Fantasy Baseball Today - Players We Keep Drafting & Fading in 2026 Drafts! (3/20 Fantasy Baseball Podcast)
Episode Date: March 20, 2026Let's get the bad news out of the way with Trey Yesavage starting on the IL (3:00). ... News (6:51): Francisco Alvarez left Thursday with a back injury. ... Who made the listener leagues (17:51)? ... ...Which starting pitchers do we keep drafting (23:35)? ... Which pitchers are we fading (42:34)? ... What closers and SPARPs have we been drafting (49:15)? ... There are too many catchers to draft (55:12)! ... Which first basemen are we drafting and fading (1:00:36)? ... What are we doing at second base (1:06:39)? ... Which third basemen are we drafting at the scarce position (1:11:55)? ... There are too many shortstops to draft (1:17:11)! ... We wrap up with outfielders we keep drafting and fading (1:21:26)! Subscribe to our YouTube channel: youtube.com/FantasyBaseballToday Download and Follow Fantasy Baseball Today on Spotify: https://sptfy.com/QiKv Follow our FBT team on Twitter: @FBTPod, @CPTowers @CBSScottWhite, @Roto_Frank Join our Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/fantasybaseballtoday Sign up for the FBT Newsletter at https://www.cbssports.com/newsletters/fantasy-baseball-today/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Come in to fantasy baseball today on March 20th.
I am Frank Stamphill, joined by Scott White.
Today on the show, the players we keep drafting and fading at each position.
I will mention players along the way who are dealing with injuries, expected to gain position eligibility.
Just as a reminder, obviously, this is the biggest draft weekend heading into next week when we've got opening day.
So I want to make sure that you're up to date on everything ahead of your fantasy baseball drafts.
We will also announce who is.
is in the listener leagues a little bit later on.
Hmm.
Hmm.
That sounds exciting.
That's right.
I would be exciting if I applied for the listener leagues.
I wouldn't be exciting.
I would be excited.
We're off to a great start here.
Getting verb tense is wrong.
Ah, you know what, Scott?
Let's just, let's just, let's keep things going.
Let's just bring the mood down before we pick everybody back up and get some bad news out of the way.
The other shoe has finally dropped.
Trey, you know.
Savage will open the season on the 15-day IL.
Due to a right shoulder impingement,
John Schneider said Yesavage came to spring training with the injury,
which explains the slow buildup.
The Blue Jays don't expect him to stop throwing,
but he needs more time to get ready for the season,
which is so annoying and frustrating.
I kind of wish that baseball teams were obligated to tell us what was going on.
Like, clearly they knew about this dating back to early to mid-fellation,
February. That's why they brought in some pitchers and stuff, signed Max Scherzer, and they just
never told anyone. So it's kind of annoying from a fantasy perspective, but how far did you lower
Trey Savage in your rankings? I moved about. Outside of my top 50, which was about 20 spots. So a significant
drop, but not like burying him, not like what I did with Joe Musgrove, for instance, because he is
pitching. Like, it sounds like he's fine. He's fine now. He showed up with an injury, obviously,
and that set him back. But he's pitching now.
and just needs some time to build up.
And that kind of explains all the weirdness going on there.
I kind of in a way feel a little better.
Obviously, I don't want to draft you a savage as high as I was yesterday.
But I feel a little bit reassured knowing what's going on with him
and not just, well, what's the plan here, Blue Jays?
Like, what are you doing with this guy who was a star in the postseason
and everybody recognizes how it's a lot of upside.
And by the way, through a pretty good number of innings last year,
now we get it.
Now it makes sense.
And somebody actually pointed this out to me on Twitter,
so I won't treat it as a novel idea.
But in some ways, you could make the argument that this is preferable
being able to stash him in an IL spot rather than just having to,
wait for him to get stretched out to a usable number of innings having him occupy a bench spot
all that time it there is added risk obviously because you know he could suffer a setback or whatever
but you're getting that that's baked into the discount you're getting you savage much lower today
than you were yesterday and you have the ability to stash him in an iL spot and the timeline from actually
mattering to your fantasy team may not have changed that much so with you savage
Well, multiple people hurt.
You Savage, Shane Bieber and Jose Burrios all out.
It looks like obviously we have the top two,
Gosman, Dylan, Cis, the back end of that rotation,
Cody Ponce, Max Scherzer, and Eric Lauer
here heading into opening day.
Scott, any deep league interest in Eric Lauer,
who actually pitched pretty well last year?
I'd have to be a pretty deep league.
More interest in Scherzer, for sure, sir.
Cody Ponce looked terrific on Thursday
for whatever that's worth.
One hit the game.
Yankees over 5 and 2 thirds innings, 11 whiffs on 6. I'm sorry, 13 wiffs on 65 pitches.
Six on the fastball. You know, I love seeing wiffs on the fastball.
18 inches of induced vertical break on that.
I think Cody Ponce is going to be a real one.
Yeah. I hate being that guy's guy and say, oh, well, did you look at who he was facing?
Yeah, it was a bad Yankee lineup.
But it was still impressive.
And he has pitched well the entire spring.
So I don't want to poo poo it too much.
But, yeah, he was facing a bad line.
at it. So one of us needs to look at it. Yeah, I am trying to pay more attention to that now because
it's, it's something we should know if someone dominates, right? Like, are they facing a terrible
lineup? No, it's fair. It was definitely definitely the beat team he was facing. He has looked good
all spring for whatever that's worth. And I do like him as a sleeper too. So yeah, yeah. All right,
continuing on, we got more bad news. Francisco Alvarez left Thursday's game with back tightness.
Carlos Mendoza said it was precautionary and added that Alvarez would have continued playing if it
was the regular season. Alvarez is not scheduled to play on Friday. Scott, are you planning to
lower Francisco Alvarez at all? Not based on this news. No. I have him toward the back end of
the good catchers anyway, and I can't imagine dropping him behind JT. Real Muto, for instance,
when it doesn't seem like his availability, Alvarez's availability is in jeopardy. So I'd rather him
not have tweaked his back, but it doesn't sound like a big deal as of now.
Okay.
So you would take all of Moreno, Basayo, Carter Jensen ahead of Auerreth?
That was true all along, though.
Okay.
What about like Alejandro Kirk?
I have Alvarez ahead of Kirk, but I just think Kirk, and it's not the first time we've
talked about this.
I just think Kirk is being overdrafted.
Quite a bit.
All right.
I'll continue on here.
Zach Wheeler will pitch in a minorly game on Monday.
He's expected to throw 40 pitches.
And of course, Scott, we won't be able to.
to get Stackcast data because it is a minor league game,
but obviously it is a really,
really good step here for Wheeler.
We'll see how he does and, you know,
if we can get any reports on what the velocity looks like
and obviously how he bounces back.
But much like we said with Garrick-Cole yesterday,
who only threw 10 pitches,
this is a good step for Zach Wheeler,
actually getting back on the mound and in-game action.
It is a good step.
I'm anxious to see what he looks like.
Maybe he'll be fine.
And all the people,
who made the early investment in him, I thought it was, I thought, I thought they were being a little
too sanguine. I'll use that word again. People like when I use that word, so I use it again.
I thought there were being a little too sanguine about Wheeler's chances of being back to
Zach Wheeler from this procedure that doesn't have much of a track record and certain variants
of this procedure certainly haven't been great for future outcomes. So we'll see what he looks.
looks like Zach Wheeler, and maybe I'll have a chance to move him up my rankings if I come away
impressed.
Grayson Rodriguez is dealing with Dead Arm and his availability for the start of the season is in
question as of now.
Rasta resource still has him in the rotation, but we're not sure.
It's just kind of up in the air right now.
They also have Jack Kohanowitz in there, which is not very exciting.
But you know what?
Scott, the Angels kind of have some pitching prospects that I'm interested to.
see at some point this season.
I don't know when it will be,
but someone like George Claussen
or like Samuel Aldegherry
who had a really good start in a WBC
where he got a bunch of whiffs.
I'd at least mildly interested to see what those guys can do.
I don't know if it would be on opening day
or in that rotation,
but they are like very deep league names
that I just have my eye on to see what happens.
Yeah, they are interesting.
Aldegari has been up before
and I don't know that there's
huge upside there. We have seen instances of him missing a lot of bats. Closson, I think also at one
point seemed to have huge upside, kind of took a step back in his first year with the Angels
organization last year, but that doesn't mean he's lost cause by any means. And yeah, at some point,
at some point there's a good chance they're going to have to use both of them this year.
Any chance you're still using like a last round pick on Grace and Rodriguez, or would you rather
shoot for upside somewhere else? Like someone that isn't dealing with dead arm, you know?
I moved him down in my rankings, but not to the point where there's absolutely no way.
I take Grayson Rodriguez.
I slid him behind.
I had him pretty high to begin with, but I slid him behind Cody Ponce and Jack Leiter, Kodi Senga,
Jacob Lopez, who I like a lot.
But I'd probably draft Grayson Rodriguez in the same range as like Mick Abel or Andrew Painter.
Guys who I definitely intrigued with the upside, but don't feel confident in what they're going to provide for me.
And I hope it is just dead arm for him.
Yeah.
We had a couple surprises in terms of players getting optioned to the miners that I don't think we expected.
But Bryce Eldridge, option to AAA.
Roster resource has Will Brennan as a strong side DH platooning with Gerard Encarnacion.
