MLB NEWS

Friday, August 4, 2017

Trade Deadline Recap

Hey guys, I'm back for a little mid season check-in and trade recap. This deadline was different from usual, we saw only 13 deals (usually we get 20+), but some of them were massive.

I think the market did a lot of self-correcting and that played in to the trades. When the first few trades were made, they favored the sellers (as they typically do), but as the weekend progressed, it shifted to a buyer's market all the way. The prices for players on Sunday night was CHEAP. This is definitely due to the fact that there were only 6 buyers (usually we have at least 7), and some of the buyers were very quiet (Pflanz, Andy).

Those of us who were overeager (Mark and myself), may have overspent early, but were able to course correct and make some favorable deals eventually. Fun deadline.

Quick check-in on my preseason predictions:
12. Greg - Saw this coming 11. Richie - Totally outperforming my prediction, might make playoffs 10. Eric - Saw this coming 9. Brad - Still has a very outside shot, but right where I expected him. 8. Dan - Needed a lot to go right, it didn't 7. Pflanz - Right on track 6. Russ - Doing slightly better than expected 5. Mark - Right on track 4. Andy - Doing even better than my lofty expectations 3. Eddie - WOW! he's in 10th now. How did this happen?? He had so many picks! 2. John - Easy pick, nailed it 1. Scanlon - Easy pick, nailed it

Now for some trade deadline grades...

Team: IV Rings

Buyer/Seller: Buyer

What He Needed: Mark’s offense has not been good so far, in fact, it’s the worst of this year’s crop of buyers, winning just 44% of his offensive category match-ups this season. And the numbers show he actually might have overachieved in the first half. He ranks 11th in runs, 9th in homers, 8th in net steals, and dead last in OBP. Cody Bellinger is the only hitter he has who is ranked in the top 95.

His pitching is the reason he’s still in the playoff picture, winning 58% of those categories. His ratios are excellent, he’s top 3 in each, and he’s second in saves. Mark had 3 solid closers and good starters, even without centerpiece Noah Syndergaard.

He needed R, HR, NSB, OBP

What He Got: Mark broke things open with the first two trades of the deadline, first, he grabbed Aaron Nola, for basically a 3rd and a 7th. His second deal involved shipping away a first rounder for Jimmy Nelson and Felipe Rivero. Mark’s third and final deal was a true blockbuster, and a great deal for him, sending injured franchise keeper Noah Syndergaard and a 5th rounder to Eddie for Jacob DeGrom, Buster Posey, and Michael Brantley just before the trade deadline clock struck midnight.

Deadline Grade: C
He spent a lot of capital to make one of the best pitching staffs even better, but an already below average offense took a back seat.  The second deal was a headscratcher. Rivero has been excellent and Nelson had been solid (I guess) for the 3 days that Greg owned him, but overall this price was WAYY too high when we saw the other types of players going for first rounders. Losing a keeper as good as Syndergaard hurts, but DeGrom is a very small step down, and came at a pretty cheap price. Basically he gave up an injured keeper, a 1st, 3rd, 5th, and 7th for a great new shiny pitching staff that he didn’t totally need, and a couple of underperforming but high potential hitters where he needed more solid contributions.


Team: Cutch Me if Yu Can

Buyer/Seller: Buyer

What He Needed: My team has been overachieving all season, mostly thanks to Paul Goldschmidt and Corey Kluber. I was 10th in homers and OBP, and 8th in RBI. Really bad offensive numbers. Of course, Billy Hamilton has kept me at #1 in steals, and somehow I’m still winning 52% of offensive categories.

On the pitching side, I was also overacheiving, ranking 8th in ERA, 10th in whip, and 10th in QS, saves only by my #1 rank in K/9 (kluber +Chapman) and 5th rank in saves. So needed some better starters to get those QS and hopefully lower those ratios!

