League 11 Draft Recap
As I was in the middle of my vacation, I spent almost no time researching before my first pick came up. I did a quick search on A++ range guys and most of the top hitters with A+ range batted right-handed, so my preliminary strategy was going to try a draft a “Hilltop Park” team (high average hitters where righties can hit HRs but lefties don't). I noticed that there are a bunch of great switch hitters at various positions and I thought about trying to draft an all switch-hitting team, but it was clear to me during the last draft that a lot of other folks are drafting switch hitters earlier than normal, which would make it tough to get all the guys I would want.
Round 1, Pick 10
2011 Jose Bautista ($10,036,321)
Drawing pick 10, I pretty much decided not to go with starting pitching in round 1 as all the top SPs were taken. Had he been available, I would’ve taken ’08 Chipper Jones, but Jtpsops took him at 1.06. So, when my turn came up, it was between '11 Jose Bautista and ’07 Chipper Jones. This pick would drive the rest of my draft. Had I taken Chipper, I would’ve picked in the top 5 in the next round and would’ve tried to get a bunch of switch-hitters and not worry about range. Had I taken a SP here, I probably would’ve taken Chris Carpenter since he would’ve had me picking in the top 5 next round. Bautista’s stats: .305, .451, .595 (A/A+).
Round 2, pick 11
2009 Chris Carpenter (7,213,451)
So going with my Hilltop Park strategy, I was hoping to get 2008 Pujols with this pick but he went at 2.01. I strongly considered 2015 Mike Trout here for his A+++ range, but Trout has some other A+ range seasons. I could take ’10 Pujols here but 1B is extremely deep and my fallback is ’07 Helton (which I can get much later). When no hitter jumps out, then go with a SP. As I mentioned above, I briefly considered ’09 Carpenter last round, so I decided to take him here. Carpenter’s stats: 193 ip, 2.06 erc#, .228 oav#, 1.00 whip#, 0.25 hr/9#.
Round 3, pick 9
2012 Mike Trout ($8,418,471)
Apparently, ronthegenius wanted Carpenter as he texted me the following right after I made this pick, and I quote… “#**#!”. He took ’09 Greinke instead. FYI - Greinke was next on my SP list. One pick after that, chewy3344 took ’15 Trout and I immediately started having regrets. I know Trout usually underachieves, but I did a search of great hitting OFs with A+ range and there just aren’t that many in this era. I looked at Mr. Triple, ’07 Curtis Granderson (he usually does well in the sim), but decided to let ronthegenius have him (which he took two picks later). Trout’s stats: .330, .404, .549 (B+/A+).
Round 4, pick 11
2010 Troy Tulowitzki ($7,329,996)
I like eblankenstei’s strategy of grabbing ’13 Hanley and ’14 Tulowitzki early - easily, the two best SS in this era and it keeps him near the top of the draft order. I was torn on this pick. All the other Tulowitzki’s were still available. Should I take the best hitting Tulo who only has 529 PAs or a lesser hitting version with more PAs? With the exception of ’07 Tulo (677 PA, best fielder, worst hitter of the bunch), I would need to draft backup SS plate appearances with any of the other versions of Tulo so I went with 2010 who has these nice stats: .319, .383, .560 (A/A+). So far, I have three right-handed hitters with A+ range.
Round 5, pick 11
2007 Chase Utley ($7,772,207)
So I am at the airport figuring out who to take before my flight takes off. 1B is too deep to use an early pick on. I am looking at ’08 Halladay as my top SP candidate. The top RP available is ’10 Kuo. Catcher is deep, so no rush there. I don’t see an OF who is jumping off the page. I decided to take ’07 Utley over ’10 Cano, which doesn’t make sense on the surface. Cano has 696 PA compared to 613 for Utley. Cano is A+/A fielder vs B/B+ for Utley. Both are left-handed. Utley’s only advantage is that he is a slightly better hitter (129 vs 125 OPS+). So why did I take Utley? It all goes back to my Hilltop strategy. Cano has 29 HRs. Utley has 22, but he has 48 doubles. I don’t want to take any left-handed batters where most of their value comes from hitting HRs. Utley’s stats: .330, .407, .545.
Round 6, pick 13
2015 Joey Votto ($6,925,102)
2008 Roy Halladay is still available, but I’m still not taking a second SP yet. 1B is so deep that I am planning on drafting two, maybe even three 1B. I selected Votto here to play DH. He’s my second lefty bat, and although he does have 29 HRs, his main value is his insane .466 obp#. I still plan on taking ’10 Pujols or ’07 Helton for their A+++ range. Heck, maybe I will take both and play one of them in LF. I’m not really thrilled with the OF options available. Note that I took ’15 Votto (.319, .466, .534) over the better hitting ’10 Votto because ’10 Votto (.328, .427, .591) has 37 HRs and a much lower on base%. If I wasn't playing in Hilltop, I could've waited since there are 3-4 good Votto seasons.