They also have Luis Matos on their bench.
So they said they want to get Bryce Eldridge.
every day at bats in the minors.
I don't know why they couldn't just do that in the majors,
but...
I mean, they left the DH spot open
for him, but we had been...
In more recent weeks,
we had been hearing whispers
that maybe they would do this.
He was up at the end of last year,
so I felt like,
okay, they
thought he was ready then,
they left a spot open for him.
Seems pretty clear the plan is to have
Eldridge on the roster.
I know the subject of defense,
was raised and him needing to improve that, him needing to improve his base running.
I don't know if that's just excuse making.
In any case, they're going to need him at some point sooner than later.
So we're going to go through the players we've drafted the most this year.
He is on that list for me.
I haven't in three leagues.
They're all on the deeper end.
Are they all 15 teamers?
One's a 12th team roto league.
They're all rhodo leagues.
They're all leagues that go pretty deep into the player pool.
deep enough that I think he's worth stashing.
I'm going to come out with the top prospects to stash in fantasy,
and he'll be on that list for sure,
because I don't think it'll be long.
Strikeouts are always going to be an issue for him, I think.
That's kind of why I've been downer on him relative to most prospect rankers.
He's 6'7 and had strikeout issues in the minors.
I just think that's going to continue.
So if that's what they're waiting on, stop striking.
out Bryce Eldridge, well, keep dreaming.
I don't think that's going to happen.
But the power is huge and obviously the upside is huge.
And they have a need for him that I think he's still going to fill sooner than later.
Next up, Logan Henderson also optioned to AAA.
And I think that makes it pretty likely that Brandon Sprote is in the rotation, Scott.
And I am very interested because his velocity has been up this spring.
He's throwing a new cutter.
And really just kind of love taking a.
shot on any Brewer's pitcher. They do so great with their pitching development. So I think
Brandon Sproke kind of enters that last round draft pick territory, you know, with guys like
Mike Abel and Grayson Rodriguez and other names that we've been talking, Rhett Louder and guys like that.
I think Brandon Sprode is in that mix now. Yeah, he's in the discussion. I have him behind all of them.
I did move him up some. I don't think he's going to be a big strikeout pitcher in the majors.
And, you know, maybe the addition of the cutter could change that.
It hasn't been, let me see what his swinging strike rate's been this spring.
We've seen a big jump in that because I think that would even tell more than the top line numbers.
12.9%.
That's pretty good.
Obviously a small sample.
He was more of a weak contact guy, especially last year in the minors and has had trouble throwing strikes.
But, you know, new organization.
They've clearly worked on some things with him.
can unlock some new upside.
I just think somebody like McAebel, for instance.
I've seen more reason for enthusiasm for him this spring than for Spro.
Jerks and ProFar will miss the entire 2026 season after the appeal of his 162 game
PED suspension was denied.
So that's pretty much what we expected would happen there with Jerks and ProFar.
Carlos Estevez's velocity remains way down.
He pitched on Wednesday night.
He averaged 89 miles per hour on his fastball.
Last year, 95.9 miles per hour in the regular season.
And usually he builds up slowly, but man, he should be higher than 89 miles per hour by now.
So it is pretty scary.
People are kind of treating him radioactively.
I know that's a term you like to mention in draft Scott.
And I just did that Tout Wars, Champions League, 12 team head toad categories.
I drafted him, which is gross.
I never thought I would draft him this offseason.
Round 17.
He went after Riley O'Brien
and after Robert Garcia
and after Kirby Yates.
It's like, all right, at that point,
I'll take a shot.
If he's horrible to start the year,
it's round 17, I'll just drop him.
Yeah, I mean, that's so late.
I need him to fall behind
a number of pitchers who tend
to go behind him.
For instance, I mean,
he still tends to go ahead
of like Dennis Santana and certainly Sir Anthony Dominguez and Ryan Walker,
guys who I feel confident are firm in that role.
They may not be the best closers, but they're firmly closers.
I think Carlos Estevez is at the back of that group for me.
But when you're dropping behind Riley O'Brien, Kirby Yates,
I mean, those guys might not get five saves this year.
They might, but there's a good chance they won't.
And I think at that point you're better.
hope is in Carlos Estevez figuring it out or just the extra adrenaline he's able to throw it
harder or whatever, whatever excuse you want to make. I think that's a better hope than just
gambling on this guy who himself is not very good. Like Kirby Hates might not be very good. Also
managing to claim the front, the top role in a closer committee. Taylor Walls will open the season
on the aisle with a strained right oblique,
which opens the door for Carson Williams
to be their starting shortstop.
Scott, any deep league interest in Carson Williams?
I mean, I left him out of my top 100 prospects.
That's how little faith I have in him as a hitter.
He definitely has power, but
when we talk about Bryce Eldridge's strikeout issues,
Carson Williams are about as bad as it gets.
Yep.
So I think it'd have to be a pretty deep league.
All right.
The Rangers have indicated that,
Evan Carter will face a decent number of lefties this season. Josiah Gray was optioned to
AAA, which means the Nationals rotation will be Cade Cavali, Miles Michaelis, Foster Griffin, Jake
Irvin, and Zach Lattell to start the season. And Hayden Birdsong will undergo Tommy John surgery
next week. Before we hit our first break, Scott, the time has come to announce the listener
leagues. First and foremost, I just want to thank each and every person who sent something in.
If you emailed it in, I saw it. My entire Wednesday, I went through nearly 300 emails,
and I needed to whittle that down to just 22 that I was going to put into these leagues here.
So we got a bunch of submissions, and I do appreciate all of them. And I did see it.
Like, if you sent it in, I saw it, and I do appreciate it. It's obviously really tough to just
like narrow it down. And again, it's so thoughtful and creative, the things that we receive. So
it does put things in perspective for me as the host when you read about, you know, what people are
going through and stuff and how the podcast helps them, you know, get through some of the
things that are happening in real life. So really, really do appreciate all the submissions that were sent
in. Up first, and I do want to apologize for any mispronunciations here. It's just like, I'm sure I'm
going to get some stuff wrong here. Up first, we have the for the people league. Shout out to
Heath Cummings. This is a 16-te-to-head categories league. Some guy named, I don't know, Scott
Whitty. He won the league last year. Hmm. Scott Witty. Yeah. Yeah. Who is that guy? That guy,
I don't know. He sounds like a good guy though. Yeah. Sounds like one I want to talk to,
maybe take advice from. Yeah, yep, yep. Scott won the league last year. 16 team head to
categories. We're drafting this Sunday, March 22nd at 8 p.m. Eastern Time. I know you.
I know I told you nine, Scott, but the Sunday draft will be at 8 p.m. Eastern time.
One quick wrinkle with this is that for any fantasy basketball fans out there,
Josh Lloyd, the host of the Locked-on Fantasy Basketball podcast, is also in this league.
He hit me up.
We go back a little bit, and we've been friends for a while in the industry,
and he wanted to be in a fantasy baseball league.
So we put him in, and Chris and myself are sharing a team.
So he didn't take a spot away from a listener.
He basically just took one of our spots.
Team crank is back, baby.
Me and Chris sharing a team.
It should be fun.
Franks.
Yes.
Here are the 13 who have made it.
Again, for the People League, 16 teams drafting this Sunday.
Spencer Clark, Cody Wiggins,
Brandon Wallace,
Brett Brilante,
Otto Gets,
Justin Sample,
Corey Tate,
Jonathan Greenstein,
Greenstein,
Lucas Brunner,
Josh Gertz,
Jake Burlowe, Tony Melton, and Madeline Bezgrove. Beesgrove.
If you heard your name, email me.
Frank.stample at paramount.com.
Next, we have our 12 team head-ted points listener league.
This will be drafting Monday the next night, March 23rd, 9 p.m. Eastern Time.
So one hour later, this one will be live streamed.
So it had to be a little bit later for us here.
So again, 9 p.m. Easter time Monday.
Here are the nine who made it.
Pedro Ortiz, Stephen, David,
David Martin, Stephan Carlyle, or Stephen Carlisle, Steve Gergenti, I'm sorry.
Tim Gloria, Mark McKinnis, Kenny Butchram, Buttrum, Jonathan.
Butchry.
Jonathan Yarberry and Joe Parker.
So congrats to everyone who has made it.
If you heard your name, reach out again.
Email, frank.stantle at paramount.com.
If I don't hear from you by Friday afternoon, I will reach out because it's a,
pretty quick turnaround. I got to get everybody in these leagues by Sunday and Monday.
So let's take our first break. When we return, the players we keep drafting and fading here on
Fantasy Baseball today. Welcome back in Fantasy Baseball today. The players we keep drafting and
fading. And let's just start off with the pitchers. We'll do starting pitchers and relievers.
Then we'll get to the hitters. Give you a quick reminder of those who are starting the season on the
IL. That will include Blake Snell, Zach Wheeler, Carlos Rodon, Garrick Cole, Trey is
Savage, Joe Musgrove, Shane Bieber, Bryce Miller,
those we know who are missing extended time also on the aisle,
Hunter Green, Spencer Schwellenbach, Corbin Burns,
Justin Steele.
Steele could be back in like May or June,
Jared Jones and Quinn Priester.
And we think this name is starting on the aisle.
We're not sure yet, but Merrill Kelly.
It sounded like he said he's going to start on the aisle.
