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hacheman@therx.com
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Astros not devoid of fantasy talent after all
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Eric Karabell

The Houston Astros own baseball's best record -- OK, so it's a bit misleading! -- after Sunday's 8-2 opening night win over their in-state rival, the Texas Rangers, and while it's hardly a harbinger to make World Series plans, it's still fun to see unheralded players such as outfielder Justin Maxwell, who perhaps you've considered owning in a deep fantasy league, perform well. Maxwell certainly played a key role in the victory, delivering a two-run triple to get the scoring started in the fourth inning and then later walking and adding another three-base hit.

I've long been intrigued by Maxwell, now 29, since he clearly showed the tools to contribute in home runs and stolen bases while toiling in the minors for years in the Washington Nationals' organization. In 2007, he hit 27 home runs and stole 35 bases! As recently as 2011 for Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in the New York Yankees' system, he hit 16 home runs and stole 11 bases in 48 games. The somewhat desperate Astros took a look at him last year and were rewarded with 18 home runs and nine steals in barely half a season of at-bats. He has signature flaws at the plate, but still I find it odd that people seem so pessimistic about Maxwell. After all, he's going to play, which is half the battle.

<OFFER>While most look simply at Maxwell's low batting average and high strikeout total as a reason to expect the worst, I see potential. He's not likely to ever contend for a batting title, but he has an enticing blend of power and speed. It's not a good Astros team, and prospect George Springer, likely the team's future in center field, isn't quite ready, so Maxwell has the center-field job to himself right now, certainly against left-handed pitching, against which he hit those triples Sunday. I don't expect Maxwell, who hit .229 last season in the majors, to hit higher than .250, not with his lack of plate discipline and struggles against right-handers, but as long as he provides power and speed, that's OK.</OFFER>

Maxwell's swing can often be a mess, as evidenced by the fact he whiffed in nearly a third of his 2012 at-bats (114 K's in 315 ABs). That's terrible, and it's why he's a batting-average liability unless he changes his approach, which also isn't likely at this age. But Maxwell is also likely to play quite a bit more than he did in 2012 for the Astros. He's owned in a mere 3.4 percent of ESPN standard leagues and coming off a terrible spring training (.153, 21 strikeouts in 59 at-bats), which we've noted repeatedly means little unless it costs someone a job. It obviously didn't cost Maxwell his job. Don't overrate him from Opening Day, but don't presume he can't repeat his relative success from 2012 in terms of home runs and stolen bases, either. ESPN Fantasy projects 22 home runs and 14 steals, which is certainly reasonable, and worth owning, depending on the rest of your team. I'd take that in a deep league, even if it means I have to pair him up with someone like Joe Mauer to help in batting average.

By the way, second baseman Jose Altuve is the lone Astro being selected in the top 200 in ESPN average live drafts, but I can make a case that Maxwell is knocking on that door. Let's hope Sunday was a harbinger, and the Astros face a lot of left-handed pitching!

Here are other random thoughts on Sunday's game. Starting today, we'll have many more games to pick from!


• Right-hander Bud Norris started for Houston and tossed five scoreless innings before running into trouble in the sixth. As usual, command was an issue; he walked three and threw first-pitch strikes to only half the 24 hitters he faced. Only 59 of his 97 pitches were strikes. Norris has 200-strikeout potential, but he has averaged only 169 innings over the past three seasons, and his lack of command results in shorter outings, costing him potential wins. And on this team, he shouldn't get many wins anyway. In an AL-only format, he's worth owning thanks to his strikeouts, though he's a liability in ERA and WHIP.

• Erik Bedard saved the win, the first and likely last save of his career. Bedard did so with 3 1/3 scoreless innings, and even in an 8-2 win, that's an official save. More importantly, Bedard threw strikes and threw hard. That said, it's tough to like him for more than 24 starts, since the last time he accomplished this was 2007. He should make his first start for the Astros next weekend against the Oakland Athletics, but in my mind, Bedard is nothing more than a deep-league spot starter. Norris is the better mixed-league pickup.

• If Maxwell goes into a prolonged slump or gets hurt, Rick Ankiel seems next in line to handle center field. Ankiel blasted a three-run home run Sunday, and he figures to play regularly in right field against right-handed pitching, with Brandon Barnes facing lefties. Unlike Maxwell, Ankiel had a terrific spring, hitting .413 with 10 extra-base hits, and it wouldn't be shocking to see him hit 15 home runs this season. In an AL-only format, he's worth a few dollars.

• Matt Dominguez, still only 23 years old, is not expected to hit enough to impact fantasy rosters. His calling card is defense. But Dominguez had some nice at-bats Sunday, drawing a walk, seeing 22 pitches in all, and he knocked in a run on an infield single. Like Maxwell, Dominguez probably won't hit .250, since right-handed pitchers can overpower him, but I could see 15 home runs and 70 RBIs.

• On the Rangers' side, I actually liked what Matt Harrison was doing, though he missed his spots at times. He allowed six runs (five earned), but fanned nine in his 5 2/3 innings. Harrison is owned in 100 percent of leagues, and it would be a shame if that dropped from this outing, since fantasy owners tend to be a bit too reactive early on. I'd buy low, personally.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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[h=1]Believe in prospects now?[/h][h=3]Fernandez, Maurer among young pitchers getting early look in rotation[/h]
By Tristan H. Cockcroft | ESPN.com

Two baseball stories begin their first chapters this week: Jose Fernandez is set to make his major league debut for the Miami Marlins on Sunday, Brandon Maurer his for the Seattle Mariners on Thursday.

(Obligatory pause to allow you to regain your composure, knowing that you, like most any fantasy owner, cannot contain your excitement when a prospect debuts.)

Understandably, headlines like Fernandez's anticipated debut -- the freshest among prospect-related news, so we'll discuss him first -- send us scrambling to the waiver wire. The proverbial "getting in on the ground floor" is an irresistible urge for fantasy owners, with no greater evidence than this: In the four FAAB-bidding leagues in which I play (or follow, to include the League of Alternative Baseball Reality-NL results), Fernandez cost an average of 28.3 percent of the winning team's seasonal FAAB budget and was the most expensive player purchased in all but one. The exception was my local NL-only league, in which Kyle Lohse took those honors.

Fernandez's prospect credentials are stunning: He was the No. 14 pick overall in the 2011 amateur draft. He had an astonishing 1.75 ERA, 0.93 WHIP and .191 batting average allowed in 25 starts in the minors in 2012. He was tabbed Keith Law's No. 6 pitching prospect and No. 16 overall, as well as Baseball America's No. 2 pitching and No. 5 prospect overall, this preseason. And he has a mid-90s fastball with a curveball that Law himself says "would miss right-handers' bats in the majors today."

But before we embrace this Fernandez lovefest, let's undergo a brief reality check: This is a 20-year-old with only 11 starts in high Class A ball, none higher, who made only one appearance of two innings facing mostly minor leaguers during this year's Grapefruit League action. His promotion is a bold move by the Marlins; the reality is that expecting much from him this season might be too bold.

There is no doubt that Fernandez should have cost a considerable chunk of any fantasy team's FAAB budget, based solely upon his scouting reports and high -- albeit potentially distant -- statistical ceiling. Now the question becomes: To what degree should you trust him, or Maurer, for that matter, in the early weeks of 2013?

Let's allow history to provide us an outline.

Using a 10-year span of prospect reports -- we'll use Baseball America's annual Top 100 prospects for this study, to grant us the largest sample possible -- I've analyzed the start-by-start, early-career performances of 80 pitchers who managed to place as one of the top 10 pitching prospects from 2000-09. To improve the sample, I've isolated only the 41 of those 80 who have made at least 80 career major league starts. The results were telling:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
Career Start<CENTER>ERA</CENTER><CENTER>WHIP</CENTER><CENTER>K/9</CENTER><CENTER>K/BB</CENTER><CENTER>HR/9</CENTER><CENTER>IP/GS</CENTER><CENTER>QS%</CENTER>
14.14 1.34 7.67 1.84 1.25 5.46 34.1%
1 to 54.03 1.35 7.20 1.76 0.97 5.69 47.8%
6 to 104.56 1.44 6.92 1.76 1.08 5.64 43.9%
11 to 204.27 1.38 7.27 2.12 1.10 5.70 48.0%
21 to 304.12 1.35 7.48 2.21 0.95 5.92 54.6%
31 to 404.02 1.36 7.49 2.18 0.90 6.00 54.4%
41 to 503.58 1.25 7.48 2.39 0.83 6.28 58.0%
51 to 603.84 1.30 7.42 2.31 0.88 6.14 53.4%
61 to 703.81 1.30 7.48 2.54 0.99 6.17 57.6%
71 to 803.69 1.25 7.65 2.58 0.90 6.36 61.5%

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Any veteran fantasy owner has, by this point, probably heard the phrase, "Every young pitcher endures an adjustment period." The chart above illustrates this; this group of elite pitching prospects typically reached this career stage between their sixth and 20th turns in the majors, then fully hit their stride by about their 40th career starts. This is evidence that you shouldn't expect the breakthrough during a top pitching prospect's rookie season, but rather his sophomore campaign, if you have the option of waiting.

It's the performance of those debut dandies, though, which are most curious. The chart also shows that prospects tend to enjoy an initial advantage through their first five career turns, particularly in the strikeout department. The rationale is anyone's guess; it could be as simple as their early opponents possessing less extensive scouting reports. This is especially relevant to pitchers like Fernandez, who averaged 10.73 K's per nine innings during his minor league career, and Maurer, who averaged 8.37 per nine during his. It's also relevant to a pitcher who has already debuted, Shelby Miller, who has but one big-league start under his belt and an 11.07 K's per nine ratio in his minor league career.


(Again an obligatory pause, this time to recognize that Maurer, unlike Fernandez or Miller, was not regarded a top-10 pitching prospect by either Law or Baseball America this preseason. He was one of Law's "just missed" prospects, so admittedly, he doesn't directly adhere to the chart guidelines.)

In other words, if you own Fernandez, Maurer or Miller, there's every bit as compelling a reason to activate them now rather than leave them on your bench for evaluation purposes until June. Granted, no two prospects possess identical skills, makeup, mentality and circumstances, all variables that influence the study, but history does show a greater chance that you'll miss a prospect's more valuable outings and absorb his adjustment-period performances if you play the waiting game.

You might also want to use the data for sell-high trading purposes, in the event that one or both gets off to a comparably strong start. After all, prospect buzz often can drive trade stock into the stratosphere. If, say, Fernandez is sitting at a 3.40 ERA and 37 K's through his first five starts, it might be a brilliant idea to shop him, because he's highly likely to reach an adjustment stage at some point.

Returning to the study's guidelines for a moment, let's not gloss over the high failure rate of this group. That only 41 of the 80 prospects reached the 80-start plateau means that a whopping 39 did not -- though, to be fair, 10 of those 39 "made it" as relievers, while it could be argued that five others (Brett Anderson, Wade Davis, Brian Matusz, Jarrod Parker and Chris Tillman) still have an opportunity to "make it." Still, that leaves 24 of 80 prospects, or exactly 30 percent, who failed to develop into long-term successes at the major league level. And that's only top-10, elite-level, prospects; a pitcher like Maurer, if he fails, wouldn't even count against that total in future years (unless he earns a top-10 ranking in 2014 or beyond).

That sure demonstrates the boom/bust nature of pitching prospects, and it's why we advise so strongly that you tread carefully with them.

A final note as it pertains to a pitcher's career development: Those career-starts-41-and-beyond statistics represent promising news for an attractive group of sophomores and third-year starters who could follow a similar pattern of improvement in 2013. The following pitchers, along with their career big league starts in parentheses, were Baseball America top-10 prospects between 2000-12 who reside within a group of pitchers with between 41 and 80 turns: Brett Anderson (68), Jeremy Hellickson (64), Stephen Strasburg (45) and Chris Tillman (51). In addition, Yu Darvish (29), Matt Moore (32), Jarrod Parker (30) and Chris Sale (29) should also reach the 41-start plateau by midsummer.

Consider it a good time, at least as history dictates, to trade for each.

[h=3]Rotations, schmotations[/h]
It must be one of those annual rites of spring, like birds, bulbs and baseball: Questions about rotation order and the relevance of Opening Day starts.


Fantasy owners' knowledge as a whole has increased in the past three seasons -- thank you, sabermetrics -- since the last time I ran this study, but every so often you'll still run into the occasional outlier who leans upon a faulty assumption: That a pitcher's alignment as his team's "ace"/Opening Day starter puts him in a pattern to face only fellow "aces," leading to a decrease in that pitcher's win potential. Some might say that New York Mets Opening Day starter Jonathan Niese, for example, might be bound to suffer in the win column.

The truth is that the only time the term "ace" matters is during the playoffs, in a short series, when the goal is to get that man on the mound as often as possible.

During the regular season, the day-to-day grind of 162 games, including off days that populate teams' schedules at varying frequencies, shuffle rotation orders, meaning that said "aces" often aren't even facing their opponent's same by their second turns. We'll already witness this for the first time Saturday, when Texas Rangers "ace" Matt Harrison works on four days' rest, lining him up against Los Angeles Angels No. 5 starter Tommy Hanson. The label also sometimes changes hands during the course of said schedule.

To lean on history again for evidence, I've analyzed 13 seasons' worth of rotational data (2000-12) -- consider it a expansion of the aforementioned 2010 study -- to illustrate how opening-week order becomes largely irrelevant deeper in the season. Labeling each team's Opening Day starter its "staff ace" and numbering its subsequent starters in order, staff aces actually matched up with the same in only 22.3 percent of their total starts all season -- that means that, after Opening Day passes, those staff aces actually meet up in only 19.5 percent of their remaining turns. And remember, with most teams using a traditional five rotation spots, you'd expect a pitcher to have a 20 percent chance of facing each individual spot.

There is, however, truth to the part about an ace possessing diminished win potential when specifically lined up with a fellow ace. The following chart compares these aces' performances to the league averages:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
<CENTER></CENTER><CENTER>QS%</CENTER><CENTER>W/GS</CENTER><CENTER>Cheap Wins
/GS</CENTER>
<CENTER>Non-Win QS
/GS</CENTER>
<CENTER>Tough Losses
/GS</CENTER>
Aces vs. aces58.70.369 0.052 0.270 0.115
MLB averages49.10.352 0.079 0.219 0.085

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If wins are paramount in your league, that's something to keep in mind -- but only as a single day's matchups are concerned, not as a yearlong thing. In other words, take it into account if, say, you see Clayton Kershaw battling Matt Cain on Aug. 3. But even if you're worried about diminished win potential, are you really going to bench either Kershaw or Cain accordingly?

Another big check in the aces' column: Aces were actually the most likely to provide you with a full healthy season, meaning the greatest appeal for these Opening Day starters is that it signifies teams' trust in them as regular contributors. These pitchers averaged 28.1 starts per season, which is astonishingly high if you consider the injury rate for pitchers.

[h=3]Relief Efforts[/h]
One of the enhancements you'll notice to this year's "Sixty Feet Six Inches" is the incorporation of our former "Relief Efforts" column into the analysis. Listed at column's end is this season's first set of rankings, and one that ranks both starters and relievers in one set. (For the sake of convenience, a pitcher's individual rank as starter or reliever is indicated, as "SP01" or "RP01," for example.)


</PHOTO4></P>
There'll also be a "Relief Efforts" section -- barring the column itself sporting a relief-pitching topic as its primary story -- to address the latest closer news.

This week's top relief-pitching story comes from the Chicago Cubs, where incumbent closer Carlos Marmol already appears on the verge of losing his gig. Handed the second-easiest save chance by definition -- the three-run-lead, one-inning assignment (the three-inning save rule is classified the "easiest") -- on Opening Day, Marmol couldn't convert. He threw just nine strikes in 19 pitches and zero of four first-pitch strikes, hitting Andrew McCutchen with a pitch and allowing a Pedro Alvarez RBI single and Gaby Sanchez to walk. Marmol was promptly yanked, Cubs manager Dale Sveum playing lefty-righty matchups to get James Russell to retire Neil Walker and Kyuji Fujikawa to retire Russell Martin. Fujikawa recorded his first save for his two pitches of work.

This comes on the heels of an awful spring by Marmol -- 6.97 ERA and 7.84 walks per nine innings in 12 appearances -- as well as a 2011-12 regular-season performance combined in which he had a 3.76 ERA and 1.45 WHIP. He's among the most ill-equipped to handle high-leverage chores because of his poor control, and regardless of Sveum's supportive comments -- he told the Chicago Tribune afterward that "[Marmol] is still the closer" -- Marmol's status as the team's primary ninth-inning reliever will probably be short-lived.

Fujikawa, signed to a two-year, $9.5 million deal this winter to serve as closer insurance, is well worth adding in any leagues in which he's available. His strength is far greater command; he averaged 2.29 walks per nine and 5.43 K's per walk during his career in Japan and had 10 K's compared to four walks during his eight Cactus League appearances.

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
[h=4]TOP 150 PITCHERS[/h]Note: Tristan H. Cockcroft's top 150 pitchers are ranked for their expected performance from this point forward, not for statistics that have already been accrued. For starter- or reliever-specific rankings, see the "Pos Rnk" column. Previous Ranking ("Prev Rnk") is ESPN's preseason ranking among all pitchers.
<CENTER>Rnk </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prev
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Rnk </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prev
Rnk </CENTER>
1 Clayton Kershaw LAD SP1 2 76 Kenley Jansen LAD RP20 74
2 Justin Verlander Det SP2 1 77 Kyle Lohse Mil SP57 100
3 Felix Hernandez Sea SP3 3 78 Edwin Jackson ChC SP58 76
4 Stephen Strasburg Wsh SP4 4 79 Ryan Dempster Bos SP59 88
5 David Price TB SP5 5 80 Alexi Ogando Tex SP60 70
6 Matt Cain SF SP6 6 81 Ernesto Frieri LAA RP21 87
7 Cole Hamels Phi SP7 8 82 Paul Maholm Atl SP61 102
8 Cliff Lee Phi SP8 7 83 Steve Cishek Mia RP22 85
9 Gio Gonzalez Wsh SP9 11 84 Brandon McCarthy Ari SP62 83
10 Madison Bumgarner SF SP10 13 85 Clay Buchholz Bos SP63 93
11 Jered Weaver LAA SP11 9 86 Jason Grilli Pit RP23 71
12 R.A. Dickey Tor SP12 15 87 Josh Beckett LAD SP64 86
13 Adam Wainwright StL SP13 12 88 Jason Motte StL RP24 54
14 Yu Darvish Tex SP14 14 89 Grant Balfour Oak RP25 65
15 Johnny Cueto Cin SP15 18 90 Marco Estrada Mil SP65 89
16 Craig Kimbrel Atl RP1 10 91 Casey Janssen Tor RP26 82
17 Chris Sale CWS SP16 17 92 Wandy Rodriguez Pit SP66 91
18 CC Sabathia NYY SP17 16 93 Bobby Parnell NYM RP27 103
19 Aroldis Chapman Cin RP2 20 94 Julio Teheran Atl SP67 124
20 Mat Latos Cin SP18 19 95 Jason Vargas LAA SP68 97
21 Zack Greinke LAD SP19 21 96 Wei-Yin Chen Bal SP69 94
22 Jordan Zimmermann Wsh SP20 23 97 Brandon League LAD RP28 92
23 Matt Moore TB SP21 25 98 Phil Hughes NYY SP70 99
24 Max Scherzer Det SP22 28 99 Kyuji Fujikawa ChC RP29 122
25 James Shields KC SP23 26 100 Mitchell Boggs StL RP30 136
26 Jonathan Papelbon Phi RP3 22 101 Chris Tillman Bal SP71 111
27 Kris Medlen Atl SP24 24 102 Ryan Madson LAA RP31 79
28 Yovani Gallardo Mil SP25 27 103 Shelby Miller StL SP72 101
29 Rafael Soriano Wsh RP4 29 104 Jonathan Broxton Cin RP32 115
30 Josh Johnson Tor SP26 37 105 Hisashi Iwakuma Sea SP73 95
31 Fernando Rodney TB RP5 30 106 Jose Veras Hou RP33 104
32 Hiroki Kuroda NYY SP27 38 107 Matt Garza ChC SP74 80
33 Mariano Rivera NYY RP6 32 108 Vinnie Pestano Cle RP34 98
34 Brandon Morrow Tor SP28 31 109 Dillon Gee NYM SP75 140
35 J.J. Putz Ari RP7 34 110 James McDonald Pit SP76 105
36 Doug Fister Det SP29 41 111 Drew Storen Wsh RP35 106
37 Ian Kennedy Ari SP30 33 112 Hyun-Jin Ryu LAD SP77 132
38 Jon Lester Bos SP31 39 113 Bud Norris Hou SP78 107
39 Joe Nathan Tex RP8 35 114 Ryan Cook Oak RP36 108
40 Jake Peavy CWS SP32 42 115 Ivan Nova NYY SP79 109
41 Anibal Sanchez Det SP33 43 116 Sergio Santos Tor RP37 110
42 Jim Johnson Bal RP9 47 117 Ross Detwiler Wsh SP80 112
43 Jonathon Niese NYM SP34 44 118 Jason Hammel Bal SP81 127
44 Dan Haren Wsh SP35 48 119 Carlos Marmol ChC RP38 96
45 Brett Anderson Oak SP36 49 120 Shaun Marcum NYM SP82 113
46 Addison Reed CWS RP10 50 121 Brandon Beachy Atl SP83 114
47 Jeff Samardzija ChC SP37 51 122 Tommy Hanson LAA SP84 119
48 Lance Lynn StL SP38 56 123 Andrew Bailey Bos RP39 180
49 Tim Lincecum SF SP39 40 124 Mark Buehrle Tor SP85 116
50 Greg Holland KC RP11 53 125 Chad Billingsley LAD SP86 118
51 Jarrod Parker Oak SP40 58 126 Phil Coke Det RP40 150
52 Roy Halladay Phi SP41 46 127 Gavin Floyd CWS SP87 120
53 Sergio Romo SF RP12 52 128 Sean Marshall Cin RP41 146
54 John Axford Mil RP13 45 129 Rick Porcello Det SP88 121
55 Huston Street SD RP14 57 130 Tyler Clippard Wsh RP42 123
56 Jeremy Hellickson TB SP42 61 131 Andy Pettitte NYY SP89 125
57 Joel Hanrahan Bos RP15 36 132 Bartolo Colon Oak SP90 149
58 Homer Bailey Cin SP43 59 133 Ricky Nolasco Mia SP91 126
59 Derek Holland Tex SP44 67 134 Patrick Corbin Ari SP92 197
60 Mike Minor Atl SP45 66 135 David Hernandez Ari RP43 128
61 Rafael Betancourt Col RP16 62 136 Joaquin Benoit Det RP44 129
62 C.J. Wilson LAA SP46 55 137 Felix Doubront Bos SP93 170
63 Jaime Garcia StL SP47 77 138 Wily Peralta Mil SP94 166
64 Matt Harvey NYM SP48 60 139 Frank Francisco NYM RP45 139
65 Matt Harrison Tex SP49 64 140 Vance Worley Min SP95 133
66 Alex Cobb TB SP50 90 141 Koji Uehara Bos RP46 135
67 Tom Wilhelmsen Sea RP17 84 142 Clayton Richard SD SP96 138
68 Ryan Vogelsong SF SP51 68 143 Justin Masterson Cle SP97 117
69 Tim Hudson Atl SP52 63 144 Luke Gregerson SD RP47 143
70 Tommy Milone Oak SP53 81 145 Mike Fiers Mil SP98 144
71 Chris Perez Cle RP18 69 146 Sean Doolittle Oak RP48 145
72 A.J. Burnett Pit SP54 73 147 Jose Fernandez Mia SP99 362
73 Glen Perkins Min RP19 72 148 Jake McGee TB RP49 147
74 Trevor Cahill Ari SP55 75 149 David Robertson NYY RP50 148
75 Wade Miley Ari SP56 78 150 Wade Davis KC RP51 157

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hacheman@therx.com
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Should we be concerned about Sabathia?
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Eric Karabell

Tags: Fantasy Baseball, Fantasy, Pitchers, Eric KarabellFantasy: CC Sabathia[h=6]NEXT VIDEO
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[/h]
  • Fantasy: CC Sabathia[h=5]Fantasy: CC Sabathia[/h]Eric Karabell discusses whether you should be worried about CC Sabathia this fantasy season.Tags: Fantasy Baseball, Fantasy, Pitchers, Eric Karabell
  • Fantasy: Cubs' Closer Situation[h=5]Fantasy: Cubs' Closer Situation[/h]Eric Karabell discusses what to expect from the Cubs' closer situation.Tags: Fantasy Baseball, Fantasy, Closers, Bullpen, Eric Karabell

Only 13 starting pitchers are going earlier in ESPN average live drafts than New York Yankees left-hander CC Sabathia, and it's certainly possible that after Monday's somewhat erratic performance, that figure will, like his waistline (and many others') around Thanksgiving, only grow. Perhaps Sabathia's name will even be floated in trade talks around your leagues as well. However, even after Sabathia permitted eight hits, four walks and four runs in the 8-2 loss to the Boston Red Sox, it's time to remind people that we've been here before with Carsten Charles Sabathia, and it usually has worked out OK.