He needed HR, RBI, OBP, QS, ERA, WHIP

What He Got: A very active trade deadline for the Commish saw 4 deals made, most of any buyer. I started by getting Yu Darvish and Salvador Perez for a 1st and a 5th rounder. At this point I’m feeling like I may have overpaid a little bit. Full disclosure, I was going really hard after DeGrom at this point, but Eddie was weighing options and I was getting impatient. I was banking on the fact that Yu would be traded to an NL team and get a fresh start, because he has the talent to dominate. Perez was a great throw in considering the lack of catcher talent out there. So I gave up a lot but felt like I was getting QS, ratios, and offense out of it so it fulfilled a need. I still needed offensive upgrades so the next deal was an easy one, the GM rapport between my org and Brad’s really couldn’t be better. Seems like we usually make a deal every season, so when Brad had told me he wasn’t getting any bites on Upton, so I made him a juicy 3rd rounder offer and bolstered my power numbers for the rest of the season. At this point I still wanted one more starting pitcher, and maybe another bat in order to actually contend, but thought the price on Alex Wood was a little bit too high, and I had just been outbid for another solid bat in Rendon, so I went back to Perk and started working on Cutch. In the meantime I was able to flip a mid round pick to Brad for Sonny Gray (another player for whom I was banking on a change of scenery at the deadline being the trick for a return to Cy Young form). Finally, after quite the negotiation from both sides, I was able to flip my 2nd and 6th round pick (with an 8th round pick swap) for Cutch. He hit 3 homers that day. That’s all the validation I needed.  

Deadline Grade: A-
I really think I covered my needs. Got more power and OBP with Cutch, Upton, and Perez. I secured 5 outfielders so Billy Hamilton doesn’t NEED to be an everyday starter (he kills my OBP). I locked down 2 big arms with high potential, and I grabbed the Tigers new closer off FA, who’s already banked 3 saves in 3 days. I love my team going into the playoffs.


Team: The SevenYear Yelich

Buyer/Seller: Seller

What He Needed: Draft Picks

What He Got: Brad made 4 deals, more than any seller, and came away with a pretty good haul. A third rounder for Upton, a 3rd and an 8th for Jake Lamb, a 9th for Sonny Gray, and a 3rd and a 10th for Marwin Gonzalez. Brad will have 6 picks in the first 3 rounds of next year’s draft to go along with Scherzer, Murphy, Yelich and….hmmm maybe he should have held onto one of those guys….

Deadline Grade: B-
It’s tough to be a seller and not get any additional picks in the first 2 rounds, but he’s got 4 picks in the third, so didn’t come away with nothing. I’m curious to like they would have been pretty perfect...


Team: BeefWellington

Buyer/Seller: Seller

What He Needed: Draft Picks

What He Got: A first rounder for Darvish and Perez, AND a first rounder for a closer he picked up in May and a starter he picked up 3 days before the deadline. THAT is how you sell.

Deadline Grade: A
I loved Greg’s deadline. He made just 2 trades, both for 1st rounders, and still has Harper, Strasburg, and a few others in keeper consideration. I think he got the better of both deals with Mark and Russ. I would say that he left too much talent on his team, and should have tried to unload more for picks, but by the end of the deadline it really seemed like a buyer’s market and the supply was beating the demand, so I can’t knock him at all.


Team: Lindor Extra Dark

Buyer/Seller: Buyer

What He Needed: The best team in the league by a good margin, Jeremy could have stayed put and still been in great shape to win the title (a la Perk in 2015). Winning 63% of offensive categories and 63% of pitching categories, he had no glaring needs.Jeremy’s offense has been excellent, top 5 in everything. His pitching has been excellent, top 5 in everything.

No specific needs, just pile-on.

What He Got: I never actually expected him to stand pat and not make deals, that’s just not in his nature. Scanlon ended up securing 3 big pieces for his championship run. First he plucked Osuna from Perk for a 2nd rounder, to keep his stranglehold on the saves category. Then he flipped a first rounder for Alex Wood, another great arm to add to his rotation. Finally, he sent his 3rd and 8th rounder for a bat, Brad’s Jake Lamb.