He just needs a little bit more time to get built up.
So, Scott, let's start with some of the high-end starting pitchers
that you keep drafting.
Who you got?
I organized my list by the number of shares I have,
so I'm going to have to bounce around a little bit to do it your way.
And I did this by the book.
I actually went through the 11 teams I've put together so far
and counted the number of times I have each player on my team.
The most is five.
The most is five out of 11, so less than half,
which is, I don't think it's especially common.
People tend to have their guys that they like to draft over and over again.
I have made a point, though, over the past couple years to emphasize cost over any particular player.
And I've written about this a lot.
Cost over any particular player.
We talked about it in the auction leagues especially because I don't think I have the same evaluative advantage that I used to have when it comes to competing against other industry folks.
So I just want to, I want to take the players who happen to get passed over the most times.
And so I think you see more diversity across my teams because of that.
It's not always the same players.
But there are some players who tend to slip a lot.
And so I tend to be more invested in them this year.
So getting back to your question, probably the most, the most, the most,
The high-end starting pitcher, the highest-end starting pitcher that I am widely invested in is Fromber Valdez with four shares.
And I'll go ahead and include Jesus Luzardo here too.
I only have three shares of Luzardo.
But they're similar in that it was obvious from as far back as November that I'm going to have a lot of these guys.
Because they were two pitchers who genuinely I was ahead of the consensus on.
Fromber Valdez, historically, we draft him as the top 15 starting pitcher, and yet he's being drafted more in the 20 to 25 range.
I don't think anything's changed for him.
I understand the ERA was a little higher last year.
He lost the curveball for a while.
He tends to lose the curveball every year, but he happened to lose it for a long stretch in the second half, which inflated the ERA.
His venue has changed, Scott.
We should mention that.
I mean, yeah, he's a new team, new venue.
I think that only helps.
Yeah, I like it in Detroit.
but in terms of how good he is, I did not, I don't see clear evidence of decline at all.
So I wanted to treat him the same way.
I find as somebody who tends to go light on pitching early, Framber Valdez is kind of a bargain ace or sometimes even number two for me.
And Luzardo is the same thing.
Luzardo, I think people recognize he broke out last year, but the ERA was still approaching four.
the whip was over 1.2.
And so I don't think people want to call them an ace, yet they recognize.
Normally, ERA and whip that high wouldn't be drafted so high.
You had the 15 wins.
He had more than 200 strikeouts.
So I think people see, okay, like Luzardo, this is, we need to draft them higher than we've ever drafted them before.
But I don't think they're accounting for, at least not accounting enough for those two games.
into May, beginning of June, I believe they were,
back-to-back starts where he was tipping his pitches.
It was very clear he was tipping his pitches.
It was widely reported.
He talked about it.
The organization talked about it.
He obviously fixed it because he was great thereafter.
But if you take just those two starts away,
the ERA drops to 303, the whip to 111 to go with 10.6K per 9.
Another reason why I think this is more legitimately,
the Lazardo, who,
Luzardo was last year,
303 ERA without those two starts.
His FIP on the year was 290.
So the
way
the ways we estimate what
ERA should be,
it was closer
the Lazzardo
without those two starts dipping the pitches
was closer to those numbers than the one, the full
season one we got.
And look,
he was so good last year at the Phillies.
that they gave him a five-year $135 million extension.
Like, that is a lot of money for a guy
who has dealt with a lot of arm injuries in his career.
So the Phillies have confidence in Lazzardo.
I think we should as well.
Scott, when you said Framber Valdez,
I started smiling because he is also my most drafted starting pitcher.
At least on the high end, I have him on five teams.
It does help that on the one team we shared together,
we also got Bramber Valdez.
So I was drafting him like a lot of...
Make a van diagram.
A lot of the...
early kind of drafted holds that I did, people were letting him slip too far because he was a
free agent. And so I just kept scooping him up a lot of times as my SP2. I think maybe even as my
SP3 on one team. So yeah, for Amber Valdez, I have on five teams this year. Garrett Crochet,
I have on three. I have, I had a few teams where I was drafting at the turn in a 12-team
league. And he was the last of the top three starting pitchers. And have mentioned a lot this
off-season that I am open to drafting one of those top three, especially if they make it to the turn.
so Garrett Crochet, I haven't been three leagues so far.
Two others that are ranked inside my top 10.
Christopher Sanchez and Chris Sale I have on at least two teams right now.
And typically I do like to diversify the high-end starting pitchers,
the ones that I draft as like a top 12 to 15 starter.
I don't want those on too many teams just because,
obviously, pitcher injuries are real and they happen very often.
So I do like to diversify up top if I can at starting pitcher.
for Amber Valdez, I was getting a little bit later as my two,
so I don't mind having a lot of him.
And he does have a higher floor in terms of the endings he provides and things like that.
So, yeah, those are the four that I have been,
I have drafted on multiple teams so far.
Mid to low end starting pitcher, Scott,
that you keep winding up with, the ones that you've drafted the most.
Who do you have there?
Well, should I mention some others on the higher end or we pass that?
Dylan Seas.
I have Dylan Seas on three teams,
which is kind of surprising because I feel like he's,
kind of dangerous to draft in Roto, given how much is ERA and WIP can waver from year to year?
And the bad years, I mean, he could destroy you.
But I found, I don't know, there have just been a couple instances where he did slip 20, 30 spots beyond where he normally goes.
And that is the kind of value that I am trying not to just poo-poo at this point in my career.
because I don't think I am that much smarter than the consensus to, you know, I think to get ahead,
I have to be capitalizing on values like that instead of just saying, I don't really like Cease.
I think it's a better way to go about it.
So, Seas, I have three shares of him.
Okay, some middle end guys that I am invested in.
Nick Povetta, surprisingly, I have three shares of him.
even though he was on my bust list.
Brandon Woodruff, I have three shares of him,
including the team we share,
and we can talk about how his outing looked here on Thursday.
On the middle end, I don't think I have any others on the middle end.
The players I'm most,
the players I have the most shares of, generally speaking,
are on the lower end, which makes sense, right?
Like, your high end, your middle end guys are determined largely by where you're picking.
But in the late rounds, you are going to tend to gravitate toward the guys more because there's a flattening in terms of where they should be drafted.
So it's more just your gut instinct, your evaluation of players.
So anyway, on the middle end, it's just those two that I have three shares of.
Brandon Woodruff and I forgot the other one.
Brandon Woodruff and Nick Pavetta.
Well, you can talk about a start now, Scott.
Brandon Woodruff, who on Thursday, three innings, four hits, three runs, one walk, four strikeouts, two homers allowed.
And the velocity was down a little bit here.
Well, and it was especially down in the fourth inning where he, that's where he got knocked around, really.
He said it was just part of the buildup process.
He didn't seem worried.
He's not sure he's going to be ready for opening day, but they've been saying that for a while now.
Now he seemed happy with the outing.
And I mean, for now, I guess I'm going to take his word for it.
I think we're seeing him start to slip a little bit in drafts again.
His ADP has been kind of a roller coaster because when he didn't have a clear timeline,
he seemed like he was going too late.
And then he started pitching in spring games.
Everybody thought, oh, okay, I guess he's back.
So we started to see him valued.
I think more in the way I drafted him or the way I ranked him originally.
But now here that there are these questions about his availability for the start of the season,
I think we're seeing Woodruff start to slide a little bit.
And I'm fine taking him at face value.
You don't take Brandon Woodruff thinking he's going to make 30 starts because he's basically never been that guy.
But I saw enough last year to think he is still an ace when he is healthy.
And if he misses a couple starts at the beginning of the year, that's fine.
you was going to miss some at some point.
The ADP over the past week for Woodruff is 154.4.
He is going just after Rasmussen and Rogers,
Trevor Rogers, that is,
and just ahead of Gavin Williams and Bubba Chandler.
Again, that was Brandon Woodruff.
Mid to low end starting pitchers that I keep drafting,
Shoti Eminaaga, I've talked a lot about him.
Velocity has been up this spring.
Kind of that weird whip help in the middle of a draft
that you just normally can't find that.
And I do think there's some upside here with that velocity being up.
Nicola Dolo, I now have him on three teams, took him in that Tout Wars Champions League as well as my SP3.
The pitcher I love this year, obviously excited to get him.
Chris Bubich, someone we talked about all offseason.
Scott also got him in that Tout Wars draft here on Thursday night.
Took him in a bunch of early drafting holds when nobody knew what was going on with his shoulder and stuff like that.
So I was happy to scoop up that value.
Merrill Kelly, just kind of boring.
I know he's dealing with the back injury now.
He's slipping a little bit further even because of that
and happy to take him and wait the minimum IL
until he's built up and typically good ratios
for where he goes and pitches for a solid D-backs team.
I thought it was low-end though,
because he's on my list too, Merrill Kelly.
I have three shares of him.
I'm doing mid-to-low-end, Scott.
I'm mentioning all of them now,
and then I'll throw it back to you.
And then two other low-end names.
Jacob Lopez, I was drafting him a lot earlier in the off-season
just because I liked what he did out of this stretch.
and obviously now he's getting a little bit more hype,
but even where he's going over the past week,
which is 367?
That sounds too late.
But I see him go pretty much in every draft now,
and I agree with that.
I think that should happen for Jacob Lopez.
