Fantasy Football Today - FANTASY BASEBALL BONUS: Sleepers, Breakouts and Busts 3.0! Latest News & Spring Performances (3/28 Fantasy Baseball Podcast)
Episode Date: March 28, 2022With Fantasy Baseball draft weekend approaching, you can listen to the Fantasy Baseball Today podcast on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to FFT. Before we get into sleepers, Chris Rock got slap...ped! Justin Verlander is undervalued (2:28)! ... Jesus Luzardo put together another impressive spring start (5:50). ... Can Carlos Carrasco get back on track (8:15)? ... Is Alex Cobb more valuable than Carrasco and Luzardo (11:15)? ... If you need power, target Luke Voit and Mitch Garver (14:00). ... Frank and Scott love Connor Joe (20:38)! Can Julio Rodriguez make the team (23:47)? ... News and notes (28:30): Zack Wheeler is progressing, humidors are coming and more. ... What's up with Cody Bellinger plus the latest spring performances (39:00)? ... What is Daulton Varsho's upside (43:20)? ... Which pitchers might break out (45:15)? ... There's a lot of excitement for Oneil Cruz and Jo Adell (50:35). ... We wrap up with busts, starting with Randy Arozarena and Jazz Chisholm (54:04). 'Fantasy Baseball Today' is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, Castbox and wherever else you listen to podcasts. Follow our FBT team on Twitter: @FBTPod, @CTowersCBS, @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/ For more fantasy baseball coverage from CBS Sports, visit https://www.cbssports.com/fantasy/baseball/ To hear more from the CBS Sports Podcast Network, visit https://www.cbssports.com/podcasts/ Subscribe to our YouTube channel: youtube.com/FantasyBaseballToday You can listen to Fantasy Baseball Today on your smart speakers! Simply say "Alexa, play the latest episode of the Fantasy Baseball Today podcast" or "Hey Google, play the latest episode of the Fantasy Baseball Today podcast." 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)
What does possible sound like for your business?
It's having to spend to power your scale with no preset spending limit.
Redefine possible with Business Platinum.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Terms and conditions apply.
Visit amex.ca slash business platinum.
Welcome to the Fantasy Baseball Today podcast from CBS Sports.
And first pitch rushing.
Deep left field.
This is where the walkable.
Got a fantasy question?
Email fantasybaseball at cbsi.com.
Get ready to win your league.
Where fantasy becomes reality.
Now here's Frank, Scott, and Chris.
Sleepers, breakouts, and bust 3.0.
Let's do it.
Welcome into Fantasy Baseball today on Monday, March 28th.
Frank Stamfel joined by Scott White,
and it's our last full week of pods before opening day next week.
Get hyped.
I was going to leave with Charlie Morton, Scott, because, come on,
the guy was awesome in his spring debut,
but I kind of feel like we should just talk about will smith smacking chris rock it's all i can think about right now like it just happened as
like as we're recording now or you know like within the last hour it just happened so
yeah yeah it's it's difficult to recompose yourself after that.
One of the greatest moments in live TV history, I think, is fair to say.
Yeah, I mean, it's hard for us to recompose ourselves.
Imagine being Chris Rock. That guy's on TV.
He just got smacked.
So if anyone hasn't seen it by now, if you're on Twitter,
if you're anywhere right now, you'll probably see a video of it. And it's one of the craziest things that I've ever seen. Anyway, Scott, Charlie Morton,
I do want to just kind of like lead with this. He looked awesome in his spring debut. It's great to
see four and two thirds hit list innings, five strikeouts to just one walk. You love to see it,
Scotty. You love to see it. I never had any doubts, Frank. No doubts. That's exactly right.
And we both have a bunch of shares of Charlie Morton.
And excited about it. Very excited.
So he looks ready to go, mid-season form.
Fantastic opening performance. I haven't been getting as many shares lately
because it seems like maybe the world has caught up to us.
Or at least, maybe not all the way,
because I have him as a top 15 starting pitcher,
but he's not going at quite the same discount he once was.
It's true.
It is true.
All right,
let's get to our latest sleepers breakouts and bus.
Plus I have some news and weekend performances.
I want to get to outside of Charlie Morton,
of course.
And Scott,
let's,
let's start with some sleepers.
You're up first.
We got. All with some sleepers. You're up first. Who you got?
All right, sleepers.
Another guy whose stock has been rising,
but I don't think as quickly as Morton's.
I still think I can call him a sleeper,
and that's Justin Verlander.
I want all the Justin Verlander I can handle
because I think, and it's easier to say this now,
having seen him throw in spring training a couple times,
I think he's still Justin Verlander.
There are always some doubts for a pitcher coming back
from Tommy John surgery, and in this case,
a 39-year-old coming back from Tommy John surgery
is one thing to throw to average mid-90s on your fastball,
hit 98 with some regularity when you're 36,
but now we're asking him to do it at 39.
Well, it seems like he still has that kind of stuff.
And he's always been such a workhorse.
And I think especially since it's clear he's in,
I'm not saying, I don't know that this is the last year of his career,
but it's clear he's in, I'm not saying, I don't know that this is the last year of his career, but it's clear he's in the last years of his career.
I doubt neither he nor the Astros are going to be interested in preserving his workload
the way you would normally see a pitcher fresh off Tommy John surgery.
So, you know, last time we saw him, he had one of the great pitching seasons in modern history.
Over 300 strikeouts, 21 wins.
The whip was.80, I think.
It was amazing.
And that was the last time we saw him.
So, you know, I don't know that he's going to be quite that good again,
but anything close to that and he's going to be well worth his ADP.
And where is he going in ADP right now?
Fantasy pros, 100.2 is the average draft position
for Justin Verlander.
Like Charlie Morton, he's someone who is beginning to climb
throughout spring training because he looks healthy.
He's throwing mid-90s with the fastball again.
And in the offseason, signed a one-year $25 million deal
to return to the Houston Astros.
And that comes with a conditional option
where if he reaches 130 innings, he'll get an additional year at 25 million. So you know that
he's, he's obviously got that as a goal, the one 30. Uh, and then, you know, if we can, I think I
feel pretty good that he's going to get there. Um, and anything after that, you know, can we get,
you know, up to one 60, one 80, something like that from Verlander. I think that would be awesome.
Scott, uh, speaking of Verlander going just think that would be awesome. Scott, speaking of Verlander,
going just ahead of him in this range,
would you rather have Verlander or Carlos Rodon,
who signed with the Giants, obviously, a couple weeks ago?
I'd rather have Verlander, but yeah,
very encouraged by what we've seen from Carlos Rodon this spring, too.
I think he's just made one start, right?
But he was hitting 98 in it,
so clearly the dip in velocity from last September wasn't carrying over.
And that's a big deal.
So I believe they're consecutive in my rankings now.
But Verlander's ahead because of even coming back from Tommy John surgery.
I suspect the workload will be better for Verlander.
What about Verlander versus some hype guys know, hype guys around the industry? Trevor
Rogers, Alec Manoa, Dylan Cease. Yeah, they're all behind those two. All right. So yeah, Verlander,
if you're using Scott's rankings, there's a pretty good chance that you're going to wind up with him
on your fantasy team. Scott, a sleeper for me and someone I just wanted to talk about once again,
because of what he did on Sunday. And I don't want to overreact too much to spring training,
but Jesus Lozardo, another impressive outing
from Lozardo on Sunday,
going up against the Houston Astros lineup,
which was basically filled with their starters,
minus Yerdon Alvarez.