For example, who can forget when Sabathia was coming off his 19-7 Cy Young award-winning 2007 season for the Cleveland Indians, and he couldn't get anyone out in April 2008. Fantasy owners couldn't run fast enough, citing fatigue, weight and his lofty expectations, despite our pleas for patience. Sabathia's April ERA finished at 7.88, his WHIP 1.78. From that point on, Sabathia dominated, boasting a 1.95 ERA, most of it for the playoff-bound Milwaukee Brewers. If you want more recent results, check out last season, when Sabathia's April ERA was 4.58. From May 1 on, his ERA was a mere 3.11, hardly a harbinger of pending doom.

<OFFER>Put simply, this is a pitcher who tends to starts slowly, and his owners must be patient. Who knows, maybe spring training just isn't enough for him. In his standout career, Sabathia has a 4.13 April ERA and 1.31 WHIP. He's considerably better in the other months, which gives credence to his post-game comments Monday: "I'm sure the velocity will keep coming back and the arm strength will keep building up the more I throw," Sabathia said. "Healthwise, I feel fine, elbow, shoulder and everything."</OFFER>

Hey, I believe him, even though his velocity was down a bit more than normal. Sabathia had minor elbow surgery this offseason, and threw a mere 10 spring innings, but nobody around the Yankees seems particularly concerned. Frankly, if you own Sabathia in the first place, you've probably been ignoring much of the pessimistic talk about him. I'm surprised he's being selected ahead of R.A. Dickey, Chris Sale and Zack Greinke, among others, but he still made my top 20. After all, while Sabathia made only 28 starts last season, tying the lowest season mark of his career, issues can easily be blamed on left elbow soreness, which theoretically is no longer an issue.

Perhaps it's career overuse scaring many; only Mark Buehrle has tossed more regular-season innings since Sabathia became a big leaguer in 2001, and Buehrle hasn't thrown 107 1/3 postseason innings to boot. Sabathia is 32, and the pitcher ranked right behind him in innings pitched over the past 12 seasons is having his own issues in Philadelphia. However, what's going on with Phillies right-hander Roy Halladay really has no bearing on Sabathia. Sure, pitchers get old at some point, even top ones, but Sabathia's spring velocity wasn't watched with concern.

Sabathia isn't the only recommended starting pitcher who has traditionally had trouble in the season's first month. Mark Simon from ESPN Stats & Info confirms that Gavin Floyd, Clay Buchholz and Matt Harrison each have career April ERAs on the wrong side of 5.00. Defending NL Cy Young winner Dickey boasts a 4.95 career ERA in April. Brandon McCarthy (4.72), Edwin Jackson (4.67), Ian Kennedy (4.64), Max Scherzer (4.55), Ryan Dempster (4.55) and yes, even the spectacular Justin Verlander (4.37), have had their own issues in April. If Verlander is a slow starter, certainly we can give Sabathia a pass. His career track shows that he deserves one.


Box score bits (NL): Don't be fooled by how well Miami Marlins right-hander Ricky Nolasco pitched in Washington on Monday. He permitted only three hits, just like counterpart Stephen Strasburg, though two were Bryce Harper solo home runs. Nolasco consistently underperforms, as his career 4.49 ERA shows, and I think we can presume run support will be an issue. … What a great sign it was to see New York Mets third baseman David Wright stealing two bases. What was not a great sign: The Mets scored 11 runs on 13 hits, and first baseman Ike Davis went 0-for-5 with four strikeouts. … Speaking of the Mets, for really deep leagues, I'd take Collin Cowgill over Marlon Byrd, but that's a tepid endorsement. … It didn't take Chicago Cubs closer Carlos Marmol long to show that his awful March seems accurate. He recorded one out in a save spot Monday, throwing just nine of 19 pitches for strikes. Kyuji Fujikawa came on and earned the save. Still, manager Dale Sveum claims Marmol remains the closer. … Dexter Fowler hit a game-tying home run off Brewers closer John Axford. Last year the Colorado Rockies outfielder hit 13 home runs, just three on the road. I want to believe a breakout is pending.

Box score bits (AL): It was a nice debut for Red Sox rookie outfielder Jackie Bradley. For one, the lefty hitter started against the lefty Sabathia. He drew three walks overall, scoring twice. In a year when Jacoby Ellsbury gets big money elsewhere, I can see Bradley leading off for Boston. … Chicago White Sox catcher Tyler Flowers accounted for the lone run in Chris Sale's 1-0 win over Kansas City, with the first of what I think will be 20-plus home runs. He's certainly worth adding in multi-catcher formats. … It's early, but I never buy the every-other-year theme on players such as Alex Rios. He singled twice, walked and stole a base Monday. Gotta love that! … The Tigers' first save chance went to lefty Phil Coke, and he retired Minnesota Twins Justin Morneau and Ryan Doumit. Add him if you like, but this is a "matchup bullpen" for now, with Joaquin Benoit and Octavio Dotel seemingly the relevant right-handers over Al Alburquerque, who pitched in the seventh inning, for now. And don't worry about Verlander throwing only 91 pitches over five innings. It's a non-issue.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Projecting Reds OF after Ludwick injury
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Eric Karabell

for catchers on opposing teams, everyone seems to love Cincinnati Reds minor league speed demon Billy Hamilton, and for good reason. He has the potential to be baseball's first 100-steal guy since the days of Rickey Henderson and Vince Coleman. Who wouldn't love that? And wouldn't you know it, early in the Reds' Opening Day, extra-inning loss against the Los Angeles Angels on Monday -- yeah, they're doing the interleague thing all season now -- Reds left fielder Ryan Ludwick suffered a dislocated right shoulder on an awkward slide at third base, fueling speculation that Hamilton would soon be altering the look of fantasy leagues this week.

But I don't see it happening. Even if Ludwick is out long term -- and as of now we still don't know the degree of the injury or whether surgery will be required -- Hamilton needs more time in the minor leagues, and he's likely to get as much as he needs. Yes, the speed he possesses is hard to fathom. I've seen it in person numerous times, from the Futures Game at All-Star weekend last year to the Arizona Fall League and spring training, and Hamilton is crazy fast. But he also didn't look crazy ready for the big leagues in his limited playing time this spring (.192 batting average, 9 strikeouts in 26 at-bats). He needs work at the plate and in learning center field before he deserves a promotion.

<OFFER>In this case, the spring stats told an accurate story, not to mention the moves the Reds made to block his promotion this winter. This is, after all, a shortstop trying to learn a new position. Plus, Reds manager Dusty Baker, who generally gets what he wants (see Chapman, Aroldis), hasn't been the greatest defender of young players in the past. Look for the Reds to promote unexciting outfielders Derrick Robinson or Donald Lutz first, and they can sit around yearning for playing time, along with Xavier Paul, while Chris Heisey gets his opportunity.</OFFER>

Anyway, not to be the bearer of bad news, but I think Hamilton will remain at Triple-A Louisville for months, perhaps until September. He can run roughshod on the basepaths there, work further on his plate discipline and physical strength, and prepare for a mid- to late-season promotion, if opportunity arises. Hamilton is owned in 2.3 percent of ESPN standard mixed leagues, and it's likely that figure will see some bump in the coming days as speculation runs rampant. I don't see it happening, but it's enough of a story to at least discuss in this space.

What I do see happening, however, is Heisey becoming Cincy's new center fielder, with Shin-Soo Choo moving over to left field, and that's actually a good thing. Not to be cruel, given that an injury forced this arrangement, but the Reds and their fly ball pitchers might actually be better off. Heisey is an experienced center fielder; Choo certainly is not. Problem solved. And Heisey can hit a bit, ya know. In 2011, he smacked 18 home runs in only 308 plate appearances, and before you think this is just a right-handed hitter who takes advantage of poor lefties, Heisey hit 17 of those 18 home runs off right-handers. The skills are there for him to be a productive, dependable and defensively competent player.


It's a bit premature to recommend Heisey in 10-team standard leagues because, as noted in Monday's blog entry on Boston Red Sox rookie "phenom" Jackie Bradley Jr., there are 60 outfielders owned in more than 88 percent of these leagues, and I'm not cutting any of them for Heisey (or the very patient Bradley). In a shallow league, there are enough outfielders to go around. In deeper formats, however, it's worth noting that Heisey is certainly capable of hitting another 18 home runs and stealing the occasional base, and that he should play pretty much all the time for the foreseeable future. He's not going to hit for a high batting average, not with the walk and strikeout rates he has exhibited in the past, but then again, if Heisey were doing well in those areas, Ludwick wouldn't have starting for the Reds in the first place.

As for Ludwick, owned in 9.9 percent of ESPN standard mixed leagues, feel free to jettison him to free agency. Last year, Ludwick hit .275 and smacked 26 home runs, certainly numbers worth owning even in a 10-team format, but we at ESPN Fantasy aren't projecting those numbers again. In shallow leagues, Heisey isn't the best addition. But there are other replacement options. Among those outfielders available in more than half of ESPN's standard leagues, I'd go with versatile Matt Carpenter, underrated David Murphy, safe Jon Jay, emerging Lorenzo Cain, enticing Starling Marte, palatable Domonic Brown and the aforementioned Bradley, in that order.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Strikeouts up, averages down

By Tristan H. Cockcroft | ESPN.com

Do you feel that cool breeze?


It might not be the unseasonably cold April weather; it might be major league hitters' rising swing-and-miss rates. While we caution the dangers of interpreting small samples, through three days of baseball the trend is stark: The Major League Baseball strikeout rate is 23.7 percent, batting average is .217, and swing-and-miss rate is 25.2 percent. Each one would represent an all-time worst.

That's not to suggest that we should extrapolate those paces over a full year, or that the final 2013 leaguewide numbers will settle at close to those numbers. But considering the game had previously exhibited large annual increases to its strikeout rate entering the year, might we be about to witness the first season in baseball history of a 20 percent overall whiff rate?

Baseball has set a new single-season record in the category in five consecutive seasons: Beginning with 2008's 17.5 percent, the number has risen each year, going from 18.0 (2009) to 18.5 (2010) to 18.6 (2011), before settling just beneath the 20 percent threshold in 2012, at 19.8 percent.

Here's why that matters to fantasy owners: As strikeout rates have risen, the leaguewide batting average has dropped accordingly, declining in six consecutive seasons. We have reached a point where there's a legitimate threat of the game's first sub-.250 campaign since 1972. That requires us to lower our bar for what constitutes a "good" batting average -- a point made in our Draft Kit -- perhaps by a larger margin than anyone could have anticipated.

Despite the "small sample" caveat, one reason why the 2013 numbers bear watching in the coming days is due to the game's historical tendency for swing-and-miss numbers to rise with the midsummer temperatures. The chart below illustrates this, with March/April leaguewide numbers highlighted:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
Month<CENTER>K%</CENTER><CENTER>Chas%</CENTER><CENTER>AVG</CENTER><CENTER>BABIP</CENTER><CENTER>SLUG</CENTER><CENTER>BB%</CENTER><CENTER>HR%</CENTER><CENTER>Swng%</CENTER><CENTER>Miss%</CENTER>
Apr 201018.4%27.4%.256.296.4069.4%36.243.8%20.8%
May 201018.1%27.8%.259.298.4048.8%36.644.6%20.2%
Jun 201018.0%28.5%.263.303.4058.2%37.245.4%20.5%
Jul 201018.3%28.8%.260.297.4118.1%33.645.7%20.9%
Aug 201018.8%28.2%.257.297.4038.1%35.645.3%20.8%
Sep/Oct 201019.3%28.2%.250.291.3908.5%36.145.2%21.7%
Mar/Apr 201118.6%27.8%.251.290.3918.6%37.444.9%21.0%
May 201118.1%28.2%.253.292.3898.4%39.345.5%20.4%
Jun 201118.2%29.1%.253.291.3917.9%38.745.7%20.8%
Jul 201118.8%29.2%.257.299.3997.9%38.046.2%20.9%
Aug 201118.7%29.0%.261.299.4187.6%32.046.0%20.9%
Sep 201119.4%28.9%.255.298.4058.2%34.345.8%21.7%
Mar/Apr 201219.3%28.0%.249.290.3958.2%35.944.8%21.8%
May 201219.6%28.2%.255.297.4088.3%33.745.2%21.6%
Jun 201219.8%28.4%.257.299.4107.9%32.445.7%21.6%
Jul 201219.9%28.9%.256.298.4117.9%32.146.1%22.1%
Aug 201219.5%28.7%.257.298.4077.4%33.546.2%21.9%
Sep/Oct 201220.5%28.9%.253.298.4008.1%33.846.1%22.8%
Apr 201323.7%27.7%.217.270.3418.2%41.844.8%25.2%

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In each of those three seasons, all of them classified "pitchers' years," the leaguewide strikeout rate (K%), chase rate (Chas%), swing rate (Swng%) and swing-and-miss rate (Miss%) were higher after the All-Star break than in the month of April. That said, batting averages, BABIPs and well-hit averages (rate of at-bats that resulted in hard contact) were also higher, hinting one of two things: Either hitters made better contact as they got into their midseason rhythm, or rising temperatures helped boost success levels on balls in play. (Both probably contributed.)

Still, if the annual April batting average declined in each of the past three seasons, and the final-season MLB average followed the same pattern, then this April's batting average bears careful watching. Could it be that this season's April batting average might finish at .240, and the 2013 full-year mark at .248? It's possible, and if it does, that's going to radically alter fantasy player valuation in the category.

Let's use our own Player Rater to illustrate. Using only batting-average contributions, let's isolate the five players whose number in the category was closest to zero on the Player Rater -- meaning that player's batting average neither hurt nor helped you. On the left, are the five closest to zero from 2009, and on the right, the five closest from 2012:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
Player<CENTER>Team</CENTER><CENTER>AB</CENTER><CENTER>H</CENTER><CENTER>AVG</CENTER><CENTER></CENTER>Player<CENTER>Team</CENTER><CENTER>AB</CENTER><CENTER>H</CENTER><CENTER>AVG</CENTER>
Jason BayBos531142.267Nelson CruzTex585152.260
Elvis AndrusTex480128.267Kyle SeagerSea594154.259
Daniel MurphyNYM508135.266Freddie FreemanAtl540140.259
Dexter FowlerCol433115.266Coco CrispOak455118.259
Ryan LudwickStL486129.265Jason KipnisCle591152.257
TOTALS2438649.266TOTALS2765716.259

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Besides the mere seven-point batting average differential between these groups, notice the 327 at-bat differential. That means 65 additional at-bats per player for that .259 batting average to influence your fantasy team's performance in the category, meaning the batting-average differential might have been wider if these samples had accrued identical at-bats. In addition, the group on the right shows how little harm a 600 at-bat, .260-hitting player would've done to your team in 2012. That most certainly could not have been said 10 years ago.

This rising strikeout trend was what drove my Tout Wars strategy, one in which I punted batting average in an attempt to capture first place in each of the other four primary rotisserie categories. Remember, a few lucky bounces can drive the batting average category, stealing you a handful of points even if your post-draft projection in the category was one. And if leaguewide batting averages drop -- and you've picked the right players -- your chances of more than one point increase.

To isolate these "batting average killers," I took a page from Larry Schechter's League of Alternative Baseball Reality (LABR) strategy, in which he also punted batting average in that league's AL-only session. Schecter's claim was that, in order to isolate "batting average killers" who provide the greatest contribution in the other four categories, calculate the player's projected dollar value as if batting average was not part of the rotisserie equation.

There's an easy way to do this: By using our Custom Dollar Value Generator.

Comparing projected dollar values for players in a 10-team, ESPN standard mixed league with and without batting average, the following players would've gained the most auction value. Players I bought in Tout Wars are highlighted:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
Player<CENTER>Team</CENTER><CENTER>Gain</CENTER><CENTER>AB</CENTER><CENTER>HR</CENTER><CENTER>RBI</CENTER><CENTER>SB</CENTER><CENTER>R</CENTER><CENTER>AVG</CENTER>
Adam DunnCWS$105333389177.212
Mark ReynoldsCle$84932978475.221
Danny EspinosaWsh$559020631980.242
Justin MaxwellHou$545422651466.231
B.J. UptonAtl$557523773184.245
Dan UgglaAtl$55632786391.243
Jason HeywardAtl$460230962293.261
Curtis GrandersonNYY$446430821088.246
Desmond JenningsTB$459215543698.252
Pedro AlvarezPit$45443291269.250
Josh ReddickOak$45752576882.254
Colby RasmusTor$45652478686.244
Rickie WeeksMil$456422631389.250
Jose BautistaTor$350841108898.268
Jay BruceCin$357438108995.267
Bryce HarperWsh$358627932287.266
Ryan HowardPhi$352534108176.259
Mark TrumboLAA$35683297670.262
Carlos SantanaCle$35362687581.257
Jason KipnisCle$360615702590.257
Carlos GomezMil$346717463374.248

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Here's how this pertains to those of you who have already drafted: Remember, strategy doesn't become irrelevant once the draft concludes. In-season strategy is every bit as relevant to fantasy success, and it's critical to keep up with changing trends in the game -- like this potential change we're seeing.

If you own any of the players in the above chart, don't be so concerned about their low batting averages, which might soon look a lot closer to league-average than you might have initially anticipated. And if you find yourself considering a trade for any in the coming weeks, take a quick glance at the leaguewide strikeout rates and batting average, to make sure you're not underrating them.

[h=3]The rankings[/h]
This season's Hit Parade expands its rankings to 150 hitters, to provide fantasy owners in ESPN standard mixed leagues more than enough ranked players to populate a fantasy roster. But we're also adding a new feature beginning with today: You can now see all players -- including starting and relief pitchers -- ranked by position on one page at this link.

Rankings will be updated along with the week's new editions of Sixty Feet Six Inches (Tuesday) and Hit Parade (Wednesday), meaning that starting and relief pitchers will receive their weekly updates on Tuesday, and hitters will receive their weekly updates on Wednesday.

The top 150 hitters overall can be found in the chart below each week.

