fantasy Fix" on iTunes and download the podcast to listen on your iPhone, iPad or iPod. Be sure to follow Brett on Twitter @theRealTal, and also TheFantasyFix.com on Twitter @TheFantasyFix for all your fantasy baseballl needs. Remember to check out our 2012 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, with Ranks, Auction Values, Expert Mock Draft and tons of articles. Click here to learn more or purchase.
Brett Talley ( @TheRealTAL) is joined this week by Michael Pichan ( @FantasyNomad), host of the Rotoinfo.com show. Brett and Michael talk about the best way to accumulate steals on your fantasy team, where to take Ryan Braun and Yoenis Cespedes, and discuss some pitchers going late with upside. Listen below by pressing play, or search "The Fantasy Fix" on iTunes and download the podcast to listen on your iPhone, iPad or iPod. Be sure to follow Brett on Twitter @theRealTal, and also TheFantasyFix.com on Twitter @TheFantasyFix for all your fantasy baseballl needs. Remember to check out our 2012 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, with Ranks, Auction Values, Expert Mock Draft and tons of articles. Click here to learn more or purchase.
 Andy Pettitte Andy Pettitte is my favorite baseball player. A family member of mine taught him in high school, and once upon a time he took less money to play for my favorite team, the Houston Astros. That same family member is telling me he’s heard that today the Yankees will announce Pettitte is returning to the team. On a personal level, I couldn’t be more excited about this. As a fantasy blogger, I’m wondering if there is anything to be excited about. Pettitte threw 129 innings in 2010 at the age of 38. Thanks to a bit of luck in the strand rate department he posted a 3.28 ERA. However, his xFIP was an even 4.00. Now at the age of 40, you’d think an ERA of 4.00 would about be his ceiling. But that doesn’t mean he wouldn’t have value in deeper leagues. He topped 7.00 K/9 in ’10, and his career rate is 6.78. Assuming he could throw 150 innings, he could be a nice source of wins and K’s in AL-only leagues. Hits will be an issue as Pettitte is a groundball pitcher without a ton of velocity, and his control is acceptable but not great (career 3.08 BB/9). You may take a bit of a WHIP hit (≈1.35), but almost every guy going late in an AL only league is going to hurt your WHIP. Few have the potential for 10+ wins and a decent K rate. Written by Brett Talley exclusively for thefantasyfix.com. Brett is a law student in Dallas who name drops Kevin Goldstein. You can tell him to shut up and/or ask him for fantasy advice on Twitter @therealTAL. Remember to check out our 2012 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, with Ranks, Auction Values, Expert Mock Draft and tons of articles. Click here to learn more or purchase.
 Tim Lincecum (credits below) If you’re not aware, we’ve been doing these starting rotation previews. I’m actually not sure how you couldn’t be aware if you’re ever been on our homepage as there are three, four, or five of them on there at any given time.
I was tasked (and by tasked I mean I volunteered) to write the San Francisco Giants preview. There are probably several ways you could stretch that subject out to 500+ words, but those ways eluded me. As far as I can tell, the Giants rotation can be covered in just three bullet points.
· Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain, and Madison Bumgarner are probably top 20 pitchers, but probably none of them are top 10 pitchers.
· Just take my word for it that Ryan Vogelsong was far more lucky than he was good last year and remember that last year was the first time he had pitched in the majors since 2006.
· Barry Zito sucks.
With that task completed, let’s move on to my other task *slash* thing I volunteered to do: Rotation previews for every team in the AL West.
In the interest of Spring Break brevity, I’m consolidating those four articles into one. Many of the 20 or so starters in the AL West are, for the most part, properly valued. Guys like Felix Hernandez (MDC ADP: 28), Dan Haren (41), CJ Wilson (83), Brandon McCarthy (203), Colby Lewis (201), and Derek Holland (168) are all going about where they should. Other starters in the division are irrelevant for fantasy purposes. Jerome Williams, Brad Peacock, Tom Milone, Jason Vargas, Matt Harrison, and Kevin Millwood (how does he have a job?) are useless in most mixed leagues. However, Harrison (wins), Peacock (strikeouts) and Milone (WHIP) might have some value in deeper mixed or AL/NL only leagues.
But there are also some potential busts, sleepers, and interesting arms out West.
Jered Weaver (34) was 8th among pitchers in WAR last year. And two of his current teammates (Haren and Wilson) bested him in that stat. So the Angels pitching will be top notch. But Weaver could easily be the third best of that bunch again, and this time more distantly so.
Weaver’s BABIP has always been lower than league average because he’s a fly ball heavy pitcher, but his .250 mark last season was low even by his standards. When you combine that with the highest strand rate in the league among starters it’s obvious that he was one of the luckiest pitchers in the game last season. And unfortunately his K spike in 2010 (9.35 K/9) was an aberration as Weaver returned to his 2008-09 K rate in the mid-sevens last season. He’s still a top 20 starter, but taking him as one of the first ten pitchers off the board would be a mistake.