He went four innings of one run ball,
five strikeouts to just one walk.
The sinker Velo was up two miles per hour
compared to where he was at last year.
The four seam was up about 1.4 miles per hour and he threw his curveball a
ton.
He got eight of his 10 swinging strikes on Sunday with that curveball.
It was a weird season for Lizardo last year,
Scott,
one where he broke his pinky playing video games,
like slammed his hand down.
So it was just a weird season traded over to the Marlins.
But man,
he knew what he needed to work on this off season.
And so far it's hard not to be excited about Jesus Liz he knew what he needed to work on this offseason. And so far,
it's hard not to be excited about Jesus Lozardo and what he's done in spring training.
Yeah, I agree. I'm getting pretty hyped about Jesus. I was not as gung ho about him early on
before we started seeing the way he looked this spring. But even like the velocity gain on its own would be enough to open a new world of possibilities.
But then you factor in that
certainly in the second spring start,
it wasn't so much the case in the first one,
but certainly in the second one,
he was leaning on his secondaries more,
which are some of the changes we were hoping to make
because they're so good.
They're so good that it was the fastball
that's held him back to this point in his career.
So now maybe the fastball won't hold him back,
first of all.
And yeah, he's leaning on his best pitches all the more.
And yeah, I think I'm going to come out
with sleepers 3.0 this week,
sleepers, breakouts and busts 3.0 this week.
And I suspect Luzardo will be in either the sleepers or the breakouts for me.
He could kind of fit into either category, I guess.
Yeah, for sure. The ADP for Jesus Lozardo, 3.04. Someone who has
also been on the rise, rightfully so. You can get him late in your
drafts. One of your last picks, honestly. Again, that is Jesus Lozardo.
Scott, would you rather have Lizardo or another
sleeper you have on this list, Carlos Carrasco?
Well, I'd rather have
both. I'd rather
have... I'd prioritize
whichever one I need to take first
in order to get both.
But that's not the question
you asked me. I would
prefer to have Carlos Carrasco.
Do you want me to get into my sleeper case for him?
Yep, let's do it.
All right, so Carlos Carrasco,
I've made the case before that,
okay, he was not good last year, obviously,
but he was sidetracked by the hamstring injury
for the first four months, right?
Hurried buildup.
Didn't seem to have
the same bite on his slider but the velocity seemed fine it didn't it didn't seem like an
age-related decline maybe just you know he wasn't quite right for whatever reason because
it's a long layoff well we have more of a reason now it's been revealed
early in spring training that he had loose bodies or at least a bone,
a bone spur,
at least one loose body or maybe several in his pitching elbow during that
stretch.
And he couldn't fully extend his elbow.
Like seems like one of those basic things you should be able to do to pitch
at a major league level.
And he wasn't able to do to pitch at a major league level and he wasn't able to do it and he's had surgery since
then to remove that loose body slash bodies and now he's his elbow feels great he says and and
his velocity has been uh higher than it normally is for this time in the spring i know the results
haven't been good but that doesn't matter nearly as much to me
as how he's feeling,
given the track record that he has.
Yeah, he was quoted recently saying
it's completely different from last year,
referring to his elbows.
So yeah, just full offseason
of being healthy for Carlos Carrasco.
And just a couple of years ago, 2020,
it was only 12 starts,
but he was a top 30 starting pitcher that year.
So I mean, we're really not far removed yeah a very productive pitcher in carasco yeah like i said
the track record you look at basically the for the better part of the last decade right there
was there was last year where he had the elbow thing going on in addition to the hamstring and
there was 2019 which was the year when he was
diagnosed with leukemia and had to shut it down then. So, clearly, it wasn't healthy then. But
otherwise, you go back to 2013, the last time he had a season where on a per-star basis, he was
anything less than high-end. high end so you know dating back to
see I could give you
the numbers dating back to 2014 even with
those two not
very good partial seasons mixed in a
354 ERA 113 whip
and 10.1 K per 9
that's a great track record
and because two
of the last three years have been
have gone the way they have for
Carrasco, I think people are forgetting just how consistent he used to be. Yeah. And you don't need
him to be that too, where you're getting him. His ADP is 272.2. We'd love for that to be the case.
If it turns out, you know, Carrasco's healthy and he pitches to that level again, we'd love it.
That's part of the reason why he's a sleeper here. But again, I mean, you just draft him as late as he's going and you hope for the best there. And same thing being said,
Scott, for Alex Cobb, someone I feel like we're all collectively excited about joining the San
Francisco Giants. They've done great work with starting pitchers the past couple of seasons,
getting the most out of someone like Kevin Gossman, who relies very heavily on the splitter.
Same thing for Alex Cobb. And Cobb was actually pretty good last year too.
3.76 ERA, 98 strikeouts,
over 93 and a third innings pitched.
Gets a good amount of ground balls,
53% last season.
He had a career high
in terms of his swinging strike rate.
So there's lots of like,
he's got to stay on the field.
He's someone who also deals with
quite a bit of injuries,
but great ballpark to pitch in.
Great organization to pitch for. Should have a ton of run, but great ballpark to pitch in a great organization to pitch for should have a
ton of run support with the San Francisco giants.
Uh,
Scott,
how would you rank those three Cobb,
Lizardo and Carlos Carrasco?
I like them all.
I do perceive Cobb to have the least upside of the three.
Okay.
Um,
I'm,
I'm hoping,
I'm hoping the giants can turn out like an Anthony
Descalfani stat line for him
which would be great but it wouldn't be
quite the
upside that I imagine the other two having so I go
Carrasco, Luzzardo and Cobb
third. Okay and for all three of these
pitchers do you want them as one of
your starters
let's say in a head to head points league where you start
five pitchers,
or do you want them more as bench options?
Oh, bench options.
Okay. Yeah, I agree with that.
Yeah, I mean, look, they could emerge as starters.
Yeah.
This is the range of pitchers where last year, you know,
we were talking about like Trevor Rodgers
and Carlos Rodon, Logan Webb.
I think Robbie Ray was in that group.
Those were the four big pitchers who were making a splash last spring.
And if you drafted early, you were picking them up off the waiver wire.
And obviously, they all turned out to be major finds in fantasy.
Oh, Freddy Peralta was part of that group too.
It's funny. Obviously they all turned out to be major finds in fantasy. Oh, Freddie Peralta was part of that group too. I was,
it's funny.
I was looking at,
cause I heading into the weekend,
I wrote my deep sleepers piece.
I have 30 deep sleepers all drafted more or less outside the top 300.
And I was looking back at last year's version of that article and all five of
those pitchers were in it.
Nice. And in addition to
like joey vato and tyler o'neill uh more hits than you'd expect for a deep sleepers piece so
i was pretty happy to see that but yeah it's just funny to put yourself put your mind uh in that place exactly a year ago and imagine those
pitchers being valued
at the level like
a Jesus Lizardo or Carlos
Carrasco is now. Yep, for sure.
Alright, Scott, I know you have a few slugging
hitters here that you want to get to. A first
baseman and a catcher.
Who are those sleepers?
Alright.
So Luke Voigt is the first baseman.