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
[h=4]TOP 150 HITTERS[/h]Note: Tristan H. Cockcroft's top 150 hitters are ranked for their expected performance from this point forward, not for statistics that have already been accrued. For position-specific rankings, see the "Pos Rnk" column. Previous Ranking ("Prev Rnk") is ESPN's preseason ranking among all hitters.
<CENTER># </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prv
Rk </CENTER>
<CENTER># </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prv
Rk </CENTER>
1 Ryan Braun Mil OF1 1 76 Neil Walker Pit 2B8 76
2 Miguel Cabrera Det 3B1 3 77 Angel Pagan SF OF33 73
3 Mike Trout LAA OF2 2 78 Brett Gardner NYY OF34 79
4 Andrew McCutchen Pit OF3 5 79 Hunter Pence SF OF35 77
5 Matt Kemp LAD OF4 6 80 Nelson Cruz Tex OF36 84
6 Robinson Cano NYY 2B1 4 81 Ben Revere Phi OF37 86
7 Carlos Gonzalez Col OF5 8 82 Rickie Weeks Mil 2B9 94
8 Albert Pujols LAA 1B1 7 83 Chris Davis Bal OF38 102
9 Joey Votto Cin 1B2 9 84 Andre Ethier LAD OF39 96
10 Prince Fielder Det 1B3 10 85 Alcides Escobar KC SS9 90
11 Justin Upton Atl OF6 12 86 Michael Morse Sea OF40 99
12 Jose Bautista Tor OF7 18 87 Chase Utley Phi 2B10 92
13 Giancarlo Stanton Mia OF8 13 88 Alejandro De Aza CWS OF41 78
14 Jason Heyward Atl OF9 22 89 Ryan Howard Phi 1B13 88
15 David Wright NYM 3B2 15 90 Adam LaRoche Wsh 1B14 95
16 Buster Posey SF C1 14 91 Dexter Fowler Col OF42 108
17 Evan Longoria TB 3B3 19 92 Paul Konerko CWS 1B15 87
18 Troy Tulowitzki Col SS1 11 93 Howard Kendrick LAA 2B11 82
19 Edwin Encarnacion Tor 1B4 24 94 Josh Reddick Oak OF43 111
20 Adrian Beltre Tex 3B4 16 95 Todd Frazier Cin 3B11 106
21 Josh Hamilton LAA OF10 17 96 Nick Swisher Cle OF44 105
22 Ian Kinsler Tex 2B2 21 97 David Ortiz Bos DH1 81
23 Dustin Pedroia Bos 2B3 20 98 Mike Moustakas KC 3B12 93
24 Starlin Castro ChC SS2 26 99 Torii Hunter Det OF45 91
25 Adam Jones Bal OF11 25 100 Pedro Alvarez Pit 3B13 98
26 Jose Reyes Tor SS3 23 101 Miguel Montero Ari C7 107
27 Jay Bruce Cin OF12 27 102 David Freese StL 3B14 103
28 Jacoby Ellsbury Bos OF13 32 103 Danny Espinosa Wsh 2B12 83
29 Billy Butler KC 1B5 29 104 Salvador Perez KC C8 124
30 B.J. Upton Atl OF14 34 105 Kendrys Morales Sea 1B16 116
31 Bryce Harper Wsh OF15 28 106 Kyle Seager Sea 3B15 101
32 Matt Holliday StL OF16 33 107 Derek Jeter NYY SS10 114
33 Brandon Phillips Cin 2B4 31 108 Nick Markakis Bal OF46 136
34 Michael Bourn Cle OF17 41 109 Jason Kubel Ari OF47 97
35 Adrian Gonzalez LAD 1B6 30 110 Manny Machado Bal 3B16 109
36 Austin Jackson Det OF18 43 111 Will Middlebrooks Bos 3B17 115
37 Desmond Jennings TB OF19 47 112 Michael Cuddyer Col OF48 134
38 Ben Zobrist TB OF20 38 113 Marco Scutaro SF 2B13 112
39 Ian Desmond Wsh SS4 45 114 Coco Crisp Oak OF49 110
40 Jason Kipnis Cle 2B5 42 115 Wilin Rosario Col C9 113
41 Ryan Zimmerman Wsh 3B5 36 116 Jayson Werth Wsh OF50 121
42 Paul Goldschmidt Ari 1B7 49 117 Mark Teixeira NYY 1B17 119
43 Yoenis Cespedes Oak OF21 37 118 Kevin Youkilis NYY 3B18 120
44 Jimmy Rollins Phi SS5 53 119 Ichiro Suzuki NYY OF51 118
45 Allen Craig StL 1B8 44 120 Lance Berkman Tex 1B18 122
46 Yadier Molina StL C2 35 121 Carl Crawford LAD OF52 89
47 Elvis Andrus Tex SS6 61 122 Dan Uggla Atl 2B14 104
48 Alex Rios CWS OF22 51 123 Cameron Maybin SD OF53 126
49 Matt Wieters Bal C3 39 124 J.J. Hardy Bal SS11 100
50 Joe Mauer Min C4 46 125 Norichika Aoki Mil OF54 129
51 Shin-Soo Choo Cin OF23 54 126 Justin Morneau Min 1B19 135
52 Pablo Sandoval SF 3B6 55 127 Daniel Murphy NYM 2B15 141
53 Carlos Santana Cle C5 52 128 Jonathan Lucroy Mil C10 132
54 Aramis Ramirez Mil 3B7 48 129 Everth Cabrera SD SS12 138
55 Alex Gordon KC OF24 56 130 Dayan Viciedo CWS OF55 130
56 Aaron Hill Ari 2B6 50 131 Andrelton Simmons Atl SS13 127
57 Brett Lawrie Tor 3B8 40 132 Emilio Bonifacio Tor OF56 148
58 Asdrubal Cabrera Cle SS7 65 133 Mike Napoli Bos C11 85
59 Freddie Freeman Atl 1B9 59 134 Jesus Montero Sea C12 128
60 Jose Altuve Hou 2B7 57 135 Jed Lowrie Oak SS14 155
61 Carlos Gomez Mil OF25 66 136 Corey Hart Mil 1B20 123
62 Chase Headley SD 3B9 64 137 Brandon Belt SF 1B21 142
63 Mark Trumbo LAA OF26 71 138 Alexei Ramirez CWS SS15 117
64 Josh Willingham Min OF27 72 139 Alfonso Soriano ChC OF57 125
65 Ike Davis NYM 1B10 62 140 Michael Young Phi 1B22 131
66 Martin Prado Ari OF28 60 141 Lorenzo Cain KC OF58 150
67 Curtis Granderson NYY OF29 67 142 Trevor Plouffe Min 3B19 139
68 Melky Cabrera Tor OF30 63 143 Andy Dirks Det OF59 199
69 Eric Hosmer KC 1B11 68 144 Garrett Jones Pit 1B23 137
70 Victor Martinez Det C6 58 145 Domonic Brown Phi OF60 185
71 Shane Victorino Bos OF31 74 146 Adam Dunn CWS 1B24 140
72 Hanley Ramirez LAD 3B10 70 147 Starling Marte Pit OF61 164
73 Carlos Beltran StL OF32 80 148 Brandon Moss Oak 1B25 144
74 Anthony Rizzo ChC 1B12 69 149 Zack Cozart Cin SS16 146
75 Erick Aybar LAA SS8 75 150 Chris Carter Hou 1B26 169

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hacheman@therx.com
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[h=1]Believe in prospects now?[/h][h=3]Fernandez, Maurer among young pitchers getting early look in rotation[/h]By Tristan H. Cockcroft | ESPN.com

Two baseball stories begin their first chapters this week: Jose Fernandez is set to make his major league debut for the Miami Marlins on Sunday, Brandon Maurer his for the Seattle Mariners on Thursday.

(Obligatory pause to allow you to regain your composure, knowing that you, like most any fantasy owner, cannot contain your excitement when a prospect debuts.)

Understandably, headlines like Fernandez's anticipated debut -- the freshest among prospect-related news, so we'll discuss him first -- send us scrambling to the waiver wire. The proverbial "getting in on the ground floor" is an irresistible urge for fantasy owners, with no greater evidence than this: In the four FAAB-bidding leagues in which I play (or follow, to include the League of Alternative Baseball Reality-NL results), Fernandez cost an average of 28.3 percent of the winning team's seasonal FAAB budget and was the most expensive player purchased in all but one. The exception was my local NL-only league, in which Kyle Lohse took those honors.

Fernandez's prospect credentials are stunning: He was the No. 14 pick overall in the 2011 amateur draft. He had an astonishing 1.75 ERA, 0.93 WHIP and .191 batting average allowed in 25 starts in the minors in 2012. He was tabbed Keith Law's No. 6 pitching prospect and No. 16 overall, as well as Baseball America's No. 2 pitching and No. 5 prospect overall, this preseason. And he has a mid-90s fastball with a curveball that Law himself says "would miss right-handers' bats in the majors today."

But before we embrace this Fernandez lovefest, let's undergo a brief reality check: This is a 20-year-old with only 11 starts in high Class A ball, none higher, who made only one appearance of two innings facing mostly minor leaguers during this year's Grapefruit League action. His promotion is a bold move by the Marlins; the reality is that expecting much from him this season might be too bold.

There is no doubt that Fernandez should have cost a considerable chunk of any fantasy team's FAAB budget, based solely upon his scouting reports and high -- albeit potentially distant -- statistical ceiling. Now the question becomes: To what degree should you trust him, or Maurer, for that matter, in the early weeks of 2013?

Let's allow history to provide us an outline.

Using a 10-year span of prospect reports -- we'll use Baseball America's annual Top 100 prospects for this study, to grant us the largest sample possible -- I've analyzed the start-by-start, early-career performances of 80 pitchers who managed to place as one of the top 10 pitching prospects from 2000-09. To improve the sample, I've isolated only the 41 of those 80 who have made at least 80 career major league starts. The results were telling:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
Career Start<CENTER>ERA</CENTER><CENTER>WHIP</CENTER><CENTER>K/9</CENTER><CENTER>K/BB</CENTER><CENTER>HR/9</CENTER><CENTER>IP/GS</CENTER><CENTER>QS%</CENTER>
14.14 1.34 7.67 1.84 1.25 5.46 34.1%
1 to 54.03 1.35 7.20 1.76 0.97 5.69 47.8%
6 to 104.56 1.44 6.92 1.76 1.08 5.64 43.9%
11 to 204.27 1.38 7.27 2.12 1.10 5.70 48.0%
21 to 304.12 1.35 7.48 2.21 0.95 5.92 54.6%
31 to 404.02 1.36 7.49 2.18 0.90 6.00 54.4%
41 to 503.58 1.25 7.48 2.39 0.83 6.28 58.0%
51 to 603.84 1.30 7.42 2.31 0.88 6.14 53.4%
61 to 703.81 1.30 7.48 2.54 0.99 6.17 57.6%
71 to 803.69 1.25 7.65 2.58 0.90 6.36 61.5%

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Any veteran fantasy owner has, by this point, probably heard the phrase, "Every young pitcher endures an adjustment period." The chart above illustrates this; this group of elite pitching prospects typically reached this career stage between their sixth and 20th turns in the majors, then fully hit their stride by about their 40th career starts. This is evidence that you shouldn't expect the breakthrough during a top pitching prospect's rookie season, but rather his sophomore campaign, if you have the option of waiting.

It's the performance of those debut dandies, though, which are most curious. The chart also shows that prospects tend to enjoy an initial advantage through their first five career turns, particularly in the strikeout department. The rationale is anyone's guess; it could be as simple as their early opponents possessing less extensive scouting reports. This is especially relevant to pitchers like Fernandez, who averaged 10.73 K's per nine innings during his minor league career, and Maurer, who averaged 8.37 per nine during his. It's also relevant to a pitcher who has already debuted, Shelby Miller, who has but one big-league start under his belt and an 11.07 K's per nine ratio in his minor league career.


(Again an obligatory pause, this time to recognize that Maurer, unlike Fernandez or Miller, was not regarded a top-10 pitching prospect by either Law or Baseball America this preseason. He was one of Law's "just missed" prospects, so admittedly, he doesn't directly adhere to the chart guidelines.)

In other words, if you own Fernandez, Maurer or Miller, there's every bit as compelling a reason to activate them now rather than leave them on your bench for evaluation purposes until June. Granted, no two prospects possess identical skills, makeup, mentality and circumstances, all variables that influence the study, but history does show a greater chance that you'll miss a prospect's more valuable outings and absorb his adjustment-period performances if you play the waiting game.

You might also want to use the data for sell-high trading purposes, in the event that one or both gets off to a comparably strong start. After all, prospect buzz often can drive trade stock into the stratosphere. If, say, Fernandez is sitting at a 3.40 ERA and 37 K's through his first five starts, it might be a brilliant idea to shop him, because he's highly likely to reach an adjustment stage at some point.

Returning to the study's guidelines for a moment, let's not gloss over the high failure rate of this group. That only 41 of the 80 prospects reached the 80-start plateau means that a whopping 39 did not -- though, to be fair, 10 of those 39 "made it" as relievers, while it could be argued that five others (Brett Anderson, Wade Davis, Brian Matusz, Jarrod Parker and Chris Tillman) still have an opportunity to "make it." Still, that leaves 24 of 80 prospects, or exactly 30 percent, who failed to develop into long-term successes at the major league level. And that's only top-10, elite-level, prospects; a pitcher like Maurer, if he fails, wouldn't even count against that total in future years (unless he earns a top-10 ranking in 2014 or beyond).

That sure demonstrates the boom/bust nature of pitching prospects, and it's why we advise so strongly that you tread carefully with them.

A final note as it pertains to a pitcher's career development: Those career-starts-41-and-beyond statistics represent promising news for an attractive group of sophomores and third-year starters who could follow a similar pattern of improvement in 2013. The following pitchers, along with their career big league starts in parentheses, were Baseball America top-10 prospects between 2000-12 who reside within a group of pitchers with between 41 and 80 turns: Brett Anderson (68), Jeremy Hellickson (64), Stephen Strasburg (45) and Chris Tillman (51). In addition, Yu Darvish (29), Matt Moore (32), Jarrod Parker (30) and Chris Sale (29) should also reach the 41-start plateau by midsummer.

Consider it a good time, at least as history dictates, to trade for each.

[h=3]Rotations, schmotations[/h]
It must be one of those annual rites of spring, like birds, bulbs and baseball: Questions about rotation order and the relevance of Opening Day starts.


Fantasy owners' knowledge as a whole has increased in the past three seasons -- thank you, sabermetrics -- since the last time I ran this study, but every so often you'll still run into the occasional outlier who leans upon a faulty assumption: That a pitcher's alignment as his team's "ace"/Opening Day starter puts him in a pattern to face only fellow "aces," leading to a decrease in that pitcher's win potential. Some might say that New York Mets Opening Day starter Jonathan Niese, for example, might be bound to suffer in the win column.

The truth is that the only time the term "ace" matters is during the playoffs, in a short series, when the goal is to get that man on the mound as often as possible.

During the regular season, the day-to-day grind of 162 games, including off days that populate teams' schedules at varying frequencies, shuffle rotation orders, meaning that said "aces" often aren't even facing their opponent's same by their second turns. We'll already witness this for the first time Saturday, when Texas Rangers "ace" Matt Harrison works on four days' rest, lining him up against Los Angeles Angels No. 5 starter Tommy Hanson. The label also sometimes changes hands during the course of said schedule.

To lean on history again for evidence, I've analyzed 13 seasons' worth of rotational data (2000-12) -- consider it a expansion of the aforementioned 2010 study -- to illustrate how opening-week order becomes largely irrelevant deeper in the season. Labeling each team's Opening Day starter its "staff ace" and numbering its subsequent starters in order, staff aces actually matched up with the same in only 22.3 percent of their total starts all season -- that means that, after Opening Day passes, those staff aces actually meet up in only 19.5 percent of their remaining turns. And remember, with most teams using a traditional five rotation spots, you'd expect a pitcher to have a 20 percent chance of facing each individual spot.

There is, however, truth to the part about an ace possessing diminished win potential when specifically lined up with a fellow ace. The following chart compares these aces' performances to the league averages:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
<CENTER></CENTER><CENTER>QS%</CENTER><CENTER>W/GS</CENTER><CENTER>Cheap Wins
/GS</CENTER>
<CENTER>Non-Win QS
/GS</CENTER>
<CENTER>Tough Losses
/GS</CENTER>
Aces vs. aces58.70.369 0.052 0.270 0.115
MLB averages49.10.352 0.079 0.219 0.085

<THEAD>
</THEAD><TBODY>
</TBODY>



If wins are paramount in your league, that's something to keep in mind -- but only as a single day's matchups are concerned, not as a yearlong thing. In other words, take it into account if, say, you see Clayton Kershaw battling Matt Cain on Aug. 3. But even if you're worried about diminished win potential, are you really going to bench either Kershaw or Cain accordingly?

Another big check in the aces' column: Aces were actually the most likely to provide you with a full healthy season, meaning the greatest appeal for these Opening Day starters is that it signifies teams' trust in them as regular contributors. These pitchers averaged 28.1 starts per season, which is astonishingly high if you consider the injury rate for pitchers.

[h=3]Relief Efforts[/h]
One of the enhancements you'll notice to this year's "Sixty Feet Six Inches" is the incorporation of our former "Relief Efforts" column into the analysis. Listed at column's end is this season's first set of rankings, and one that ranks both starters and relievers in one set. (For the sake of convenience, a pitcher's individual rank as starter or reliever is indicated, as "SP01" or "RP01," for example.)


</PHOTO4></P>
There'll also be a "Relief Efforts" section -- barring the column itself sporting a relief-pitching topic as its primary story -- to address the latest closer news.

This week's top relief-pitching story comes from the Chicago Cubs, where incumbent closer Carlos Marmol already appears on the verge of losing his gig. Handed the second-easiest save chance by definition -- the three-run-lead, one-inning assignment (the three-inning save rule is classified the "easiest") -- on Opening Day, Marmol couldn't convert. He threw just nine strikes in 19 pitches and zero of four first-pitch strikes, hitting Andrew McCutchen with a pitch and allowing a Pedro Alvarez RBI single and Gaby Sanchez to walk. Marmol was promptly yanked, Cubs manager Dale Sveum playing lefty-righty matchups to get James Russell to retire Neil Walker and Kyuji Fujikawa to retire Russell Martin. Fujikawa recorded his first save for his two pitches of work.

This comes on the heels of an awful spring by Marmol -- 6.97 ERA and 7.84 walks per nine innings in 12 appearances -- as well as a 2011-12 regular-season performance combined in which he had a 3.76 ERA and 1.45 WHIP. He's among the most ill-equipped to handle high-leverage chores because of his poor control, and regardless of Sveum's supportive comments -- he told the Chicago Tribune afterward that "[Marmol] is still the closer" -- Marmol's status as the team's primary ninth-inning reliever will probably be short-lived.

Fujikawa, signed to a two-year, $9.5 million deal this winter to serve as closer insurance, is well worth adding in any leagues in which he's available. His strength is far greater command; he averaged 2.29 walks per nine and 5.43 K's per walk during his career in Japan and had 10 K's compared to four walks during his eight Cactus League appearances.

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
[h=4]TOP 150 PITCHERS[/h]Note: Tristan H. Cockcroft's top 150 pitchers are ranked for their expected performance from this point forward, not for statistics that have already been accrued. For starter- or reliever-specific rankings, see the "Pos Rnk" column. Previous Ranking ("Prev Rnk") is ESPN's preseason ranking among all pitchers.
<CENTER>Rnk </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prev
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Rnk </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prev
Rnk </CENTER>
1 Clayton Kershaw LAD SP1 2 76 Kenley Jansen LAD RP20 74
2 Justin Verlander Det SP2 1 77 Kyle Lohse Mil SP57 100
3 Felix Hernandez Sea SP3 3 78 Edwin Jackson ChC SP58 76
4 Stephen Strasburg Wsh SP4 4 79 Ryan Dempster Bos SP59 88
5 David Price TB SP5 5 80 Alexi Ogando Tex SP60 70
6 Matt Cain SF SP6 6 81 Ernesto Frieri LAA RP21 87
7 Cole Hamels Phi SP7 8 82 Paul Maholm Atl SP61 102
8 Cliff Lee Phi SP8 7 83 Steve Cishek Mia RP22 85
9 Gio Gonzalez Wsh SP9 11 84 Brandon McCarthy Ari SP62 83
10 Madison Bumgarner SF SP10 13 85 Clay Buchholz Bos SP63 93
11 Jered Weaver LAA SP11 9 86 Jason Grilli Pit RP23 71
12 R.A. Dickey Tor SP12 15 87 Josh Beckett LAD SP64 86
13 Adam Wainwright StL SP13 12 88 Jason Motte StL RP24 54
14 Yu Darvish Tex SP14 14 89 Grant Balfour Oak RP25 65
15 Johnny Cueto Cin SP15 18 90 Marco Estrada Mil SP65 89
16 Craig Kimbrel Atl RP1 10 91 Casey Janssen Tor RP26 82
17 Chris Sale CWS SP16 17 92 Wandy Rodriguez Pit SP66 91
18 CC Sabathia NYY SP17 16 93 Bobby Parnell NYM RP27 103
19 Aroldis Chapman Cin RP2 20 94 Julio Teheran Atl SP67 124
20 Mat Latos Cin SP18 19 95 Jason Vargas LAA SP68 97
21 Zack Greinke LAD SP19 21 96 Wei-Yin Chen Bal SP69 94
22 Jordan Zimmermann Wsh SP20 23 97 Brandon League LAD RP28 92
23 Matt Moore TB SP21 25 98 Phil Hughes NYY SP70 99
24 Max Scherzer Det SP22 28 99 Kyuji Fujikawa ChC RP29 122
25 James Shields KC SP23 26 100 Mitchell Boggs StL RP30 136
26 Jonathan Papelbon Phi RP3 22 101 Chris Tillman Bal SP71 111
27 Kris Medlen Atl SP24 24 102 Ryan Madson LAA RP31 79
28 Yovani Gallardo Mil SP25 27 103 Shelby Miller StL SP72 101
29 Rafael Soriano Wsh RP4 29 104 Jonathan Broxton Cin RP32 115
30 Josh Johnson Tor SP26 37 105 Hisashi Iwakuma Sea SP73 95
31 Fernando Rodney TB RP5 30 106 Jose Veras Hou RP33 104
32 Hiroki Kuroda NYY SP27 38 107 Matt Garza ChC SP74 80
33 Mariano Rivera NYY RP6 32 108 Vinnie Pestano Cle RP34 98
34 Brandon Morrow Tor SP28 31 109 Dillon Gee NYM SP75 140
35 J.J. Putz Ari RP7 34 110 James McDonald Pit SP76 105
36 Doug Fister Det SP29 41 111 Drew Storen Wsh RP35 106
37 Ian Kennedy Ari SP30 33 112 Hyun-Jin Ryu LAD SP77 132
38 Jon Lester Bos SP31 39 113 Bud Norris Hou SP78 107
39 Joe Nathan Tex RP8 35 114 Ryan Cook Oak RP36 108
40 Jake Peavy CWS SP32 42 115 Ivan Nova NYY SP79 109
41 Anibal Sanchez Det SP33 43 116 Sergio Santos Tor RP37 110
42 Jim Johnson Bal RP9 47 117 Ross Detwiler Wsh SP80 112
43 Jonathon Niese NYM SP34 44 118 Jason Hammel Bal SP81 127
44 Dan Haren Wsh SP35 48 119 Carlos Marmol ChC RP38 96
45 Brett Anderson Oak SP36 49 120 Shaun Marcum NYM SP82 113
46 Addison Reed CWS RP10 50 121 Brandon Beachy Atl SP83 114
47 Jeff Samardzija ChC SP37 51 122 Tommy Hanson LAA SP84 119
48 Lance Lynn StL SP38 56 123 Andrew Bailey Bos RP39 180
49 Tim Lincecum SF SP39 40 124 Mark Buehrle Tor SP85 116
50 Greg Holland KC RP11 53 125 Chad Billingsley LAD SP86 118
51 Jarrod Parker Oak SP40 58 126 Phil Coke Det RP40 150
52 Roy Halladay Phi SP41 46 127 Gavin Floyd CWS SP87 120
53 Sergio Romo SF RP12 52 128 Sean Marshall Cin RP41 146
54 John Axford Mil RP13 45 129 Rick Porcello Det SP88 121
55 Huston Street SD RP14 57 130 Tyler Clippard Wsh RP42 123
56 Jeremy Hellickson TB SP42 61 131 Andy Pettitte NYY SP89 125
57 Joel Hanrahan Bos RP15 36 132 Bartolo Colon Oak SP90 149
58 Homer Bailey Cin SP43 59 133 Ricky Nolasco Mia SP91 126
59 Derek Holland Tex SP44 67 134 Patrick Corbin Ari SP92 197
60 Mike Minor Atl SP45 66 135 David Hernandez Ari RP43 128
61 Rafael Betancourt Col RP16 62 136 Joaquin Benoit Det RP44 129
62 C.J. Wilson LAA SP46 55 137 Felix Doubront Bos SP93 170
63 Jaime Garcia StL SP47 77 138 Wily Peralta Mil SP94 166
64 Matt Harvey NYM SP48 60 139 Frank Francisco NYM RP45 139
65 Matt Harrison Tex SP49 64 140 Vance Worley Min SP95 133
66 Alex Cobb TB SP50 90 141 Koji Uehara Bos RP46 135
67 Tom Wilhelmsen Sea RP17 84 142 Clayton Richard SD SP96 138
68 Ryan Vogelsong SF SP51 68 143 Justin Masterson Cle SP97 117
69 Tim Hudson Atl SP52 63 144 Luke Gregerson SD RP47 143
70 Tommy Milone Oak SP53 81 145 Mike Fiers Mil SP98 144
71 Chris Perez Cle RP18 69 146 Sean Doolittle Oak RP48 145
72 A.J. Burnett Pit SP54 73 147 Jose Fernandez Mia SP99 362
73 Glen Perkins Min RP19 72 148 Jake McGee TB RP49 147
74 Trevor Cahill Ari SP55 75 149 David Robertson NYY RP50 148
75 Wade Miley Ari SP56 78 150 Wade Davis KC RP51 157