Deadline Grade: B-
He didn’t need to have a good deadline to win a title, but he still did. The league usually becomes a massive arms race, and if you’re not sporting all-stars at every position you might fall behind. His biggest threat to the title (John) made his team better, and Jeremy responded well. He probably overpaid for all 3 guys, but he could afford to, he didn’t have to sacrifice much because his team was already good enough.


Team: The Young Guns?

Buyer/Seller: Buyer

What He Needed: John is currently in second place. He ranks in the top 3 of EVERY offensive category, and has won 60% of offensive matchups. Same situation as Jeremy, there’s no glaring needs here.

His pitching is not quite as strong, but he is still winning 52% of categories. He’s top 3 in ERA, QS, and saves, but 7th in whip, and 8th in k/9.

He needed WHIP, K/9

What He Got: First he made a blockbuster first round deal for Anthony Rendon. Then he made a super mega crazy blockbuster the likes of which this league has never seen. What a fucking trade. 13 players, no draft picks, 2 of the top names in baseball. John sent away the injured Carlos Correa and injured Clayton Kershaw (the player he worked so damn hard to get once upon a time) to Richie (who has been working hard to get him for almost as long) in exchange for reigning MVP Kris Bryant. HUGE deal. Rich Hill, Trevor Story, Greg Holland, and Marcell Ozuna also come back John’s way, which should help pretty much everywhere.

Deadline Grade: A
Really ballsy deadline from Johnny, cutting ties with two of the better keepers in the league to increase his short term chances. I think it’s a move he should have made, but I never thought he would actually do it. The offensive has been upgraded, and Hill and Holland will help those ratios too. The Rendon deal is gravy, and John keeps his 2nd, 3rd, 4th 5th pick in the draft...etc.


Team: Super Seager Bros.

Buyer/Seller: Seller

What He Needed: Draft Picks

What He Got: Nothin’

Deadline Grade: F
Tough break for Eric, he just didn’t have the assets. His biggest chips were Domingo Santana and Brad Hand, who was in heavy trade rumors and expected to be a setup man somewhere. Santana has been solid, and Eric would have taken pennies on the dollar (as he should have in the current market), but still no buyers appeared.


Team: Kids Back

Buyer/Seller: Buyer

What He Needed: 4th in runs, 1st in homers, 3rd in rbi, 5th in obp, last in steals. 59%, 67% without steals. 7th in ERA, 4th in whip, 11th in k/9, 6th in QS, 4th in sv. 51% pitching

What He Got: Nothin’

Deadline Grade: D
I was expecting some sort of last minute deal as is customary with Andy at the deadline, but crickets from the Musto camp. He certainly could have used help with steals and pitching. His offense is still dominant, but the other buyers are showing off much more complete teams.


Team: All Betts are off

Buyer/Seller: Buyer

What He Needed: The defending champ;s offense has been pretty good this year numbers wise, but it’s only winning him 49% of offensive categories.

His pitching rations have been good, top 5 in each, but he’s dead last in QS and 7th in saves. He’s tied for the last playoff spot but there were really only 6 buyers, so his path could be clear if he made a few big deals.

He needed OBP, NSV, QS

What He Got: It was a very quiet deadline for typically one of the most active trade deadline movers. He made just one deal, late on a sunday, shipping a 3rd rounder for Marwin Gonzalez.

Deadline Grade: C
Gonzalez is a great all around player and that position eligibility is tantalizing (Pflanz was getting prime Zobrist flashbacks without a doubt), but he needed more than this to contend for a repeat. This smelled of concession.


Team: Ozuna Matata

Buyer/Seller: Seller?

What He Needed: winning 40% of offensive categories, his offense has been bad all year, the pitching has been better, but none of it is title caliber. Kudos to Richie for making it this far with a team I predicted to finish in 11th.

He needed to decide what the heck he was doing.