Another of Weaver’s teammates, Ervin Santana (150), gives the Angels depth in the rotation that few teams have. But Santana, like Weaver, is being drafted before he should. He’s just not a top-150 caliber player.
Once upon a time, Santana exhibited excellent control (1.93 BB/9 in 2008). But more recently he’s been about a 3.00 BB/9 type of pitcher. Absent BABIP luck, his WHIP will sit around or above 1.30. He got some of that BABIP luck last year and rode it to a 1.22 WHIP and 3.38 ERA. However, his xFIP and SIERA show his ERA should have been near four if he had been luck-neutral. Without more luck, expect Santana to post an ERA just under four, a WHIP around 1.30, and slightly above average K numbers. Solid, but not worthy of a top 150 pick.
Because a couple of ballparks on the West Coast are very favorable to pitchers, there are always going to be some sleepers coming out of Seattle and Oakland.
Bartolo Colon (460) was a sleeper that no one saw coming last year. Which is amusing because you can almost always see a man of Colon’s size coming. But thanks to a very solid 3.38 strikeout-to-walk ratio, Colon was one of the biggest surprises of 2011. Because that success was based on his rediscovered skill to get the ball over the plate and not aided by luck, a move to Oakland and all of its spacious foul territory goodness gives Colon a chance to repeat his success. And because no one apparently believes he can do it again, he could once again be one the biggest draft day values. Ha! Biggest...
Up the coast, Hisashi Iwakuma (435) and Hector Noesi (undrafted) will try take advantage of Safeco. Iwakuma hasn’t gotten much hype as he has understandably played second fiddle among the Japanese league imports behind Yu Darvish. And while Iwakuma won’t match Darvish’s production, there’s some definite potential.
I spoke with Kevin Goldstein of baseballprospectus.com last week (listen here) and he said Iwakuma has very good control. And that control comes with some actual stuff, not necessarily just the deception that Japanese pitchers often rely on. WHIP is hard to come by late in drafts, so if you took some iffy WHIP guys early like Yovani Gallardo or Jon Lester, Iwakuma might be an option as the last guy on your fantasy staff.
Noesi was the other player the M’s got in that monster Montero for Pineda trade, and he might end up being what determines who “won” that trade. He posted very solid numbers through AA. His strikeout numbers dipped quite a bit at AAA, but he only spent about 60 innings there. In roughly 60 innings out of the Yanks bullpen last year he struck out over seven per nine and had a SIERA under 4.00. If he can keep the strikeouts above seven per nine as a starter in Seattle, there will be value there.
And finally we come to the not-so-west Texas Rangers and two of the more interesting starters in baseball, Darvish (123) and Neftali Feliz (158).
I’ll admit that initially I was wary of Darvish. I’m just a see-it-to-believe-it kind of guy. But Goldstein sung Darvish’s praises on my podcast, and he has convinced me that Darvish is capable of producing at level on par with his ADP. He’s being drafted as the 35th starter, and he could easily justify that draft spot.
Feliz is a riskier proposition. Only 9 starters are being drafted after Darvish and before Feliz. Because Feliz has thrown fewer than 70 innings in each of the last two seasons (not counting playoffs) and because we’ve yet to see that he can throw more than two pitches effectively for more than an inning or two, I don’t see how Feliz can be expected to produce at a level all that close to Darvish.
Written by Brett Talley exclusively for thefantasyfix.com. Brett is a law student in Dallas who name drops Kevin Goldstein. You can tell him to shut up and/or ask him for fantasy advice on Twitter @therealTAL.(February 29, 2012 - Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images North America) Remember to check out our 2012 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, with Ranks, Auction Values, Expert Mock Draft and tons of articles. Click here to learn more or purchase.
Brett Talley ( @TheRealTAL) of TheFantasyFix.com is joined by Kevin Goldstein ( @Kevin_Goldstein) of BaseballProspectus.com to talk about which rookies are worth drafting in various non-keeper, non-dynasty formats. They discuss which rookies will be useful in shallow mixed leagues, deeper mixed leagues, and AL-only and NL-only leagues. Listen below by pressing play, or search "The Fantasy Fix" on iTunes and download the podcast to listen on your iPhone or iPod. Be sure to follow Brett on Twitter @theRealTal, and also TheFantasyFix.com on Twitter @TheFantasyFix for all your fantasy baseballl needs. Remember to check out our 2012 Fantasy Baseball Draft Guide, with Ranks, Auction Values, Expert Mock Draft and tons of articles. Click here to learn more or purchase.
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