<THEAD>
<TH style="VERTICAL-ALIGN: bottom"><CENTER> </CENTER>
</THEAD><TBODY>
</TBODY>
 

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Is Brian Roberts worth picking up?
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Eric Karabell

I'm reasonably confident that the measly dollar I spent in a recent mixed-league auction on Baltimore Orioles second baseman Brian Roberts was worth it. However, I really do have no degree of reasonable confidence as to whether Roberts will play in 20 games or 140 games this season. I'm rooting for him, for more important reasons than just fantasy baseball, but honestly, do you think even he knows what's going to happen this year?
<OFFER>But I had to crack a few smiles as Roberts singled twice and scored a run in Baltimore's 7-4 victory in Tampa Bay on Tuesday, because at least he's out there playing. He could have had three hits, but Rays third baseman Evan Longoria took a hit away from him on a diving play. Roberts, formerly one of the top middle infielders in the game over a six-year stretch, used to be a high-steal guy with double-digit-homer pop, including that magical, unrepeatable April 2005, when he bashed eight over the wall. Since a terrific 2009, he has dealt with myriad physical issues and has barely played. Even while Roberts was having a strong spring, not only seeing regular at-bats -- no Oriole had more -- but also hitting .310 with five walks and three stolen bases, it was tough to muster realistic optimism. However, if you want to talk about comeback stories, this is one to watch.

</OFFER>
"It was fun," Roberts told reporters after Tuesday's game, in which he batted ninth and certainly looked like his old self. "Not that you forget how fun baseball was, but when you are out for such a long period of time, sometimes you forget what the atmosphere and energy is like and just the joy of playing the game. So it was great."

Roberts is owned in just 8.0 percent of ESPN standard mixed leagues, and at this point there's no reason to call that number too high or too low. We just don't know. Orioles manager Buck Showalter inserted Roberts into the No. 9 lineup slot, and not solely because lefty David Price was on the mound (Roberts is a switch-hitter). Showalter has said he wants to decrease the pressure on Roberts, but he also has a high-OBP option leading off in Nick Markakis. It's certainly possible that Roberts moves up in the order, though, since I can't see 20-year-old third baseman Manny Machado hitting second regularly against right-handed pitching, even though he's a future star.

I'm hoping Roberts stays healthy, and one would presume the skills he used to boast are still there. The few times I caught Roberts on TV in March, his swing looked fine, his wheels looked fine, it appeared to be the same guy, just with that one very important asterisk of having played in a total of 115 games over three seasons. And let's be clear, this was one game Tuesday. Baseball is a daily grind, and Roberts is 35 years old. It would be great if he could hit 10 home runs, steal 30 bases and play in 140 games, but let's not go there yet.

Ultimately, what Roberts used to do when he was a top-50 overall option is not, I believe, a reasonable comparison starter for what he would do if healthy this year. Not yet. In addition, what Roberts did -- or didn't do -- at the plate last season, when he hit .182 in 66 at-bats, tells us nothing. This is new territory. There are 15 second basemen owned in 100 percent of ESPN leagues, and another seven ahead of Roberts in terms of fantasy popularity. For now, I'd still leave Roberts on free agency and own the likes of Jeff Keppinger, Omar Infante and even Gordon Beckham, none of whom I'm particularly enamored with. I want to believe, but give me a week or two before I can believe in Roberts, and even that seems like way too soon.

Speaking of Orioles, the underrated Jason Hammel allowed a Ben Zobrist home run and little else through five innings, when he may or may not have started to tire. It's tough to tell. Hammel is owned in only 9.2 percent of ESPN standard mixed leagues, which seems low based on his 2012 numbers. Forget about what Hammel did -- or didn't do -- as a member of the Colorado Rockies. Last season with the O's, he brought a new, big-boy strikeout rate of nearly one per inning, kept the ball down and avoided home runs. It all looked legitimate to me. I don't even assume his knee problems will trip him up. I see a borderline top-60 fantasy starter, someone who can whiff 175 hitters if he makes 32 starts. As such, his ownership should probably be higher.


Box score bits (AL): Well, that Yu Darvish guy looked pretty good, eh? Darvish, who I predicted months ago would be a Cy Young Award contender, was an out away from a perfect game Tuesday. But he's already owned in all leagues. I think the Houston Astros have some intriguing pieces to watch, but they're going to strike out a lot. Alexi Ogando is a wise spot-start addition for Wednesday against the Stros, though I do feel it's a bit early to be spot-starting pitchers. … I saw some of what Cleveland Indians right-hander Justin Masterson did in Toronto, but I still don't trust him. He's hittable and walked 88 batters last season. Lefties eat him up. I'd leave Masterson on free agency. Unless he's facing the Astros, of course. … Mike Morse homered twice off right-handed pitchers Tuesday, one an opposite-field blast. He has 30 more homers left in him.

Box score bits (NL): Milwaukee Brewers right-hander Marco Estrada fanned eight batters over five otherwise messy innings Tuesday, allowing nine hits and four runs. The K's are for real, but if the home runs are, as well, you can expect an ERA around 4.00. … That's two more hits for St. Louis Cardinals No. 2 hitter Matt Carpenter. I continue to enjoy his work on a handful of my fantasy teams. He's no fluke. The update on David Freese (back) is that he could return Monday; Carpenter would move to second base. … Cards shortstop Pete Kozma launched a home run to center field Tuesday, but it came off the embarrassing Heath Bell. Does it still count? Don't get enamored with Kozma, who hit .223 in Triple-A in 2012. … Joaquin Arias started at first base for the San Francisco Giants, but don't fret, Brandon Belt owners: He was battling the flu. Don't drop him yet!
 

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Jays' Lind, Rajai Davis have sneaky value
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Eric Karabell

The Toronto Blue Jays were able to make major additions to their ball club this winter, getting Jose Reyes, Josh Johnson, R.A. Dickey and others, and expectations are high. In fact, seven Blue Jays hitters and four pitchers are owned in more than half of ESPN's standard mixed leagues. Of course, when I went searching for Blue Jays to talk to in the Citizens Bank Park clubhouse after Friday night's spring training win over the Philadelphia Phillies, I was focusing on a few barely owned Blue Jays who used to matter quite a bit in fantasy but for the time being appear to be sharing the designated hitter role.
Adam Lind went hitless in four at-bats from the No. 5 lineup spot in Tuesday's 4-1 loss to the Cleveland Indians. Meanwhile, on the bench and perhaps waiting for Lind to get on base so he could be summoned for pinch-running duty was speedster Rajai Davis. These guys, one an enticing power hitter and the other a major base stealer, are owned in a combined total of 7 percent of ESPN leagues, but it sure sounds like each player intends to be more relevant than that in 2013, and fantasy owners should be watching.

<OFFER>"I feel good," said Lind, who hit .305 and smacked 35 home runs in 2009 but hasn't been as valuable since. "To be honest, my role is yet to be determined. I'd like to stay in the big leagues, but it's my last year here, nothing is guaranteed. The last two years, I have had two good half-years. I'd like to try to get at least five months this year."

</OFFER>
Lind spoke with a smile, like a guy who has little to lose, and perhaps that's the case. While fantasy owners seem disinterested, he's a proven player at the big league level, and even while struggling in 2010 and 2011, he hit 49 home runs. Last season he hit 11 home runs in only 321 at-bats, but battled injury and slumps. He did, however, hit .304 after the All-Star break, cementing at-bats on this year's team. He lost weight this offseason and claims a new yoga regimen has made his back stronger. With the emergence of Edwin Encarnacion in 2012, Lind, who is eligible at first base, isn't likely to claim that role regularly. But we just want to see him hit. I asked Lind what has gone wrong the past few seasons.

"I think I was too fast, too tense, too tight at times," he said. "You watch the big guys like [Prince] Fielder, they're slow and under control, everything they do. I need that rhythm and tempo. I had it for three months, then was like the fifth chair in the band. As for hitting 30 home runs, that's pretty elite. It's possible. I know I can do it, but I'm not gonna say it."

While Lind's contributions for fantasy owners last season were modest, Davis finished second to Mike Trout in all of baseball in stolen bases. A right-handed hitter and seemingly natural platoon mate with Lind, Davis also could find himself in a new organization next season, or sooner. Prospect Anthony Gose could steal a ton of bases and is an elite outfielder to boot. He's only 22, but he's nearly big league-ready. If this is a straight platoon with Lind, then Davis would figure to get less playing time, being the right-handed hitter, but then again, he wouldn't need many at-bats to pile up stolen bases. Davis has stolen an average of 43 bases per season since 2009, yet with an average of 420 at-bats per season, which is low. He doesn't offer much else in terms of fantasy or real-life aid, though.

"I guess time will have to tell what my role is," Davis said. "There's a good chance I'll face lefties. Whatever I can do to help us win, whatever the role is. I just take advantage of opportunities. I get the opportunity, I take it."

When I asked Davis if he thinks about running pretty much every time he gets on base, he stopped what he was doing, looked up at me and said, "I do a little more than thinking it. I'm trying to get it."

It might sound odd, but this situation really could work, and fantasy owners should be on guard. Lind is certainly a reasonable power source against right-handed pitching, carrying a .282/.335/.502 career line against them, with 99 of his 117 home runs. Davis boasts a .290/.349/.417 line against lefties, certainly serviceable, and neither of these players figures to be facing opposite-throwing pitchers regularly. That bodes well for their individual batting averages. For example, Lind hit .276 against right-handers in 2012, with nine home runs in 232 at-bats. That could have been a 20-plus-homer season had he played more. Frankly, Blue Jays fans and fantasy owners don't want him facing lefties.

And Davis, for all his flaws, had a pair of double-digit stolen base months in 2012, same as Trout. Davis stole third base 17 times. Only one other American Leaguer reached double digits there (Darin Mastroianni). Davis is elite at what he does, and every fantasy owner seems to be looking for cheap stolen bases. Look no further. In AL-only formats, Lind and Davis are likely already owned, but I have a feeling we'll be seeing their names in mixed leagues, probably 12 owners or deeper, during the season, as well.

Blue Jay talk: Brittle or unlucky? Third baseman Brett Lawrie will miss another two weeks because of a strained rib muscle, but I still wouldn't drop him in any leagues. This is a potential top-50 player. I know, I know, he can't help us from the disabled list. Maicer Izturis can steal the occasional base filling in, and if this gives Emilio Bonifacio unlimited playing time at second base, I'm all for it. Bonifacio is only nine games at second base away from coveted eligibility! … Catcher J.P. Arencibia had a huge power spring and doubled Tuesday, but he also had trouble, as many do, catching knuckleballer R.A. Dickey. It might cost him playing time in the future. … Colby Rasmus whiffed three times in three at-bats Tuesday. When Gose starts strong at Triple-A Buffalo, don't be shocked if Rasmus' time starting runs out. … Don't read into Dickey's four-run performance Tuesday. His ball was certainly dancing. He's durable and will be a top-20 pitcher.
 

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Fantasy prospects: Profar at No. 1

By Jim Callis | Baseball America

Welcome to our first installment of ranking the best fantasy prospects for 2013. Each week, we'll update our Top 10 to clue you in on which minor leaguers can help your fantasy team win this year.

Note that the rankings and information differ from my normal work for Baseball America. In this space, I'm not as concerned with a player's all-around ability or long-term impact; only his ability to put up fantasy numbers in 2013 matters. For instance, Astros shortstop Carlos Correa and Twins outfielder Byron Buxton were the top two picks in the 2012 draft and they're loaded with tools, but they're not close to being ready for the majors, so you likely won't see their names in the rankings this year.

To be honest, at the outset of spring training, I wouldn't have put Red Sox outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr., Marlins righthander Jose Fernandez, Twins outfielder Aaron Hicks or Mariners right-hander Brandon Maurer in the Top 10. Even a week before Opening Day, I wouldn't have ranked Fernandez. But they all broke camp on big league rosters, a testament to the uncertainty of prospect ETAs.

<OFFER>Of those four, I believe Bradley and Maurer are the best equipped to perform in the majors right now, though Bradley also could wind up heading to Triple-A once David Ortiz is healthy. Fernandez is on the short list of the game's top pitching prospects, but he's making the jump from high Class A to a bad big league club. Hicks may have had a great spring training, but those numbers (.370, 4 HR, 18 RBIs, 3 SB) mean less than his history of needing time to adjust to each new level and his lack of experience above Double-A.</OFFER>

With that, I present to you the inaugural Top 10 fantasy prospects for 2013:


[h=3]1. Jurickson Profar, SS/2B, Texas Rangers[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Round Rock.
2012 minor league stats: .281 AVG/.368 OBP/.452 SLG, 14 HR, 62 RBIs, 16 SB at Double-A.
Fantasy scouting report: Profar would be the starting shortstop for most any other club, but the Rangers have Elvis Andrus, and they just locked him up through at least 2018. While Profar might never be the regular shortstop for Texas, it shouldn't be long before he takes over at second base and moves Ian Kinsler to first base or a corner outfield spot. Profar also is athletic enough to plug one of the Rangers' few holes in center field, though he has no outfield experience. Regardless of his position, he's a gifted, disciplined switch-hitter who should hit for average with double-digit homers and steals and plenty of run production in one of the game's deepest lineups and most favorable hitting parks.


[h=3]2. Wil Myers, OF, Tampa Bay Rays[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Durham.
2012 minor league stats: .314/.387/.600, 37 HR, 109 RBIs, 6 SB at Double-A and Triple-A.
Fantasy scouting report: The Rays traded James Shields and Wade Davis to get Myers and three other prospects from the Royals during the offseason, and they have a glaring lack of power, so it doesn't make much sense that he isn't in their lineup. His situation may play out like Evan Longoria's in 2008; Longoria began the season at Triple-A Durham and was in Tampa Bay a week later. In 2012, Myers won Baseball America's Minor League Player of the Year award and became the first 21-year-old to hit 37 homers in the minors since 1963. His power is his calling card, but he's also a career .303 hitter in the minors and he runs well enough to steal an occasional base, too.


[h=3]3. Oscar Taveras, OF, St. Louis Cardinals[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Memphis.
2012 minor league stats: .321/.381/.525, 23 HR, 94 RBI, 10 SB at Double-A.
Fantasy scouting report: The "Legend of Oscar Taveras" is getting pretty ridiculous. Signed for a bargain $145,000 out of the Dominican Republic, he has led his minor league teams to championships in each of the past three years, captured two straight minor league batting titles and won the Double-A Texas League MVP award last year at age 20. The best pure hitter in the minors, he's also growing into at least plus power, and he runs well enough to steal double-digit bases and perhaps play center field. A year after jumping from low Class A to Double-A, he could have skipped a level again and cracked the big league roster, but the Cardinals have a set outfield of Matt Holliday, Jon Jay and Carlos Beltran. As soon as Taveras gets an opportunity in the lineup, via injury or by forcing his way there with his bat, it's likely that St. Louis won't be able to get him out of there.


[h=3]4. Trevor Bauer, SP, Cleveland Indians[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Columbus.
2012 minor league stats: 12-2, 2.42 ERA, 130 IP, 157 K's, 1.29 WHIP at Double-A/Triple-A.
Fantasy scouting report: Eleven months after going No. 3 overall in the 2011 draft, Bauer became the first player from that draft class to make the big leagues. But last December, the Diamondbacks traded him to the Indians because: a) He had rubbed several members of the organization the wrong way; and b) GM Kevin Towers somehow thinks Didi Gregorius could be the second coming of Derek Jeter. Bauer's training regimen and desire to call his pitches are unusual, but so is his stuff: a pair of well above-average pitches, his mid-90s fastball with riding life and his hard curveball. His splitter, slider and changeups are weapons as well, and he just needs to focus on getting hitters out instead of trying to make them look bad. Cleveland hopes to be more competitive this year, a goal that will be made easier if it doesn't leave its most talented starter in Columbus all season.


[h=3]5. Billy Hamilton, OF/SS, Cincinnati Reds[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Louisville.
2012 minor league stats: .311/.410/.420, 2 HR, 45 RBIs, 155 SB at high Class A/Double-A.
Fantasy scouting report: Hamilton probably has the most roto upside on this list because he's likely going to be the next player to steal 100 bases in the major leagues. His 155 steals last year broke Vince Coleman's minor league record, and one scout opined that Hamilton might be baseball's quickest player since Cool Papa Bell. Hamilton isn't as polished a hitter as the others on this list, and he's in the midst of converting from shortstop to center field, so he's going to need some time at Triple-A. But even if he doesn't make his big league debut until August, he still could steal 25 bases in the final two months.


[h=3]6. Travis d'Arnaud, C, New York Mets[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Las Vegas.
2012 minor league stats: .333/.380/.595, 16 HR, 52 RBIs, 1 SB at Triple-A.
Fantasy scouting report: Originally drafted by the Phillies, d'Arnaud since has been included in trade packages for Cy Young award winners Roy Halladay and R.A. Dickey. Acquired by the Mets during the offseason, d'Arnaud has the highest offensive ceiling among catching prospects. He could hit .280 with 20 or more homers per year, though he still must prove his durability after various injuries limited him to 252 games over the past three seasons. New York doesn't figure to contend in 2013, so it might let service-time concerns delay his call-up until June, but his positional value makes him an attractive fantasy option.


[h=3]7. Gerrit Cole, SP, Pittsburgh Pirates[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Indianapolis.
2012 minor league stats: 9-7, 2.80, 132 IP, 136 K's, 1.20 WHIP at high Class A/Double-A/Triple-A.
Fantasy scouting report: The Pirates spent the No. 1 overall pick in 2011 and a draft-record $8 million bonus on Cole, who has better stuff than any pitcher in the minor leagues. He operates at 96-98 mph and touches 101 with his four-seam fastball, throws his two-seamer at 93-95 mph with sink, backs up his fastball with a wipeout slider that can hit 93 and can throw hitters off balance with a solid changeup. He throws strikes but still is refining his command, the last item on his to-do list before Pittsburgh calls him up.


[h=3]8. Nolan Arenado, 3B, Colorado Rockies[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Colorado Springs.
2012 minor league stats: .285/.337/.428, 12 HR, 56 RBIs, 0 SB at Double-A.
Fantasy scouting report: Arenado led the minors with 122 RBIs and won the Arizona Fall League MVP award in 2011 before enduring a slightly disappointing 2012 season, during which Rockies GM Dan O'Dowd even questioned his maturity. Arenado did finish with a flourish, batting .358/.375/.569 in the final month, and he tied for the Rockies lead with four homers in spring training. If Chris Nelson can't repeat last year's numbers, Arenado will claim his third base job and benefit from Coors Field. He makes consistent hard contact and has the potential to hit 15-20 homers and drive in 75-80 runs if he gets considerable playing time as a rookie.


[h=3]9. Dylan Bundy, SP, Baltimore Orioles[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Double-A Bowie.
2012 minor league stats: 9-3, 2.08, 104 IP, 119 K's, 0.92 WHIP at low Class A/high Class A/Double-A.
Fantasy scouting report: Perhaps the most advanced high school pitcher ever, Bundy went fourth overall in the 2011 draft and reached the majors as a 19-year-old in 2012. He has a full array of plus pitches, including a 92-98 mph fastball, 12-to-6 curveball and changeup, and he already controls and commands them well beyond his years. His upside dwarfs that of the members of the Orioles' rotation, though Baltimore pledges to handle Bundy carefully. Case in point: He came down with mild elbow soreness in spring training, and will miss the start of the minor league season. If he takes too long to return, it's possible that Kevin Gausman, the No. 4 choice in the 2012 draft, could beat him to Baltimore this year.


[h=3]10. Mike Olt, 3B/1B, Rangers[/h]
Opening Day assignment: Triple-A Round Rock.
2012 minor league stats: .288/.398/.579, 28 HR, 82 RBIs, 4 SB at Double-A.
Fantasy scouting report: Like his Round Rock teammate Profar, Olt has moved quickly through the minors, but he faces obstacles in Texas. Adrian Beltre blocks him at third base, and the Rangers may try to get Profar into their lineup before worrying about Olt. Nevertheless, he could hit for a solid average with double-digit homers if he gets even a half-season of playing time. And if your fantasy league incorporates on-base percentage, note that he has drawn 155 walks in 253 pro games.
 