And I mean, can you look up the latest ADP since the trade, which was?
Yeah, so I'm looking at the past week, NFBC ADP.
And for Luke Voigt, it's 217.66, round 18.
Round 18 of a 12-team league, yep.
Still outside the top 200.
That's just, that's amazing.
So clearly, I mean, look,
that NFBC is just one source,
and obviously ADP can vary from site to site,
and I think NFBC draft rooms
are ordered by ADP, or aren't they?
Anyway, there's a lot of smart people participating in the FBC.
So it really does.
I really don't understand.
I mean, before when he was going outside the top 200,
you could make the case, okay, well, he's still with the Yankees
and we think the Yankees want to make a change at first base.
So what's Voight's role going to be?
And we presume that was the reason he was going so late.
But then he got traded to the Padres where he's going to be and we presume that was the reason he was going so late but then he got traded to
Padres where he's going to be an everyday player and if that's the case it really doesn't make any
sense after during his entire stint with the Yankees he had 271 with a 901 OPS and homered
more often as in on a a per-plate appearance basis,
more often than Matt Olsen during that time.
So top five potential among first basemen.
I think he deserves to go 80 to 100 picks earlier than he's going.
1000%. I'm with you, Scott.
I don't understand what people are looking at here when it comes to Luke Voigt.
He's got to stay on the field.
He's another one.
He's dealt with a bunch of injuries last year,
a torn meniscus in his left knee,
strained right oblique.
He's also had some foot issues that he's played with,
but when he's been on the field,
Scott, you highlighted just how good Luke Voigt was
with the Yankees and now likely to be the everyday DH
for the San Diego Padres.
He actually crushed his first home run
of spring training over the weekend as well.
So Scott has Luke Voigt 132nd overall on his rankings.
I have him 137th.
Who is that catcher?
I know you have a slugging catcher you like as well.
Yep, Mitch Garver.
Mitch Garver, who had a two-homer game
over the weekend, I believe.
So all the sleepers stepping up in spring,
except for Carlos Carrasco, I guess.
But, you know, that's fine.
That's fine.
He's healthy.
That's the important thing.
Yeah, Mitch Garver, yeah, he's going to play more
with the Rangers.
That's the bottom line.
He should have played more with the Twins,
and obviously injuries prevented that from happening
to some degree.
But even when he was healthy last year,
it seemed like he was splitting at bats 50-50 with Ryan Jeffers.
For reasons I don't understand, I guess they wanted to develop Jeffers.
But, I mean, it's not like Mitch Garver is bad defensively.
His pitch frame rating is, I think it's like 93rd percentile,
or it was last year according to StatCast.
So I think the Rangers appreciate that.
They have a greater appreciation for what Garver could do
than maybe the Twins did.
And at the plate, there really shouldn't be much question
what he could do.
The only catchers who had a higher OPS than Garver last year
were Yosemite Grandal, who of course walks a ton,
and Buster Posey, who's retired now.
So he had a better OPS than Salvador Perez
with all those home runs he hit.
And was even better, Garver was, in 2019.
31 home runs in only 93 games, a 995 OPS that year.
And I should point out, he was one of those players,
Garver was, who got off, he was one of those players, Garver was,
who got off to a miserable start last April when offensive numbers were down across the league.
From April 28th on, Garver had a 991 OPS.
So he was basically as good as he was in 2019,
just without the playing time.
Yeah, look, Gar Garver he's been awesome
when he's on the field he's another one has to stay healthy but he crushes the ball lots of fly
balls strong average exit velocity a 17.4 percent barrel rate last year for Mitch Garver that was
second to only Mike Zanino at the catcher position it was better than Salvador Perez I mean that's
that's just how good on a per-plate appearance basis
that Mitch Garver was last
season. Scott, would you rather have
Mitch Garver or
I think this one's an easy one, but for
ADP's sake, Tyler Stevenson.
Yeah, definitely Garver. How about Garver versus
Caber Ruiz, who's still going
about 33 picks ahead of Mitch Garver?
So, I think
I kept Caber Ruiz ahead in points leagues
because the strikeout rate is so low.
And that obviously gives him a big advantage
in that scoring format.
But I think I'm talking myself out of that.
I'm really excited about what Garver can do
with a team that genuinely wants to play him every day.
To the point that I think he'll spend a lot of time at DH
when he needs a day off.
Because who else?
It's not like they have a lot of viable DH options.
Willie Calhoun, I guess, is expected to get most of the starts there.
But Garver could get some of them.
All right, yeah, I'm looking at the rankings here.
You have Mitch Garverver seventh in Roto and
eighth in headset points but you can make that swap uh I've already made it to yeah I put Mitch
Garver ahead of Caber Ruiz as much as I like Ruiz um I think there's a lot of potential and upside
there I mean basically the way I'm approaching catcher is if you know if i can get salvador perez in the back half of round three or later
then absolutely i do it otherwise i'll the the next one i'll look at is dalton varsho
who projects to be the full-time center fielder for the diamondbacks and so you know getting full-time at bats as a catcher eligible player you know that that that gives varsho a lot
an easy path to fantasy relevance in addition to the fact that he gets steel bases so i look to
dalton varsho next in round 10 or 11 you know i want to kind of get him at a little bit of a
discount and if it doesn't work out, then I look to Garver a couple
rounds later. If that doesn't
work out, I basically just take the
best of whatever's left at the end.
All right. One more sleeper
for me, Connor Joe. You know
the deal by now. You listen to Kokomo Friday.
You know I love Connor Joe. You know Scott loves
Connor Joe as well. 29-year-old
journeyman who burst onto the scene last year
with the Rockies.
He had 285, eight homers, 35 RBI in his small sample with the team.
Fantastic plate discipline, 12% walk rate,
19% strikeout rate, lots of line drives.
It's going to play very well in Coors Field.
And he was leading off against both left-handed
and right-handed pitching in the second half of the season.
He led off every game from August 8th
through September 3rd.
And so far in the spring,
he's just picked up exactly where he left off.
Let's see, I have the numbers here.
In 19 at-bats, he has 10 hits,
two doubles, a home run, a steal,
a 1380 OPS.
So you don't want to care too much
about spring training,
but seeing an older player like Connor Joe
kind of emerge last year,
you do want to see him kind of pick up where he left off,
and that's exactly what he's done thus far.
He is going very, very late in drafts.
The ADP for Connor Joe is...
Oh man, it's really low.
On Fantasy Pro's 348. So if you play in a five outfielder league, he's someone low, on Fantasy Pro's 348.
So if you play in a five outfielder league,
he's someone that you could even get on your bench.
So you don't even have to have him as a starter.
Why not take a chance on the potential
leadoff man for the Rockies?
Yeah, I included him in that deep sleepers column
because he's going as late as you said he was, Frank.
Almost going too late to be included
in the regular sleepers column because
i also have a deep sleepers column i have to fill but you know i think there has been
some question about playing time for him and i talked about how the randall gritchick trade
i i think gave him a clearer path to playing time because now the Rockies can put an actual...
They get Tapia out of the way.
Tapia was only a corner outfielder himself,
and they could put a bat they like in center field
in Randall Gritchick,
and that still leaves a corner spot.
