Sunday, February 9, 2014

Newsletter - 2014 Post Draft

NVABL Newsletter

February 2014

Free Agent Draft

The draft was held on January 26th with 10 managers present and 2 teams without managers.  Heartfelt appreciation goes out to those who helped draft for the manager-less teams.  Walt and Steve drafted for the Vermont franchise.  Walt’s brother Jerry drafted for the Arlington franchise.  Unless Walt has another brother, this is the one we met on the NVABL baseball trip that Walt, Jim Allen from the Kansas City Monarchs (now Columbia Pike Cubs?), and myself took to see games in Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Milwaukee, visiting Travis in Milwaukee to get some games in vs. the Homestead Grays franchise which is now the Roswell Greys.  Excellent hamburgers were consumed with Jerry prior to the game at Frank and Irma’s restaurant in downtown Pittsburgh.  Walt, please forward this email to Jerry so that he can know we appreciated his help.


To see the major direction the teams went this year, let’s look at the players chosen in the first two rounds.

Round 1

1)     Delphi passes on Jose Fernandez and uses their Hamner pick to take Wil Myers, a 23 year old outfielder of the Tampa Bay Rays.  Wil posted a solid card this year after his rookie season.  He is an OF-2 with Arm 33, steal grade F-28, power numbers 1-0-0-0-7, with 14 on base numbers, and 0/-2 splits.  Wil has 59 games of availability.  Wil played 4 years in the minor leagues, posting an OPS of 1.106 in the 2009 developmental leagues, .934 in 2010 single A, and in 2011 double A slipped a bit with his power but kept his OBP up at .353 for an OPS of .745.  In 2012 he rebounded with OPS of 1.146 in double A and .932 in AAA.  In 2013 he had OPS of .876 in AAA and .831 in the big show.  His minors totals show OBP of .389, Slugging of .522 and an average of 28 home runs, 115 RBIs, 102 runs, 13 stolen bases per 17 attempts, 85 walks, and 149 strikeouts per 162 games played.
2)     Washington takes Jose Fernandez, the 21 year old starting pitcher from Cuba who plays for the Florida Marlins.  For this year, Jose has a 18xyg grade with 16 starts of availability.  For the Marlins he had an ERA of 2.19 in 28 games, with 3.0 walks and 9.7 strikeouts per 9 innings pitched.  In the minors he was developed in a hurry, pitching 1 game for 2 innings at the developmental league level, then 1 game for 2.1 innings in single A at the age of 19.  At the age of 20 he pitched 25 games at the single A level with an ERA of 2.19 with 2.4 walks and 10.6 walks per 9 innings.  This young guy is looking like he could become a modern day version of Pedro Martinez, who had a career of 2.4 walks and 10 strikeouts per 9 innings.
With these first two choices we see George and Bart being able to enjoy the luxury of those who can pick excellent prospects who will be immediately productive their first year in the NVABL.
3)     Columbia Pike took Jurickson Profar, a 21 year old second baseman from the Texas Rangers.  Profar’s card is not very usable after posting an OPS of .645 in his first 94 MLB games over the last 2 years, but his minors totals show OBP of .367 and slugging of .449 with OPS of .816 in 341 games.  His stats in the minors average out to 16 home runs, 85 RBIs, 110 runs, 25 stolen bases per 33 attempts, 86 walks, and 70 strikeouts per 162 games played.  In the minors he did pretty well with fielding, with percentage of .987 with a range factor of 4.78.
This pick signals Steve’s intent to not attempt to make the playoffs in 2014, but rather pick the best prospects he can get.