And Chad Patrick, who is someone I like a lot,
who had a solid rookie season,
locked into the brewer's rotation,
introduced a slurve late in the season,
and got a lot more strikeouts down the stretch with that pitch.
So I do like Chad Patrick.
very late in drafts as well.
I'll throw it back to you, Scott,
for some of those low-end starting pitchers
that you keep drafting.
So the one I've drafted most is Jacob Lopez.
I have four shares of him across the 11 leagues.
And his, you know, 28 years old,
was never considered much of a prospect,
but always ran very high strikeout rates in the minors.
For his minorly career, 11.4K per 9.
And he came up last year,
actually it came up a couple years ago,
but got an extended look last year
and showed that same strikeout ability
because he has an unorthodox left-handed delivery,
an unusual fastball shape.
It's just a very difficult pitch for players to handle,
even though he doesn't throw it very hard.
So his final 13 healthy starts last year,
I say healthy because he had a very ugly start
at the end of the year where he was not healthy.
It ended his season.
But his final 13 healthy starts,
Jacob Lopez had a 217 ERA and an even one whip and 10.8 K per 9.
I mean, he looked phenomenal,
delayed by injury this spring,
but his most recent start was outstanding.
And you can get him,
his ADP since March 12th is outside the 350,
outside the top 350.
You can get him at the end of drafts.
So I love the value there of Jacob Lopez.
I wish I had more than four shares, honestly.
Let's see who else here.
We have scroll down.
Kodi-Senga.
I got kind of lucky on this one because I ended up with him in a couple leagues early on
just because it was like it was an auction where his dollar amount was so low
that I couldn't help but jump in.
And then I kind of thought, man, I wish I hadn't used a spot on Koto Senga.
or you know the draft just ran out of pitchers I cared about
and so I was like I guess I'm going to take Kodi Senga
I backed into taking him in a couple of leagues
but now it looks great because Velocity is up this spring
with a remade delivery
my third share of him was a more intentional pick
of Kodai Senga because I'm excited about what we're seeing
Merrill Kelly as you say
just a great
great stabilizer in a roto league.
He's going to give you, especially those deep roto leagues like 15 teamers that run out of pitchers worth using.
He's going to give you a ton of innings.
Got to get over the injury first, but it seems like that's going to happen in short order.
It's going to give you a ton of innings without hurting your ERA and whip.
And I think that's very valuable in those formats.
I am heavily invested in Noah Cameron and Sean Manaya.
I think most of the investment and both happened before we got deep into spring train.
The velocity's been down for both.
But I'm not entirely without hope.
I'm not going to sit here today and say, I'm not going to draft Sean and I or Noah Cameron again.
But for less than I would have before, I'm probably, I may have been ahead of the consensus
originally before their velocity readings came out, and now maybe I'm more in line with consensus on those two.
Cameron, I think, is a pretty popular fade because his FIP and XERA were both over four last year, even though he had the 299 ERA.
Yeah.
But if you look at the way his changeup game steam over the course of the year, it was running whiff rates, 45, 50 percent the last three months.
His secondary pitches are really good.
I have questions about the fastballs, but his secondary is good.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So don't like the way he's look at the spring with the velocity being down in anything.
He can't afford to give up much there.
but it is spring.
And so I think if everybody else passes on Noah Cameron,
I'd still give him a shot in deeper leagues.
Mick Abel, three shares of him.
He has obviously been a spring riser,
and I was able to capitalize that on that before his price rose too much.
Though his price hasn't risen that much,
ADP since March 12th, that's over the last week, basically about 3.30.
So still plenty of affordable.
There is Mick Abel.
I did have a quick list of just pictures I wish I had more of so far
and I have three drafts left so I still have some opportunities here to grab some
but Kyle Braddish, Cam Schlittler, Ryan Pepio, Tatsui Imi
Mike Burroughs, Braxton Ashcraft and Kodai Senga.
Those are all pitchers I like quite a bit and I just don't have enough of them yet.
So I'm hoping these last couple drafts I could get a few of those.
Yeah, I have three drafts also so it's not a complete list.
I imagine Michael Burroughs could join the list of being on three or more of my teams
before all said and done, I just moved him up in my rankings,
the second big jump of the spring to ensure,
to give me a better chance of drafting him.
That's probably the only pitcher who's like that.
I'm really surprised I don't have more shares of Shane Smith
because I think I've been talking about more than just about anybody.
but I never seemed to get him at what I think is an appropriate price.
So maybe not.
I do have a couple shares of Grant Holmes.
Maybe I'll get one more of those.
I have like three of Grant Holmes.
I don't know how that happened,
but he goes so late in like some of these drafting holds and stuff.
I got him in an NL only league too where he might not stay healthy,
but while he is, he might get a ton of strikeouts.
So I'm all right taking the shot.
very late on him.
I have a couple shares of Nicola Dolo,
so I could easily grab him in a third league.
I added them to breakouts 2.0.
But two of those drafts are with you,
two of my three remaining drafts.
So maybe not.
A couple shares of Matthew Boyd,
who I've grown to like Cody Ponce,
another mention for him,
couple shares of him.
On the really low end,
I have Rhett Louder.
But that's getting pretty deep.
All right, we do have to move infinitely faster for every other category we talk about,
but I think we will because obviously starting pitchers are very important,
so we were going to spend a lot of time on that always.
What about these starting pitchers that you keep fading, Scott?
I mean, again, we've talked about this a lot this off season,
but a quick reminder on those starting pitchers you keep fading in drafts.
I would say Spencer Strider is on that list.
When it's the appropriate time to take them, I'm just not going to.
Edward Cabrera.
I already felt that way about Edward Cabrera.
I thought there was too much ratio risks there.
I'd have to be trailing in strikeouts by quite a bit
to be willing to risk my ratios for Edward Cabrera.
And that goes double now with the way things have gone for him this spring.
It's not just that he's struggled.
It's that he seems to have gotten away from what allowed him to have a career best season last year,
which was fading the foreseamer for the sinker.
And talking about it.
I was talking about wanting to throw more four seamers, which, come on, man.
So Edward Cabrera is a pretty easy fade for me.
I've begun to fade Tanner Bybee a little bit.
I just finally had to move him down my rankings.
Not for any good reason.
I just wish you had a better spring.
There's a reason for skepticism already, I suppose.
Emmett Sheen, I've started to fade him just because I question if the Dodgers are going to really give him full run.
anyone else
I have been fading
I mean
Logan Webb
I don't
thrilled to take him
in a points league
but he tends to get elevated
there because he's such an innings eater
I feel like if you're taking
Logan Webb in a category
that you're probably taking him as your ace
maybe you're number two
and
the kind of hole he's
going to put you in a whip for that cost just isn't that's just not how how I want to put together
my pitching staff so I would say Logan Webb so I don't have to chase whip which is difficult to
do is somebody I'd have to fall two or three rounds for me to take them probably yep I agree with
that call I have Logan Webb here on this list Freddie Peralta as well he just the the price
comparatively to last year he's up like 40 or 50 picks and I don't really see fundamentally
a different pitcher there with Freddie Peralta.
Yuri Perez, I mean, this is one that could just blow up in my face,
but I usually like to get one of those, just one of those kind of young upside-y starting
pitchers, and I'd rather make that pick with like Cam Schlittler a little bit later on or like
a Bubba Chandler.
I just think Yuri Perez being so much elevated compared to some of those names.
It's just I never find myself drafting him.
And then Sunny Gray, who we've talked a lot of them.
I argue he's more proven than those others, and that's why it gets elevated.
I have more confidence in Yuri Perez
taking the step forward of becoming an ace this year
than certainly anyone who debuted last year,
like Cam Schlittler.
As much as I like Schlittler.
Got a couple shares of him myself.
I get that.
I just personally have some concerns with Yuri Perez
in terms of like the control.
He still walks quite a bit and he gives up a lot of barrels and fly balls.
And, you know, it's just like if you give up hard contact in the air
while walking people like those can be multi-run home.
So I just, yeah, it's not going to be me, but it definitely could blow up in my face.
Sunny Gray, we've talked a lot about it's just his ADP is like a top 30 starting pitcher on fantasy pros.
I have him closer to like SP 50.
Three names that I pretty much just will not draft is Spencer Shrider, Tyler Glass Now, and Blake Snell.
And two names that I just, I have a hard time pressing draft on.
Nick Povetta, it's like I'm expecting regression and he kind of had this arm fatigue thing in spring.
and then Zach Wheeler because he's like he's getting pumped up
and look he could come back and be himself
but like his range of outcomes is
we haven't seen him pitch yet
and he's still being elevated so it's
Zach Wheeler is what I have not been able to get there on either
so those are the names that I've been fading at starting pitcher
I share a lot of those by the way
I will I will mention
I think you fading Nick Povetta
and others fading Nick Povetta
is why I have three shares of Nick Povetta
because he's one of those pitchers who tends to go two rounds later than he, quote, or quote, should.
And I'm not so confident in any bus pick that I'm willing to pass up that kind of value at this point,
especially in Povetta's case.
I think no matter what direction his strikeout rate, his ERA goes, the whip's going to be good.
And so I think he's going to be useful in Roto leagues, which is where I tend to draft him,
unless he's just hurt.
But that goes for any pitcher.
All right.
Let's take our final break.
When we return,
we've got to talk about
every other position.
We'll do that right after this.
