With Opening Day seemingly right around the corner, I'm sure you all are in the midst of drafting for your fantasy baseball team. Wait, what am I saying, I know all five people who read this blog and you all are in my fantasy league. So because I know you will be drafting soon, I'm here to help you out.
Although I would like to say, I've never played roto before this year and the three years prior I haven't done THAT well so maybe I don't have the best ethos (read more Aristotle dude), but I'm confident these tips will help. Also, I did win my fantasy football league a couple months ago so maybe I'm on the up and up? Haha
Pre-Draft:
1. You can never do enough research. For any fantasy sports, you are essentially predicting the future. MVP Eckstein has done a great job in his analysis of John Danks and Edison Volquez and how they might fare in 2009. Unfortunately, that analysis is long and tedious. I personally have signed up for baseball prospectus for offensive players and have my own system using certain past stats for all pitchers. MVP Eckstein also posted a bit back about some free websites to help you out. Me personally, I have analysis of every single projected starter (both offense and defense). The point is I recommend you find a way to get analysis on every single player and then some. This may seem excessive, but you can never do enough research
2. Know what stats your league has. I'm in four league and all have different stats they use to judge players. Not all leagues use the basic 5x5 format. In another random football league I was in last year, I didn't realize that essentially one great to above average QB could win head-to-head match ups for you by himself every week. This fucked me because in my normal Fantasy Football strategy is to draft a QB late so I got sort of a shitty QB. Clearly I did not win that league.
3. Ready, aim, TARGET! Make sure you have multiple players you are targeting, for both big guys AND sleepers.
4. Strategery. Have a specific strategy in mind. Take Fantasyland for example. Author Sam Walker had a pitching strategy mind; he was going to take two stud SP and one stud RP and hoped to build enough of a pitching lead to then trade away from P for offense. Have something like this in mind.
5. Don't worry about big names. Trust whatever research you do.
6. Practice, practice, practice! There are many great sites like MockDraftCentral or ESPN that you can go to hone your skills
During Draft:
7. Play the expectations game. The key to drafting is all relative to how other people view the players you want. Don't trust that counter thing on the side of yahoo or ESPN or whatever. For example, I drafted a player probably WAY too high, but I don't really care. I got most of the players I wanted later in the draft PLUS this one player. People may have laughed at me then but we'll see who's laughing when we actually play. If you've done all the above well, don't worry about what other people think of your picks
8. Adjust. For by now you've come up with a pretty solid draft strategy. That will change because there will always be people who don't know what they're doing or people who will take a player who want and you'll be like, "WTF! Why would you ever take THAT player so high!?" It'll happen and you need to prepare for it. So despite all your preparation, practice, and targeting, just be aware that things won't go as planned.
9. Learn from your mistakes. I myself have of course made a few and that hopefully will help me for this year
10. Don't be hatin! Don't draft a player just to spite someone else. I.E.- last year in the second to last round I took Pat Neshek to spite MVP Eckstein instead of this reliever I had on my team last year who I recently found out was going to be a closer, George Sherill. Sherill was picked up in free agency the next day. Sherill racked up SV and Ks and was a quality undrafted free agent closer. Neshek was out most of the year. The joke was on me.
11. Take risks in the very last rounds. Once you reach towards the end of the draft, the players that you can choose from are pretty slim. Unless there is a player you are targeting or think should have been drafted higher or something along those lines, draft risks. Chances are, no matter what, your last round picks won't be on your team anyway.
Post Draft:
12. Be on the lookout for breakout players. I'm sure not many people in your league last year drafted people like Edison Volquez, Carlos Quentin, or Nate McLouth. Do your best to get them early but look at peripherals to make sure you're not just getting a player who's having a good couple weeks and then will suck again (I don't know what peripherals actually are but there's a way to look at them)
13. Patience is a virtue. I myself am I huge hypocrite of this because I am an impatient motherfucker and I'm positive this will hurt me when I play roto this year but it's something I, and you, should do.
14. Don't be complacent. Be on the lookout to help your team but don't make any trades or pick up any guys just for the sake of it.
This is all the tips I'm going to give away right now. I'll tell you guys my strategy after our drafts. Happy drafting!
Ichiro just turned an infield groundball into a double
ReplyDeleteMy favorite line is:
ReplyDelete"MVP Eckstein has done a great job in his analysis of John Danks and Edison Volquez and how they might fare in 2009. Unfortunately, that analysis is long and tedious"
haha
Also, I disagree with the "Ready, aim, TARGET!" assertion just because you have to continually adjust your strategy on draft day. Surely have a goal (ie, pick a top tier 3B by round X) in mind, but you can't rigorously stick to it. If Dunn is going to go in round 2, just forgo Dunn now and follow the strategy rather than get your specific guys
other than that, i agree with the article. Good job
ReplyDeleteI agree you HAVE TO adjust but you should target player and have a good idea where you can get them but you also need a back up plan in case they get taken
ReplyDeletei just rely on my superior sports knowledge to guide me through the draft and fantasy season, but that never seems to work. Maybe trying to trade for the entire cubs team wasnt such a good idea. I'm sure my all white team idea this year will also fail hard!
ReplyDeletei cant wait to find out sexy rexy's secret player. ooohhh
It's very shocking that you don't do better. You hands down know sports and players better than me and Sexy combined and yet...well...
ReplyDeleteSeriously, who the fuck else would know that Edwin Jackson was an outfielder in college?
1)The Bright One is good at analyzing how players have done and knows every player, but no offense, is not the greatest at predicting how players will do
ReplyDelete2) fantasy baseball is more than just knowledge of players, its creatively applying every player to work for you to win stats.
3) As The Bright One has said before (but in a much funnier way), he's good at using his cold, calculated reasoning side of his brain but not his creative side
I don't mean any offense or disrespect to The Bright One because he does know more about sports and baseball than myself and MVP Eckstein combined, but there's a reason he hasn't done the best in fantasy leagues
so who IS good at predicting good seasons out of players in your opinion? is it...me?
ReplyDeletehahaha!
that wasn't arrogant at all.
But seriously! You ALL made fun of me for drafting and highly valuating players like Magglio, Torii Hunter, BJ Upton, Carlos Guillen, Aaron Rowand and Tim Hudson in 2007 and then Duchscherer, Kemp, Baker, Slowey and Brian Wilson in 2008! Perhaps no one will attempt to veto my trades in 2009...
Thats not even to mention that I've plucked up Fauso Carmona, Ryan Braun, Nate McLouth, Ryan Ludwick, Ryan Doumit and Chris Ianetta early in recent years...
then again, I also had Alex Gordon, Roger Clemens, Aaron Harang, Erik Bedard, Curt Schilling, Trevor Hoffman and Michael Young too...