4)     Columbia Pike took Los Angeles Dodgers phenom Yasiel Puig, the 23 year old outfielder from Cuba.  In the minors he posted OPS of 1.016.  His major league totals last year would translate to 29 home runs, 65 RBIs, 102 runs, 17 stolen bases per 30 attempts, 56 walks, and 151 strikeouts per 162 games played.  Odd the number of RBI’s.  The Dodger’s need to figure out how to better use this guy, or maybe he just strikes out too much with runners on base and needs to hone his raw talents.  He’s an OF-2 with an arm of 38.  That arm is always going to be incredible, and if Steve keeps him an entire career it will be a plus factor.  I expect OF-3 with double ones to be in his future as well.  While being fast and un-disciplined on the base paths and in his Mercedes, he does have star power and potential.  You’ve got to love the number 66 on the back of his uniform.
5)     Sterling picked Garrit Cole, a 9yzg starting pitcher this year.  Walt’s sweet tooth for all things Pittsburgh shows with this pick, as Gerrit is a 23 year old prospect for the Pirates.  He had 19 starts last year with an ERA of 3.22.  Prior to that he pitched basically a full season in the minors, with a 2.84 ERA and 183 strikeouts in 200 innings.  He is clearly improving in 3 important categories, posting better numbers in the majors than the minors with 2.1 walks and 7.6 strikeouts per 9 innings pitched with 1.49 ground outs per 1 fly out posted.
Walt signals to us with this pick that he doesn’t think he’ll be able to be in contention this year, and to hope for the future.
6)     Jerry picked Shelby Miller for Arlington.  He is a 13x right handed starting pitcher with 17 starts available.  A nice complement to the 2 15z starters they already had.  This was the first of many practical picks for Arlington, filling holes with young players.  Miller is a 23 year old from the St. Louis Cardinals.  This was his rookie year and he finished 15-9 with an 3.06 ERA.  The 61 walks and 185 strikeouts in 187 innings are strong numbers by an X pitcher who is not in danger of a W.  In the minor leagues he pitched 3 full seasons and had similar numbers of walks but more strikeouts.  His ERA in the minors was 3.73, so that kind of raises a flag that he was not missing a lot of bats with raw stuff, but hopefully he is learning to be a smarter pitcher. 
7)     Roswell picked Michael Wacha, wunderkind rookie from the St. Louis Cardinals.  He really didn’t pitch much until August but had a special October in which he started and won 5 consecutive playoff games until losing the final game of the world series to Boston.  Wacha is 22 years old and has an 11X grade for Roswell.  His minors numbers were good, having only played 1 year and posting a 2.29 ERA with 23 walks and 113 strikeouts in 106 innings.  Those are XYZ level numbers so that is a very promising sign that the youngster is able to control his pitches while possessing overpowering stuff.  His batting average against in the minors was .193 and in the majors was .219.  With this pick Bob gave up a little bit this year in hopes of landing a starter who will help him for many years.  Not a bad pick, but not the kind of guy you are going to win a title with this year and perhaps wisely so, given the early lead Oakton and Stonehenge seem to have jumped out to.
8)     Now it was the tandem’s turn to pick for Vermont and they took Julio Teheran, at 12xz with 17 starts a very good choice.  The 23 year old brave from Atlanta was a rookie this year.  He pitched 211 2/3 innings and was 14-8 with a 3.20 ERA.  Prior to that as a 19 and 20 year old he pitched 183 innings at single A level, 40 innings at double A, and 2 full seasons at the AAA level, and posted a 3.50 ERA overall in the minors.  His 153 walks and 462 strikeouts in 514 2/3 innings in the  minors point to a young man who is getting a lot of experience and has xz level power and control.  It also raises a flag that the Braves are bringing him along extremely quickly, and young arms usually do not hold up to a heavy workload.