It sounds like it's going to be Charlie Blackman
in the corner spot more in right field
and Connor Joe as the primary DH though of course
getting some occasional starts in the outfield
himself but
every
team's beat writer that's employed by
MLB so you know
for all the official team sites the beat writer
for each they all this
weekend published an article predicting
the team that they cover's opening day
roster and Thomas Harding for the rockies he he predicted he predicted connor joe in the dh spot
basically playing every day and uh yeah i i think that makes sense i mean obviously you talked about
how productive he was last season how good he is at getting on base,
and how he's continued it this spring.
I don't think there should be too many doubts about his playing time.
If that's what's preventing you from drafting Connor Joe, knock it off.
I agree.
Yeah, let's go.
Let's do this.
Let's get Connor Joe in there.
Scott, talk to me about one of the top prospects in baseball,
in Julio Rodriguez, and why you're so excited about him.
I think he's going to make the team.
I think he's going to make the team.
And the version of that article
for the Mariners by the Mariners beat writer
thinks he's going to make the team too.
They've played him most every game
he's started at center field
for the Mariners
this spring.
And Scott Service
is already on the record
saying he thinks
he's their best defensive option
in center field.
Jerry DiPoto,
the GM of the Mariners,
has said he thinks
he's ready for the big stage.
I mean,
what more do you need to hear?
They're all dropping some pretty big hints there
and you can certainly see him fitting into the lineup they moved Jared Kalnick to
left field where they're more comfortable playing him they put Jesse Winker at DH at least most of
the time I I read actually that he's also been taking some grounders at first base recently. Yep. To create another potential path for at-bats,
possibly in anticipation of Julio Rodriguez being there.
So, you know, it didn't seem like going into spring training
anybody was giving him a real chance.
He's played, I think, 42 games above A-ball,
but he hit.362 in those 42 games.
And he's just, like, he's the caliber of prospect
that you expect to skip AAA, honestly.
Like, the only reason he won it
is because the team wants to delay his timetable
for service time monetary reasons, you know?
And the Mariners are not in a position to do that.
They're trying to win.
They're the team that's been held out of the playoffs
for the longest.
They came very close last year.
They just gave Robbie Ray a big contract.
If Julio Rodriguez is ready,
I think they should,
I think they should let him on the team.
And it seems like they think that too.
Before we get to the news and notes,
Rachel Jones is leading our March Madness FBT bracket. If she holds on, she will earn a $100 gift card to Paramount Plus
and get to join our For the People Listener League.
And speaking of which, we are still taking your submissions again.
The FBT Podcast Leagues will be,
one of them will be this week.
The 12-team Head-to-Head Points League draft
will be this Wednesday, March 30th at 9 p.m. Eastern time.
And the For the People League,
a 16-team Head-to-Head Categories League
will be drafted the following Tuesday, April 5th
at 8 p.m. Eastern time.
So if you want an opportunity to join one of these leagues,
send us something
creative, a song, create a fun Photoshop. We've been receiving awesome tweets and emails so far.
So we do appreciate all of those. You can create a t-shirt design, poem, haiku, or just tell us why
you deserve to be in the league. Email those submissions to fantasybaseballatcbsi.com. Put
FBT Listener League in the subject line,
and I will let you know by tomorrow.
I will have the announcement for the Head-to-Head Points League,
because obviously the draft is the following day.
So be on the lookout.
Send those in.
I'm going to choose those tomorrow,
and I will announce that.
And one final thing.
We're closing in on 10,000 YouTube subscribers.
So thank you to everybody who has subscribed to this point.
If you are watching this and you haven't subscribed,
please help us out.
And once we hit 10K,
we're going to do a giveaway for a free FBT hoodie.
So more details to come about that.
You know, nice little milestone there.
10Ks, YouTube subscribers.
So very excited about that as well.
We're going to hit a quick break.
And when we return,
some news and notes from the weekend
here on Fantasy Baseball Today.
All right, so Zach Wheeler pitched a simulated inning
against two hitters on Saturday.
He also said that he, quote,
hasn't felt a trace of soreness in his right shoulder
and hopes to be ready for the start of the season.
So, Scott, good news all along.
I know that you've been drafting Zach Wheeler
in that third-round range, and it's looking pretty good
right now. Yeah, I got him discounted
in a few leagues. Feeling good about it.
Alright, Shohei Otani was scratched
from his pitching start on Saturday,
but he will start this upcoming
Thursday. Joe Maddon said Otani
was not scratched because of injury or fatigue,
but they didn't really give
a reason as to why, so
I thought it was interesting.
Somebody to pay attention to,
but Otani hit a home run over the weekend as well.
Looks healthy.
Everything seems to be good there.
Every ballpark, Scott, this kind of came out of nowhere.
Every ballpark will have a humidor this season.
And I know a couple of years ago,
I wasn't with you guys yet,
but it was like a pretty big deal.
Anytime a ballpark would get a humidor.
I remember Arizona was one that, you know,
really caused a lot of controversy,
but, you know, we started like shaking things around.
Yeah, consternation.
That's a good word there.
Eno Sarah tweeted that it won't be a big deal
in most parks, this humidor,
but the most humid parks,
the Giants, the Padres, the Marlins,
and the Tampa Bay Rays may get an offensive boost
as the Humidors will dry out the balls a little bit
in those locations.
So, Scott, I don't know if you've read anything else
or if you have any takeaways about this,
but the Humidors, you have anything?
I reacted, I guess you could say I overreacted
to the Humidor being introduced in Arizona a few years ago
based on how it ultimately played out the park hasn't it you know this is saying it could elevate
offense in the most humid parks well obviously Arizona is not humid it's on the other end of
the spectrum so when you're bringing up the humidity of the ball relative to the air around it that kills the ball.
It doesn't make it travel better like, you know, Saris is suspecting it will in the more humid parks.
And look, since the introduction of the humid door, Arizona hasn't been as friendly a place to hit.
But it didn't have the drastic effects on individual hitters that i
thought it would that i feared it would and so i don't think any of the examples he gave are as
extreme on the other end of the spectrum as arizona is you know so i'm not saying he's wrong
i'm just saying i i don't i don't want to i don't want to overreact to it.
I'm not really thinking about changing anybody's spot in the rankings based on that.
All right, that's fair.
Did you happen to see the other league news that came out this weekend?
Oh, that they're going to crack down on sticky substances again?
Even more, yeah.
Yeah. So I had a hunch that would happen and so basically they noticed
like we've talked about that that spin rates after the initial drop across the league in june they
went back up toward the end of the season and they also suspect that pitchers must have figured out
a way around the checks that umpires were doing
and so now they're going to check it even more thoroughly they're going to check the hand itself
as opposed to the glove and and you know the main areas where pitchers would have hit it in the past
uh and they're good they're good a few other things they're going to check too basically
they're cracking down even harder yep definitely something to pay attention to yeah yeah now i i was cure garrett cole made his first
spring start here on sunday the spin rates as compared to last year what he averaged
for the whole year wasn't a big difference so are these new checks going to really address the
problem i don't know i i also happen to see i was reading it was just a throwaway line from the
yankees beat reporter on the yankees official site i forget what the article was even about
but there was a throwaway line in it where aaron boone said that pitchers are being offered two versions of a new tackier rosin
this season to help with grip so it looks like yes they want to prevent like spider attack and
the the foreign substances but they're introducing like an alternative that's legal.
That maybe means we don't see the drastic change in spin rate that we saw last summer.