Welcome back in fantasy baseball today.
Scott,
how long will this podcast be?
I have no.
I don't know.
I mean,
we just did the biggest position.
Some of these guys
I may not even have answers
for some of these positions.
All right.
Well,
we'll keep things moving here.
Let's talk about relief pitchers.
The ones that we keep drafting,
You could go ahead and you could just go up and down the position, Scott.
If you want to give me closers, like solidified closures, you keep drafting,
maybe some spec guys and Sparps in Points League, all three categories there of reliever.
Okay.
So there is only one reliever that I've drafted more than two times.
That is on more than two of my teams.
Mock drafts don't count.
And that's the player I've drafted most of all, Sir Anthony Dominguez.
I've talked about it a ton.
I think he's going 50.
50 spots later than any other locked in closer.
And that seems like an easy call to me.
Happy to take Sir Anthony Dominguez is my second.
Always third would be even better.
And again, that's the only one I've drafted more than twice.
Now, I think the way things are trending,
I'm probably going to draft Jeff Hoffman in three or more leagues.
I haven't been two already.
People seem to be fading him.
I'm moving him up.
I looked at his pitch selection.
in the spring start, he did just what he said he was going to do, throwing that slider closer
to 60% of the time.
I'm in for him.
Reiseloglesias, another one, others are fading, and I think he's fine.
I got a couple shares of him.
Let's see, Spark.
I would say Cody Ponce, unless his cost just surges this weekend, it's still in the 260 range
right now, ADP, and I think that's fine for the upside he's shown.
So I'm probably going to end up more invested in him.
than I already am.
I do draft a lot of Ryan Nelson,
but actually not in head-to-head points leagues.
My Ryan Nelson shares are more roto
because I think he's a true whip standout.
He's shown that for the last year and a half,
and that's valuable to get as late as Ryan Nelson
tends to go off the board.
The closers that I have on at least two teams so far,
I have Edwin Diaz, David Bednar,
Ricell Iglesias, and Sir Anthony Dominguez.
So I guess these are leagues we're not playing against each other, Scott,
because how many shares of domingas i have three i think i think him and bednar probably i think
are the two closers i have on at least three teams i thought i was the domingez guy maybe i i'm more
a domingas guy than you yeah but you're kind of and there's no overlap we didn't get dominas on that
shared team so yeah okay we did we no we didn't no we took kenley jansen instead oh right yeah we
We have a Glacius.
We do have a Glacius on that team.
So that's one of the shared ones.
Yeah, Glacius, I mean, I get it.
Some people are scared about Robert Suarez being there,
but Iglesias has done it for so long and he finished the season so strong.
I'm going to be most invested in the closers that people are scared of for what I think are irrational reasons,
which is Igles, Hoffman, and Dominguez, I guess.
I don't know what makes Dominguez any less certain than Dennis Santana or certainly Ryan Walker.
The spec closers, the ones that we're speculating on,
I have multiple shares of Kirby Yates, Riley O'Brien,
Clayton Beater, and Chris Martin.
I mean, Chris Martin's a real deep league name,
but those other three, you know, as your third closer
in a Roto league, something like that.
Sparps, I have Anthony Kaye on a few teams.
So, I mean, he's a real late round name
coming back from Japan and different pitch mix now,
velocities up a little bit,
locked into the White Sox rotation.
So mildly interested to see what he could do with that opportunity.
Some names that I wish I had more of so far, Daniel Palencia, Griffin Jacks, Abner Arebe,
and then on the Sparp side, it's Cody Ponce and Braxton Ashcraft.
Any quick mentions there?
I shouldn't have said irrational reasons why people are fading Iglesias and Hoffman.
I think they're rational reasons.
They're just weak.
Okay.
That's a better word.
Relief pitchers that we keep fading.
God, I'll start us off here.
A roll of Chapman.
He's older now and he's coming off one of the best seasons of his career.
Can he maintain that control?
I have questions.
Devin Williams, I mean, this is just anecdotal.
I don't know if he could pitch in a big market and that is just like me being so close to the situation last year on the Yankees.
And another one that could make me look foolish.
I mean, his underlying numbers were still great last year.
He finished very strong.
Totally recognize that with Devin Williams.
But I want to be a little bit more pick and choosy about the closers that I take.
If I have like any inkling, I'm just going to stay away.
And that's how I feel about Ryan Helsley, too.
It's just, you know, what he did last year with tipping the pitches and with the Mets,
he was just awful.
I think there's some injury risk there too.
So Chapman, Williams, Helsley, fading those three.
And obviously, Carlos Estevez, unless he goes in round 17.
Scott, which relievers are you fading?
So I'm just the opposite.
Like, I want to get my saves as cheaply as I possibly can.
So I am not going to be that choosy.
I'll take whichever
everyone else passes up
the one exception
might be Carlos Estevez who
even over the last week is going about
130th we've gotten into our concerns
about him. No way I draft
him anywhere close to that high
I might draft him ahead of Sir Anthony
Dominguez at this point. I'm kind of with you
on Ryan Helsley but
it's never an issue. Somebody always takes
Helsley before
that tier is anywhere close
to depleted. Yep.
Some names that I've just had trouble pressing draft on.
Josh Hater, just the injuries he's been dealing with.
I know how dominant he is when he's healthy,
but the shoulder to end last year shows up and now has the biceps.
Just kind of worries me a little bit.
And then Pete Fairbanks.
I think there's a really good chance that he's traded at the deadline.
I saw a report the other day that there are some situations
they could use him before the ninth inning as well.
So Pete Fairbanks, in that tier with like Kenley Jansen and Pagan and Palencia,
I have him at the bottom of that tier right now.
So he's someone that I just have not been drafting.
Let's get into the hitters that we keep on drafting and fading here.
Scott, we will start with catchers.
Remind people of some injuries here.
Kyle Teal has a hamstring.
He's likely back in late April.
Gabriel Moreno has forearm soreness.
He's hopeful for opening day.
Sean Murphy is rehabbing off-season hip surgery.
He's out until May or June.
Anybody who is gaining eligibility,
Yvonne Herrera is the hopeful.
We think eventually maybe it's April.
maybe it's May, that he gains catcher eligibility. Scott, who are the catchers that you keep on drafting?
There's only one I have three or more shares of, and it's a player I love, Carter Jensen.
It's good to be invested in one of your Valentine's because so often it turns out that I'm not.
But I am heavily invested in Jensen, you know, the Kyle Schwerber-like exit velocities in both the majors and the minors.
I think he's going to be a full-timer. He was down the stretch last year, him and
Salvador Perez trading off catcher and DH.
I think the Royals will continue with that arrangement.
I imagine just the way things are trending,
I'm going to be even more invested in Samuel Basayo.
Probably grab him in a couple more leagues.
He did Homer twice on Thursday here.
And so maybe that's going to elevate his stock for the weekend.
But I find in Mox recently, I've been getting Samuel Passiio pretty easily.
A couple shares of Gabriel Moreno.
I like him as a second catcher.
Victor Caratini in deep two catcher leagues.
He's kind of my go-to second choice.
Just because he's going to play so much for the twins, I think, is their primary DH.
I've gotten Cal Raleigh in a couple leagues.
Not scared to do that, even as deep as catcher is.
But for the most part, I'm treating catcher like I am a relief pitcher.
It's deep enough that there are so many options I like there.
I'm happy to take.
just the best that everybody leaves for me.
Yeah, it's the same for me.
There are a lot of catchers that I have on multiple teams so far
just because it's who falls to what part of the draft.
I have catchers at all different parts of the draft
that I like to draft because there's so many intriguing options this year.
So number one catchers I have on multiple teams,
Shea Langaleers, Augustine Ramirez, Will Smith, Yiner Diaz,
fine with the costs on all those guys.
As a second catcher, Alejandro Kirk,
I know a lot of people fade him.
I know Scott that you guys typically fade him,
but sometimes he slips a little bit too far
as a batting average help,
someone that could hit 15 home runs,
still going to hit in the middle of that lineup.
So I don't mind him as a catcher two.
Don't want him as my catcher one, though.
And then Tyler Stevenson in some of those deeper leagues.
I know last year the strikeouts were up,
but he was also playing through injuries and things like that,
entering a contract year.
Exit velocities were still really good.
I don't mind Tyler Stevenson as a,
not even a deeper league,
but like in a 12-team league is my second catcher.
If I wait, I'm fine with Tyler Stevenson.
Did you have anything there on Kirk?
Sounded like you want to hop in.
Just everything Kirk does well.
I think Gabriel Moreno does a little better,
and the ceiling might be higher,
and he goes later.
So that's the main reason I'm fading Kirk.
Yeah.
There are some drafts where Kirk goes later
than Gabriel Moreno.
Yeah, I'm sure there are.
Names that I wish I had more of, Ben Rice.
It's just like the price is so high.
Everybody wants Ben Rice.
It's hard to get him.
I have Ben Rice in one league, and it's to play first base in an A-L-O-M
because I had already filled my two catcher spots.
I only have them in one league, and it was a draft I did back in November.
And the whole reason I joined was so that I can get Ben Rice before his price got out of control
because I knew it was going to happen.
Salvador Perez is someone I still do want more of.
I just, I love the walls coming in a little bit.
I like that lineup.
I think he's still rock-solid.
Drake Baldwin. I actually drafted him on that Tout Wars team tonight, so happy I was able to get him there.