9)     With the 9th pick, Chris chose Mark Melancon, a 28 year old reliever from the Pittsburgh Pirates, and the first reliever taken in the draft.  Melancon brings a 22*xzh grade with 40 innings to the Springfield franchise which needed a closer.  Later on in the 3rd round, Chris would stumble into an even better closer in 23*xyzh Louis Coleman, who only has 20 innings of availability.  Around this time Chris began to make little comments that this was not meant to be his year.  Nice “psy-ops”, but we all know Springfield is going to the playoffs and unless they trade one or both of these guys, they will be a deadly team to have to face if you ever get down.
10)  With this pick I took Yan Gomes, the 26 year old catcher from Cleveland who has an OPS of .826 with a defensive rating of C-8 and arm of +5.  In my opinion he was the best catcher available in the draft.  I was facing a season with Saltalalmachia at C-6 Th-1 if I didn’t draft a catcher.  Gomes was number 2 on my list behind Teheran, who I projected to possibly fall to my pick, but I am very pleased to have Gomes.  In fact, when I possessed the #4 overall pick of the draft I felt that Gomes might be my choice there, but with some of your advice I concluded it was a bit early for him which motivated me to trade down and see if I could pick up an extra second round pick while still drafting Gomes.  It did work out that way, luckily.  Occoquan’s strategy in the pre-season was to multiply who I could get for Hanley Ramirez and become a stronger playoff team than if I kept Hanley.  Dwight got the best shortstop in the league this year, he had plenty of other good players to complement him, as well as a lot of draft picks, so he could afford it.  In exchange for Hanley, (who I picked up for a 5th round pick), I ended up with Gomes, 39 year old Joe Nathan with a 23*xyh rating and 40 innings, 25 year old Mike Leake of Cincinnati with an 11z grade and 17 starts, and 23 year old lefty Patrick Corbin of Arizona, who has  a 12y grade and 18 starts.  I would do it again, I think Dwight has a chance for the plaque and a few more solid years with Hanley, but I like the quality of the players I received in return.  The owner who benefited last year with a plaque but lost out the most this year was Chad, who lost Hanley and a 9th for supplemental round sensation Eric  Chavez and Sterling 5th which he flipped to Springfield as a throw in to the deal for Medlen and LaRoche which contributed greatly to him becoming the league champion.  Springfield flipped STE #5 along with SPR #7 for Derek Jeter.  This made no sense at all for the youthful direction that Springfield has been going, and indeed Jeter ended up being a cut in the draft this year, while STE #5 was used by Washington to pick up Jhonny Peralta with his .815 ops as a replacement shortstop .
11)  Bob used Oakton’s pick to draft Alex Cobb for Roswell.  Cobb is a 26 year old starter for Tampa Bay with a 14x grade and 12 starts of availability.  With this pick, Roswell gets a very good card to use in the playoffs as his 3rd starter.  Already possessing an ace level starter in 16y Greinke, Bob now shifts away from prospects to picking up the best starters available to complement him and make a run for the playoffs.  The trade of closer Scott Atchinson last year to Oakton looms huge for Roswell and hurts Oakton somewhat this year.  From that trade Roswell ended up using the OAK#1, OAK#4, and OAK#9 picks to nab Cobb, double one outfielder Evan Gattis, and the useful J-1 card of Will Venable, OF 2, 1-0-0-0-11 numbers, with D-30 steal grade and 0/-2 splits, while Atchinson ended up being a cut.
12)  With the last pick of the first round Springfield took 26 year old catcher Jason Castro from Houston.  Having seen the departure of Yan Gomes two picks earlier Chris wasted no time in securing an everyday catcher.  Castro has slightly better offensive numbers than Gomes, with 1-5-6-6 power compared with 1-0-0-0, but Gomes has the better defensive arm as Castro has a throw rating of 0.