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Top prospects make 2013 debuts in minors
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Eric Karabell

While the big leaguers were mainly finishing up the first series of their new season Thursday, the minor leaguers started things up at the same time, and there are quite a few players whose progress fantasy owners should be following. While I continue to believe Texas Rangers prospect Jurickson Profar is so good that he will see enough time with the big club to make a serious impact, on Thursday he made his Triple-A debut for the Round Rock Express.

Profar made his mark, reaching base three times, stealing a base and dazzling defensively at shortstop. He's only 20 years old but seemingly ready for the Rangers right now should opportunity open up, and let's be clear, is not a must-own in ESPN standard, 10-team mixed formats. There are enough middle infielders to count on in a shallow league. In deeper formats, especially if you have deeper benches, I'd add him now. Each game that Mitch Moreland (0-for-11 so far) doesn't get a hit could make a promotion reality!

Of course, Profar wasn't the only potentially fantasy relevant player who enjoyed his Thursday Opening Day. Fantasy owners are always asking about which players they should be stashing away for later in the season. Here are several others who performed Thursday to keep an eye on, because not only do they seem ready for the big leagues, but it could be soon. These aren't necessarily the top prospects, but five on my mind this fine first Friday.
<OFFER></OFFER>

Tony Cingrani, P, Cincinnati Reds: The 23-year-old lefty had little trouble with the Toledo Mud Hens, as he permitted nary a baserunner through five sparkling innings. He ended up going six, throwing 84 pitches and allowing no hits, one walk and striking out a cool 14. And the Hens lineup featured several players with big league experience, including outfielder Quintin Berry, as well as future star left fielder Nick Castellanos. This was Cingrani's Triple-A debut, but he's likely the first call-up should a Reds rotation spot open up, and probably part of the reason why Dusty Baker wanted Aroldis Chapman closing again. If Mike Leake struggles, well, you know.


Billy Hamilton, OF, Reds: Cingrani's teammate on the Louisville Bats doubled in four at-bats and did not steal a base. What? How dare he not run!?! We know Hamilton will make a huge impact for fantasy owners, but he needs more reps in center field. With the Ryan Ludwick injury forcing Chris Heisey into starting duties, and merely fourth outfielder types in his way, one more injury could mean Hamilton gets the call. I'd still prefer Profar for stashing purposes, and believe Hamilton is still months away from promotion, but he's pretty much ready.

Anthony Gose, OF, Toronto Blue Jays: Speaking of speed, Gose has plenty of it. Remember that the Blue Jays' new Triple-A affiliate is in Buffalo, rather than hitter-friendly Las Vegas, which should give us a more accurate portrayal of their players. Everyone hits in Vegas, as we'll see with New York Mets prospects now. Gose's Buffalo Bisons debut went well, with three hits and three runs scored. He did not steal a base. Keep an eye on Gose's plate discipline; he's already elite in center field, but he swings and misses a lot. So does current Blue Jays center fielder Colby Rasmus, though, and if he struggles and the team views Rajai Davis as a fourth outfielder (correctly) or platoon DH, Gose should be doing a mini-Hamilton impression before Hamilton.

Hunter Morris, 1B, Milwaukee Brewers: I think he's relevant because I can't believe a big league team would feel content playing shortstop Alex Gonzalez at first base. And it's not as though Gonzalez hits. Morris does. On Thursday, the 24-year-old Morris smacked a two-run home run in the first inning for Triple-A Nashville, then later a two-run double. Morris slugged 28 home runs in Double-A last year, 74 extra-base hits in all, and Corey Hart is out until May. Gonzalez is not the answer.

Dee Gordon, SS, Los Angeles Dodgers: For the record, I'm questioning whether he'll ever hit enough, but if he would just walk more and not look so overwhelmed at the plate, he could beat out the likes of Justin Sellers and Luis Cruz, pushing Hanley Ramirez to third base. Gordon walked and stole a base in four hitless at-bats Thursday for the Albuquerque Isotopes. A good two weeks in Triple-A might be enough for promotion, and let's be clear, he could steal double-digit bases in any month in the big leagues.

Others: The Wil Myers debut for Durham was rained out, but he was in the lineup in right field, batting third. My take on Myers is that he'll hit for power for Joe Maddon's Tampa Bay Rays right away, and he is ready, but the fiscally prudent Rays will wait until June, no matter how Matt Joyce, Sam Fuld or current Rays perform. … The Memphis-Oklahoma City game was also rained out, so St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Oscar Taveras did not play. He's working in left field and can handle right field, but I see him and Myers on a similar timetable, unless a long-term injury creates opportunity. … If you're wondering about Cleveland Indians right-hander Trevor Bauer, he's slated to start for the big club Saturday in place of shockingly injured Scott Kazmir. … Baltimore Orioles right-hander Dylan Bundy was placed on the DL at Double-A Bowie with right elbow stiffness. Uh oh. As of now, the team doesn't assume the worst. Bundy is 20, and I'd be surprised if he was called up before September. … Mets right-hander Zack Wheeler started Thursday at Sacramento and struggled, allowing three hits, three walks and two runs in 3 1/3 innings, on 86 pitches. He's pitching for Las Vegas, so don't look too closely at his early-season numbers. He's ready. … And Seattle Mariners catcher Mike Zunino made his Triple-A debut for Tacoma and finished a single short of the cycle, knocking in three. Wow. I see him debuting for Seattle around midseason.
 

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Will Middlebrooks: Time to buy or sell?
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Eric Karabell

Boston Red Sox third baseman Will Middlebrooks entered Sunday hitting .200, and in our reactive, impatient fantasy world, that was enough to elicit concern on Twitter about whether his wrist, which was fractured last season, was healthy, whether poor plate discipline would catch up to him and if this remained someone to rely on. After all, Middlebrooks is going in the 19th round in ESPN average live drafts -- you can still get in the game, you know! -- so the investment is modest at best, and many want immediate results.
Um, nobody will be thinking about dropping Middlebrooks after Sunday's performance, when immediate results came, and then some.


Middlebrooks slugged three home runs, just missed a fourth and doubled in Boston's 13-0 romp over 2012 NL Cy Young Award winner R.A. Dickey and the Toronto Blue Jays. The Red Sox as a team entered the day with two home runs in their first five games, then exploded for six on Sunday alone. Middlebrooks is projected by ESPN Fantasy for 23 home runs and 79 RBIs, with the risk coming in batting average. Those are reasonable power numbers, worth owning in all leagues, and there's upside for more.

<OFFER>Then again, there's also downside in batting average, and while it's simplistic to say pretty much everyone is a sell-high option after a three-homer game, it's very true in this case. Fantasy owners should always see what exorbitant price a rival fantasy owner is willing to pay after a monster game. Yes, Baltimore Orioles slugger Chris Davis was the ultimate sell-high after his first week. Do you really think Davis, a 16th-rounder on average in ESPN live drafts, is a top-50 player? Like Davis, Middlebrooks is valuable, but if someone floats the name of a struggling star your way, like any of the myriad ace pitchers that oddly got obliterated Sunday (Dickey, Stephen Strasburg, Cole Hamels, Matt Cain and David Price), then act on it. After all, the 24-year-old did this damage off a struggling knuckleballer in Dickey (0-2, 8.44 ERA, 1.97 WHIP) and career underachiever in Dave Bush, who played in Korea last season and was demoted to the minors by Toronto after the game.</OFFER>

That hardly means Middlebrooks will struggle. He should be a safe power option if he stays healthy, and there's little reason to believe durability will be a concern. But when a young player has such an impatient approach, there are red flags. After all, Middlebrooks walked 13 times in nearly half a season in 2012, striking out 70 times. Few would consider his .288 batting average reachable again with that rate. Any fantasy team can live with a .250 mark if there's power, but what if he hits .230?

Ultimately with third base such a brittle mess so far -- Milwaukee Brewers veteran Aramis Ramirez joined Chase Headley, Hanley Ramirez, Brett Lawrie and David Freese on the disabled list this weekend -- someone like Middlebrooks is tough to trade. But I would still choose all those injured hot corner options over him, because all come with significant upside or are more proven. That said, I do like Middlebrooks over Todd Frazier, Manny Machado and Kevin Youkilis, a few of whom are off to tremendous starts. Middlebrooks nearly joined Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt among third basemen to hit four home runs in one game, and while the performance might have been aberrant and there's batting average risk here, enjoy what should be a reliable young player.

Box score bits (AL): Speaking of the Red Sox, cult hero Jackie Bradley Jr. struggled in the Toronto series, going 1-for-11 and striking out five times. He's still drawing walks, but remember when you cut a veteran option for him that someone on the Red Sox has to lose a roster spot when David Ortiz comes off the DL. … Oakland Athletics outfielder Josh Reddick could be headed for the DL after spraining his right wrist running into the outfield wall Sunday. Reddick, who has a home run and a surprising three stolen bases already, is worth sitting in weekly leagues this week. … Still concerned about New York Yankees lefty CC Sabathia? He shut out Detroit over seven innings Sunday. He's a slow starter, and usually gets better after April. … Mark Reynolds of the Cleveland Indians launched two more home runs Sunday, and they weren't exactly fence-scrapers. He might hit about .220 and air-condition the ballpark with a bunch of swings-and-misses in the process, but another 40-homer season is reachable.


Box score bits (NL): Miami Marlins right-hander Jose Fernandez fanned eight New York Mets over five innings in his impressive debut Sunday. Fernandez, 20, was held to 80 pitches. While it's possible Fernandez sticks around in the majors to hit his 150-170 innings limit, a portion of them could occur in the minors. He's next scheduled to face Hamels and the Phillies, which now doesn't appear too scary. … What's scary is the Brewers using Alex Gonzalez and Yuniesky Betancourt as starting cornermen this weekend. One must believe slugging first baseman Hunter Morris is close to promotion. You don't want Gonzalez or Betancourt starting for you in fantasy, even at middle infield. … You don't want Chicago Cubs right-hander Carlos Marmol, either, not after his latest hiccup Saturday. Manager Dale Sveum quickly reversed his vote of confidence on the walks machine -- or team management intervened -- and Kyuji Fujikawa got the closing job, though he hasn't impressed either. Fujikawa is a must-add now, and in deep formats, lefty James Russell and right-hander Shawn Camp are also worth a look. … Atlanta Braves rookie Evan Gattis hit cleanup Sunday. He didn't reach base via hit, but that's some serious trust in a guy with a then-eight big league at-bats. Look for the Braves to use Chris Johnson and Juan Francisco at the corners with Freddie Freeman (oblique) on the DL, but perhaps Gattis can play first, too. Don't be concerned about Freeman; he claims he will return as soon as his DL stint is up.
 

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Suggested early-season pickups

By Todd Zola | Mastersball.com

Do you realize that when you completed your draft or auction, you accrued only about 70 percent of the stats you'll have by year's end? That's right, you still have a lot of work to do. So while everyone else is reading about how the key to fantasy success is to be patient, take advantage and be proactive with your lineup.

I'm not saying you should deal Matt Kemp for Chris Davis or Cole Hamels for Justin Masterson. What I'm saying is it's never too early to make your team better.

<OFFER>Every fantasy roster has a few spots that are occupied by fringe players. Of course, that's all relative. The last player you pick up in a 10-team mixed league is obviously a better fantasy option than the last player on a 12-team AL- or NL-only roster, but in terms of fantasy baseball, they are both worth about the same to their respective squads. Thus, there are some roster spots where "patience" is the operative word. But there are also a number of roster spots where being proactive trumps patience, as you should be striving to upgrade the fringe players regardless if it's the first week of April or the last week in September.</OFFER>

The key to this is determining playing time. What delineates one fringe player from another is usually not the level of skill, but how much one will play as compared to the other. Monday we're going to examine a number of situations in which the playing time shakeouts are different than what was expected as recently as the last week of spring training. Some of these differences have influenced rankings, meaning you could have a lesser player occupying a fungible spot, and now is the time to recognize that there could be a better alternative.

Before we delve into actual scenarios, let's review a concept I introduced in March when examining roster construction, because it can be tied into this discussion. Conventionally, when a dollar value or rank is assigned via a mechanism such as ESPN's Player Rater, the full-season's expectation is plugged into the little black box. But the assumption is that, in order to get that number, the player will occupy an active roster spot all season.

Practically speaking, we know this is not the case. Let's illustrate this with a pair of teammates, the San Diego Padres' Carlos Quentin and Will Venable. In a vacuum, their fantasy potential is very close. Granted, Quentin should hit for more power while Venable will swipe more bases, but their fantasy value in a vacuum should be pretty similar. In fact, the amount of playing time expected for each is also fairly close. But here's the rub: Venable's playing time is derived from being on the good side of a platoon, playing against right-handed pitchers, while Quentin is an everyday player who always seems to get hurt and misses lumps of time every season. So on a per-week basis, during the weeks Quentin is healthy, he's a better fantasy option.

In other words, there are some players who, with stretches of consistent playing time, have a weekly fantasy value that's greater than their average value. This is the sort of player you want populating your fungible roster spots during the time they're playing regularly. Even at this early juncture of the season, there are some pertinent examples.


[h=3]Mixed-league options[/h]Gerardo Parra, OF, Arizona Diamondbacks: Coming into the season, the Diamondbacks' plan was to split the 2,100 or so outfield plate appearances fairly equally among Adam Eaton, Jason Kubel, Cody Ross and Parra. But with Eaton and Ross yet to make their 2013 debuts, Parra has played in every game, and he should continue to do so for at least the next few weeks, even though Ross is due back by the end of this week. In shallow mixed leagues, if Parra were to play in only 4-5 games per week, there are better options. However, when he's playing 6-7 games per week, he could be quite useful.

Alex Gonzalez, SS/1B, Milwaukee Brewers: Gonzalez was the Brewers' Opening Day first baseman, but he now will get regular playing time across the diamond at the hot corner while Aramis Ramirez is on the disabled list. Gonzalez might not be the prototypical fantasy corner infielder, but since he qualifies at shortstop, he could upgrade your middle-infield spot in deeper mixed leagues, as well as National League-only formats.

Michael Cuddyer, OF/1B, Colorado Rockies: While Cuddyer was expected to play most of the time anyway, either in right field or spelling Todd Helton at first base, after the surprise demotion of Tyler Colvin, most of the time is now all of the time, assuming the sore wrist that bothered Cuddyer over the weekend is minor. Dual eligibility at first base and the outfield is often perceived as not as important as other positions, but since your outfield and corner-infield reserves are likely your strongest bench players, the ability to flip Cuddyer between the spots helps keep your active roster at maximum strength.

Chris Heisey, OF, Cincinnati Reds: One of my favorite ploys when preparing for my own drafts is assigning the same number of plate appearances to everyone and running this through my value generator. That takes playing time out of the equation and allows me to get a feel for a player's potential if he were to get more playing time than expected. For the past couple of years, Heisey has stood out as someone who would be a very nice fantasy asset if he were to happen upon more playing time. His average might be low, but he should make up for it in the counting stats. With the injury to Ryan Ludwick, Heisey should be playing regularly and is now worthy of a roster spot even on a mixed roster.

Jed Lowrie, SS, Oakland Athletics: Lowrie is the perfect example of a player whose projection always has a playing-time hedge since he is prone to injury. In addition, many thought that even when healthy, Lowrie would fulfill a super-utility role with the Athletics, not as a regular starter. Well, he broke camp as the starting shortstop, and it appears that as long as he's healthy, he's going to play full-time and put up useful numbers for mixed-league owners at a middle-infield slot, if not shortstop.

Emilio Bonifacio, Toronto Blue Jays: There was no doubt Bonifacio was going to play for Toronto, but there was a question as to how much, since the Jays also seemed to want to find at-bats for Maicer Izturis. Following the injury to Brett Lawrie, though, Bonifacio has played nearly every day and should continue to do so until Lawrie returns. Bonifacio steals bases in bunches, and he can always be replaced with a hitter who has more pop if his playing time wanes later in the season.


[h=3]Deep-mixed, AL- or NL-only options[/h]
Jackie Bradley Jr., OF, Boston Red Sox: Coming into the season, it seemed the Red Sox's plan was to play Jonny Gomes full-time in left field, even though he is best suited as the right-handed part of a platoon. Many owners drafted Gomes expecting more at-bats than usual, but something happened just before Opening Day: The injury to David Ortiz freed up a roster spot, and Bradley was given a seat on the plane heading north with the big club. At least until Ortiz comes back, Gomes' playing time will be reduced, and it could remain that way if Boston decides to keep Bradley in the majors.

If you drafted Gomes as a back end outfielder, hopefully you have already looked to upgrade; if not, there is no need to be patient. As for Bradley, the expectation is that he takes over for Jacoby Ellsbury in center next season. He got off to a hot start, but it appears he could use more seasoning, so don't be surprised if he's sent down to Triple-A Pawtucket when Big Papi is ready.


Lyle Overbay, 1B, New York Yankees: After contemplating using Juan Rivera at first base, the Yankees came to their senses and claimed Overbay off waivers (from the Red Sox). Overbay's best days are well in his past, but while Mark Teixeira is on the mend, Overbay will get at-bats and could poke a couple of homers over the short fence in right field at Yankee Stadium. In deep leagues, at-bats are currency, and Overbay will get his share.

Brian Dozier, 2B, Minnesota Twins: About two-thirds of the way through spring training, it became apparent that the Twins wanted Dozier to seize the starting job at the keystone sack, relegating Jamey Carroll to a utility role, and he did just that. Dozier is a better fielder than he is a hitter, but he has a little speed and can hit a home run now and then, making him a viable middle infielder in deeper formats.

Leonys Martin and Craig Gentry, OF, Texas Rangers: Just before the season, the word was that while it might not be a strict platoon, Martin would see more action than Gentry. Now it seems the split is closer to equal. This hurts those owners who drafted Martin expecting 500 plate appearances. He still could get there, but for the time being, he isn't playing enough to warrant being active on shallower mixed-league rosters. I wouldn't drop him, but you might want to find a replacement until he establishes himself as the regular center fielder.

Gaby Sanchez, 1B, Pittsburgh Pirates: This one stings, as I had Travis Snider pegged as this season's post-hype breakout performer. That still may happen, of course, but at least early on, the resurgent Sanchez has sent Snider to the pine. The original plan was for Sanchez to play a little at third base to get his bat in the lineup, but he hit so well in the spring that he earned a starting job at first base, his natural position. That pushed Garrett Jones to right field, with Snider as the odd man out. Consider Sanchez a corner-infield option in deeper leagues.

Collin Cowgill, OF, New York Mets: My personal opinion is that the Mets should find a regular starting spot for Cowgill and let him play, as he's the most talented of the glut of Mets outfielders (which also includes Jordany Valdespin, Marlon Byrd and Kirk Nieuwenhuis). Quite frankly, Cowgill is the only one worthy of a spot on a major league team, but at least for now, Byrd will play all the time while the others make up a platoon, meaning Cowgill likely will face only lefties. I still think, however, that Cowgill will emerge as a regular by the end of the season.

Nate Freiman, 1B, Athletics: Many expected Brandon Moss to be the regular at first base, but it looks like Rule 5 draftee Freiman may face southpaws, which will cut into Moss' production. If Moss is your corner infielder or outfielder in mixed leagues, you may want to look to upgrade. On the other hand, Freiman could be a corner or utility option in deep AL-only formats.

Evan Gattis, OF, Atlanta Braves: His defense behind the plate needs work, but Gattis can hit and will serve as the backup catcher until Brian McCann returns. He might even stick in the majors afterwards. In most leagues, Gattis is eligible only in the outfield, but with three games already at receiver, he should qualify there soon. In two-catcher leagues, he could be the ideal "won't hurt you" option, and might even help.

Hank Conger, C, Los Angeles Angels: While the analogy is not perfect, Conger is the American League version of Gattis in that he can hit, but his defense is lacking. Still, Conger makes for an interesting stash, as all it will take is an injury to Mark Trumbo, Albert Pujols or Chris Iannetta for Conger to get more at-bats.


[h=3]Undervalued mixed-league options[/h]
We'll wrap up this discussion with a look at a group of hitters often overlooked in terms of their changing fantasy potential. Part of estimating playing time is predicting the spot in the order the player will bat. My colleague Tristan H. Cockcroft wrote an outstanding column on that subject just a few weeks ago. I'll follow up on a couple of the scenarios discussed, as well as a few new ones.


Ben Revere, OF, Philadelphia Phillies: It appears Revere will hit atop the Philadelphia lineup, which is even tastier given the positive early returns from Chase Utley. If this persists, Revere could lead the Senior Circuit in steals, and he vaults past Juan Pierre and Brett Gardner in terms of fantasy value if you are looking for an all-speed, no-power outfielder.

Alcides Escobar and Mike Moustakas, Kansas City Royals: After moving Alex Gordon back to the top of the lineup, there was some question as to whether Escobar or Lorenzo Cain would occupy the coveted second spot. So far, Escobar has been there each game, which dents Cain's potential a bit. For those expecting a big bounce-back campaign from Eric Hosmer, you better hope that if he indeed hits, he is moved up from the 6-hole. Of course, there is a good chance he is left there as a means to keep the pressure off him. On the other hand, if Mike Moustakas struggles at his coveted cleanup spot, Hosmer could take over the 3-hole with Billy Butler sliding to the fourth slot in the lineup. But for now, temper expectation for Hosmer, regardless of whether you feel he'll find his groove.

Erick Aybar, SS, Angels: As expected, Aybar is hitting in the plush spot between Mike Trout and Pujols, while Howard Kendrick is batting sixth. This is a great boon for Aybar owners, as he'll score a ton of runs and likely be in motion a lot in an effort to have Pujols and Josh Hamilton see more fastballs. While Kendrick would have also benefitted if he was in the second spot, his owners should not panic, as once they get going, the Angels will turn that lineup over a bunch of times each game and Kendrick will see plenty of plate appearances. He should have a lot of RBI opportunities and should run a bit, as well. Let's put it this way: If I owned both Aybar and Kendrick, I'd much prefer Aybar hitting second and Kendrick sixth than Kendrick second with Aybar toward the bottom.

Nick Markakis and Manny Machado, Baltimore Orioles: Nate McLouth is in a platoon, and when he sits, Markakis leads off. When McLouth is playing, Markakis moves down to third. This could help Markakis score a few more runs, though his RBIs might take a little hit. Overall, his value will be slightly increased due to a few more plate appearances. More relevant is that Machado has displaced J.J. Hardy as the No. 2 hitter, which could be a huge benefit to his potential. Machado should score a lot of runs and add a couple of extra steals to what was expected.
 