Francisco Alvarez was a name I had on this list, but now dealing with that back injury, so we'll see.
That's not a big deal. I like all the catchers. What about the names?
I'm surprised I don't have any Adley Rushman because I'm pretty optimistic about Adley,
and I come very close to taking him in a couple leagues. Just hasn't worked out yet.
Interestingly enough, catchers that we keep on fading, I have him as the name here that I just have not been able to press
draft on is Adley Rutchman because there are so many other catchers that I like and I just
have questions about who is Adley Ruchman at this point in his career and just some mild
concerns about playing time. I think he's mostly going to be an everyday player but if he gets
off to a slow start and Samuel Bousai was just tearing the cover off the ball, is there a chance
that Ruchman starts to lose playing time? Yeah, I think there's a chance. It might not be the most
likely as outcome, but I think there's a chance.
And then Cal Raleigh in the second round,
I'm just not going to pay the cost for Cal Rale in round two.
Scott, who are some catchers that you keep fading?
Will Smith.
I think playing time is going to remain an issue.
And I think in terms of percentages,
he gave us close to his best outcome last year.
And Alejandro Kirk.
Don't have a ton of interest in Yiner Diaz either.
I think there are higher upside players
that go in the same range.
and I also question playing time for him.
Not that he's not their number one catcher,
but how much is he going to sit for number two?
Let's move over to first base,
and we'll talk about the names that we keep on drafting.
Don't think we have any big injuries here.
Scott, if anything comes to mind that you're thinking,
that you remember about a first base injury,
just let me know, but I scroll,
I went through, I didn't see anything.
Names who will gain first base eligibility,
Jorge Polanco, Luis Garcia Jr.,
I believe is going to play first base for the nationals.
Um, Muna Taka Morikami already has first base on CBS, but on other outlets like Yahoo and NFBC,
he's third base and he will gain first base eligibility, so keep that in mind.
Yahoo doesn't have them at both already?
He might, honestly.
Um, and then the last name I had here was Bryce Eldridge, but I guess that will happen later on in the season.
Yeah.
Who are the first baseman that you keep drafting, Scott?
The first baseman I keep drafting.
Let's see if I have three or more shares of anyone.
No, I do not.
And I was surprised about that because I feel like I keep drafting Matt Olson and Freddie Freeman.
And maybe it's mocks.
I was going to say those are the mock drafts.
And then you're going to look up at like once the season starts and realize, why don't I have these guys?
I have two shares of each, Olson and Freeman.
I think one is the same team.
I drafted them together.
But I could very easily end up with three with these drafts coming up because that's the range of first baseman.
I like to draft from.
And I think within that tier, I, I,
I like those guys more than the consensus, both of them.
Josh Naylor, I'm surprised I'm not more invested in him, only one share,
but I could see that changing, moving ahead.
I do have a couple shares of Jonathan Aronda, no surprise there, a couple shares.
Do I have a couple shares of South Stewart?
I guess I do.
I drafted them once, and I think I kept them once.
I counted my keepers here.
Yeah, that's it.
I think anyone else who I imagine I'm going to be invested in,
probably not Bryce Harper, Rafael Devers, again,
just because I prefer Matt Olson and Freddie Freeman to them, respectively.
The first baseman that I have on multiple teams already,
Raphael Devers, is one of them.
He just falls a little bit too far in drafts.
I like that same range as you do, Scott,
the Olson, Harper, Devers tier.
And a lot of times Devers is like the last one to go in that tier.
So happy to get him.
Sal Stewart, the hitter I love.
I have him on multiple teams already again,
just drafted him here on Thursday night.
Again, Alex Burleson,
as someone with first base and outfield eligibility.
I like him more in leagues as a corner infielder.
I think it's a higher batting average.
Just a high floor player,
270, 20 homerters, solid counting stats there for Berluson.
Did you say home burgers?
Home burgers?
Is that what it sounded like?
What, I don't know.
20 homers?
Home burgers?
Yeah.
Yeah, go for some home burgers right now.
Yeah.
Jeez.
Home burgers and home fries.
Yes.
Yes.
Josh Bell.
Actually, I had to quit.
What is your favorite way to consume potato, Scott?
This is something I like to ask people.
Because obviously, there are so many different ways.
Oh.
What's your favorite?
I mean, I don't think I could choose against the French fry.
I mean, at its peak, it's perfection.
It's tater tots, man.
Tater tots.
To me are amazing, man.
A nice golden brown, crispy tot.
Oh, nothing better.
Yeah, I don't totally get the tater tot hype.
Oh.
I just, I don't know that I like the shredded potato more than a fluffy potato, you know?
You get that shredded effect inside the, the crispy outside.
I'm not saying it's not tasty.
It's plenty tasty, but I mean.
Oh, I love it.
the perfect fry is
so is leagues
ahead of the best tater tot I could have.
I would disagree with that, but I do love fries too.
I mean, they're both awesome, but I do prefer tots.
Josh Bell, I have in multiple draft and holds
as just kind of a, you know, boring, very deep name
who's going to hit like 250 with 20 home runs.
Names that I wish I had more of, Michael Bush and Jonathan Arronda.
I do like those two quite a bit as well.
What about the first baseman that we are fading, Scott?
The ones that I'm not really going to draft unless they fall are Vlad Jr., Nick Kurtz and Pete Alonzo.
I just don't love that, like, round two draft cost.
And I haven't been able to press draft on Freddie Freeman.
I know he's someone that you like a lot.
I do.
I worry a little bit about the age and, you know, the strikeouts coming up a little bit last season.
You know, people forget he was coming back from ankle surgery early last season and was gutting it out.
when he talked about sitting more often than he actually did to manage that injury,
you look at what he did over the final two months,
the strikeout dropped to the normal range.
He hit, I think, 14 of his, was it 14 of his 24 homers?
He improved his home run pace and dropped his strikeout rate considerably as the season went on.
So I think he's still Freddie Freeman.
And what I like about, you know, you talked about taking Devers,
I feel like most of those first basemen will be active help.
batting average and Freddie Freeman and Josh Naylor especially so Devers is the one I most worry
will not Olson could be Harper could be Freeman and Naylor especially Devers probably not I hear that
but Devers also could hit the most home runs of that group yes he could I just tend not to be worried
about that at that point in the draft yep first basement I'm fading I'm with you on Nick
Kurtz and Vlad Guerrero and Pete Alonzo I don't I want to draft any at cost they slide
four picks I'm probably taking them.
But that really seems to happen.
Is that
anyone else I'm fading? No interest in
Munataka Murakami really, but the cost is so low
that I can't quibble about it too much.
Yeah, that's about it.
Let's move over to second base.
We'll start with injuries here.
Jackson Holiday has the hamate bone.
He's expected to start the season on the aisle.
But don't think he'll miss too much time.
Tommy Edmund is on the aisle recovering from
ankle surgery, names who will gain second base eligibility.
Luis Arise, so he'll be first and second.
JJ Weatherholtz, he'll be shortstop and second.
And Josh Smith, he'll be gaining second base eligibility with every other infield position.
Outside a catcher, but it'll be first, second, third, and shortstop there.
So for those who play in Deepro leagues, pretty interesting name there with Josh Smith.
Scott, who are some second baseman you keep on drafting?
Believe it or not, no second base.
men in three or more leagues either.
And it's funny because I mentioned to my kids
that I was writing this article yesterday.
And the first name they said that I'm most invested in is Bryce Terang.
But they're wrong.
I only have two shares of Bryce Terang in leagues that count.
I think there's a good chance that changes this weekend.
I'll grab them in one of those three leagues at least.
It feels like you draft him in every draft we do.
I know.
But I guess they're all mock drafts.
A bunch of mocks, I guess.
And I also have two shares of Altuvei.
I think both are to play the outfield in a five outfielder league,
curiously enough.
Yeah, I mean, I honestly, I feel like I've been the most vocal proponent of
Ozzie Albys this entire preseason.
I haven't drafted them in a single league.
I don't think I've drafted them in a single mock even.
It's just never, it's never happened.
I'm drafting too many Bryce Terang in the mocks.
Yep, yep.
And then in real, in the leagues that count, I don't know.
It just hasn't happened.
Brandon Lowe, too.
I feel like the value's incredible there,
but it just hasn't happened.
Yep.
The second baseman that I have on multiple teams,
Bryson Stott, five teams already.
He's just, you know, a lot of these roto leagues where I purposely go in knowing
that I have to wait at least at one position.
I have to be, quote, unquote, weaker at one position.
Second base is just usually that position that I wind up waiting at.
And Bryson Stott is just,
someone boring 12 to 15 homers, 250 batting average, 25 plus steals, kind of a set it and forget
it. Wish he played against lefties, probably not going to, but he's just rock solid. And someone that,
you know, I usually need speed at that point in the draft. And so I wind up with a lot of
Bryson Stott. Do have Ozzy Albies and Marcus Semyon on two different teams already. Again,
mostly waiting at second base, but there were drafts where Albies felt like outside of the top
150, especially in those NFBC drafts.
So scooped them up there.
Marcus Semyon, kind of like that last resort second basement.
I've wound up with a few times.
In draft and hold, I do have three shares of Andres Jimenez as a middle infielder
slash bench, you know, second baseman.
Just someone that can give you some, you know, 20, 25 steals this season.