Round 2

In the second round the picks were:
1)     Delphi taking 26 year old Hyun-Jin Ryu, a 12yz lefty with 17 starts.
2)     Washington taking set up man Luke Hochevar, a 19*kz righty with 40 innings.
3)     Stonehenge taking Tanner Roark, and this was huge for Dwight.  He is a 16yzh righty starter who is 27 years old and just coming up with the Nationals.  He only has 3 starts of availability for Dwight but he will be deadly in the playoffs.  In the minors he pitched 658 innings and has always had good control and strikeout numbers.
4)     Columbia Pike picked up excellent prospect 23 year old Zach Wheeler of the Mets who was the reward for giving up Carlos Beltran to the Giants in the middle of a playoff race.  In our league Steve gave up Joe Nathan for Wheeler.  At the time Wheeler was drafted, the best relievers Occoquan might have taken instead of Nathan were Luis Avilan, 22*h lefty with 40 innings, Drew Smyly 16*xyzg lefty with 50 innings,  the before mentioned 23*xyzh righty Louis Coleman with 20 innings, Dan Otero, 19*zh righty with 30 innings, etc.  Those are pretty close in grade and availability to what Nathan was, but more so I lost the opportunity to draft Scooter Gennett, Josh Donaldson, or Jose Iglesias, all players I probably needed more than Nathan.  To me it was really hard to pin down where Iglesias would fall, I was hoping he would be around for me in the 4th round.  Now that Chad as spent a 2nd on him, there is really no hope for anyone needing a shortstop to get him for anything less than a 1st, and who would be crazy enough to do that?  Then again, his name did cross my mind when I was considering what to do with OCC #1 so maybe some of us are crazy enough to do that if Chad continues his mode of sell, sell, sell.
5)     Dwight decides to go the platoon route for his 2B needs, drafting Scooter Gennett a -22/4 2B-7 with OPS of .835, and later in the 7th round taking Jordy Mercer, a 17/-4 2B-7 with OPS of .771.  Now those have to be the biggest split differentials for a platoon that we have ever seen!
6)     Jerry takes 12y righty starter Andrew Cashner for Arlington.  There is no rest for those desiring usable cards if Jerry is picking ahead of you.
7)     Roswell took Luis Avilan, a 22*h lefty mentioned above.  Again we see here that Bob is making good choices for success in the playoffs with the rest of his picks.
8)     For Vermont, Steve and Walt choose Josh Donaldson, an interesting card at J-0, 3B-4, .883 ops, and splits at 6/-4.  This was a position I needed to fill to replace A-Rod.  This was a sad moment when I heard Josh Donaldson’s name called in the second round.  Donaldson is more than just the best 3B card in the draft, he is a 28 year old rookie prospect from the Oakland Athletics.  In the end I had to use my 6th round pick to settle for 34 year old Juan Uribe and his .769 OPS.
9)     Springfield took Drew Smyly, 16*xyzg lefty with 50 innings.  I love this pick.  Having lefties of that caliber in your bullpen the whole season gives Chris a lot of flexibility to torment us with the platoon matchups, and this is one of the techniques that has brought him so much success over the years.
10)  Seacoast drafted Jose Iglesias, the only SS-9 in the draft who could hit a little bit.  Sigh.  It’s going to be a long year for me going with SS-8 Asdrubal Cabrera who carries an OPS of.701 compared to .735 for Iglesias.  The 9 makes the difference.  It depresses me just thinking about this.  It’s what George calls having to live with your choices from the past, and the reason he didn’t want us to be able to trade entire franchises.  I’m reviewing what I’ve written so far and feeling very bad about the lambasting I’m about to give Chad in the next paragraph, so I want to add a couple of sentences and say Chad, I think Iglesias was a good pick for you at this point in the draft.    He can hit and run well using  0-0-7-7-7-7 numbers with 13 on base numbers and that is a rare thing in a good defensive shortstop. 
11)  What?  Seacoast drafts twice in the second round after winning the championship?  This is really the pick he took from Larry in exchange for 29*kwg lefty Kevin Siegrist.  What Chad got for that is Martin Perez, a 10 grade lefty with 11 starts.  He’s going to lose 10 of those starts in our league but who’s counting when you are the favorite for winning the Hamner trophy?  What matters most is the nice picks you are going to be getting next year.  Ok, I’m no expert, really bad at prospect picking, I bow to Larry, Walt, and probably everyone else in the league in that department, but let’s look at this pick and ask ourselves, was there no better prospect?   Here are the attributes:
a.     22 years old.  NICE!  A positive, he’s not all negative.
b.     6’0” 190 lbs, hardly your prototypical starting pitcher these days.
c.     Plays in the Texas ballpark.  Red flag for a pitcher, but teams can change.
d.      Gave up a .274 batting average in the majors and .271 in minors.  Not something to be proud of.
e.     He’s already pitched 583 2/3 innings in the minors.  They started him young and didn’t let up.  Red flag.
f.      Strikeouts are not too bad in the minors, with 492.  But in the majors he has 109 in 162 innings.  This guy’s starting to look like Barry Zito.  Maybe he’ll win a Cy Young.
g.     3.6 walks per 9 in the minors.  2.9 in the majors.  You need to be down around 2.0 or below to get a Z.  Not impressive so far, but he’s learning and headed in the right direction.
h.     He’s a ground ball pitcher.  Check!  That’s a another positive.  1.46 and 1.22 ground ball outs to fly ball outs ratios in the minors and majors.
i.      In June he had 2 starts and an ERA of 1.32 with batting average against of .229.  In July they figured him out and hit .281 against him, for an ERA of 4.81.  In August he made adjustments and brought the batting average and ERA back down.  In September they figured him out.  He’s 22 and it’s an ongoing battle.  Where it will end I don’t know.
How’s this as an alternative?  How about Jedd Gyorko?  Snapped up by Jerry in the 3rd round.  Sorry Chad for giving so much attention to this spot, but you are the plaque winner!  You can smile all the way to the bank while the rest of us take the few opportunities for pot shots that we get.   If I’m wrong on this and Perez is a good prospect you all can call me out on being a dummy.
12)  Springfield drafted Ervin Santana, a 12yz righty with 18 starts.  Why he is available this late is he is 31 and has a career ERA of 4.19.  But a very usable card that is going to help propel Springfield into the playoffs despite Chris’ worst protests to the contrary.