So again, it's one of those where like, yeah, it could have an effect, but it could not too.
Do you want to turn your rankings upside down? My biggest takeaway about that is the effect that the sticky substance ban
had last year, I think, was mainly on the high end.
You saw them become a little less dominant and a little less consistent.
And maybe there's a continued flattening in the pitcher ranks
as a result of this.
Not an extreme one one but a subtle
one i was already thinking hitter hitter to start most drafts rounds one and two go hitter hitter
to the extent i can help it of course because you know you're at the mercy of what everyone else does
and i'm not going to pass up garrett cole 12th overall or whatever uh but i think even more so, I'm thinking hitter-hitter to not invest so much in those high-end pitchers
that I think could potentially suffer the most from this.
All right, Andrew Vaughn had to be carted off the field Sunday
after making a diving catch in the outfield.
He's been having a really strong spring,
so something to watch there,
but if he opens the season on the IL,
could lead to even more playing time for your guy, Gavin Sheets.
Zach Gallen is unlikely to be ready the first time through the rotation for the D-backs
because of that shoulder injury that he's dealing with.
Dylan Carlson is being considered as the Cardinals' leadoff hitter.
It would certainly help Dylan Carlson's value,
but could hurt Tommy Edmunds' value quite a bit as well.
So I think the assumption was that Edmond would lead off
and that could lead to more steals and runs scored, obviously.
But if he's not, it obviously hurts.
There were differing reports this weekend.
I saw something about Dylan Floro with his hip,
but I've also read arm soreness.
Either way, Dylan Floro is dealing with something, Scott.
And then I also saw differing reports about who can be the replacement
if he has to open the season on the IL.
So I saw one about Anthony Bender, who was very good last year,
and then one about Anthony Bass, who wasn't as good,
but has a little bit more closing experience.
So do you have a feel here if Floro can't go to start the season?
I mean, Bender is the one I'm moving up because of this.
I think Don Mattingly, I also read he said we may be one of those teams that doesn't have a set closer to begin the year. Though given Mattingly's history, he quickly settles on a guy. of the absence if we're talking about you know he shows up in week two for the marlins then maybe nothing happens he still ends up being the closer but he's not the caliber of pitcher
that i think would push out anthony bender of benders getting the job done you know so that was
i think flora is a good enough pitcher to keep closing if he's getting the job done but
somebody else steps in and starts getting the job done, but somebody else steps in
and starts getting the job done instead,
I think Mattingly would just stick with him.
So I think I'm still drafting Floro ahead of Bender,
but I was already drafting Floro higher
than most people anyway.
I'm moving Bender ahead of the Tigers duo
of Gregory Soto and Michael Fulmer.
Cause I just don't think there's ever going to be any clarity with those two.
And I'd rather take the shot on Bender taking the job and running with it
personally.
But yeah,
as somebody with a lot of Floro shares already,
I'm concerned about this.
There was an article on the athletic this weekend about John Gray and Dane
Dunning changing their slider grip.
So it's going to be more of a sweeping slider.
So let's pay attention to that throughout spring training.
Alex Reyes was placed on the 60-day injured list
with that severe shoulder injury.
Brandon Belt is dealing with knee inflammation.
He's participating in full baseball workouts
and will be reevaluated for spring training action within a week.
If he can't go to start the season,
that would help Darren Ruff, someone we also like.
Nationals prospect Cade Cavalli
allowed three runs on five hits
over three plus innings on Saturday.
After the start,
manager Dave Martinez
didn't rule out the possibility
of Cavalli being part
of the opening day rotation
for the Nationals.
Martinez said,
I like it.
Let's just say that.
I like it.
You know,
he'll get another start down here
in five days
or pitch in another game and then we'll see.
Cavalli was the first round pick in 2020,
and last season he had 175 strikeouts,
over 123 in a third innings pitch.
Scott, any deep sleeper appeal for Cade Cavalli
following this quote?
I mean, yeah, if you play in a large league,
15 teams or deeper, take a flyer on him with your last pick, see what happens.
I'd be pretty surprised.
His minor league track record, a ton of strikeouts last year,
but a lot of inconsistencies otherwise.
I'm not questioning the talent.
I'm just not sure why the Nationals would be in a position to rush him.
I mean, even this last spring start he gave up.
Yeah, he wasn't great.
Fewer runs, right?
Yeah, he made six starts at AAA last year, too.
He had a 7.30 ERA.
So I think he could use a little bit more seasoning down there.
And speaking of pitching prospects,
Ronzi Contreras with the Pirates was optioned to AAA,
so he will not be in the opening day rotation for them.
Luis Patino is scheduled to throw a bullpen session Tuesday
as he works through shoulder soreness.
Oof, there are a lot of performances
I wanted to mention here, Scott.
I just want to mention real quick,
I would go Mackenzie Gore over Cade Cavalli.
Even if it's a long shot, Gore makes the roster.
Yet another, his second start was great.
He's allowed one base runner, I believe, in five innings.
And he looks like he's on track.
So whenever he does come up, I imagine him staying.
All right, let me just quickly run through some of these performances
and then we'll get into breakouts and busts as well.
Through seven spring training games, Cody Bellinger has a 158 batting average
and has 14 strikeouts in 19 at-bats.
That was entering Sunday.
So there was a report recently that he changed his batting stance again.
I don't know what's going on.
Like, originally, I was very excited about Cody Bellinger.
I drafted him in my home league this weekend.
But seeing something like this, it's just, what is going on with Cody Bellinger?
I mean, you don't want to overreact to a 20 at-bat stretch in spring training,
but plate discipline is one of those things that normalizes pretty quickly.
And what's most concerning is throughout his struggles the past two years,
strikeouts haven't really been the issue.
So if he's having trouble just connecting now, he may be spiraling here.
I'm not sure I'm going to touch Cody Bellinger unless
his stock just plummets from where it already
is. I don't blame you, man.
It is tough. It's one of the weirdest situations
to figure out. Jacob DeGraw made it through
three innings of one-run ball with five strikeouts
on Sunday. He got his pitch count up to
52 and seemingly came away from
the start healthy. Luis Severino allowed
three runs with four walks
over one and two thirds innings on Friday
and his fastball velo was actually down
compared to his first start.
So he averaged right around 95 miles per hour.
It was 97 in his first start.
So kind of scared off Severino right now as well.
Andrew Heaney gave up five more runs on Sunday.
His spring ERA is up to 16.88.
I mean, let's get him
out of here. Get Andrew Heaney out of here.
Scott, I know that there's some optimism
about your guy, Tony Gonsolin. We'll get to him
in just a little bit. The Padres
fifth starter job, we mentioned Mackenzie Gord
is pitching very well so far. Nick Martinez
threw three innings of one run ball
with three strikeouts on Friday.
The fourth and fifth starter job for the Braves
are up for grabs right now.
Tucker Davidson threw three perfect innings this weekend
with four strikeouts, so a name to watch there.
The Mariners' fifth starter job, Matt Brash,
three perfect innings with six strikeouts on Sunday.
Scott, I know you've raved about the slider,
one of the best in the minor leagues last season.
These are deeper names,
but I think they have some strikeout appeal.
So Tucker Davidson, Matt Brash.
Brash especially.
Brash I like.
