My First Mock of 2008

9 01 2008

Just a note that I’ll be going on vacation tomorrow, so I don’t think I’ll be posting anything for the next couple of days.

 Anyway, I was bored the other night, and I had a couple hours free, so I went to Mock Draft Central.

 The results of the draft can be found here .

Some notes:

  1. I was fairly happy with my squad.   As always, I focused on offense early, taking Holliday, Ortiz, Morneau, Hafner, Cano, Bay, and Figgins with my first 7 picks, before shifiting my attention to pitching, and I was able to put together a very solid rotation (Haren, Smoltz, Cain, Liriano, Schilling, Snell, Pettitte, Blanton) 
  2. Getting Wagner in the 9 and Mariano in 11 round I thought were great value picks.  They are not in the top 4 closers(Putz, Papelbon, KRod, Nathan) but both are on very good teams who should win a lot a games, and thus get plenty of save opps)
  3. Normally, I’m not a big Figgins guy, but I basically ignored speed in the early rounds, so I needed to get a specialist.  Getting him the 7th was a great value.  Let’s also not forget he did hit .330 last year.
  4. Someone else got Byrnes in the 7th, right before I took Figgins.  I think that was the steal of this draft.  He should go before Chris B Young (which was not the case here)
  5. I’m not as high on him as some others (due to his ballpark, lineup, inconsistency) but Adrian Gonzalez at the end of the 9th round was a nice pick too.
  6. I got some flak for taking Liriano in the 13th, but I am fine with gambling on my #4 SP with #1 upside there.
  7. Someone took Russell Martin before V-Mart.  I don’t like that.  I know Martin runs, but it’s not like he is Vince Coleman.  V-Mart is better.
  8. I was surprised to see Peavy go before Johan, but in speaking with others in the draft room, there were a lot of people who agreed.   That’s fine.  They are all wrong though.




21-50

30 12 2007

Due to the tremendous amount of positive feedback I received on my initial Top 20 rankings, I have decided to include my current #21 – 50 rankings.  In the coming weeks I’ll be doing positional ranks. 

 21.     Brandon Phillips:  30-30 at 2B.  He probably should be higher than this, maybe ahead of Soriano, but this is only the first time we’ve seen him do this.  Probably not the last though. 

22.     Mark Teixeira: Started off a little slow once again in 07, but he bounced back pretty quickly.  Missed a few weeks and still finished with very good numbers, .300/30/104/86/0.  Assuming healthy and you can deal with a slow starter, he’s a lock at 35-100 with upside.  

23.     Ichiro: The only reason he is not higher is because unless he hits .350 (which I’m not saying is not likely), he’s a tick below Crawford.   LOCK at .315 AVG, 100 runs, and 40 SB’s.   

24.     Magglio Ordonez: I think a lot of “experts” may rank him higher than this, but he’s not going to hit .363 again and I expect the power numbers to drop as well.  He’s gonna be really good, think .300/25/110/90/4, but not 2007 good. 

25.     Justin Morneau:  I think this guy is gonna be a lot (numbers wise) like pre-2007 Carlos Delgado.  Every year he’ll get a very streaky .280/35/100 (great months, bad months, no in betweens), but he’s gonna have 2-3 years where he just goes off (ie 2006).   After a down year in 2007, are we in for a resurgence?  

26.     Robinson Cano: As a staunch supporter of the New York Yankees, I watch a lot of games.  I’ve seen a good majority of Robinson Cano’s MLB at bats.  This guy is INSANE!  When he’s on (not like the first half of 07, more like the 2nd) he can hit any pitch to any part of the ballpark. Hit a ridiculous .343 after the All Star break, with 13 HR and 57 RBI.  If the Yankees wise up and move him to the #5 hole, between A-Rod and Posada, the blossoming 2B is gonna hit .320/25/110/100/5 and he’s gonna win a batting title one of these years. 

27.     Lance Berkman: The #1 multi-position eligible player in the game (1B, OF) had an off 2007, but still hit .278/34/102.  With the acquisition of Miguel Tejada and Kaz Matsui to infuse the lineup, Lance’s numbers should improve.   

28.     BJ Upton:  The #2 multi-position eligible player (2B, OF) is an electrifying talent that has #1 overall potential.  He may not have the patience yet to meet his 2007 batting average (.300), but he’s a good enough hitter to hit .285 with 30-30 potential.  Enjoy the 2B eligibility this year, but it is probably the last as he’s developed nicely as a CF. 

29.     Adam Dunn: Dunn owners were pleasantly surprised with a .264 average last year.  He’s hit exactly 40 home runs in each of the last 3 seasons, 46 the season before that.  He’s gonna kill your AVG, but he’s gonna give you excellent power numbers and is a very valuable player.  If he can hit .260 again, you’ll be fine. 