Post Draft Rankings and Predictions

I’ve run some new rankings of the teams.  I used the same method as last month’s newsletter, in which I picked the best players for each position on each team and ranked them vs. the other team’s players.  The rankings were based mostly on grades for pitchers and OPS for hitters.  A lot of value was placed on Z’s, H’s and strikeout letters.  A lot subtracted for W’s.  Good defense was highly valued for hitters.  I ignored availability mostly, other than disqualifying all J-4 xb hitters for consideration in the rankings.  Ignoring availability skews the results.  What you will see in the regular season will be different from what you see here.  These rankings are geared more towards what chances people currently would have in the playoffs if we went through the entire season with no trades.  Also the rankings are extremely close, highly subjective, and just one person’s opinion.  In many cases the ranking was so close that the difference between the number 2 ranked player and the number 8th ranked player was miniscule.  With small differences enough of the final averages were changed that I have to say I’m embarrassed that I’m ranking myself 3rd and really the 6 active teams below me, Springfield, Roswell, Washington, Sterling, and Delphi all might have better teams than Occoquan.  We are bunched in the middle, while Oakton and Stonehenge are on top and Columbia Pike and Seacoast appear to be preparing their teams for next year.




Results of the Rankings

See the spreadsheet attached to the email for more details.  This time, since it’s post draft, I’m including all the raw numbers.  I’m holding off on talking about splits and strategy on teams, that’s for each of us to figure out.  Here are the rankings with pre-draft rankings in parenthesis, so we can see who improved and digressed in the draft.

Overall Rankings

Pitching Rankings

Hitter Rankings

OAK         1 (1)
OAK         1 (2)
OAK         1 (1)
STO          2 (3)
OCC         2 (3)
STO          2 (2)
OCC         3 (7)
STO          3 (5)
STE           3 (3)
SPR          4 (2)
SPR          4 (1)
VMT        4 (6)
VMT        5 (5)
ROS         5 (10)
DEL          5 (4)
ROS         6 (11)
WAS        6 (9)
SEA          6 (11)
WAS        7 (8)
VMT        7 (6)
OCC         7 (9)
STE           8 (4)
ARL          8 (7)
ARL          tie (5)
ARL          9 (6)
DEL          9 (11)
SPR          9 (7)
DEL          10 (9)
STE           10 (4)
ROS         10 (12)
CPC         11 (10)
CPC         11 (8)
CPC         tie (10)
SEA          12 (12)
SEA          12 (12)
WAS        12 (8)