Round 7, pick 13
2008 Roy Halladay ($6,925,102)
Well, pedrocerrano sniped ’10 Pujols from me at pick 2.07. This is probably a blessing in disguise as he was more of a luxury than a "need". There are still a bunch of good hitting, good range 1B available. Meanwhile, some of the top SPs available were recently taken and Halladay was working his way to the top of the list. As tempting as it was to grab a stud closer here (like ’09 Mike Adams) and move up in the draft by six spots, what’s the point if somebody in front of me takes Halladay. Hallday’s stats aren’t overwhelming (246 ip, 2.47 erc#, .235 oav#, 1.04 whip, 0.52 hr/9#) but his performance review numbers are very solid. It’s not an exciting pick, but it’s a necessary pick if I want to have some hope of my pitching staff getting some outs. If my offense (and defense) is as good as I think it will be, Halladay should accumulate enough wins to be in the running for the Cy Young award.
Round 8, pick 13
2013 Shin-Soo Choo ($7,597,960)
I was correct that Halladay would not have made it back to me. Unfortunately, bigsteve12 surprisingly grabbed ’07 Helton. Although I wanted him, I didn’t expect him to go this early with so many better hitting 1B still available. I guess I will continue to wait on 1B. As I pointed out when I drafted Trout, there aren’t many good hitting outfielders with great defense in this draft, and most of them got taken early. I need another left-handed bat with a good OBP that isn’t a big-time HR hitter. Choo (.291, .431, 459) is not ranked among the top 50 OFs in terms of OPS# and I may be taking him too early, but he’s got a few attributes I really need... a lefty bat, can be my leadoff hitter (712 PA w/ a great OBP#) and a solid defender (B+/A). After making the pick, I soon learned that 3dayrotation wanted Choo. This drops me to last pick next round. I’m sure that won’t hurt me at all.
Round 9, pick 16
2013 Andrew McCutcheon ($6,635,456)
It was nearly seven hours between my last pick and this pick so I had a very long time to think about who I wanted. I considered taking ’09 Mike Adams to get a stud closer and move up in the draft order. I am also looking at ’11 Victor Martinez at catcher but I think I can wait another round or two. At about the fifth hour into my wait, I had finally decided on taking ’08 Carlos Beltran to get my first switch-hitter and another great defensive outfielder. Now I just had to wait until my turn… sweating out everybody else’s pick. With one pick to go, njbigwig crushed my soul and took ’08 Beltran. Noooo! Crap. Now what do I do? I quickly scanned the available OFs and knee-jerk drafted McCutcheon. He wasn’t even on my radar, but the available OFs just don’t excite me. There just aren’t any more A+ range guys or decent fielding switch hitters that can hit. At this point, I didn’t care which way the player bats, I wanted a .300/.400/.500 guy with reasonably good defense. McCutcheon fit that criteria perfectly with a normalized slash of .324, .411, .505 with C+/B defense.
Round 10, pick 15
2011 Victor Martinez ($4,372,503)
Once ’13 Mauer got drafted, I knew it was time to get my preferred catcher. Yes, I know there are other good Mauer seasons and there are a bunch of catchers with better hitting stats and better arms than V-Mart. But none of them are .330-hitting switch-hitters. Martinez only has 595 PA, but he’s the perfect fit for my Hilltop offense with this slash line: .332, .383, .457 (with 40 doubles). And yes – I acknowledge that I took him about 2-3 rounds too early.
Round 11, pick 13
2009 Todd Helton ($6,767,677)
Well, I waited one round too long on ’09 Mike Adams (nice pick eblankesntei). I wanted to wait a little longer to grab 1B since it’s so deep, but most of the other guys I wanted bat right-handed. Losing out on Carlos Beltran (and replacing him with McCutcheon) gave me a fourth right-handed bat and means that I didn’t have the luxury of taking Goldschmidt or Pujols in a later round. This version of Helton (.327, .414, .475, A+++ range) should fit perfectly at Hilltop. I know that somebody is going to get a late-round steal with ’13 Goldschmidt and/or ’07 Pujols.
Round 12, pick 14
2013 Josmil Pinto ($1,886,876)
I know that I should be grabbing some of the top RPs here, but since Victor Martinez has a D arm and only has 595 PA, this pick solves both problems. Pinto only has 86 PA but with an impressive slash of .346, .402, .555. Oh, and he’s got an A+ arm. I doubt many teams will be stealing a ton of bases, but having an A+ arm can’t hurt. Also, this is the start of trying to move up the draft order before we hit round 17 (with the double picks).
Round 13, pick 10
2013 Tanner Roark ($2,207,971)
I have zero RPs so far so it’s time to start grabbing some. I was going to take Bobby Jenks, but chewy sniped me with pick # 13.07. All my favorite short-inning SPs went off the board earlier than anticipated. Roark was the best one left, so I took him. Roark’s stats: 54 ip, 1.60 erc#, .208 oav#, 0.95 whip#, 0.14 hr/9#.