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Eric Hosmer poised for big things in 2013
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Eric Karabell

Kansas City Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer struggled in the team's first three-game series, and wasn't expected to start at all during the interleague weekend series in Philadelphia. After all, regular designated hitter Billy Butler is pretty established himself, and two players can't play first base at the same time. I attended Friday's Royals-Phillies game and was surprised to see Hosmer in the lineup, but not to see him explode with four hits and a walk, plus three RBIs in the 13-4 demolition.

The performance raised Hosmer's batting average from .111 to .357, and is another reminder why players shouldn't be evaluated from just a few games. Of course, in Hosmer's case the 2012 campaign was so frustrating -- for him, Royals fans and yes, fantasy owners -- that a slow start to this season will send many impatient fantasy owners to the waiver wire.

"It definitely felt good," a smiling Hosmer told me of his big Friday. "Days like this are big, and a big confidence booster. I'm not trying to do too much. I get my work in. I definitely trust my abilities. I stopped thinking about last year, I've moved on."


Of course, not all fantasy owners have moved on, evidenced by how different Hosmer's draft spot is this season. A year ago he was a fifth-round fantasy darling, and currently he's going in the 12th round, outside the top 100. Not that it's overly relevant but Hosmer hit well in spring training, with a .385 mark and slugged .596, offering hope that last season was the aberration. So what really happened?

"Last year I just put myself in a hole, and you want to get it all back quick," Hosmer said. "The biggest thing I learned was to let it all happen and trust your ability. My lower half, I want to keep it as simple as possible. I'm a big guy, but I'm not trying to do too much, just make consistent contact and not swing too hard. Every at-bat you're going in with a game plan."

The Royals' game plan did not include Hosmer the other two weekend games, as Butler helped carve up the Phillies with a seven-RBI outburst Sunday, but fantasy owners shouldn't devalue Hosmer based on road interleague games; the Royals are home all this pending week, back in designated hitter country where he and Butler can coexist comfortably, and are scheduled for only four more road games in NL parks (two each in Atlanta, St. Louis) before the All-Star break. Who knows, by then Hosmer could see occasional outfield duty as well. He did play three games there last season.

Hosmer's rookie season was so promising that it raised expectations for his second year a bit too high, in retrospect. Hosmer hit .232 with only 14 home runs, though he certainly helped with 16 stolen bases. He hit ground balls more than half the time, many to the right side of an eager and often pre-shifted infield, raising speculation that, as with Atlanta Braves outfielder Jason Heyward, a shoulder injury played a role. Only 23, my feeling has been that Hosmer is just too good to be that average (or below average) again, a sentiment that teammate Butler concurred with after the Friday game.

"He looks comfortable now, it was a big game for him today and hopefully he builds off that," Butler said. "If he keeps having at-bats like that it's going to be a fun year. Hitting is all confidence, and a lot of people were telling him stuff he needed to do and it almost overwhelmed him. This is the big leagues, you're facing tough guys every day. It spiraled on him. He's too good of a hitter, too good of a baseball player for that to happen again, but it happens to guys in their second year and you overcome it and become stronger from it."

Butler should know. In 2007 he made his mark as a rookie, hitting .292 and slugging .447, then regressing with more playing time his sophomore season. In Year 3 Butler blossomed and he's coming off his first All-Star season, as his doubles finally turned into home runs and he became a worthy fourth-round ADP choice. Hosmer has similar upside offensively as a run producer and adds the stolen base option. The Royals don't seem particularly worried about the left-handed hitter, and he rewarded the team Friday from Butler's usual No. 3 lineup spot. Hosmer singled three times to right field, but also walked and drove a ball to deep center field for a double against a pair of left-handers, which is significant. In 2012 Hosmer hit .220 off lefties with a .591 OPS. If he can stay consistent and confident and aggressive on the basepaths, Hosmer is capable of emerging as a top-10 first baseman this season.

Royals roundup: Shortstop Alcides Escobar stole 35 bases last season, and is well on his way to perhaps more after swiping his third base of opening week Sunday. Escobar spent roughly half of 2012 in the No. 2 lineup spot, and remains there this year. It's early, but his improved plate discipline certainly won't hurt. … Outfielder Lorenzo Cain had a quiet first week, striking out in each of his five games, then getting three hits. Cain drew a few walks, but generally had poor at-bats. Jarrod Dyson waits in the wings to steal playing time if this continues. … Tough weekend for closer Greg Holland, though it'd be a surprise if Kelvin Herrera replaced him so soon. Holland walked the bases loaded Saturday, surrendering a bases-clearing triple by Kevin Frandsen, and manager Ned Yost had a quick hook Sunday after Holland permitted two singles. At least it's clear Herrera is next in line. … Right-hander Luis Mendoza impressed Saturday. He kept the ball down and fanned seven Phillies. Mendoza has never missed many bats, but did improve his strikeout rate the second half of 2012.
 

hacheman@therx.com
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Impact of diminished velocity

By Tristan H. Cockcroft | ESPN.com

Diminished fastball velocity is not a death sentence.

Oh, you might disagree if you're a Roy Halladay owner, having watched him surrender a 14.73 ERA, .353 batting average and three home runs in his first two regular-season starts, following a spring training in which he had a 6.06 ERA, .323 BAA and three homers allowed in six turns. In those two regular-season outings, he has averaged 89.3 mph with his fastball, cutter and sinker combined; he averaged 91.5 mph with those pitches in 2010-11, when he won the National League's Cy Young award (2010) and finished the runner-up (2011).

The danger of the Halladay lesson is latching onto a singular aspect of his struggles, which ties to a statistic much more readily available today than, say, five years ago. Velocity readings have become all the rage in baseball -- and therefore fantasy baseball -- and with them comes the risk of misinterpretation.

This is the time of year in which fantasy owners are most apt to overreact, seeking something -- anything -- to explain their pitchers' early struggles. In some cases, velocity readings are relevant. But to make sweeping, league-wide judgments on the numbers is foolish; every case is individual and many such examples don't bear any worry whatsoever. As is, the league-wide numbers illustrate that average fastball velocities tend to be lower in April:

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
<CENTER>Year</CENTER><CENTER>Apr</CENTER><CENTER>May</CENTER><CENTER>June</CENTER><CENTER>July</CENTER><CENTER>Aug</CENTER><CENTER>Sept</CENTER>
201090.891.091.291.291.391.3
201190.991.391.591.691.791.6
201291.391.691.791.691.691.7

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For two individual examples why fantasy owners shouldn't rush to panic, let's flash back to 2012, when Felix Hernandez averaged 91.0 mph with his fastball during an April 7 start, his second of the year, after reported 89-90 mph numbers from his first start on March 28 in Japan (our pitch-tracking tool didn't include this game). Hernandez's owners were wild with panic over the readings, but after April 7, he managed 20 quality starts, a 2.98 ERA, 1.15 WHIP and 210 strikeouts in his final 31 turns. Oh, and by the way, he averaged 92.1 mph in those 31 starts, more than 1 mph beneath his 2011 average (93.2).

Clayton Kershaw, meanwhile, suffered the largest season-opening-outing velocity drop of any top-50-ADP starting pitcher in the past three years, his 89.2 mph average last April 5 more than 4 mph slower than his 2011 average (93.3). There was, however, an explanation: He was battling the stomach flu, which ended up limiting him to three innings and 39 pitches. After that date, Kershaw managed 25 quality starts, a 2.56 ERA, 1.02 WHIP and 226 K's in 32 games. His velocity was effectively back by start No. 2: He averaged 92.8 mph on April 10.

That's not to say that every pitcher follows the Hernandez or Kershaw path. To make this a more comprehensive study, consider that in the past three seasons, 47 starting pitchers selected among the top 50 at their position suffered an average fastball velocity drop of at least 1.0 mph in their first starts of the year (comparative to the prior year's average). Twenty-six of those starters finished within 20 spots of their ADPs -- 15 of them either matching or exceeding it.

(In the chart below, "Prev mph" represents the previous year's average fastball velocity, "ADP" is the player's average draft position in that season and "PR" is the individual's Player Rater finish in that season.)

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
Player<CENTER>Year</CENTER><CENTER>Prev
mph</CENTER>
<CENTER>ADP</CENTER><CENTER>Debut
mph</CENTER>
<CENTER>Diff.</CENTER><CENTER>April
mph</CENTER>
<CENTER>Diff.</CENTER><CENTER>PR</CENTER>
Roy Halladay201291.6189.6-2.089.9-1.777
Justin Verlander201294.8293.1-1.793.6-1.22
Clayton Kershaw201293.3389.2-4.192.8-0.53
Felix Hernandez201293.2591.0-2.291.3-1.911
Tim Lincecum201292.2690.0-2.289.7-2.5148
CC Sabathia201293.7892.1-1.691.7-2.016
Dan Haren201289.9988.4-1.588.6-1.378
Cole Hamels201291.31090.2-1.190.8-0.58
Jon Lester201292.71391.3-1.492.4-0.3131
Yovani Gallardo201292.61591.3-1.391.3-1.331
Ricky Romero201292.02289.8-2.291.1-0.9318
Mat Latos201292.82591.7-1.192.4-0.421
Josh Beckett201292.92790.8-2.191.3-1.6129
Ubaldo Jimenez201293.22991.3-1.991.8-1.4276
Tommy Hanson201291.13188.7-2.489.7-1.4106
Anibal Sanchez201291.64190.0-1.690.2-1.459
Jaime Garcia201289.84488.7-1.188.4-1.4116
Johnny Cueto201293.14591.2-1.991.5-1.610
Brandon Morrow201293.74991.8-1.993.3-0.440
Roy Halladay201192.1190.7-1.491.2-0.93
Cliff Lee201191.2490.0-1.291.40.24
Jon Lester201193.0591.6-1.492.1-0.930
Justin Verlander201195.3894.0-1.394.4-0.91
Tommy Hanson201192.61190.9-1.791.3-1.348
Cole Hamels201191.71590.6-1.191.6-0.18
Max Scherzer201193.02491.5-1.592.0-1.072
Clay Buchholz201193.92792.3-1.691.9-2.0103
Tim Hudson201191.22889.8-1.489.9-1.317
Ted Lilly201186.73084.6-2.186.2-0.541
Brett Anderson201192.03390.7-1.390.6-1.4142
John Danks201191.33490.2-1.191.1-0.295
Colby Lewis201189.93587.4-2.588.2-1.753
Brett Myers201189.44286.9-2.588.5-0.993
Ricky Nolasco201190.94389.9-1.090.2-0.7117
Josh Beckett201193.24491.9-1.392.7-0.511
Jhoulys Chacin201191.04590.0-1.090.2-0.862
Ryan Dempster201190.94789.6-1.390.0-0.9115
Johan Santana201090.51089.5-1.089.1-1.424
Chris Carpenter201092.81291.4-1.490.9-1.918
Yovani Gallardo201092.11390.9-1.291.5-0.652
Javier Vazquez201090.91588.8-2.188.7-2.2139
Josh Johnson201094.91793.5-1.494.0-0.912
Matt Cain201092.51991.3-1.291.3-1.215
Clayton Kershaw201093.82392.4-1.492.8-1.016
Max Scherzer201093.63592.6-1.091.6-2.036
Rich Harden201091.93890.5-1.489.3-2.6277
Jonathan Sanchez201091.64489.6-2.090.1-1.522

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Meanwhile, 18 relief pitchers selected among the top 20 at their position suffered an average fastball velocity drop of at least 1.0 mph during the first week of the year (fantasy's Week 1, compared to the prior year's average). Ten of these relievers finished within 15 spots of their ADPs -- three of them exceeding it.

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
Player<CENTER>Year</CENTER><CENTER>Prev
mph</CENTER>
<CENTER>ADP</CENTER><CENTER>Debut
mph</CENTER>
<CENTER>Diff.</CENTER><CENTER>April
mph</CENTER>
<CENTER>Diff.</CENTER><CENTER>PR</CENTER>
Jonathan Papelbon201294.8393.7-1.193.1-1.78
Brian Wilson201294.0492.2-1.892.2-1.8333
Joel Hanrahan201297.0995.7-1.395.6-1.415
Rafael Betancourt201292.21091.0-1.291.1-1.125
Huston Street201290.11788.5-1.688.7-1.424
Brian Wilson201195.7194.4-1.394.5-1.223
Heath Bell201193.9292.3-1.693.2-0.79
Joakim Soria201191.7489.2-2.589.7-2.038
Neftali Feliz201196.2594.3-1.994.3-1.922
Carlos Marmol201194.1691.5-2.691.6-2.532
Huston Street201191.21189.7-1.589.4-1.843
John Axford201194.91393.9-1.094.2-0.73
Chris Perez201194.51491.9-2.692.3-2.221
Francisco Cordero201194.31593.0-1.392.5-1.88
Jose Valverde201195.11692.9-2.293.6-1.56
Jonathan Broxton201097.6195.1-2.595.3-2.356
Brian Fuentes201090.01788.2-1.888.6-1.427
Frank Francisco201093.42091.5-1.992.0-1.494

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Incidentally, to dig deeper, seven of the 65 pitchers above -- starters or relievers -- averaged at least 2.0 mph beneath their prior-year averages in both their first starts/first week of the year and for the month of April in total; yet three of those seven finished within 10 spots of their ADPs.

What all this tells us is that every pitcher's story is different, and each suffering a velocity drop must be examined individually. So let's do that today, addressing some of the more notable examples so far in 2013:

CC Sabathia, New York Yankees (92.2 mph average in 2012, 89.6 in 2013 debut): His 2.6 mph average fastball velocity drop during his first start raised many red flags for fantasy owners and analysts, but many of those people aren't considering the context. Sabathia, who was coming off October elbow surgery, was kept on a lighter schedule than usual this spring; his two starts and 10 innings pitched represented his second fewest of any spring training (he missed the 2005 exhibition season with an abdominal injury). He also historically exhibits lower velocity -- and poorer rotisserie stats -- in April than in future months; he averaged 92.6 mph in April 2010, 92.6 mph in April 2011 and 91.8 in April 2012, compared to 93.1 mph overall in those three years combined. I agree with colleague Eric Karabell's assessment of Sabathia's "struggles;" and any concern related to Sabathia's past workloads, offseason operation or 2012 velocity drop (92.2 mph) was already accounted for in my No. 17 ranking of him among starting pitchers.

Max Scherzer, Detroit Tigers (94.2 mph average in 2012, 91.8 in 2013 debut): Push the panic button with Scherzer, who recorded 135 of his 231 strikeouts with his fastball last season, if you wish. I'll counter that he has shown a history of mediocre velocity in April -- he's in the above chart twice -- and in his career, he has a 4.86 ERA in April and May, compared to 3.43 from June through September. Scherzer's "velocity woes" could create quite a buying opportunity, even if they extend four or five starts into his season.

John Axford, Milwaukee Brewers (96.1 mph average in 2012, 94.1 in first week of 2013): The charts above do demonstrate that a velocity drop is a bit more disconcerting for a reliever than for a starter, especially if you account for the quick hook many managers have with closers. Axford's 2.0 mph decline is perhaps the most troubling, because he needed to start the year hot in order to recapture his manager's favor following a disappointing 2012. But in his case, it's not necessarily velocity that's at the root of the problem -- his location is just as problematic. Though sample sizes contribute to this number, Axford has left his fastball up in the zone 8 percent more often thus far in 2013. Location was an issue for him in 2012, as well, so there's every reason to believe his won't be an overnight fix.

Justin Verlander, Detroit Tigers (94.1 mph average in 2012, 91.0 in 2013 debut): This isn't intended to inspire a panic, but the fact remains that Verlander's 91.0 mph average on April 1, followed by 91.4 mph on April 7, represented his lowest average fastball velocities in any start since 2009, the first season ESPN's pitch-tracking data was charted. And it'd be largely irrelevant if not for two things: One is that Verlander's annual fastball velocity was in a three-year pattern of decline, and the other is that he has amassed a major league-high 762 1/3 innings pitched (playoffs included) the past three seasons combined. In his defense, his numbers in those April 1 and 7 starts were fine -- 2.19 ERA and 1.22 WHIP -- but his performance bears watching in the coming weeks, being that there's not a substantial difference in value between a top-2 and top-10 fantasy starting pitcher.


Joe Nathan, Texas Rangers (93.9 mph average in 2012, 91.4 thus far in 2013): He's not going to get every call like Monday's game-ender, and any cause for alarm with his velocity drop is that it harkens memories of his early 2011, when he was fresh off Tommy John surgery. In the first two months of that season, Nathan was only 3-for-5 in save chances with a 7.63 ERA and 1.70 WHIP, his average fastball velocity 91.3 mph in those 17 appearances, before he returned to the disabled list with a flexor strain. Now 38, Nathan warrants more attention than in the past, though thus far his rotisserie stats have been fine and he faces little immediate competition for saves in the Texas Rangers' bullpen. No reason to panic.

Yovani Gallardo, Milwaukee Brewers (91.7 mph average in 2012, 90.1 in 2013 debut): His radar-gun readings so far this year aren't the greatest concern; it's that they were down last season that put them under more scrutiny. Gallardo averaged 92.6 mph in 2011, 91.7 mph in the first half of 2012 and 91.6 mph in the second half of 2012. His strikeout rate has also slipped slightly in recent years; by percentage of batters faced it has gone from 25.7 percent (2009) to 24.9 percent (2010) to 23.9 percent (2011) to 23.7 percent (2012), and through two starts he has an 11.3 percent K rate this season. Of any of these pitchers, he most belongs on a "watch list."

And what of Halladay himself?

He's yet another example of a pitcher with whom radar-gun readings don't tell the entire story. Command is the larger concern: Halladay's walk rate -- calculated as a percentage of total batters faced -- has gone from 3.8 percent in 2011, to 5.6 percent in 2012, to 14.6 percent in his first two starts of 2013. (His walk rate was also 12.0 percent during spring training.) And Halladay's cutter, his signature pitch, has resulted in a .750 batting average and two home runs.

Halladay's struggles have extended to the point where he might need a DL stint to return close to his old form, and they're the reason for his precipitous drop in this week's rankings. There's every reason to panic with him.

But to again be clear: They are not only related to velocity, nor should velocity be hailed as the example by which all other pitchers should be judged in that department.

[h=3]Relief efforts[/h]
Three bullpens are either on the verge of or have already undergone a change at closer, including the aforementioned John Axford's own Milwaukee Brewers. Axford's struggles have opened the door for Jim Henderson, who, after a spring in which he posted a 5.68 ERA and 9:6 K-to-walk ratio, has managed four consecutive scoreless appearances including his first save on Monday.

Though Henderson's minor league track record -- 3.31 ERA, 2.15 K-per-walk ratio in Double-A; 4.01 ERA, 1.71 K-per-walk ratio in Triple-A -- makes him appear a mediocre choice to close, he at least deserves credit for a month-by-month improvement in terms of his command. He averaged 2.43 K's per walk last August and 3.83 K's per walk last September, has six K's compared to zero walks thus far in April, plus possesses one of the better sliders among current big league relievers. Henderson might yet possess the skills to hold this gig for several weeks -- if not the entire year -- meaning the Brewers can afford to shy from Axford, allowing him to work through his problems in middle relief.

The Kansas City Royals' closer role could be a wide-open one, after Greg Holland afforded four walks, four hits and four runs in his first three appearances of the season. Like some of the relievers discussed earlier, his average fastball velocity has also dropped comparative to 2012; he has averaged 94.9 mph, after averaging 96.0 mph last season. In Holland's defense, he began last season similarly poorly -- his ERA 11.37 last April -- but the Royals can't afford the luxury of patience with him in a high-profile role considering their multitude of alternatives.

Kelvin Herrera has the most natural closer "stuff," having averaged 4.10 K's per walk with a 1.92 ERA during his minor league career, then 3.67 K's per walk with a 2.35 ERA for the Royals last season. He notched the save on Sunday, and might receive the next chance, as Aaron Crow's appearance at closer on Monday was more a product of Herrera having previously worked back-to-back days. Fantasy owners might want to scoop up Herrera, who has top-10-closer stuff if granted the gig.

Finally, as hinted last week, the Chicago Cubs made the long-overdue move to demote Carlos Marmol from their closer role, installing Kyuji Fujikawa during the weekend. Though Fujikawa endured a rocky outing on Saturday, his track record of strong command in Japan makes him a worthy top-20 fantasy closer.