And there was a report over the weekend,
it sounds like the Braves are leaning toward
Waskari Noah and Kyle Wright for the last two spots,
leaving Davidson out.
Not totally decided yet,
but Snitker mentioned that they were in the lead.
All right, Joe Ryan on Sunday against the Red Sox.
Three hitless innings with five strikeouts
in just one walk.
His fastball velo was up a mile and a half
compared to where it was last season.
Tanner Rainey picked up two strikeouts on Saturday.
Dave Martinez has mentioned he wants Tanner Rainey
to win the closer job.
His fastball velo, however,
was down four miles per hour
compared to where he was at
last season.
So that's pretty substantial
for Tanner Rainey.
Kesson Hira hit another home run
on Saturday,
his third of the spring.
Phillies prospect Bryson Stott
started at third base on Sunday.
He hit a three-run homer.
So they're trying to find a way
to get him in the lineup.
So if Boehm or Didi struggles, if they don't work out,
we could see Bryson Stott rather quickly.
Akil Badu hit a home run off of a lefty on Friday.
Anytime he does anything against a lefty,
I feel like that's noteworthy.
So that's Akil Badu.
And Jeremy Pena, Scott,
someone we've talked about quite a bit recently,
he's hit leadoff in the past two games
that all the starters were in,
the lineup for the Houston Astros.
I don't, like, to me,
I can't really fathom the idea
of Jeremy Pena leading off
when you have as many bats as you do.
But I think it's noteworthy.
So, look, if he's leading off
in a lineup that includes
Jose Altuve and Yordan Alvarez
and all the great bats they have,
there's going to be value there.
So just something to pay attention to.
Yeah, if he does, if he does.
It may just be that, you know,
obviously spring training is different
and if you're batting at the top of the lineup,
it's a chance to bat more
and they're trying to give him more bats
to evaluate him further.
I don't know if,
I don't think I've seen anything from Dusty Baker talking about using it
during the regular season or anything like that,
but he has made some interesting lineup choices in the past,
so something to keep an eye on.
All right, Scotty, let's get to some breakouts here.
And where do you want to start?
Well, since we have so much time left,
I, where are we? Okay, here we have so much time left, I...
Where are we? Okay, here we are.
Let me just mention Dalton Varshow real quick
because I already brought him up when I was talking about Mitch Garver.
And yeah, like I said, everyday center fielder is the plan.
So having a bad advantage over most every catcher.
He's the only catcher who runs a lot,
at least in theory he does.
Real Muto could get double-digit steals,
but Varshow could approach 20, I think, potentially,
especially if he's playing center field.
And he pretty much caught fire
over the final 60 games or so.
I don't have the numbers right in front of me,
but hit near 300 with an OPS of like 880
or something like that over his final 60-ish games.
Looked like the guy we saw in the minors.
So I think he's legit,
and he's catcher eligible.
So that's a good...
The ADP for Dalto varsho is 129 scott wilson
contraris is going six picks ahead who would you rather have varsho or contraris i would rather
have uh i think varsho yeah varsho how about varsho versus yosemite grandal in a categories
league varsho in a categories league for sure. Grandal with all the
walks, I think you have to put him ahead
in points. Alright, so
a good bit of value there if you like Varshow
over Grandal because he's going
about 30 picks later
in ADP right now.
Alright, I got the exact numbers here. It was basically
what I said. Final 57 games
last year, Varshow hit 294 with 10
homers and an 886 OPS.
All right.
I wanted to mention a few
starting pitchers as breakouts.
You know, guys that I've mentioned
quite a bit already.
Shane O'Mac, Shane McClanahan,
throws mid to upper 90s.
Bunch of strikeout potential here.
Had a 14.8% swinging strike rate
last year that was tied
for eighth best among starters
with at least 120 innings pitched last season.
He does allow a lot of hard contact.
I think the Rays are going to figure it out,
whether it's sequencing or changing up the pitch mix
just a little bit,
maybe not throwing the fastball as much,
but I have a lot of faith in the Rays
figuring it out for Shane McClanahan.
And they need him.
They need some length out of him
because their rotation is not great,
and no Tyler Glass now this year,
so I think that they are going to rely heavily
on Shane O'Mac.
The other one, Logan Gilbert.
He's been in the news.
I mentioned last week,
I'm getting irrationally excited about Logan Gilbert.
Last year, the surface numbers, not great, 4.68 ERA,
but the skill interactive ERA,
the Sierra was very good for him.
The strikeout minus walk rate was
tied for 26th with Joe
Musgrove. He's got all the stuff.
Everything is there. He just needs to put it all
together. He's got a really hard fastball.
He's big. He gets a lot of extension
on that fastball. He's got good
secondary pitches, Logan Gilbert does.
Two pretty hyped up names here,
Scott and Shane McClanahan and Logan Gilbert.
Do you find yourself drafting either one?
And if so, which one of the two?
I haven't.
I mean, Shane McClanahan's going about the same point.
I'd look to draft Verlander
or just move on from pitching altogether.
I've had more opportunities to draft Gilbert
and just haven't yet.
But him going with a harder
slider this year.
It was low 80s last year.
It's high 80s now.
Just the way he's looked this spring
with the development of that pitch,
it's starting to get excited about
him too. Yeah, Logan Gilbert.
I might need to add him in breakouts 2.0 or
3.0. All right, Scott. I know you have a few
starting pitchers here as well
that you are excited about the breakout potential
of Patrick Sandoval and Tony Gonsolin.
Yes.
So, Sandoval had a 15.3% swinging strike rate
in the 14 starts that he made from May 17th on.
That, if he had the innings to qualify,
it would have been second only to Corbin Burns.
So he was a huge bat mister.
His changeup is unbelievable.
It might be the best swing and miss pitch in the game.
Had some control issues,
obviously had some health issues last year,
shut down early with,
I think it was a lumbar,
a stress fracture in his back
or something like that.
But supposed to be healthy now.
I don't think he's made an official start yet,
but we hear he's healthy and a ton of strikeout potential.
And I think there's a lot of upside there
that's not being accounted for by his ADP.
And then Tony Gonsolin, yes,
he looks like he's going to be in the Dodgers rotation after all.
It wasn't so clear after they brought in Tyler Anderson.
They brought in Tyler Anderson.
It wasn't so clear Gonsolin was going to be in the rotation
since he has a lot of experience in the bullpen as well.
But Dave Roberts said over the weekend
that Gonsolin is in line to be the fifth starter.
And if you just look at his career numbers,
that pretty much tells you why you should be excited.
Because in his career now, 142 and a third innings,
285 ERA, 109 whip, 9.4K per nine.
The walk rate was way up last year.
He had some health issues,
but he came back in September.
He looks sharp again.
The swinging strike rate was up.
And I think,
I think there's a potential for him to take off,
especially with that Dodgers lineup backing him.
All right.
Yeah.
Patrick Sandoval.
I know the ADP has been on the rise over the past week.
That is one 86 for Patrick Sandoval over I know the ADP has been on the rise over the past week. That is 186 for Patrick Sandoval over at the NFBC.
So lots of excitement there for Patrick Sandoval now climbing inside the top 200.
And then Tony Gonsolin, the ADP for him is 283.4 over on Fantasy Pros.
Scott, he's going right around Carlos Carrasco and Jesus Lozardo, names that we talked about earlier.
Where does he rank among that group?