2014 Team Scoops

1)   Oakton

Oakton is ranked first in pitching and first in hitting.  Larry has gone all in this year, do or die.  The last two or three years of giving up future draft picks will eventually take it’s toll on this dynasty and Larry will return to what he does best, building for the future.  For now though, for one glorious season, it’s going to be pedal to the metal.  If you want to keep up, you will need to do likewise.  Oakton was able to move up from 2nd in pitching to first in pitching by acquiring Siegrist and Jimenez in a pre-draft trade, then nabbing Rex Brothers, a 22*xyw lefty with a huge 40 innings in the 4th round.  By drafting a Ryan Raburn with the STO #5 pick in the 5th round, Larry acquired his 4th player with OPS above .900 and prevented Stonehenge from catching him in the hitting department.  I expect the dice deities to make sure Larry wins the plaque this year, as a make up for so many in the past they did not allow him to win.  But if it’s not meant to be, then what are his weaknesses?  His two weakest players in the field are Brian McCann and Brandon Moss, but they are ranked 6th and 6th, which is top half of the league.  McCann’s arm isn’t going to discourage base stealers, but the trade for Ryan Hanigan, a C9 Th. 6 catcher will take care of them in late innings when it matters most.  The only real weakness I see on this team is the decision to rely on pitchers with a W.  Five of Larry’s top ten pitchers have W’s, and he leads the league in this category.  In the playoffs those high graded W’s can be deadly, and in either direction.  They can shut a team down with no harm done, or they can give up the base runner who becomes the winning run in a close game.  I think the most devastating effect of a role of 35 with a W on the mound is allowing your opponent 4 or sometimes 5 outs, and against playoff level teams when dice can be fickle, this is not something you would ordinarily want to take a chance on.  I’m not sure why Larry did it, he must think this is the last year he has a chance for a while.

2) Stonehenge

 Dwight had a brilliant draft with the picks he had and did everything in his power to catch Oakton.  The drafting of Tanner Roark with the 15th overall pick was the right thing to do.  It gives Stonehenge a 16yzh righty to fit into the number two slot in the playoffs.  That and other picks elevated Dwight’s pitching staff from the number 3 ranking to 2nd, keeping pace with Larry’s improvements.  This is a solid team that is worthy of winning the plaque, without any more trades.  With trades, who knows, it can only get better.  Where to improve?  Well Carp helped improve the outfield but having your third best OF with an OPS of only .748 is a weakness for a top tier team.  Dwight has unusable surplus in the 1B and DH slots, 3 players above .900 and only two of them can play at a time, so perhaps one of them will be moved at little cost to Dwight’s team this year.  Santana is a bigger defensive liability for the Druids than McCann was for the Aviators, but here again we see an answer in C-9 Th. 6 A.J. Ellis.  Those B’s C’s and D’s people have will prove valuable this year for early inning theft, as there are so many catchers floating around with Arms of 5 and 6 that will be in for the late innings.  Dwight this year made a strategic decision to rely on platoons to fill the second base position.  That’s not so bad, but it’s a headache to manage vs. teams that can bring 3 lefties and 4 righty relievers to the playoffs.  Overall this team has a lot of flexibility here to stagger the splits in the lineups to mitigate the problem.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 











3) Occoquan

This team is only jumping up to third place in the pre-season rankings due to the quirk in the rating system that favors high graded pitching without as much regard to availability as should probably be given.  Specifically, it was the draft pick ups of 14yh righty Tyler Thornburg in the 4th round and  16xz lefty James Paxton in the 7th round that made this starting rotation in the playoffs viable at very little cost.  This coupled with already having a strong bullpen helped Occoquan jump from 3rd to 2nd in the pitching rankings.  But this is perhaps a mirage.  The lack of availability in the regular season will result in a poorer seeding in the playoffs than the teams like Springfield, Roswell and Washington who are currently ranked below them, and the Ospreys will by having to face the toughest teams possible in every round.  On the bright side, Yan Gomes will be a solid addition for 59 games at catcher, and possibly future years.  A lot of the draft picks were young players who hopefully will keep this team in the hunt for years to come.  The biggest weakness is in the outfield, where no one is really very good, and there doesn’t seem to be any way to fix it with trades, but we will see who becomes available.