<STYLE type=text/css>.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</STYLE>
[h=4]TOP 150 PITCHERS[/h]Note: Tristan H. Cockcroft's top 150 pitchers are ranked for their expected performance from this point forward, not for statistics that have already been accrued. Starter- and reliever-specific rankings are in the "Pos Rnk" column, and can also be seen at this link: Position Rankings.
<CENTER>Rnk </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prev
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Rnk </CENTER>Player <CENTER>Team </CENTER><CENTER>Pos
Rnk </CENTER>
<CENTER>Prev
Rnk </CENTER>
1 Clayton Kershaw LAD SP1 1 76 Marco Estrada Mil SP57 90
2 Justin Verlander Det SP2 2 77 Trevor Cahill Ari SP58 74
3 Felix Hernandez Sea SP3 3 78 Kyle Lohse Mil SP59 77
4 Stephen Strasburg Wsh SP4 4 79 Kenley Jansen LAD RP20 76
5 David Price TB SP5 5 80 Jason Motte StL RP21 88
6 Matt Cain SF SP6 6 81 Matt Harrison Tex SP60 65
7 Cliff Lee Phi SP7 8 82 Greg Holland KC RP22 50
8 Cole Hamels Phi SP8 7 83 Grant Balfour Oak RP23 89
9 Madison Bumgarner SF SP9 10 84 Roy Halladay Phi SP61 52
10 Yu Darvish Tex SP10 14 85 Casey Janssen Tor RP24 91
11 Gio Gonzalez Wsh SP11 9 86 Edwin Jackson ChC SP62 78
12 Adam Wainwright StL SP12 13 87 Ryan Dempster Bos SP63 79
13 Johnny Cueto Cin SP13 15 88 Josh Beckett LAD SP64 87
14 Chris Sale CWS SP14 17 89 Bobby Parnell NYM RP25 93
15 Craig Kimbrel Atl RP1 16 90 Wandy Rodriguez Pit SP65 92
16 R.A. Dickey Tor SP15 12 91 Kyuji Fujikawa ChC RP26 99
17 Zack Greinke LAD SP16 21 92 Kelvin Herrera KC RP27 NR
18 Aroldis Chapman Cin RP2 19 93 Brandon McCarthy Ari SP66 84
19 Mat Latos Cin SP17 20 94 Phil Hughes NYY SP67 98
20 CC Sabathia NYY SP18 18 95 Wei-Yin Chen Bal SP68 96
21 Matt Moore TB SP19 23 96 Hisashi Iwakuma Sea SP69 105
22 Jordan Zimmermann Wsh SP20 22 97 Hyun-Jin Ryu LAD SP70 112
23 Max Scherzer Det SP21 24 98 Jose Fernandez Mia SP71 147
24 Jon Lester Bos SP22 38 99 Steve Cishek Mia RP28 83
25 James Shields KC SP23 25 100 Brandon League LAD RP29 97
26 Rafael Soriano Wsh RP3 29 101 Jim Henderson Mil RP30 NR
27 Kris Medlen Atl SP24 27 102 Julio Teheran Atl SP72 94
28 Jonathan Papelbon Phi RP4 26 103 Jason Vargas LAA SP73 95
29 Josh Johnson Tor SP25 30 104 Shelby Miller StL SP74 103
30 Brandon Morrow Tor SP26 34 105 James McDonald Pit SP75 110
31 Jeff Samardzija ChC SP27 47 106 John Axford Mil RP31 54
32 Mariano Rivera NYY RP5 33 107 Jason Hammel Bal SP76 118
33 Ian Kennedy Ari SP28 37 108 Jonathan Broxton Cin RP32 104
34 Yovani Gallardo Mil SP29 28 109 Dillon Gee NYM SP77 109
35 Fernando Rodney TB RP6 31 110 Matt Garza ChC SP78 107
36 Jake Peavy CWS SP30 40 111 Mitchell Boggs StL RP33 100
37 Jonathon Niese NYM SP31 43 112 Vinnie Pestano Cle RP34 108
38 Joe Nathan Tex RP7 39 113 Chris Tillman Bal SP79 101
39 J.J. Putz Ari RP8 35 114 Bud Norris Hou SP80 113
40 Addison Reed CWS RP9 46 115 Ross Detwiler Wsh SP81 117
41 Anibal Sanchez Det SP32 41 116 Jose Veras Hou RP35 106
42 Hiroki Kuroda NYY SP33 32 117 Joaquin Benoit Det RP36 136
43 Brett Anderson Oak SP34 45 118 Brandon Beachy Atl SP82 121
44 Matt Harvey NYM SP35 64 119 Drew Storen Wsh RP37 111
45 Doug Fister Det SP36 36 120 Ivan Nova NYY SP83 115
46 Homer Bailey Cin SP37 58 121 Justin Masterson Cle SP84 143
47 Alex Cobb TB SP38 66 122 Andy Pettitte NYY SP85 131
48 Jim Johnson Bal RP10 42 123 Gavin Floyd CWS SP86 127
49 Sergio Romo SF RP11 53 124 Ryan Cook Oak RP38 114
50 Tim Lincecum SF SP39 49 125 Jhoulys Chacin Col SP87 NR
51 Jarrod Parker Oak SP40 51 126 Sergio Santos Tor RP39 116
52 Mike Minor Atl SP41 60 127 Miguel Gonzalez Bal SP88 NR
53 Joel Hanrahan Bos RP12 57 128 Andrew Bailey Bos RP40 123
54 Lance Lynn StL SP42 48 129 Chad Billingsley LAD SP89 125
55 Jaime Garcia StL SP43 63 130 Patrick Corbin Ari SP90 134
56 Huston Street SD RP13 55 131 David Hernandez Ari RP41 135
57 Jered Weaver LAA SP44 11 132 Bartolo Colon Oak SP91 132
58 Dan Haren Wsh SP45 44 133 Tyler Clippard Wsh RP42 130
59 Rafael Betancourt Col RP14 61 134 Shaun Marcum NYM SP92 120
60 Jeremy Hellickson TB SP46 56 135 Ryan Madson LAA RP43 102
61 Derek Holland Tex SP47 59 136 Tommy Hanson LAA SP93 122
62 Tom Wilhelmsen Sea RP15 67 137 Sean Marshall Cin RP44 128
63 A.J. Burnett Pit SP48 72 138 Mark Buehrle Tor SP94 124
64 Paul Maholm Atl SP49 82 139 Ricky Nolasco Mia SP95 133
65 Glen Perkins Min RP16 73 140 Koji Uehara Bos RP45 141
66 Alexi Ogando Tex SP50 80 141 Luke Gregerson SD RP46 144
67 Clay Buchholz Bos SP51 85 142 A.J. Griffin Oak SP96 NR
68 Tim Hudson Atl SP52 69 143 Trevor Rosenthal StL RP47 NR
69 Tommy Milone Oak SP53 70 144 Felix Doubront Bos SP97 137
70 Chris Perez Cle RP17 71 145 Rick Porcello Det SP98 129
71 Ernesto Frieri LAA RP18 81 146 David Robertson NYY RP48 149
72 C.J. Wilson LAA SP54 62 147 Ervin Santana KC SP99 NR
73 Jason Grilli Pit RP19 86 148 J.A. Happ Tor SP100 NR
74 Ryan Vogelsong SF SP55 68 149 Sean Doolittle Oak RP49 146
75 Wade Miley Ari SP56 75 150 Wily Peralta Mil SP101 138

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hacheman@therx.com
Staff member
Joined
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Messages
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Hicks struggling, Mastroianni worth a look
in.gif


Eric Karabell

Minnesota Twins manager Ron Gardenhire might not want to admit it, but rookie outfielder Aaron Hicks is clearly overmatched at the plate. I caught a few of Hicks' at-bats over the weekend and again Monday, with each of them ending in strikeouts, and at some point soon, a stint at Triple-A Rochester will be warranted, if it's not already. Hicks, 24, became a popular sleeper for many fantasy owners this spring, as he hit .370 with four home runs and 18 RBIs to earn the starting center field job vacated by the trades of Denard Span and Ben Revere, but so far in the big leagues, he has produced two singles in 30 at-bats, with 13 strikeouts.
<OFFER>Those in dynasty formats and even one-year AL-only leagues should be patient by benching Hicks even if/when he's demoted, because his future remains enticing. Hicks features a patient approach at the plate, as he piled up the walks at each minor league stop. He also strikes out quite a bit and doesn't figure to hit for a high batting average, but fantasy owners should be willing to overlook that, given his potential for double-digit home runs and 30 steals. Frankly, it's not a shock he's struggling. After all, three of the four home runs he hit in spring training, and six of his RBIs, came in one wind-blown game against three Philadelphia Phillies left-handers in Clearwater, Fla., one month ago. Hicks is the No. 11 outfielder on ESPN's most dropped list.

</OFFER>
For now, fantasy owners in deeper formats should get reacquainted with speedster Darin Mastroianni, who stole 21 bases last season despite getting only 186 plate appearances. He has been hobbled by a bruised ankle suffered when he fouled a ball off it weeks ago, and hasn't batted in a game this month, though he has been used as the left field defensive replacement for Josh Willingham. It's hard to believe the Twins will keep sending Hicks out there regularly unless he starts hitting. He's not a proven veteran; he's a kid who hasn't played above Double-A and is likely losing confidence. Mastroianni is more of an organizational player and brings little upside, but when healthy he'll certainly run, and that's enough for some fantasy owners.

The other Twins outfielder to watch is current right fielder Chris Parmelee. He's first base-eligible in ESPN leagues -- he likely will add outfield eligibility -- and he's going to hit. The lefty-swinging Parmelee raked at Rochester last season, hitting .338 with 17 home runs and 49 RBIs in 64 games. He might cede at-bats to Wilkin Ramirez, a right-handed hitter who doesn't possess near the same plate discipline, but Parmelee is a threat for 15 home runs and a strong batting average, and he's someone I've been watching for a few seasons. And on this team, he has opportunity. Add him in deep formats before he really starts hitting.

Box score bits (NL): Well, start No. 2 for Roy Halladay wasn't any better than his first outing, and perhaps worse considering the foe. Unable to locate his pitches, the New York Mets lit up Halladay for seven runs in four innings. I still wouldn't cut Halladay yet in 10-team mixed leagues, but a benching is in order. … Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun was on the bench over the weekend because of a neck strain, but he looked just fine roping three hits Monday. … By the way, the most dropped catcher in ESPN leagues is Brewer Jonathan Lucroy. Big mistake. You want him over John Buck for sure. Lucroy walked three times Monday. Can it be considered a slow start so soon? I don't think so. … Buck did hit another home run Monday. But he's 33 and is a career .236 hitter. He's not a different player. … The St. Louis Cardinals welcomed back David Freese (back) from a short DL stint. He played 144 games last year, but don't expect a repeat there. There's upside, but there's also health risk, and the team has depth with Matt Carpenter able to play third base. … Cincinnati Reds outfielder Shin-Soo Choo keeps on raking at the plate, knocking in three more runs Monday. He's hitting .379 with power and plate discipline, but he dropped a pair of fly balls in center field for errors, too. Why Chris Heisey is playing left field and not center I cannot fathom. Choo's playing time should be safe in left or center, but his pitchers are better off when he's in left field.

Box score bits (AL): Baltimore Orioles lefty Wei-Yin Chen looked really good for six innings Monday, matching up with Clay Buchholz, then Daniel Nava took him deep for a three-run homer. I've been skeptical about Chen repeating his productive 2012 campaign, but so far, so good. He's next scheduled to meet the Yankees on ESPN's "Sunday Night Baseball." … Chen should oppose Hiroki Kuroda. The wily right-hander worked through a bruised finger Monday, walking four, and should be owned in all leagues. … Don't read too much into Aaron Crow saving Monday's game for the Kansas City Royals. If Greg Holland can't fix things, Kelvin Herrera would be the closer. I will add, though, that big league managers should be open to letting different pitchers close games. … Keep an eye on Texas Rangers outfielder Craig Gentry. The right-handed hitter started Monday against right-hander Jeremy Hellickson, perhaps suggesting his platoon with Leonys Martin is up for grabs. Gentry stole his second base of the season. He could add 25 more with 400 at-bats. … Speaking of Hellickson, in two starts he has permitted three home runs, and struck out just three total. I'm not punting him, but I can't say I'd use him Sunday in Boston, either.
 

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[h=3]A healthy Hafner could hit 20 homers
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[/h]Eric Karabell

New York Yankees designated hitter Travis Hafner certainly enjoyed his triumphant return to Cleveland Monday afternoon, as he mashed a three-run home run off the ghost of right-hander Ubaldo Jimenez in the first inning, then later singled, walked twice and even went first to third on a Vernon Wells single. Speed surely never was Pronk's game, but it's a sure sign the guy is healthy, and when he's feeling good Hafner can still hit for power, draw walks and add value for those in daily leagues, especially OBP/OPS formats.

<OFFER></OFFER>As a left-handed hitter and one who hasn't done great work against fellow lefty hurlers in recent seasons, not to mention the fact he's hardly durable, Hafner is not likely to pile on the plate appearances this season. He's likely to platoon, though the Yankees have faced all right-handed starters since falling to Boston Red Sox lefty Jon Lester in the first game. Hafner didn't start that game but relieved Ben Francisco in the sixth inning. The point is we have a really good idea when Hafner is going to play, depending on the opposing pitcher, and while one week of games is hardly enough of a sample size, he can help.


Hafner entered play Monday hitting .350 in his 20 at-bats, with a homer and a few too many strikeouts, then added the two hits, three runs and four RBIs. We know many of you play in considerably deeper formats than 10-team standard mixed, and Hafner is a reasonable free-agent addition, especially if you can manipulate your lineup day to day, and even at DH-only. It's a shame the Yankees don't have a strong right-handed platoon partner for him, or this would make for a truly intriguing platoon (Casper Wells, perhaps?). Surely Hafner was motivated on Monday, since he spent 10 years in Cleveland, though he's not the same player that produced three terrific seasons in which he accrued MVP votes.

Even while averaging a mere 93 games played over the past four seasons, Hafner hit double digits in home runs each year (an average of 14) and took enough walks to post above-average on-base numbers. The only year in which his batting average plummeted was last year. Playing half the time in Yankee Stadium, with its enticing right field porch, it's reasonable to expect Hafner to flirt with 20 home runs this season, just as Raul Ibanez was able to last year for the Yankees. Ibanez, now back with the Seattle Mariners, hit 19 home runs in his lone Yankee season, all of them against right-handed pitching and 14 at home. Hafner can do this, though I'll take the under on 400 plate appearances.

I saw most of New York's offensive explosion against the brutal Jimenez and various relief pitchers, and think reports of the franchise's demise to irrelevance are a bit premature. Sure, losing Derek Jeter, Mark Teixeira, Curtis Granderson and Alex Rodriguez hasn't helped, but Hafner, the cleanup hitter, looks good splitting right-handed hitting Kevin Youkilis and Vernon Wells in the lineup. Youkilis isn't the picture of health himself, but he's whacking the ball to all fields and can still differentiate balls from strikes. Wells is far from being a good player, but the power remains. He did smack 25 home runs only two seasons ago. The best sign on Wells, other than the fact the Yankees are paying less than a third of his contract, are the five walks against five strikeouts so far. It's early, but last season Wells walked twice all of April. This is progress, desperate as it might be. I do believe a change of scenery can help veteran players, and in New York's case the middle of the lineup qualifies.

Tribe Talk: Meanwhile, I cannot fathom why so many people believe Jimenez is worth owning in a 10-team mixed league. He's at 17.1 percent, and on ESPN's most-added list. This is not the guy that nearly won the Cy Young in 2010. Yes, his first outing in Toronto went well, and you thought the meager Yankees lineup would pose little threat, but look how much damage Jimenez did to fantasy rosters in 2012. It's not worth it. He hurts rosters far more than Adam Dunn/Mark Reynolds types. … Reynolds did not homer -- how dare he? -- but ripped a double in four at-bats. His flaw is batting average, but if you can deal with it, there will be power. … Big scare late in the game with catcher Carlos Santana, as a Chris Perez fastball found his left thumb, necessitating X-rays. Santana, off to a monster start hitting .500 and with more walks than strikeouts, should be hitting cleanup. I've got him as the No. 4 catcher overall. Hopefully he doesn't miss much time with what is being called a contusion, but it's a reminder that catchers are big risks. … One can do worse than have Mike Aviles as a dollar middle infielder in AL-only formats. I could see 350 at-bats and a flirtation with 10 homers, 10 steals.
 

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Re-evaluating Fernandez, Harvey, Teheran
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[h=5]Keith Law[/h]Author's note: Please keep in mind that evaluating off TV footage isn't the same as scouting a player live or off video angles that are geared to allow for evaluation.

Jose Fernandez's major league debut Sunday against the Mets couldn't have gone much better, not just in terms of results -- five innings, eight punchouts, one walk, one run allowed -- but in the stuff that doesn't necessarily show up in the stat line. Fernandez's stuff was as good as ever, his command was fine, he was poised even when things didn't quite go right, and he seemed to pitch with a plan in mind without deviating much from it.


Fernandez's raw stuff was ridiculous: mostly 93-97 mph with his fastball, with some late life up on the pitch, similar to Matt Cain's, a plus curveball and a flash of a plus change, a pitch I hadn't seen from him before.

He established the fastball early, starting the game with five straight and throwing first-pitch fastballs to the first 10 batters he faced, with eight of those hitters seeing at least two fastballs to start their at-bats. Once he turned the lineup over once, he started changing his pitching pattern more, made somewhat more necessary by the Mets' hitters adjusting enough to extend their at-bats. They never did catch up to the fastball -- even David Wright was late on the pitch -- with two of the three hits Fernandez allowed coming on breaking balls, including a hanger at 82 that resulted in the Mets' one extra-base hit off him.

Fernandez worked mostly with the curveball at 79-83, showing hard downward break, but got caught between the curve and slider a few times in his final inning of work.



The changeup was the real revelation, a difference-maker that cements his status as a potential ace given its heavy action and his clear confidence in the pitch when he threw it, which wasn't often enough, at least the second time around. He threw one his first time through the order, to left-handed hitter Ike Davis, and threw four in total. While Mets hitters weren't turning around his fastball and swung through quite a few in the zone, mixing in a few more changeups might help him shorten those at-bats the second time around.

Other than the pitch mix, the only negative, a very slight one, was Fernandez's fastball command the second time through. He started missing up, especially up and away, more often and made a couple of mistakes in the zone, getting away with all but one. It's not a huge concern, as the delivery is fine, repeatable with good use of his lower half to generate velocity, and I don't see why it wouldn't improve with experience. A pitcher with three pitches that grade out at 60 or better who has even average command will pitch at the top of a lot of rotations. While the Marlins may have goofed by promoting him so early, he could be their best pitcher this season.


[h=3]Harvey has room to improve[/h]
Matt Harvey faced off against a desiccated facsimile of Roy Halladay -- the less said about him, the better -- on Monday night and put up an outstanding stat line, showing great stuff but struggling a lot with location, control and even consistency on his curve and slider.

The good stuff first: That's ace stuff, a fastball mostly 93-97, a filthy slider at 87-91, a hard curveball at 78-83 and a riding change at 85-88. He punched out Ryan Howard by going up and in with heat three times in four pitches; Howard eventually caved and chased a pitch he couldn't sniff. Laynce Nix, not really a major league hitter anyway, couldn't touch Harvey's fastball and swung through three of them in his last at-bat, the final one perfectly placed up out of his reach but close enough to induce him to flail at it.

Harvey threw some sliders that were unhittable, right off the outside corner to right-handed hitters, victimizing Michael Young more than once that way. The slider he threw to strike out Young in the fourth, 90 mph on the TV gun, broke down over the outside corner of the plate and made Young look feeble. He could have used the changeup more, preferring to go in with the curveball to left-handed hitters, even though his changeup is an above-average (or better) pitch.

Philly's lineup just isn't very good anymore, which helped Harvey get away with a lot of pitches where he either didn't locate or didn't finish a breaking ball (mostly the curve). The sac fly Howard hit in the fourth came off a bad changeup that a decent left-handed hitter would have destroyed. Harvey hung several sliders and curveballs, including ones that Humberto Quintero and Young failed to capitalize on, with the curve the bigger problem on Monday.

Harvey also missed up in or above the zone way too often for my tastes. He did blow it by a number of hitters, which is great when the location is planned, but when you miss, it's much better to miss down in the zone than it is to miss up. Quintero also got a fastball up in the first pitch of his second at-bat that might as well have been on a tee, a mistake Harvey will pay for if he does it against better hitters.

He didn't get a ton of help from his defense. Ike Davis was an adventure at first base all night, and Kirk Nieuwenhuis struggled picking up some balls in center. It also seemed like John Buck struggled to catch Harvey's better velocity, jerking some borderline pitches away from the zone.

Overall, I'm still as bullish on Harvey as I was when I scouted his major league debut in July, but there is a gap between that ace potential and what he showed Monday night in both command and in consistency on the two breaking balls.


[h=3]Teheran still scuffling[/h]
Julio Teheran pitched Saturday against the Cubs and, in spite of spring training numbers that were practically shoved down our throats, struggled as he has in previous major league outings.

His main issue is that he lacks an average breaking ball, which was still the case Saturday. He worked the pitch from 70-76 mph, but it had no depth, he left several hanging, and he caught too much of the plate with the better ones.

He also struggled to get sink on his fastball, adding a two-seamer this spring and throwing a number of them in the game against Chicago but not getting enough action on the pitch to make a difference. It didn't help that, in the fifth inning, he didn't get a called third strike on the 0-2 fastball he threw to Starlin Castro, a pitch that nailed the corner low and away, after which Teheran threw him five more pitches, the final one a curveball in the dirt that Castro tapped for an infield single.

But Teheran hung a curveball to the next batter, Anthony Rizzo, who gently placed it over the right-field fence, and later gave up a run-scoring single on a flat fastball up in the zone. Teheran is a little maddening because the velocity is so easy and he can turn over a changeup, but until he develops at least an average breaking ball capable of changing hitters' eye levels, he won't reach his ceiling.


[h=3]Teheran still scuffling[/h]
Julio Teheran pitched Saturday against the Cubs and, in spite of spring training numbers that were practically shoved down our throats, struggled as he has in previous major league outings.

His main issue is that he lacks an average breaking ball, which was still the case Saturday. He worked the pitch from 70-76 mph, but it had no depth, he left several hanging, and he caught too much of the plate with the better ones.

He also struggled to get sink on his fastball, adding a two-seamer this spring and throwing a number of them in the game against Chicago but not getting enough action on the pitch to make a difference. It didn't help that, in the fifth inning, he didn't get a called third strike on the 0-2 fastball he threw to Starlin Castro, a pitch that nailed the corner low and away, after which Teheran threw him five more pitches, the final one a curveball in the dirt that Castro tapped for an infield single.

.
 

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Lessons learned from early stats

By Tristan H. Cockcroft | ESPN.com

Let's face facts: We've just come off a 153-day span without baseball that counts (115 days if you're counting from the final 2012 World Series game through the spring training openers) and are only days removed from the excitement of draft season. The 2013 campaign is fresh and new, and the urge to put plenty of stock in your league's standings is often irresistible.

My advice: Ignore them, at least until May.
This is the worst time of the year to trust numbers, because there's no other time of year in which samples are smaller. Year-to-date statistics are based on a maximum of eight team games played, meaning that streaks and slumps are magnified, the perception greater than at any point of the year. We are far more unfair judges of player performance today than we would be in, say, July. Frankly, we would do ourselves far greater service -- that's fantasy owners and analysts -- if we always cited a player's statistics in past-calendar-year blocks. At the very least, we'd be better off if every sample cited was of identical size.
To illustrate, consider this: Had the 2012 season begun Aug. 9, Adam Jones would have had full-season triple-slash rates of .233/.303/.267, zero home runs and one stolen base 16 games in. Had the year started then, his fantasy owners might have been running for the hills. Instead, they presumably exercised more patience with the eventual No. 11 hitter on the 2012 Player Rater, because his full-season numbers would have had more influence on their opinion.
So here's the question: Why should a Buster Posey owner panic today, despite the fact that he's a .208/.269/.250 hitter with zero homers or steals through seven games? Considering there is no injury or obvious obstacle to Posey's path to success, there's no reason he should be treated any differently than Jones was in August. Heck, he deserves more leeway, being that he was drafted earlier this spring (16th overall) than Jones was last season (81st).
That said, a "don't worry" brush also shouldn't be used to paint broad strokes across the entire baseball population. Sometimes there is deeper meaning to the numbers, or at least something that warrants more closely monitoring the player's performance in the coming days.