Round 14, pick 9
2007 Joakim Soria ($3,017,033)
Picking RPs is so boring. Nothing really to see here. Soria: 69 ip, 1.50 erc#, .183 oav#, 0.92 whip#, 0.30 hr9#.
Round 15, pick 8
2010 Rafael Furcal ($3,526,559)
Everybody is grabbing RPs now and I should continue adding to my bullpen, but I need 150-200 PA at shortstop since my Tulowitzki only has 529. Furcal is a perfect fit. He’s a switch hitter with A- range with the following slash: .304, .369, .451. A better option was 2009 Asdrubal Cabrera (who also can play 2B for Utley), but thejuice6 left a multi-round proxy and Cabrera was his first choice for his SS, so I didn’t feel right taking him.
Round 16, pick 7
2014 Joe Smith ($3,204,998)
I’m ready to be hurt again. Smith has solid numbers (75 ip, 1.52 erc#, .177 oav#, 0.84 whip#, 0.40 hr/9#) but he always underperforms for me.
Round 17, pick 7
2011 Josh Johnson ($2,331,387)
2015 Jeff Maship ($1,953,294)
I only have two starting pitchers and know I need three more. These will be my last two sub 80-inning RPs. Johnson (60 ip, 1.73 erc#, .190 oav#, 1.00 whip#, 0.25 hr/9#) has IP/G > 6, which I like. Manship (39 ip, 1.15 erc#, .150 erc#, 0.17 hr/9#) will be my closer. My 5 RPs (Roark, Soria, Smith, Johnson & Manship) have a combined 297 innings with raw stats of 0.89 whip, .182 oav, 0.33 hr/9. These guys will only pitch in the seventh inning or later, only when leading or tied. I still need a couple of long-reliever types to bridge the gap after my SPs get knocked before sixth inning.
Round 18, pick 2
2009 Jake Peavy ($3,143,418)
2012 Ryan Depmster ($2,931,657)
And here they are – my two long relievers…. Basically, these are SPs with about 100 innings. I’ve used this Peavy (102 ip, 2.43 erc#) before and he does ok for me. I’ve not used Dempster before but he has similar stats as Peavy (102 ip, 2.36 erc#). I thought about taking ’09 Jarrod Washburn instead as he rated a little better, but he’s a lefty and I don’t want any LHP pitching at my ballpark.
Round 19, pick 2
2012 Jered Weaver ($5,554,842)
2011 Josh Beckett ($5,804,802)
I was all set to take 2013 Stephen Strasburg here but calhoop sniped me at pick #19.01. Ouch! I usually don't get sniped this late in the draft. I took Beckett instead. I knew I needed to roster five SPs, so there was no reason to take a 220-240 inning guy who was rated worse than Weaver or Beckett. There are many SPs with worse ERC#’s drafted, so I imagine these two guys were available b/c of their lower inning totals and higher HR rate. Stats: Weaver (189 ip, 2.46 erc#, .218 oav#, 1.04 whip#, 0.72 hr/9#). Beckett (193 ip, 2.53 erc#, .213 oav#, 1.04 whip#, 0.79 hr/9#). I’ll be looking forward to upgrading these guys in future mini-drafts (if I can advance to the next round).
Round 20, pick 4
2012 Matt Cain ($6,553,220)
2014 Rafael Ynoa ($634,670)
2014 Jose Abreu ($6,553,220)
Matt Cain is my fifth SP. He’s a little worse than the two SPs I just drafted (219 ip, 2.59 erc#, .227 oav#, 1.06 whip#, 0.70 hr/9#). But considering how late I drafted these guys, they’re not terrible. Five SPs with ERC#’s of 2.06, 2.46, 2.47, 2.53, 2.59. We’ll see how much my defense helps them.
I’ve had Rafael Ynoa in my team center since about round 10. I wasn’t sure I’d be able to roster him as I did have other needs. Ynoa (.351, .389, .462, C/A+ at 3B) is just too fun to pass up. Did I mention he’s also a switch hitter? Jose Bautista will have to play a little OF since Trout only has 645 PA so Ynoa will slide into 3B nicely.
This last pick was tough. Utley only has 613 PA so it makes sense to take a 2B here. Helton only has 645 PA but I have Votto (starting at DH) who can move to 1B, so then I’d need to use somebody like Furcal at DH? No thanks. I decided to take the best hitter/fielder combo available, ’14 Jose Abreu (.322, .390, .577, B+/A-). I will bat Utley last to save his PAs, and if I need to rest him, Helton (A/A+ at 1B) should do ok out of position at 2B. I noticed others drafting extra 1B to play out of position. Ironically, Abreu is ranked significantly higher than Helton in OPS# and I took Helton in round 11. 1B was an extremely deep position.
Ballpark:
Hilltop Park. I decided on my ballpark the minute I drafted Bautista and many of my later decisions were based on this… I know I could have drafted a better team had I not locked into the ballpark so early, but let’s have some fun.