What He Got: Typically an all-in or all-out guy, I was shocked to hear he wasn’t going in either direction. He wanted to stand pat unless a keeper deal came along. And one did. As outlined above, it was the biggest deal in Franchise history, involving 13 players, and sending 2 keepers back Richie’s way.

Deadline Grade: B+
Sale, Correa, Kershaw, and all of his draft picks make him an immediate 2018 title threat. He built for the future without exchanging a single draft pick. And I like the deal from his perspective. On top of that, he still has a shot at the playoffs this year, and who knows what will happen once you’re invited to the dance.


Team: Gettin’ Miggy With It

Buyer/Seller: Seller

What He Needed: Draft Picks

What He Got: He flipped McCutchen into a 2nd and a 6th, he traded Osuna to Jeremy for a 2nd, and secured a 5th rounder and future keeper Noah Syndergaard for DeGrom, Brantley, and Posey.

Deadline Grade:  D
Perk was supposed to be a contender this year. He sold big last season and came into the season as one of my final 4 picks, but somehow he turned all those juicy picks into a crappy team, currently sitting in 10th. In his words, he got too many high draft picks last year, and not enough mid round picks. I’m not sure I follow the logic completely, but whatever works for ya.

This year, he kinda shipped everyone off. Like, I don’t know who he is expecting to keep besides Thor. Bold strategy Cotton.


Team: Xander the Great

Buyer/Seller: Seller

What He Needed: Draft Picks

What He Got: Sent Rendon away for a 1st and a 3rd, set Wood away for a 1st and a 7th, sent Nola for a 3rd and an 8th

Deadline Grade: A-
Dan played things very well at the deadline, and of all the sellers, he probably got the best haul (picks-wise). Not sure who he’s planning to keep after shipping off some talented young players, but 8 picks in the first 3 rounds should make up for that. As with Greg,  my only negative was how much mid-tier talent is still left on the roster, but it wasn’t like he wasn’t trying to sell, the market just wasn’t there. Great job getting all those picks in a buyers market.


Tuesday, July 11, 2017

ASB check in

Here’s a way overdue look at how this season fits into the annals of The Franchise:

Jeremy Scanlon – Yes the same Jeremy that has missed the playoffs in each of his three seasons in The Franchise – has the highest winning percentage through fourteen weeks in league history.  His .654 mark beats out the previous .643 high-water mark set by Russ in 2013 and tied by John in 2014 (Russ’s 89 wins still stands as the most wins to this point of the season though.)

John has the only other team that can claim a .600+ winning percentage on the season; it’s the first time since 2014 that we’ve had two teams above that mark in a single season.  Despite the hot start it barely cracks John’s top 3 starts through fourteen weeks.  The perennial title threat is in the midst of yet another fine season, showing last year’s campaign was a fluke. 

Andy sits comfortably in third place and, like John, is enjoying his third best start in his franchise’s history.  He seems to have hit a critical milestone – he’s made the playoffs in each of the three seasons where he’s above .500 at this point (he’s at .579 now).  In the five seasons where he’s below .500 at this point, he misses.

Russ is the last team in the “second tier” teams, nearly equidistant to 1st and 7th.  He’s yet to play any of the top five teams for a second time but has positioned himself well to take some hits and still be ok.  Like Andy, he’s made the playoffs in every season he’s been over .500 at this point in the season (8/8).

After a strong start, Mark is just 32-43-5 in his last eight weeks and 5-14-1 in his last two.  He has an intriguing match up this week against Brad which could change the fortunes of both teams drastically, and he closes his 2017 regular season against the best looking league member in what could be a win-and-in scenario for both teams.

The best looking league member has been dancing around .500 all season and holds a slim 1 game lead over 7th place.  It’s been a predictably back and forth season for Richie whose 8-4-2 weekly record would suggest a better W/L.  He’s got a mixed bag of match ups and will have to beat the teams he’s supposed to beat to secure a playoff appearance.