30.     Aramis Ramirez:  He missed about 30 games and still had excellent numbers.  Lock for .285/30/100/90. 

31.     Derek Jeter: It was a tough decision going with him over Carlos Guillen, but I think his downside is pretty close to Guillen’s upside.  At worst he’ll do what he did last year, .322/12/73/102/15, but he also has the potential to go .340/15/95/120/25. 

32.     Carlos Guillen:  Let’s call him 31(a). One of the most underrated players in fantasy baseball.  He’s gonna move to 1B this year and he’ll give you nice 5 category production.  Think .300/18/90/100/18.   

33.     Bobby Abreu:  Another Yankee lefty who endured a disastrous first half, but was en fuego after the break to give him nice overall numbers of the .283/16/101/123/25.  I think his numbers will be right there again this year, but you’ll be getting them more consistently.  A very nice player (I think Ari will disagree though). 

34.     Curtis Granderson:  To be honest, I did not realize how good a year he had last year until a couple weeks ago.  He probably deserves to be much higher on this list.  A very good shot to repeat his .300/23/74/122/26, 2007 numbers. 

35.     Carlos Lee:  One of these years he’s gonna be too fat to be good.  Problem is, each year he rakes.  I think the days of 20 steals are over, but he’s a lock at .285/30/110/90.  He’s just about done it the last 5 years.

36.     Brian Roberts:  The last of the good 2B’s.  Big drop-off after him.  Speed Demon.  Think .280/10/70/100/40. 

37.     Carlos Pena: 2007’s biggest surprise.  Won’t be that good again, but he’ll be close.  

38.     Garret Atkins:  There’s something about him I don’t like, but it’s definitely not his back to back campaigns of at least .300/25/110 or his home ballpark. 

39.     Victor Martinez:  Let me preface this with that I would never draft a catcher this high.  BUT, if I would, it would be him.  Projection: .300/18/90/80.  

40.     Troy Tulowitzki:  We cut him early last year.  Big mistake.  Imagine his numbers if he didn’t hit .244 in April?  In case you can’t, I think we’ll see them in 2008.  

41.     Jason Bay:  My pick for the 2008 Fantasy Superstar OF Who is Going to be Drafted Way Too Late and Win His Owners Leagues This Year Award.  Previous winners include Gary Sheffield (2007), Vernon Wells (2006).   

42.     Eric Byrnes:  Raise your hand if you predicted he’d go .286/21/83/103/50 in 2007? (Anyone? Anyone?) Raise your hand if you think he’ll do it again in 2008? (Anyone? Anyone?)  Raise your hand if you think he’ll come close (Ed. Note: I am raising my hand) 

43.     Nick Markakis:  A really nice young developing hitter.  Kind of reminds me a little of Paul O’Neill.  Should hit .310/25/100/100/15 for years to come. 

44.     Alex Rios: He teased us in 2006, but he really put out in 2007.  I don’t know how much upside he really has, but he should be able to duplicate his .297/24/85/114/17 statline. 

45.     Derek Lee: Had a decent year in 2007, coming back from a wrist injury.  The power stroke returned in the second half.  I think he should be safe for .300/30/100/90.  I think the days of 15 steals are gone though. 

46.     Russell Martin:  Had an incredible 2007, almost going 20-20 (finished at 19-21).  I don’t know if I’d bet on him doing it, but he should come close again.   

47.     Manny Ramirez:  Manny has regressed statistically in each of the last 2 years.  It can probably be attributed to poor health, and that is a legitimate concern for 2008.  However, if he can stay healthy, when he plays he rakes.   

48.     Paul Konerko:  We knew going into 2007 he wouldn’t hit .300 again, but we didn’t expect .259.  Nevertheless, he did finish with 31 homers and 90 RBI.  Again, if that’s a bad year, sign me up! 

49.     Gary Sheffield:  Got off to a terrible start but was just plain STUPID from May-July.  Then he got hurt and never really regained his stroke.  He should be healthy to start the year, so I expect a typical Gary Sheffield season.  Think .290/30/110/90/15.  Note that unless you are in a 10 game eligibility league, he’s a DH only.

50.     Jake Peavy:  Best pitcher in the game last year.  3 straight years of 200 K’s.  Give me one more year like last and you jump up to Santana land.

Just Missed: Miguel Tejada, Chipper Jones, Adrian Gonzalez

Top 50 Positional Breakdown:  2 SP, 2 C, 9 1B, 5 2B, 6 SS, 6 3B, 19 OF, 3 DH