He was playing through injury last year.
So hoping that he gets back to running now that he's healthy again.
And wish I had more of Luke Kishel.
this was a really good exercise to do earlier in the day, Scott.
I made this rundown early on Thursday.
So ahead of the Tout Wars draft,
I knew all the players that I wanted more shares of,
and I drafted all of them in that draft.
So it was a really good exercise to do,
and I'm happy I did it because I drafted Luke Keishla as well in that one.
So I was happy to do that.
That's kind of amazing, actually.
I don't know if it was actually all of them,
but it was most of them, the ones that I've wanted to draft it.
That was an auction, right?
I go into an auction.
No, it's a 12-team head-to-head categories, daily lineup, snake draft.
Oh, that's even more impressive then.
Yeah, yep, just kind of worked out that way.
You're a very lucky man.
What about the second baseman we keep fading?
Scott, who do you avoid at second base?
Nico Horner, too big of a power hit for as early as you have to draft him.
I mean, now I don't think I'd be willing to pay the premium for Matt McLean
with the way he's been surging up draft boards.
And Seidon-Rafiella is probably my biggest fate of all.
I don't think there's anybody at second base that will wreck your fantasy team.
There's no ADP that stands out to me as overly egregious.
Have not been able to press the draft button on Seidon-Raphael like you, Scott.
And if you want to just close your ears, take out your headphones, go for a walk, Scott.
Bryce to rang, I haven't been able to do it.
I just, I don't know how much of last year is sustainable.
It was nice to see that when he showed up to spring,
he hit two 400 foot home runs right away.
But I'm just kind of left figuring out, like,
who is the real Bryce Terrang?
Like, what are we getting this season?
And I haven't been able to completely lock that in.
I mean, for me, the downside case looks a lot like Nico Horner,
and he doesn't go that far ahead of Horner.
But, you know, the upside case is like a second rounder, 2040 guy.
Yeah, I get it.
But it's just like the fourth round.
I guess I'm always just trying to do something else
in the fourth round of drafts,
whether it's starting pitcher
or maybe one of those first basemen,
like a Devere, someone like that.
Let's slide over to third base
and we'll start with injuries here.
Jose Ramirez has been dealing with left shoulder inflammation,
but he returned to the lineup here on Thursday.
I was supposed to look up what he did.
And let's see if we can figure that out in real time.
Let's see.
They won six to five.
Jose Ramirez went one.
one for four, and he hit a home run.
So that's pretty good news for Jose.
Yeah.
Jordan Westberg has a partially torn UCL in his elbow.
He won't be back until May at the earliest,
but could be a lot longer than that.
Names who will gain third base eligibility,
Bo Bichette, remember that on draft day.
If you need...
I have exploited it to the fullest already.
He's among my most drafted players.
If you need that third baseman,
just don't forget he's going to gain that eligibility early on.
And for ROTO league's batting average, like the point where you're talking round seven, round eight range, both of those needs are very difficult to fill in a Roto league at the point where Bouchet goes and he fills in both.
Yep.
Or at least he eventually will third base.
And Brendan Donovan will also gain third base eligibility.
Scott, who are the third baseman that you keep on drafting?
Well, if we're counting Bo Bichette, got three shares of him.
And I probably should have been looking through this list.
while you were talking.
I have three shares of Max Muncie.
I think people are riding off Max Muncie.
969 OPS from April 30th on.
That's when he started wearing the glasses.
Max Muncie of the Dodgers.
Of the Dodgers.
Yes.
And it's true he'll probably sit against some left-handers,
but in a lot of those games,
once they get to the bullpen,
he's going to be coming off the bench.
I think he is,
I think it's silly how late he's going.
surprisingly only two shares of Isak Perid is as high I'm like 80 picks ahead of consensus on him
and I imagine I'll get him at least one of those drafts this weekend I get the way mock drafts have
been going recently I could see Alec Bohm joining this group as as a nice in a roto league corner infield
batting average stabilizer pretty late yep Alec Bohm is actually a name that I have on three teams
already. I think I got him as a corner in one and then a third basement in the other two where I just
kind of waited and missed out on everybody else. One of them. Oh, and Kazuma Okamoto. Still going way too late.
Yep. Michael Garcia, I have on three teams. Michael Garcia, excuse me. And he was close to the hitter.
I love this season. I am really, really impressed with what Michael Garcia did last season.
And I think that he could actually take another step forward this year. So like him a lot. Cosima Okamoto,
I have him on three teams already.
Just saw today that he had another batted ball,
107.7 miles per hour.
It was like 405 feet,
just missed being a home run as well.
Right.
To right center too.
It did not look off the bat like it was going to go that far.
And he's going to be right in the middle of that Blue Jays lineup too.
So I do like him a lot.
And then Matt Chapman.
I've talked about him as a,
if you miss out on everyone else,
just kind of boring fallback option,
25 homers,
10 to 15 steals.
240 batting average.
You know he's going to play every day
because he's an awesome defender.
So those are the names I've been drafting a lot.
One that I wish I had more of,
and I hope I get him on at least one team this weekend
or before draft season wraps up,
is Austin Riley.
Just because the off chance that he bounces back,
maybe he does run a little bit.
Off chance.
There's an off chance, Scott.
I mean, you know, he's...
There's a chance, not just an off chance.
There's a good chance.
Thank you.
I do want to get him on at least one team
before everything wraps up here.
who are the third basement that you have been fading?
I don't think I have any Riley either.
I've been pushing Riley and Albys on everyone else and not taking them myself.
Do as I say, not as I do.
Okay, Alex Bregman, for the first time in his career, I am down on him.
Relatives to the consensus, I've always been a big Breggman backer,
but I don't think it's going to go as well at Wrigley Field, not a good venue for him.
Noel V. Marte, with the playing time concerns coming up.
Royce Lewis, I just, I did end up taking him in one league, but I can't get excited about him.
Oh, come on, Scott.
I can't do it.
That's about it.
Third base, you can't afford to be that picky.
Yeah, I am never tempted to take Bregman in a categories league, but I am okay with it in a points league.
Sure, that's fair.
No thanks on Nelvi Marte, third base, or outfield.
It's just question marks about playing time.
pretty streaky player as well
and one of the names
did you do you mention barger
no I guess I should mention barger
I have no interest in him at cost
I don't think he's going to play enough
and I'm not convinced he's that good
I like barger so I'm actually okay with where he goes
but it's a no on no LV Marte
no LV Marte and then
haven't been able to press draft on this name
which I really
just might regret it and it might blow up in my face
I get it I get what can happen
let's talk about shortstop
and we will start with the injuries here.
Lindor is working his way back from that hamate bone injury.
I think he'll be ready for opening day.
He has been playing in some spring games so far.
Jeremy Pena has a fracture on the tip of one of his fingers.
He's supposed to swing a bat with both hands this weekend.
He's progressing.
Still a chance he's ready for opening day as well.
We're still waiting to see on the prospects here.
We expect J.J. Weatherholt will be up.
Connor Griffin and Kevin McGonigal, we still don't know.
I think it's more likely
McGonigle is up
than Connor Griffin at this point.
They could all be up.
We just don't know yet.
I think we'll probably find out
in the next couple days.
Who are the short stops
that you keep drafting?
Geraldo Pardomo.
I don't think that will surprise anybody
who's been listening
for the entire preseason.
I've come up with a guideline
for players who have surprising years
and everybody wants to fade him
the next year because
where did that come from?
If they're being drafted at a point
where they could deliver 80% of the previous year's production
and it will still be a good value,
go ahead and take him.
So that's where I stand on Cal Raleigh,
why I'm fine taking him in round two,
and Geraldo Perdomo,
that would certainly apply to him
where he tends to go round five, round six
when he performed like a second rounder last year.
I just love the way he finished the season, man.
We kept waiting for him to fade, and he just got better, much better, actually.
Connor Griffin, I have three shares of him that I think that's trending toward being a stash.
I always got him at a discount, though.
And I'm happy to stash him for around the 160th pick.
And those are the only ones I have three or more shares of.
I've got a couple shares in mooky bets.
I guess Boba Shet, we could count him.
I have three shares of him.
Yep.
Yeah.
All right, the short stops that I have on multiple teams.
Shortstop, to me, is a lot like catcher,
where I just love the position so much that I find myself kind of
bouncing all over the place and diversifying,
just because I want to get lots of shares of different short stops this season.
But I do have Gunner Henderson on two teams.
I have Ellie De LaCruz on two teams.
I have Corey Seeger on two teams.
Happy with the cost, totally fine with that on all three of those.
As middle infielders, I have Zander Bogartz on three.
Just kind of a boring veteran, 15-15 guy.
I think the batting average actually will be helpful,
260 to 270 there on Bogart's.
And Nassim Nunez in some deeper leagues as a middle infielder.
I saw a report today that we don't know if he's going to be an everyday player,
but he's got legitimate speed.
He's a really good defender.
I think it's two seasons with 50 plus steals in the minors there for Nassim Nunez.
Jose Cabrero and Nassim Nunez both.
Like, I feel like if you have to resort to them for steals, you've done messed up your steals because they're going to be really bad for everything else.
Yeah, that's fair.
I don't know that I'm relying on him for steals.
Yeah, it's just kind of as a bench option.
As a bench guy who might have, you know, whatever, 30 or 40 steel season out of nowhere.