4) Springfield

This team dropped from 2nd to 4th after the draft but again it is a fluke due to tiny variations in the comparisons.  I really like the first 5 picks Chris made, not so much the picks of Cody Ross in the 6th and Gaby Sanchez in the 8th.  These guys have proven to be replacement level players at best, and there were people available at the positions that would help the team more.  Like Dwight, this was a clear play at relying on the platoon, and I think we’ve learned over the years that a lot of bullpen can carve to pieces a lot of platoon.  You either have the choice of pinch hitting now or later, you can’t cover every substitution and you can get burned in extra innings games.  But we’ll see, Chris has the skill to pull it off.

5) Vermont

The solid drafting by Steve and Walt preserved this team’s position in the 5th spot.  I have no desire to talk about Vermont and Arlington since they don’t appear to be headed towards the playoffs, but I will say this: all 10 managers in this league are really really good managers with a lot of experience.  These franchises will be tough opponents no matter who you need to face on the other side of the dice table.  You will see a lot more split series with them than anything else you see.  No one is going to cake walk over these teams.

6) Roswell

I liked Bob’s draft quite a bit for the way he improved his team from 11th to 6th.  This is the most improved team after the draft.  The one guy I felt was an under draft for this year was Wacha in the first round, but this is how Larry built his dynasty, settling for 5 years of drafting guys who would not contribute for a few years.   After Wacha, the rest of the draft improved this team a lot.  The biggest room for improvement would be the outfield, so we’ll see what happens if someone good becomes available for trade.

7) Washington

The Senators improved their position from 8th place to 7th place from the draft.  This is what Bart does every year.  Washington is likely to be a playoff team but oh my, how sweet that future could be if Fernandez proves to be as good as I think he will be.  A place Washington could benefit to upgrade would be to pick up another high grade starter, perhaps with a Z.  Also the hitting is looking rather tepid in 2 of the 3 outfielders, but these guys are OF-3’s and that makes up for a lot.  As always, Bart will be one of the tougher managers to face and will squeeze every last drop of success out of the team.

8) Sterling

Sterling was in position to be a shoo-in for the playoffs prior to the draft, but they tended to draft rather for future years than for this year.  See the picks he made of Garrit Cole, Travis d’Arnaud, and Carlos Martinez and you see picks that will not help at all this year.  Sterling is not strong in starting pitching, so so in the bullpen, and weak at Shortstop and (dare we say it for this team), first base.  Walt holds a lot of key players that may become available throughout the year.  Mauer’s would be the first one people could lust after.  The pirates are pretty strong in the outfield also.  A lot of teams need outfield help and Walt has already made overtures in that direction, so perk your ears up guys and see if you can figure out what kind of trade could be made.  I don’t expect this team to make the playoffs, I think they are packing it in this year.  Delphi has a better chance.  It’s just that Sterling had such a highly ranked team during their last dynasty it has taken a long, long time for them to drop from the top.

9) Arlington

I don’t want to talk about this team.  Jerry’s drafting was brilliant, and heartbreaking for the rest of us.  They have strengths.  The number one ranked first basemen in the league.  Two 15z right handed starters.  But their strengths and weaknesses have no bearing on this year since it will be a long, long time before anyone can trade with them, and the team is good enough if you take 5 of 8 from the substitute managers you are going to be doing well.