Historically, only eight of fifty-nine teams (14%) that are sub .500 at this point in the season have made the playoffs; Pflanz holds claim to four of those eight teams.  He finds himself in a familiar position as this is the eighth time in ten years he’s been under .500 at the All-Star break.  It’s hard to figure, but this is just about the time where he seems to flip a switch; he has a career .490 winning percentage pre-ASB and a .569 post.  He’s one game out of a playoff spot and plays Richie this week and Mark in week 20.   

From 2008-2013, Brad averaged a .501 winning percentage at the ASB.  Since the 2014 season, that number has fallen to .449.  That unfortunately falls right in line with this year’s efforts as his .461 winning percentage puts him in a difficult position.  We also cross a notable barrier here as a playoff appearance from anyone here down would break the record for worst winning percentage through 14 weeks to make the playoffs (Mark’s .471 in 2014).  Brad’s strength of schedule the rest of the way leaves the door open but he’s got a lot of work to do to earn his first playoff berth since 2013.

9th place Dan is really the end of the line for playoff hopefuls as he has to make up seven games and leapfrog three teams to make it happen.  This is his worst record at the ASB since 2012, a season where he finished in 11th place.  He closes the season with a murder’s row of John, Andy, and Russ.

Eric never got it going this season and has been under .500 for the entire 2017 campaign.  This is by far his worst record at the ASB in his four seasons in The Franchise.  His 51 wins are tied for 5th fewest through fourteen weeks in league history.

Eddie is battling through another tough season, his second in as many years.  Unfortunately his 2017 iteration is, on paper, the worst team of his career.  But of the bottom three teams, I think Eddie has by far the most intriguing trade assets (if he ends up selling) that should set him up nicely for 2018.


Greg’s .379 winning percentage is quite the departure from his .604 mark just last season.  It’s his worst mark in team history as you’d expect and it checks in as the second-worst ASB winning percentage of all time to Zack’s WTF 2012 .304 mark.

Monday, April 17, 2017

The Franchise History Books

You may know that I'm a founding member of the Diamond Dynasty, a fantasy baseball league made up of WHS '06 grads.  Entering our 15th year, we've lived through some of the same things The Franchise has; absentee managers, infighting, the 2009 ERA playoff tie-breaker, and general Yahoo ineptitude.  But we also have a rich history of rivalries, rags to riches championship stories, back-to-back titles, and the million other moments that make leagues like these great.  

In a subconscious effort to put my $100,000 journalism degree to use, I've become the de facto blogger/historian for the DD.  They started with match ups of the week, season previews, season reviews, etc, but they were restricted to that season.  I'd try to dive into the Yahoo! record books but they aren't very forgiving.  So I did what any late 20's male would do.  I spent months pulling our fantasy baseball league history off Yahoo! into a spreadsheet where I could spend even more time sifting through the data faster.  It gave the seasons so much more depth and put current seasons into perspective.  We could see career leaders in wins, the best and worst seasons of all time, career records against one another.  Putting seasons into context gave more gravity to the successes and failures. It added a whole dimension to the league we didn't have before.

You probably already figured out where this is going, and yes, I've pulled the entire nine year Franchise history onto a Google doc.  It's been a cool way for me, a non-founding member, to see this league grow from inception to the cluster fuck of 2009 to today (I'll let someone with more knowledge revisit/blog about the '09 season if they want but I will say the tomfoolery corrupts the historical data a bit.)  I'm about 75% done but we have enough of a foundation to start pulling data out of it.

I'll be throwing out some stats throughout the year to highlight exactly how impressive (or terrible) a manager's season is going this year but without further ado, here are some stats worth mentioning!