Oh, man.
So I had been taking him behind Carrasco,
but that's when there were questions about Gonsolin's role.
I still think behind Carrasco.
I'll put him right in between those two.
Carrasco, Gonsolin, and then Luzardo.
Wish I could get them all, though.
You might be able to.
I mean, you know, just because the ADP,
just because they're bunched up in ADP,
I mean, those could be, you know,
the last three picks of your draft or something like that.
I missed out on a couple chances at Gonsolin
last week for a good price.
I just started to have second thoughts about whether or not
he was really going to be in the Dodgers rotation,
and I regret it now because I think he's good.
I think so, too.
Yeah, he just has to stay on the field.
He's someone who's dealt with injuries,
but if he can do that and get stretched out
and they give him a real opportunity,
great run support, great organization to pitch for, Lots to like there for Tony Gonsolin and lots to like for
O'Neal Cruz. So far that we've seen in spring training, the guy, he just, his power comes so
easily, O'Neal Cruz. And we've seen two really long home runs so far. He has the ability to
seal bases. He's a physical freak. And Scott, I know that you've cited, you know, he was among the league leaders in the minors last year in terms of average exit
velocity. He's someone that typically hits the ball as hard as somebody like Aaron Judge. And
he kind of appears like Aaron Judge. He's a six foot seven shortstop, again, prospect in the
Pirates organization. He's a shortstop by trade, but they're talking about playing him in the outfield.
They want to find ways
to get O'Neal Cruz's bat
in that lineup.
And Scott, someone that
we talked about earlier as well,
I'm kind of jumping
all over the place here,
but two prospects,
young players with lots of upside,
Joe Adele as well.
I mean, what Joe Adele has done
so far in spring training,
he hit another home run
over the weekend.
He's now six for 22 with three homers, three steals in spring training, he hit another home run over the weekend. He's now 6-for-22 with three homers, three steals
in spring training. Lowered the strikeout
rate tremendously last year.
And he's someone who
the max exit velo looks really
good for Joe Adele. Sprint speed.
The tools are there for both of these
guys. Are they names that you
typically target Joe Adele and O'Neal Cruz?
Yeah. they're both
they were both in breakouts
2.0.
It doesn't sound like O'Neal Cruz is going to
have a job on opening day. Nobody
on the Pirates beat seems to give
him much of a chance of that.
And, you know, it's mostly
because the Pirates
what's their incentive to call him up?
He hasn't had much time at AAA,
so he could stand to have more, I guess,
especially if they want to try him in the outfield.
But he'll be up soon enough, and I think the upside is such
that he's worth stashing away until that day comes.
But at this point, I think I would prioritize
like a Julio Rodriguez over O'Neal Cruz,
when maybe I wasn't two weeks ago, you know.
Scott, talk to me about this last name that you have on this list, and that's Willie Adamas. You can argue that he already broke out, but he's just not really being treated like it in terms of ADP.
Yeah, yeah. I mean, that's basically it.
He wasn't thought to be a great fantasy asset in uh when he was with the rays
but turns out tropicana field is a terrible place to hit and especially for him because you just
look at his road numbers during his time with the rays 291 with an 858 ops which is very similar to
the 285 with an 886 ops he put up after joining the Brewers last May.
That'll play.
I mean, those numbers aren't going to be so different
than what I imagine Carlos Correa is going to put up.
And they may not be so different
than what I think Xander Bogarts is going to put up.
So Willie Adamas is somebody I love drafting
as my starting shortstop well after those guys, especially Bogarts.
They're off the board.
And I've noticed, Scott, just around the fantasy baseball industry
in general, it seems like there's not that much optimism
for Willie Adamas.
So I don't know, maybe I'm mistaken in that,
but I feel like in other expert drafts that I've done
and even like tout wars, I think I got Willie Adamas for six or $7
in a 12 team head to head points salary cap draft.
I got him as my middle infielder and I'm okay.
Yeah, totally fine getting Willie Adamas for that.
Yeah.
Happy to do so.
Let's talk about some bus here.
Scott, we'll wrap up.
We'll go for like another 10 minutes or so.
And we'll just rattle off a few names here back and forth.
But I know two players who have a lot of power and speed potential,
Randy Rosarena and Jazz Chisholm,
wind up on this list for you.
Yeah, Rosarena is...
I mean, they're both players.
I'm just not going to draft probably.
But Rosarena goes earlier,
and he was one of the biggest overachievers,
according to Stat stat cast last year
stack has gave him an expected batting average of 220 and an expected slugging percentage of 366
which are obviously not good numbers and uh he yeah yeah i mean that it's reminiscent of of what
cavendish's expected stats looked like going into last season. And we see how that turned out for him. Now, Roserain is pretty athletic and he may be able to outperform them. But to the extent he did last year, I'm skeptical. And if he doesn't outperform them to the extent he did last year, do the Rays continue to use him as that everyday player? Because they don't use many players as everyday players.
I think more than anything, he's just being elevated
because he stole 20 bases last year,
and people are so desperate to get base stealers
that they end up kind of ignoring all the other aspects
of their profile and the risk factors therein.
But even those steals, I mean, it was 20 for 30 last year.
So is that something we can necessarily pencil them in for again,
that, that those 20 steals, I'm not sure about that.
Jazz Chisholm, another player who I think, Oh, he steals bases.
So let's give him a shot is basically what people are thinking because from May 1st on, he hit.236 with a.681 OPS,
got off to a really good start.
Surprisingly, I think, because the way he looked in the minors,
too many strikeouts.
I thought he was going to get eaten alive by Major League pitchers.
He didn't in April, but he did from that point forward.
And I think it's just as likely,
especially like a 12-team context,
that you drop him after six weeks than that.
I think it's more likely, actually,
that you drop him after six weeks than that.
He's like elevated his game
and become this indispensable player for you.
And both have issues with splits too, Scott.
Something I noticed with a Rosarena last year crushed lefties,
but right-handed pitching 257 batting average, 750 OPS.
It's fine. It's adequate.
But especially with an organization like Tampa Bay,
where they find ways to get creative and get the most out of their players.
It's something that could wind up being a factor for a Rosarena.
And Jazz Chisholm the other way against lefties, 237 batting average, 670 OPS. the most out of their players. It's something that could wind up being a factor for a Rosarena.
And Jazz Chisholm the other way against lefties,
237 batting average, 670 OPS.
He's a really good defender.
Obviously, the Marlins are not necessarily competing this year,
so I don't know that they have as much incentive
to take Jazz Chisholm out of the lineup ever.
But overall, it's going to affect his stat line there, Jash Chisholm. For me, he's got to
have another outfielder who does provide power and speed, and I really don't have a great reason
for this outside of just fading someone coming off of a career year, and that's Tyler O'Neal.
His ADP is 61.4. He's the 19th outfielder off the board. He's dealt with a ton of injuries
in the past. The strikeout rate is massive. We're talking over 30%. He's the 19th outfielder off the board. He's dealt with a ton of injuries in the past.
The strikeout rate is massive.
We're talking over 30%.
He impacts the ball so hard.
It's very reminiscent of what we saw from Aaron Judge
earlier in Judge's career where he was able to make up
for his strikeout rate because he hit the ball as hard as he did.
But it's just a profile that scares me
and the fact that there's been as many injuries
as there have for Tyler O'Neal,
you know, as a borderline fifth, sixth round pick,
it just seems like a big price tag.