10) Delphi

George made wise draft choices that will build for the future as well as being useful this year.  This team could easily make the playoffs.  Their weakness is in pitching being less strong than most teams, rather than hitting.  They are the 5th best team in the league in hitting.  As usual George didn’t buy into a bullpen very much.  He doesn’t seem to care about having a deep bullpen and often brings only 5 relievers to a series, giving up a few extra runs per series by the starters.  If George’s team falters and he decides to pack it in, there is lots of talent that may become available in July.  He has solid outfielders for one thing, and as I’ve said, many teams need help there.  If anything ever happened to David Wright, watch out!  He’s the number 2 ranked 3B behind Cabrera, and he is 31 now.  If a 3B of that caliber were suddenly thrust onto the market, he could be an earthquake in the landscape, a game changer.  He’s 3B-5, with 1-0-0-0-11 strength, 15 on base numbers, and E-33 on the steal grade.  The 7/-5 splits are capable of carving up strong lefty starters, and Larry is relying on 2 of them this year.

11) Columbia Pike

The Cubs are the first of the two teams that are not seriously trying to make the playoffs this year.  Steve and Walt were very good at drafting guys for Vermont that would hurt the rest of us, and many of Steve’s picks for his Cubs franchise were great cards, they were also more on the side of being prospect cards than one year cards.  The dead giveaway is the drafting of Jurickson Profar with the #3 overall pick.  Look at his card, this is not the stuff playoff teams are made of.  Maybe in the future.  Not now.  So what does Steve have that might be plundered?  Any older players with good cards that might not fit into his future if they falter in the MLB?  Well guys like Cliff Lee and Carlos Quentin come to mind.  Dustin Pedroia, will he ever not be a Cub?  2B-9 with OPS of .787, I would take that.  He’s 30.  He’ll probably be good about 3 more years, he’s quick as a cat, but at some point that will begin to erode.  The guy I’m intrigued with is Timmy Lincecum.  He’s 29 and at 5x not going to help anyone.  His arm speed has disappeared.  But he could have a nice card next year.  Word out on the left coast is this is the year he has finally realized he is not going to ever overpower anyone again, and he is working on finesse and reinventing himself as a pitcher.  Back off the speed from 92 down to 90, place the ball, avoid walks, and fool guys with location, it can go a long way.  Several years of 12-13 grades with Z’s might be in his future.

12) Seacoast

The Wayfarers signaled their intentions before a game was even played, drafting guys they would immediately trade.  I like this style over the long term dynasty building techniques.  It’s flashy.  It’s exciting.  These draft picks are precious currency, and give Chad a lot of early ones in any given year and he’ll win another plaque.  His trading pedigree is right up there now also.  He becomes more and more dangerous as an opponent each year we play.  I still have questions about his judgement in the players he kept, like Keppinger, and Dickey.  Both are well over 30 and had careers with spotty cards.  The probability of getting future value out of those guys is low enough that you wonder if their roster spots might be better used up on younger prospects.  Looking for someone from this team who will be available and might help you?  Look at Eric Chavez.  As well as the 3 low grade Z relievers that are already on the trade block, if you don’t already have enough of that type of card.  If anyone is able to pry one of the outfielders out of Chad’s hands that would be something that turns this league upside down.

Summary

I see the three tiers of active teams being:
Oakton and Stonehenge are true contenders.  Oakton’s average player ranking is 3rd out of 12 and Stonhenge’s is 4 out of 12.
Occoquan, Springfield, Roswell, Washington, Sterling, and Delphi all might make the playoffs.  Their average player rankings are around 6 out of 12.  Four of those six will go.  Probably not Sterling, he seems to be giving up on this year already, with his draft picks.  So 4 out of 5 have a chance.  Whoever else ends up not winning many games early will pack it in and trade away all kinds of talent.  It could easily be Occoquan, you have fair warning.
Columbia Pike and Seacoast are actively building for the future.  They each have a few players left who might be plundered as the season goes on.
Looking at these rankings vs. pre-draft, I feel that Springfield lost a tad to become a mid-tier team, and Roswell stormed back into playoff position with a strong draft.
Good luck everyone, it’s nice competing with guys as knowledgeable as you all.