Names that I wish I had more of, Trey Turner and Boba Shett.
I only have one of each, but I do like both quite a bit.
Who are some short stops that you keep on fading?
I keep fading.
Trevor Story.
I think he is my clearest bus pick.
Same.
Everybody's just forgotten the injury risk all of a sudden.
That's not the only one I'm actively fading.
I mean,
I'm not thrilled to draft Willie Adamas or Jacob Wilson,
but if they meet my need at the time, I'll do it.
Yeah, everyone else is pretty low end.
Not a lot of fading happening here.
So I agree with you wholeheartedly on Trevor's story.
And again, Scott, like if you want to just go stretch,
the legs. Like, I think this would be a good time to go do that.
Perdomo. It's Ferdomo. Yeah, I'm not buying the career year. I understand the cost is nowhere
close to where he actually finished last season. I just don't see enough in the underlying
numbers to explain what happened. I think he could still be serviceable, but I just don't want
to buy coming off that career year with Geraldo Perdomo. Let's wrap things up here with the
outfield and some injuries. Sayas Suzuki has a sprained PCL. We are not sure if he's going to be
ready for opening day. We should learn that this weekend. Lawrence Butler has been slowly working
his way back from off-season knee surgery. He did return to spring games this week. Lars Neupar
had off-season heel surgery, Lord Escorial coming back from a torn ACL, both of those expected to
start the season on the IL. And those who are gaining outfield eligibility, I have Jordan Lawler
and Luis Anhele Cunia. U-Til only names. Let's watch here. I rank them in the order that I think
they're most likely to gain outfield eligibility, and I have it, Yelich, Yorne Alvarez, Kyle Schwerber.
Would you agree with that, Scott? In that order of gaining outfield.
Yelich, Alvarez, Schwerber. Yeah.
Yeah, I think so. Okay. Who are some of the, let's start on the high end, Scott.
Any high-end outfielder's that you've been drafting on multiple teams so far?
The my most drafted outfielder with four shares is Pete Crow Armstrong.
What a difference a year makes, Scotty.
I may be the most notorious Crow Armstrong detractor in all the land.
And now I have four shares of him.
And this is less about favoritism, kind of what I was getting at earlier on the show.
It's less about I like Pete Crow Armstrong than just, I've often found that he is the perfect fit.
Or I get him at a discount because others are scared off by him.
The perfect fit would be if it's a Roto League, and really I'm only talking about Roto or categories leagues.
No interest in Pekro Armstrong really in points leagues unless it's a steep discount.
But in a Roto League, round three, I don't have any steals yet.
I don't have an outfielder yet.
I probably should take Pekro Armstrong, right?
And like I said, in auctions, I was getting him for $6 to $8 less than he's projected to go.
I'm happy to do that because, you know, I only know so much.
Yeah, that's high end.
Any other high end guys that I have three or more shares of?
Could we put Ian Hap?
Maybe he's closer to high end than low end.
Is that fine?
Just the perfect third outfielder in my mind.
Second outfielder, if I'm really in the soup.
Great.
Like, he's not going to be a stud, but bankable numbers,
especially home runs, runs RBI.
if you're willing to absorb a little loss of batting average there.
Very safe, Ian Hap to fill that third outfield spot
before you get into the floodgates open on the speculative plays at the position.
I guess I have two shares of Cody Bellinger.
He's probably my favorite outfielder to draft.
I wish I had drafted Amor.
I love him in like round six as a cheap first outfielder.
and I will
well, yeah, you just said high
high end guys, so I'll stop there.
Yeah, the high end outfielers I have on multiple teams.
Kyle Tucker, we've talked a lot about this
offseason Scott where the NFBC ADP is
a lot of times, you know, 14, 15, 16,
we all have him ranked as a top eight or nine players.
So I've just wound up with a bunch of Kyle Tucker.
Jackson Trio, someone I like a lot this year in the second round.
Cody Bellinger, I have on three different teams as well,
either as a second or if you wait a little,
bit. Grab them as your first outfielder in round five or six. I'm good with that.
And Juan Soto I have on two teams. So don't normally like to have multiple shares of a first round
hitter just because I like to diversify those early rounds. But here we go. I've got three
Kyle Tucker and two Juan Soto. So I hope it works out with those guys. I don't have any first round
hitter on two teams. And that wasn't intentional. It's just worked out that way. Yep. On the
mid to low end
Scott who are some outfielders you keep
drafting there well I already mentioned Ian Hap
who's more mid end I guess
I am drafting
late in five outfielder leagues
I don't think you need to bother with these guys in three outfielder
leagues but late in five outfielder
leagues the rookies Carson Benj
Justin Crawford
even
even like Chase DeLauder I think
I think Benj is the only one I have in three or more leagues
What about Owen Casey?
Owen Casey sure
I, as my fourth, fifth outfielder in those kinds of leagues, I think I'd much rather gamble on them because at the point they're still going, that, you know, they're still going late.
The alternative outfielder's in that range are park timers who I'm not confident are good anyway.
So I might as well, I might as well shoot my shot with the rookies, hope they make the team, hope they live up to their potential right away.
And that's what I've been doing.
All right, so mid to low end outfielders
that I keep drafting as well.
Ian Hap also on this list.
Scott, Brian Reynolds, to me, both of them,
just boring third outfielders.
I think it's a bounceback season for Brian Reynolds.
South Freelik, I like the cost.
He goes later than Stephen Kwan.
Gives you a nice little batting average,
20 steel kind of boost there
at a totally fine cost where he goes in drafts.
Josh Lowe, no surprise.
I still think he could be like a 15-25 guy
if he's healthy.
Darcarlo Stanton, a lot of times I feel like I need power late,
so then I take a shot on Stanton.
I don't know how many games he's going to play,
but it'll probably deliver a 30 home run pace,
not 30 actual home runs.
Harrison Bader, boring, five outfielder, 15-15 guy,
with you on Benj, Justin Crawford, I like those guys,
and Jake McCarthy.
I have a lot of Jake McCarthy.
So I hope he has an everyday role with the Rockies leading off.
Maybe it's 2,8.
80 hitting 10 homer, 25 to 30 seal season here from Jake McCarthy.
I am surprised I'm not more invested in Dalton Varsho.
I don't, I think I must have him just in one.
I hope I haven't been at least one league.
I banged the drum too loudly for Dalton Varsho
because I priced him out of my range, I guess.
He looks so good this spring too, man.
I have no shares of Caglione, which I hate.
I just got one in Tout Wars.
I feel like at this point you're going to have.
to reach so much to get them.
Let's see what round I took them in in that one.
I think it was maybe round 12.
To be clear, I hate that I don't have any shares of Caglio, not I hate Caglio.
13.13.8, Scott, in a 12-team league.
That feels okay for Caglio.
Yeah, what number does that come out to?
That's probably right, probably right around maybe a little below where I rank them, actually.
I think he did well there.
I've come so close to drafting Dalyle and Lyle.
it's so close so many times it's the right round i nailed the round to take him but just somebody
grabs it before me and yep that's a shame because i like like him i think he's late batting
average help especially but that won't be all he contributes then outfielders i wish i had more of
again you just can't get everybody that you want it's just not the way that you know drafts work
you get a lot of the players you want you can't get all of them white langford roman anthony
Joe Adele, Caglione, and Varshot.
Those are the five that I wish at this point
that I have had, I have more of those outfielders.
Who are some of the names that you keep on fading, Scotty?
James Wood.
Same.
Yeah, I'll definitely P. Crow Armstrong over Wood.
Because at least he's going to give you steals, right?
I'm not confident Woodville, and I worry about the strigotts in the second half.
I don't know that it's fading Roman Anthony.
He just goes early, then I'd take earlier than I'd take,
I don't know if that's a true fade.
I'd be happy to take him.
It's a little too early.
Riley Green.
Riley Green, I think his profile now really depends on him hitting a ton of home runs.
And he doesn't have a long history of doing that.
It doesn't really have the exit velocities to back that up either.
O'Neill Cruz.
I mean, I know I've put on a happy face relative to you and Chris,
but I don't want a complete batting average drain.
and there's not much interest in points leagues
because he strikes out so much.
Yep.
The names that I'm openly fading,
I'm with you on Riley Green.
Buxton, it's just,
now he's a top 80 pick
coming off the year
where he finally stayed healthy
and it was only like
124 games too.
It's not like he played the entire season.
I get how talented he is.
It doesn't feel good fading Buckson,
but he...
Oh, I should have said Jackson Merrill.
Like, that's the most obvious one.
Yeah.
Buxon is one that I keep fading.
O'Neil Cruz as well.
Nelvi-Martin.
Mike Trout, I just never find myself drafting Mike Trout.
Two names I just haven't been able to press draft on this season, Scott, is Luis Robert.
I am mildly intrigued, just bounce back to see what he could do in a better situation with the Mets,
but lots of injury risk with him.
And Jacob Marcy, man, it's like he came up, he was so good in August, and then he was so bad in September.
I think he has an intriguing skill set.
I think he's going to run.
He'll get on base, but it's, you know, the batting average in the
minors is like 2.30 or 240, something like that.
So it's Robert and Marcy, just two names.
I haven't really been able to get behind this season.
All right.
We made it, Scott.
We are going to wrap there.
For Scott, I am Frank.
Thanks as always for tuning into fantasy baseball today.
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