So I've, myself, I've been fading Tyler O'Neal.
I hear you.
And there haven't been that many players in the history of the game
that have succeeded,
that have delivered a respectable batting average
with that kind of strikeout rate.
So I've, I haven't been particularly enthusiastic
about drafting Tyler O'Neill.
I don't think I have yet.
I haven't been willing to call him a bust
because I can certainly...
I mean, the expected stats are what they are.
They pretty much back up what he did
even with all those strikeouts,
and that's the effect of him hitting the ball that hard.
So I'm mostly buying into it,
but I hear what you're saying about O'Neal.
It's definitely a profile that I generally like to avoid.
All right, Scott.
I know two outfielders that you also have here.
Well, outfield eligible players going inside the top 120 picks
that you've been fading, Jesse Winker and Ryan Mountcastle.
Yeah, so Jesse Winker,
for his career,
his OPS is about 100 points higher at home
than on the road.
And that home was Cincinnati,
the most favorable park for home runs.
And now he's going to Seattle
on the opposite end of the spectrum.
So I wonder how that's going to play,
first of all.
And the fact that it splits against lefties,
176 batting average, 572 OPS last year.
Is that something a contender is going to be willing to accept
every time against the lefty?
Is he going to be able to hit 350 against righties again
if he has those
to balance out those numbers
against lefties
and give us the kind of stat line
we're looking for in fantasy?
And I have my doubts
about all of that.
I have my doubts about
the playing time
given the platoon splits,
the power given the park shift,
and
the batting average.
I suspect it'll be good, but as good as last year, I don't know.
So yeah, Winker worries me there.
Mountcastle might be the clearest bust to me.
And partly it's just I don't know why people are drafting him as high as they do.
He's going ahead of all the profit pocket at first base.
At least he was.
And you look at just what he did last year.
The 33 home runs are really the only number that stands out.
Like his entire profile is dependent on that.
Bad lineup, doesn't get on base much,
so the runs in RBI are not really in line with those 33 home runs.
And I have a lot of doubts in him repeating those 33 home runs.
I had doubts even before they decided to make those drastic changes
to Camden Yards, pushing the fence back 30 feet in left field,
turning it into maybe the worst park for right-handed hitters,
the worst home run park.
Even before that, I thought maybe he profiled realistically
for more like 28, 29 homers.
Now low 20s is all I'm giving him.
And like I said, there's not going to be much to go with it.
So definitely out on Mountcastle.
You know, Scott, for the most part,
I agree with you on both players, Jesse Winker and Ryan Mountcastle.
I wonder if now people are going too far the other way with Jesse Winker.
I did a draft earlier on Sunday night before this podcast,
and I drafted Jesse Winker. I did a draft earlier on Sunday night before this podcast, and I drafted Jesse Winker,
something I have not done all off season in a 15 team league where I got him
at pick one 70.
So his ADP right now is right around pick 100.
But I mean,
if you're telling me he's dropping 70 spots now,
then all right,
I'm going to be,
I'm going to be interested if everyone is,
is fading him that far.
So outfielders that went ahead of him,
Alex Verdugo, Hunter Renfro, Dylan Carlson in this draft,
to me, I mean, that's just a little bit too egregious.
Yeah, I was looking at ADP, how that would compare.
And Verdugo and Carlson were the names that stood out.
Yeah, definitely rather have Winker than those two.
Hunter Renfro, that's a close call for me.
I've always been higher on Winker than the consensus.
All right.
I had a starting pitcher that I wanted to mention here,
and it's Blake Snell.
I just can't get behind Blake Snell.
I know he had a stretch last year where he looked like
maybe the best pitcher in baseball.
It was an eight-start stretch from August through September
where he basically just cut out the changeup
and he went fastball, slider, and it was amazing.
And it worked for him.
I forgot.
I was either listening or I was on a podcast recently
where somebody mentioned they were watching Blake Snell
on a Twitch stream.
It might have either been the Welsh or Paul Sporer.
And he was doing a a live Q and a,
and they asked him,
are you going to ditch the change up this ups,
this upcoming season as well?
Are you just going fastball slider heavy again?
And he said,
nah,
the change up is coming back.
I like,
I something like that.
It just kind of worries me where like Blake Snell is going to be stubborn and
he's going to try and,
you know,
bring back this pitch and look,
he should just go with what worked. And that, that was the fastball slider, but I just worry that he's going to t stubborn and he's going to try and you know bring back this pitch and look he should just go with what worked and that that was the fastball slider but I just worry that he's going
to tinker again and he has a lot of issues with control and command and durability and he doesn't
go deep into his start so I get it you know he used to have some of the best upside in the game
he still gets a lot of strikeouts but Scott I mean to me there's just so much playing against
Blake Snell that I just never wind up drafting where he's going.
Yeah, I mean, it doesn't help that it sounds like he's behind and may not be ready to go the first time through the rotation.
So that's just another risk factor stacked on top for him.
So I get it.
I don't think the price for him is so bad compared to where it's been in recent years.
And he did show us that upside again late in the year.
So I've taken him on occasion,
but I hope not to.
I hope to get,
like if I'm looking to make up ground in strikeouts,
I hope to get like you Darvish instead
before I have to resort to Snell.
The ADP for Blake Snell is 112.6.
So you're right, Scott.
I mean, recent seasons, he was a third or fourth round pick
in 12 team leagues.
I would take Shane McClanahan, who's going basically
right next to him.
Justin Verlander is going around him.
Much rather have Verlander.
And Pablo Lopez is someone that's going after Blake Snell.
He's going about 20 picks later.
I would rather just have Pablo Lopez straight up
than Blake Snell this upcoming season.
Yeah, I do like Lopez a lot.
Yeah.
All right, Scott, let's wrap up here with one more pitcher.
You mentioned risk with Blake Snell,
and perhaps no riskier starting pitcher right now
than Zach Gallin.
Yeah, I'm surprised.
There still seems to be some enthusiasm for him.
Obviously not like in past years,
but to me he's just untouchable
because he was even before the shoulder bursitis.
He showed up to spring training with that,
and that puts his immediate future in doubt.
But I think he's going to need Tommy John
based on the way his elbow sprain played out
last year where he did not look as effective after returning from it and I've seen that pattern
enough times to know what it means pitcher has an elbow injury that doesn't sound so bad but then he
just doesn't look right after returning and usually that that's how it ends, is with Tommy John surgery.
So I am not touching Zach Gallin.
All right.
The ADP on Fantasy Pros,
which is a culmination of a bunch of different sources,
has Zach Gallin at pick 148.
But over the past week at the NFBC,
he is dropping. So 185.6 is the ADP.
He's going around names like Tarek Skubal,
Patrick Sandoval, Adam Wainwright.
Scott, I have to assume you'd rather have Wainwright
and Sandoval over him, right?
Yeah, that's...
And who was the third name you mentioned?
Tarek Skubal?
One of these names is not like the others.
Yeah.
I don't know how those three pitchers
end up going in the same range, but okay.
All right, so keep on falling.
We've got a drop of Zach Allen,
even more than that.
We're going to wrap there for Scott.
I am Frank.
Thank you all for listening and watching fantasy baseball today.
We'll be back again tomorrow.
Bye-bye.