With the caveat that the tiniest of samples often lead to the worst of misinterpretations, let's take a look at some of 2013's more curious early numbers:
" Through 34 plate appearances, Giancarlo Stanton has four hits and zero home runs. The Stanton numbers of greater relevance are this: He has walked or struck out in 56 percent of those PAs, whereas in his first three seasons he walked or whiffed 39 percent of the time, deviating by only 1 percent from that 39 number in any individual year. In addition, only 35 percent of the pitches thrown to him have been within the strike zone, the second lowest rate in the majors and a 9 percent decline from 2012.
Naturally, those kinds of facts, plus the fact that Greg Dobbs (5 starts) and Placido Polanco (3) have been the cleanup hitters behind him, spawn the inevitable "lineup protection" debate. Yes, perhaps the Miami Marlins' lineup deficiencies will limit the number of quality pitches that Stanton sees in 2013. But he will see some, he does have power potential that rivals that of anyone in the game, and there are two other points to cite in his defense. The first is that, as a "three-true-outcomes" hitter -- meaning a player who has a large percentage of PAs result in a home run, walk or strikeout -- Stanton is going to be prone to slumps from time to time. The other is that, judging by his career history, he has been known to get off to his share of slow starts.
The chart below lists the 15 active players who had the largest OPS differential between their April and full-season numbers from 2010-12 combined (minimum 150 PAs in April, 900 total), with April being the poorer side:
<style type="text/css">.mod-inline td img {margin: 0px;}</style>
Player<center>April OPS</center><center>Total OPS</center><center>Difference</center>
Giancarlo Stanton.701.928-.227
Aramis Ramirez.635.845-.210
Victor Martinez.665.847-.182
Chris Johnson.598.755-.157
Raul Ibanez.612.754-.142
Carlos Gonzalez.786.918-.132
Ronny Cedeno.542.670-.128
Albert Pujols.799.926-.127
Rajai Davis.553.675-.122
Alexei Ramirez.589.708-.119
Gordon Beckham.545.664-.119
Delmon Young.630.746-.116
Mark Reynolds.660.775-.115
Juan Pierre.559.672-.113
J.J. Hardy.614.726-.112

<thead>
</thead><tbody>
</tbody>


That's as compelling evidence as there is that Stanton's owners should give him a longer leash. It's also something to keep in mind if you're disappointed with the early returns of Victor Martinez or Albert Pujols.
" Marco Scutaro has hit only one line drive in 34 PAs. By comparison, Scutaro hit three line drives in his first game of 2012. No one hit more line drives last season (138), and only Paul Goldschmidt was higher than Scutaro's 23.4 percent line-drive rate. We caution so often on these pages the difficulty of a player repeating such a high number. Line-drive rates often vary by multiple percentage points -- it's rare to see a player consistently manage higher than 22 percent from year to year -- and Scutaro had a mere 18.9 percent rate in 2011 and 19 percent in 2010. His fantasy appeal remains that of the "can't hurt you" middle infield type, being that he's rarely one to disrupt your team's batting average, but a .290 mark in the category might be his eventual result.
" Josh Hamilton has only one extra-base hit in 29 at-bats, and it was a double. Again, there's a more telling number at play: Hamilton has chased pitches outside of the strike zone (swings on non-strikes) 50 percent of the time, and he has missed on his swings 32 percent of the time. Last season, he set career worsts in both departments en route to a .259 second-half batting average. There's a simple solution for what ails Hamilton: Recapture the kind of plate discipline he had during his outstanding 2010 season.
" Coco Crisp has hit four home runs and has made hard contact 12 times, second most in the majors. Wherefore thy power, Coco? Crisp's critics will be quick to point out that three of the homers came against mediocre Houston Astros pitching -- Brad Peacock, Bud Norris and Lucas Harrell, to be specific -- and there's another reason to doubt: Our Home Run Tracker notes that two of Crisp's homers wouldn't have cleared the fence in any park except Houston's Minute Maid Park. Heck, Crisp is already more than a third of the way to his entire 2012 season total in homers (11).


" Chris Davis has four homers and a major league-leading 17 RBIs. Fantasy owners probably know by now that the RBIs are somewhat fluky and reliant upon team performance, but Davis' early power surge shouldn't be entirely cast aside as a mere streak from a historically streaky player. Two other numbers of his stand out as hints of skills improvement. One is his 16 percent miss rate on swings, which is 15 percentage points beneath his 2012 number (31 percent). The other is his 6-for-8, 2-homer performance on "soft" stuff -- specifically curves, sliders and changeups -- which reflects an equal-or-better level of performance to that of 2012. Certainly Davis' early surge supports his 2012 breakthrough as legitimate, and it's not unthinkable that if he's closing more of the holes in his swing that he might even take a small step forward in 2013.
" Brett Wallace has struck out in 17 of 22 PAs. Contact has never been Wallace's strong suit, but that's a somewhat unbelievable strikeout rate, even with the sample as small as it is. The Astros could always restore Chris Carter to either first base or designated hitter, using Carlos Pena at the other spot, if Wallace doesn't pick up the pace. From a long-term angle, continued struggles by Wallace could lead to midsummer questions about Jonathan Singleton's arrival.
" Jesus Montero has neither walked nor made hard contact once. This is another one that is difficult to believe, though it's worth pointing out that Montero did have the 17th-highest swing rate in baseball last season (51 percent) and the 19th-lowest walk rate (5.2 percent). He did get off to a comparably aggressive start last year too, walking only twice in April, but fantasy owners were probably hoping for a breakthrough, especially with the Seattle Mariners bringing in the outfield fences at Safeco Field this year. Still, give Montero some time: The Mariners have played just two games at Safeco.
" Josh Reddick, who struck out the 31st-most often in 2012, has struck out the fifth-least often in 2013. Oddly enough, most of his other numbers are largely in line, with the exception of his ground-ball rate (41.7 percent, up from 29.7 percent) and his BABIP (.087, down from .269). There appears not to be any reason to worry about Reddick's early struggles, though a boost to his contact rate could help him be more of a contributor in terms of batting average over the long haul.
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[h=4]TOP 150 HITTERS[/h]Note: Tristan H. Cockcroft's top 150 hitters are ranked for their expected performance from this point forward, not for statistics that have already been accrued. For position-specific rankings, see the "Pos Rk" column. Previous Ranking ("Prv Rk") is ESPN's preseason ranking among all hitters.
<center>#</center>Player, Team<center>Pos
Rk</center>
<center>Prv
Rk</center>
<center></center><center>#</center>Player, Team<center>Pos
Rk</center>
<center>Prv
Rk</center>
1Ryan Braun, MilOF1176Carlos Gomez, MilOF3561
2Miguel Cabrera, Det3B1277Todd Frazier, Cin3B1095
3Mike Trout, LAAOF2378Freddie Freeman, Atl1B1259
4Andrew McCutchen, PitOF3479Angel Pagan, SFOF3677
5Robinson Cano, NYY2B1680Carlos Beltran, StLOF3773
6Matt Kemp, LADOF4581Aramis Ramirez, Mil3B1154
7Carlos Gonzalez, ColOF5782Brett Gardner, NYYOF3878
8Joey Votto, Cin1B1983Alcides Escobar, KCSS885
9Justin Upton, AtlOF61184Ben Revere, PhiOF3981
10Prince Fielder, Det1B21085Erick Aybar, LAASS975
11Albert Pujols, LAA1B3886Nelson Cruz, TexOF4080
12Jose Bautista, TorOF71287Victor Martinez, DetC670
13David Wright, NYM3B21588Neil Walker, Pit2B1076
14Troy Tulowitzki, ColSS11889Howard Kendrick, LAA2B1193
15Giancarlo Stanton, MiaOF81390Andre Ethier, LADOF4184
16Buster Posey, SFC11691Ryan Howard, Phi1B1389
17Evan Longoria, TB3B31792Miguel Montero, AriC7101
18Adam Jones, BalOF92593Adam LaRoche, Wsh1B1490
19Ian Kinsler, Tex2B22294Josh Reddick, OakOF4294
20Jason Heyward, AtlOF101495Kevin Youkilis, NYY3B12118
21Adrian Beltre, Tex3B42096Torii Hunter, DetOF4399
22Jose Reyes, TorSS22697David Ortiz, BosDH197
23Dustin Pedroia, Bos2B32398David Freese, StL3B13102
24Edwin Encarnacion, Tor1B41999Jed Lowrie, OakSS10135
25Jacoby Ellsbury, BosOF1128100Mark Teixeira, NYY1B15117
26Billy Butler, KC1B529101Alejandro De Aza, CWSOF4488
27Jay Bruce, CinOF1227102Jason Kubel, AriOF45109
28Starlin Castro, ChCSS324103Wilin Rosario, ColC8115
29Brandon Phillips, Cin2B433104Kendrys Morales, Sea1B16105
30Bryce Harper, WshOF1331105Nick Swisher, CleOF4696
31B.J. Upton, AtlOF1430106Carl Crawford, LADOF47121
32Josh Hamilton, LAAOF1521107Mike Moustakas, KC3B1498
33Matt Holliday, StLOF1632108Coco Crisp, OakOF48114
34Austin Jackson, DetOF1736109Paul Konerko, CWS1B1792
35Michael Bourn, CleOF1834110Derek Jeter, NYYSS11107
36Desmond Jennings, TBOF1937111Will Middlebrooks, Bos3B15111
37Paul Goldschmidt, Ari1B642112Dan Uggla, Atl2B12122
38Jimmy Rollins, PhiSS444113Kyle Seager, Sea3B16106
39Ben Zobrist, TBOF2038114Michael Cuddyer, ColOF49112
40Adrian Gonzalez, LAD1B735115Salvador Perez, KCC9104
41Ian Desmond, WshSS539116Pedro Alvarez, Pit3B17100
42Ryan Zimmerman, Wsh3B541117Nick Markakis, BalOF50108
43Yoenis Cespedes, OakOF2143118Jayson Werth, WshOF51116
44Elvis Andrus, TexSS647119Manny Machado, Bal3B18110
45Alex Rios, CWSOF2248120Lance Berkman, Tex1B18120
46Allen Craig, StL1B845121Danny Espinosa, Wsh2B13103
47Shin-Soo Choo, CinOF2351122Norichika Aoki, MilOF52125
48Pablo Sandoval, SF3B652123Daniel Murphy, NYM2B14127
49Alex Gordon, KCOF2455124J.J. Hardy, BalSS12124
50Aaron Hill, Ari2B556125Ichiro Suzuki, NYYOF53119
51Yadier Molina, StLC246126Justin Morneau, Min1B19126
52Carlos Santana, CleC353127Marco Scutaro, SF2B15113
53Jason Kipnis, Cle2B640128Alexei Ramirez, CWSSS13138
54Matt Wieters, BalC449129Jonathan Lucroy, MilC10128
55Martin Prado, AriOF2566130Everth Cabrera, SDSS14129
56Joe Mauer, MinC550131Adam Dunn, CWS1B20146
57Chase Headley, SD3B762132Trevor Plouffe, Min3B19142
58Asdrubal Cabrera, CleSS758133Mike Napoli, BosC11133
59Mark Trumbo, LAAOF2663134Brandon Moss, Oak1B21148
60Brett Lawrie, Tor3B857135Dayan Viciedo, CWSOF54130
61Jose Altuve, Hou2B760136Andrelton Simmons, AtlSS15131
62Dexter Fowler, ColOF2791137Michael Young, Phi1B22140
63Josh Willingham, MinOF2864138Jean Segura, MilSS16NR
64Eric Hosmer, KC1B969139Starling Marte, PitOF55147
65Chris Davis, BalOF2983140Michael Saunders, SeaOF56NR
66Curtis Granderson, NYYOF3067141Matt Carpenter, StL1B23NR
67Hanley Ramirez, LAD3B972142Josh Rutledge, ColSS17NR
68Ike Davis, NYM1B1065143Cameron Maybin, SDOF57123
69Melky Cabrera, TorOF3168144Chris Young, OakOF58NR
70Rickie Weeks, Mil2B882145Garrett Jones, Pit1B24144
71Michael Morse, SeaOF3286146Mark Reynolds, Cle1B25NR
72Shane Victorino, BosOF3371147Jesus Montero, SeaC12134
73Anthony Rizzo, ChC1B1174148Emilio Bonifacio, TorOF59132
74Hunter Pence, SFOF3479149Chris Carter, Hou1B26150
75Chase Utley, Phi2B987150Franklin Gutierrez, SeaOF60NR

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hacheman@therx.com
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Assessing the Angels rotation
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Eric Karabell

The good news on Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Jered Weaver hitting the disabled list Tuesday is that the elbow he fractured Sunday night was his left one, and he doesn't rely on that one to throw baseballs. Sure, Weaver will miss a month and perhaps more, but at least we don't need to worry about performance when he returns, as we would if this were his pitching elbow or a shoulder. Or do we?
<offer>Lost in the strange way Weaver hurt himself, falling off the mound to avoid a comebacker that did not strike him, is that his already underwhelming fastball velocity was -- as it seems with half of baseball's pitchers these days -- significantly down from last year. Weaver was never Stephen Strasburg to start with, so perhaps it's a bit overblown, but it's tough to get hitters out with an 85 mph heater, and it showed Sunday night before the injury as two Texas Rangers homered off him, and he issued four walks.

Weaver's velocity dropped from an average of 89.1 mph to an average of 87.8 mph last season, though it didn't seem to matter, as he registered a 2.81 ERA and 1.01 WHIP. Then again, I couldn't help but notice his FIP was 3.75 and his xFIP 4.18, and those are indicators he was fortunate to earn that ERA. Also, since the 20 wins tell us nothing in terms of being repeated -- remember, Justin Verlander and Clayton Kershaw each lost seven wins from their 2011 totals in 2012 while pitching similarly -- I left Weaver out of my top 10 starting pitchers for this year, though he was close. In 11 innings this season, Weaver's fastball was coming in at 85.5 mph, and he was throwing fewer of them.
Still, Weaver is a terrific pitcher, and in a way the DL stint, while painful for fantasy owners and Angels fans in the short term (though not nearly as painful as most believe) could actually help. We don't know why Weaver's velocity was down. Perhaps his arm was sore or he was still building up strength from the spring. St. Louis Cardinals closer Jason Motte can't work on his arm strength while he's sidelined because it's his pitching arm. For Weaver it isn't. Regardless, nobody should be sending Weaver to the free-agent bin in any fantasy format. This is not, and I hate bringing up the names again, Roy Halladay or Tim Lincecum.
Weaver's second half of 2012 wasn't close to as successful as his first, but his September ERA was 2.67, his WHIP 1.15. Anyone is tradable, whether you're buying or selling, but I see Weaver returning by mid-May, making roughly 26 starts this season and settling in with a 3.30 ERA and 1.12 WHIP. There's nothing wrong with that, and it's common for fractures to heal cleaner and quicker than sprains and other ligament issues, depending on severity, so I don't see much risk in reinjury.
The Angels had a rotation somewhat built on hopes and dreams anyway, with two reliable options and three newcomers of varying effectiveness and little depth. Any team can survive the loss of one starting pitcher for a month, even if Garrett Richards, Jerome Williams or even the very available Aaron Harang becomes the replacement options. In ESPN standard leagues, Weaver and lefty C.J. Wilson, himself having sputtered at times in his first Angels season, are 100 percent owned. Wilson is on my bounce-back list because there's a track record, his strikeout rate is strong and he's proved to be durable, but he sure didn't look effective early on Tuesday night against the Oakland Athletics, when he threw a ton of pitches early and was down 4-0 after two innings. Wilson righted himself and gave the Angels six innings, permitting no extra runs. Through two starts he's walked seven and fanned 11 in 12 innings. Stick with him.
As for the three newcomers to the rotation -- right-hander Tommy Hanson, lefty Jason Vargas and right-hander Joe Blanton -- I can't say I'm much of a fan of any of them. Hanson is owned in 44.2 percent of ESPN standard formats, mainly because people remember he had a successful run for the Atlanta Braves and his first start last week went well, but he's had shoulder and back injuries the past two seasons. Plus, I'll be honest, when the pitching-rich Braves unload a guy, I pay attention. Hanson permitted 27 home runs last year, and his walk rate was a career high. He brings more upside than Vargas and Blanton, but with his shoulder issues, I will take the under on 30 starts.
At least Vargas is more likely to stay healthy, and his performance in recent seasons has been consistent. Sure, he doesn't call cozy Safeco Field his home ballpark any longer, but even as his ERA rises to the 4.25 range, there's a security factor for deeper leagues or AL-only formats. Blanton, like Hanson, was allowing too many homers in the National League, so moving to the AL seems like a poor fit. The Cincinnati Reds tagged Blanton for three homers in five innings last week. Go with a middle reliever to fill out your staff rather than Blanton, and stay away from Richards and Williams. I don't think the Angels are in trouble, but for the next month without Weaver, Wilson is the lone starter I'd rely on.
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Injured Yankees progress report

Stephania Bell

The normal focus heading into any game is who is in the starting lineup. But this year is anything but normal, especially for the Yankees, when it comes to starting lineups. Injuries have hit the Yankees so hard in the offseason, with a couple scares early in the season too, that their DL roster could be confused with a starting lineup. Since many Yankees stars will be out for Wednesday's game against the Indians (7 p.m. ET, ESPN2 and WatchESPN), it seemed appropriate to provide some quick updates on their collective road to recovery.

Hitters:

Curtis Granderson, OF (injured Feb. 24, due back mid-May): Even Granderson was surprised when the "bruise" from a J.A. Happ fastball in a spring exhibition game turned out to be a fracture. Granderson has remained focused on conditioning ever since so that once the healing in his arm permitted it, he would be able to get baseball-ready in short order. Manager Joe Girardi says Granderson could hit soft toss or off a tee as soon as this weekend, keeping him on track for a mid-May return.


Derek Jeter, SS (injured in October, no timetable for return): It almost feels as if once Jeter realized he could not make Opening Day, the reset button was hit on his return clock. Jeter was pushing to be back by the start of the season, but his still-healing 38-year-old ankle would not cooperate. It's hardly a failure -- except perhaps to the ultracompetitive, hardworking athlete that Jeter is -- that he could not get to game readiness by Opening Day; recovery from this type of surgery (plates and screws in the lower leg to restore ankle stability) takes months to heal and additional months to return to every-day playing form. Jeter is working out in Tampa, Fla., doing baseball drills and, most importantly, progressing his running from water to land. The team (wisely) will not hear of his return until he can play in minor league games on back-to-back days, something which is still a ways off. The Yankees are not being coy about a timetable; it is a stepwise process where the next level of activity is dictated by response to the previous level. Jeter is as day-to-day as they come, but based on what he is doing, it appears as if early May is in his sights.

Mark Teixeira, 1B (injured March 5, due back in May): Teixeira hopes he will avoid the fate of Blue Jays outfielder Jose Bautista, who also suffered a partially torn tendon sheath, which ultimately required surgery. Teixeira's right wrist was immobilized after his injury in the hopes that the sheath would heal itself, and he says he did not experience any instability of the tendon itself -- something Bautista did feel, which led him to surgery. All reports of Teixeira's progress have been excellent so far. On April 1, he was permitted to remove the brace (other than for workouts), and he has been focusing on strengthening exercises for his wrist and forearm. He still has not been cleared to swing a bat, and doing so, especially from the left side -- the side he bats from primarily and also the way in which he was originally hurt -- will be the ultimate test. Even if the early swings are uneventful, the big challenge will be when he returns to hitting in a game situation, going all out on his swing repeatedly. Teixeira hopes he can return by the start of May, but there will be no rush. After all, if the sheath re-tears or he proves unable to function at the plate, he will find himself following in Bautista's footsteps into the operating room.

Alex Rodriguez, 3B (estimated back around All-Star break): There hasn't been much to report on Rodriguez because, well, he has remained mostly hidden from view. When he did emerge to meet the media on Opening Day, Rodriguez merely confirmed that he was dedicating himself to the rehab of his surgically repaired left hip. He was guarded about his progress, saying he was in "Stage 1" of his recovery. Based on the surgical procedure to address hip impingement along with a labral repair, it is reasonable to expect Rodriguez to be ready around the second half of the season. But until he is participating in baseball activities and approaching minor league games, it's too early to make any definitive claims.


[h=3]Pitchers:[/h]
Phil Hughes, SP (returned April 6): After a bulging disc in his back derailed Hughes' spring, the Yankees were just glad to have him back the first week in April, even if the outing was unspectacular. Perhaps they are happier that he appeared to suffer no physical setback and is in line to take the mound again Thursday.

Hiroki Kuroda, SP (no missed time): This is what you call dodging a bullet. Kuroda was hit by a line drive on the middle finger of his pitching hand, fortunately sustaining no break in the bone but a scare nonetheless. There was concern whether he would be able to make his subsequent start, but Kuroda pitched Monday, pain and all. At least the Yankees avoided sending yet another key player to the DL.

Michael Pineda, SP (surgery May 2012, due back June/July): Pineda's debut season with the Yankees went exactly the opposite of how everyone envisioned it and ended abruptly with him undergoing surgery to repair a torn labrum. The rehab has been long and arduous, and Pineda has used the time to get in better physical shape, something he unquestionably needed to do. While there are never any guarantees as to how a pitcher will perform following shoulder surgery, recent signs of Pineda's recovery and his young age are encouraging. He has been throwing bullpen sessions, even incorporating breaking pitches in the past month. He still has a ways to go before he can definitively return to healthy status, but there is reason to be optimistic he will contribute in the second half.


[h=3]Meanwhile, in the Indians training room ...[/h]
I certainly couldn't leave Cleveland completely out of the conversation. While the Indians can't compete with the Yankees when it comes to starters on the DL, they do have one injury concern.

Carlos Santana, C (DTD): Santana bruised his left thumb Monday when he absorbed a fastball from Chris Perez. X-rays came back negative, but given that the impact was such that even Santana thought he broke it initially, don't be surprised if he's out for a few days.
 

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