*Career stats do not include 2017

Career Winning Percentage
Win
Loss
Tie
%
Russ Travers
1078
799
103
0.570
John DeMovellan
1014
850
106
0.542
Dan Alber
771
679
80
0.530
Mark Chirokas
993
881
96
0.528
Chris Pflanz
956
884
130
0.518
Andy Musto
845
808
97
0.511
Roland Zhou
532
519
49
0.506
Eric Rose
301
310
39
0.493
Eddie Perkins
916
951
103
0.491
Richie Travers
396
421
53
0.486
Jeremy Scanlon
290
314
46
0.482
Brad Calandrella
884
980
106
0.476
Greg Thompson
858
990
122
0.466
Bryan Bart
94
116
10
0.450
Matt Keaveney
548
691
81
0.446
Zack Hanrahan
453
574
73
0.445
Matt Pru
80
126
14
0.395
Ryan Fitzgibbon
145
261
24
0.365


Career Wins
Win
Loss
Tie
%
Russ Travers
1078
799
103
0.570
John DeMovellan
1014
850
106
0.542
Mark Chirokas
993
881
96
0.528
Chris Pflanz
956
884
130
0.518
Eddie Perkins
916
951
103
0.491
Brad Calandrella
884
980
106
0.476
Greg Thompson
858
990
122
0.466
Andy Musto
845
808
97
0.511
Dan Alber
771
679
80
0.530
Matt Keaveney
548
691
81
0.446
Roland Zhou
532
519
49
0.506
Zack Hanrahan
453
574
73
0.445
Richie Travers
396
421
53
0.486
Eric Rose
301
310
39
0.493
Jeremy Scanlon
290
314
46
0.482
Ryan Fitzgibbon
145
261
24
0.365
Bryan Bart
94
116
10
0.450
Matt Pru
80
126
14
0.395



By Week
Win
Loss
Tie
Russ Travers
115
54
29
John DeMovellan
100
71
26
Mark Chirokas
99
73
25
Chris Pflanz
95
76
26
Eddie Perkins
84
93
20
Brad Calandrella
78
101
18
Andy Musto
78
79
18
Greg Thompson
75
107
15
Dan Alber
74
63
16
Roland Zhou
47
48
15
Matt Keaveney
47
75
10
Zack Hanrahan
44
55
11
Richie Travers
37
40
10
Eric Rose
29
31
5
Jeremy Scanlon
27
34
4
Ryan Fitzgibbon
11
26
6
Matt Pru
7
13
2
Bryan Bart
6
14
2


And a quick look at how 2017 is stacking up for each team through two weeks of play:

Russ (15-4-1):  Second best start in team history behind his 2010 campaign (15-3-2)

Richie (14-6-0):  Second best start in team history behind his 2014 campaign (14-4-2)

Mark (13-6-1):  Tied for second best start in team history when he had the same start in 2014.  His 2012 season was his best at 14-4-2.

Jeremy (13-6-1):  Easily his strongest opening to a season, besting his 2016 season (9-10-1) by four games

Andy (10-9-1):  Third best two week start in team history, and the third time in team history he’s been above .500 entering week three; he made the 
playoffs in both times prior.

Eric (8-11-1):  Eric has never been above .500 at the start of week three in team history, but he has managed to make the playoffs in two of his first three seasons.

Eddie (8-11-1): Perk sits under .500 at the start of week three for the third time in the last five seasons (he only did that once in his first five seasons).

John (8-11-1):  Under .500 after two weeks for the second straight season.

Pflanz (8-12-0):  A traditionally slow starter, Pflanz is under .500 after two weeks for the eighth time in ten seasons (!).  He’s made the playoffs in all but two of those seasons.

Brad (7-12-1):  Nearly his worst start in team history, edging out his 2016 effort (6-11-3).  Made me double check my stats when I learned he owns the THREE BEST EVER TWO WEEK STARTS IN LEAGUE HISTORY when he was 16-3-1 in 2014 and 16-4-0 in 2011 & 2014.  He missed the playoffs in 2014.

Dan (6-14-0):  Worst start to a season in team history, “besting” his 2010 campaign (7-11-2).  He’s made the playoffs in four of his first seven seasons, but he was above .500 entering week three in each of those playoff years.

Greg (5-13-2):  Not his worst start to a season (yikes!) but close.  At the very least he has avoided the worst start in league history; that honor belongs to 2014 Eddie Perkins who started 2-17-1 (spoiler alert:  he didn’t make the playoffs.)