Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Masters

Just when you were thinking about not taking Phil seriously at Augusta...

In my lifetime, I've learned a few things about what it takes to win at Augusta.  You need to putt well and have a superb short game.  You need to be able to shape your ball off the tee and length helps plenty.  That'll pretty much do it.  If you have three of four, you have a shot, two of four, not likely.  One or zero, you're going to need to make eagles from the pine straw.

Ok, hold the thought about what it takes to win at Augusta.

About a month ago I identified five guys who I thought had a good chance to win this week.  Let's break them down.

1.  Phil Mickelson -- Obviously has all four of the characteristics of a winnner here, including the binus of being able to make eagles out of the straw.  Was totally off his game until this week, when he went 63-65 over the weekend to crush the competition in Houston.  I bet Phil thinks he'll be wearing green to the Krispy Kreme drive thru Monday morning.  He just may be right.

2.  Tiger Woods -- His best finish since his hiatus?  His first tourney back, 4th at Augusta last here.  Obviously can play the course, the swing is the only question.  Showed flashes at Bay Hill.

3.  Luke Donald -- Not a bomber, but his weakness -- driving accuracy -- is the same as the two guys already mentioned.  Read: that can be overcome amongst the azaleas.  Donald can putt and has a world class short game.  He is also playing very well.

4.  Matt Kuchar -- If his dad was on the bag I'd like him more, but you have to like his consistency -- he shows every week -- his putter and his short game.  Let's be honest, I have no idea who can shape shots and who can't.  I just know Kuchar has major game and he's going to breakthrough soon.

5.  Nick Watney -- Watney has been the hottest player in the world so far in 2011, and he's got so much going for him at Augusta.  He can play the course, he is a great putter, and he can drive the ball well.  He's my pick to win, and I have 250 reasons why I hope it happens.

Other than my five favorties, there are others with great history at the Masters who certainly can win.  Mahan, Els, Westwood and Poulter have all had varying degrees of success here and all should play well this week.  I do like Ernie coming in a bit under the radar...he has a slew of top 10s in his history here.

Sergio may be a darkhorse.  His history here isn't great, but the pressure is completely off and he has shown some decent form so far in 2011.  He's a nice flier to take.

Most Talent
Woods
Mickelson
Kaymer
Westwood
McIlroy?

Course History
Woods
Mickelson
Singh
Els
Love

Who's Hot?
Mickelson
Watney
Kuchar
Donald
Mahan

Who's Not?
Poulter
Clark
Weir
Glover
O'Hair

My Picks
Watney
Woods
Kuchar
Mickelson
Donald
Mahan
Els
Garcia
Baddeley
Fowler

Cheers,
TFAM

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Shell Houston Open

You know what the best part of the SHO will be this week?  Not having to listen to Arnold Palmer speak or watching his mediocre grandson play mediocre golf.  Is that too harsh?  Am I the only one who could care less about Sam Saunders?  I do look forward to Spazner Levin throwing a few clubs though.  I love watching that guy, especially if I've got money on Martin Laird.

The TOUR heads to Houston this week, where Anthony Kim is thd defending champ.  A quick check of his results since his win here a year ago tell us to stay very clear of AK.  The top ranked players in the field are Westwood (two top 11s in the last two years), Mickelson (zero top 20s in six starts), Kuchar, and StrickerHunter Mahan is interesting here too.  It seems like he is close and its a matter of time before he's in the winnner's circle again.  Mahan has two MCs and two top 10s here in the last four years.

Players not on their game include Harrington, Els and Goosen, all of which may have more value in name than anything these days.  There are at least 10 guys I'd draft before either this week.

Of the lesser knowns, Steve Marino is playing well and has competed well on this course.  DJ Trahan is also going to be a trendy sleeper choice.  Francesco Molinari is here too, and is a top 20 player in the world.  He's certainly worth a look in the one and done.

Deep sleepers?  James Driscoll and Johnson WagnerDriscoll tied for 14th last year and Wagner won in 2008 after a ninth in '07.  Nice value there.  Wagner also won in Cancun in February.

Most Talent
Mickelson
Westwood
Stricker
Kuchar
Mahan

Course History
Kim
Couples
Holmes
Wagner
Stricker

Who's Hot?
Marino
Kuchar
Leishman
De Jonge
Baddeley

Who's Not?
Kim
Mickelson
Els
Villegas
Glover

My Picks
Mahan
Wagner
Westwood
Molinari
Marino

Cheers,
TFAM

Monday, March 21, 2011

Ranking the outfielders

Had my first of two auctions over the weekend.  It's a dynasty auction (we converted from a keeper league), so you get to keep your guys forever.  Obviously, lots on the line, and considering the fact I have just one Final Four team left, it's a good thing I had something to do.

My team?  Weiters, Pujols, Beckham, Longoria, Brignac, Laporta and S. Rodriguez in the infield.  J. Upton, Snider, Brantley, Borbon, Willingham and JD Drew in an admittedly weak outfield.  The starters are Greinke, Verlander, Holland, W. Davis, E. Santana and Porcello and the relievers are Broxton, Putz and C. Zambrano.

I'm very reliant on youth, and could struggle in speed and saves, but having a youthful core anchored by Pujols long term seems okay to me.

Now, you need help in the outfield.  To me, outfield and starting pitching is where you'll find most of the sleepers in your fantasy draft.  Usually, you look toward the youth, and you can steal a few guys ready to break out.  I called McCutchen last year, and I swung and missed again on BJ Upton (much like he did himself all season long).

1. R. Braun -- I think he's the surest thing of the lot.  Bounceback in order.
2. C. Gonzalez -- No question he is for real, and a threat to take over number one overall in two years.
3. C. Crawford -- Tough to rank.  Monster should help, I bet steals go down in Boston.
4. J. Upton -- He's a great bet to break out.
5. J. Hamilton -- Better, but more injury prone, than Upton.
6. A. McCutchen -- I'd just rathyer have him than the next tier.  Still upside.
7. M. Holliday -- Real safe bet to help across the board.
8. M. Kemp -- I think he can bounceback but likely won;t pay to find out.
9.  S. Choo -- Like Holliday, safe stats.
10. N. Cruz -- Last of the real high upside guys.
11. B. Upton -- Which is why I put him here.  Could leap, likely won't.  Still want him.  Sigh.
12. H. Pence -- Quietly has 75 HR and 41 SB over last three seasons.  Huge drop off to him from top tier though.
13. J. Bruce -- I can't understand why people think Heyward is better...in 2011.
14. J. Ellsbury -- Really hard to rank pure speed, but I think there is a slight dropoff to...
15. A. Rios -- Great first half, awful second.  Better than the reverse.
16. I. Suzuki -- I guess, but no thanks.
17. J. Heyward
18. J. Werth -- Probably a bargain, but be wary of ballpark, contract and lineup change.
19. M. Stanton -- He could really disappoint, and I love youth.  Just really young.
20. C. Rasmus -- Not much of a leap to .280-30-20.
21. A. Ethier -- Never much of a fan.
22. S. Victorino -- Flyin' Hawaiian keeps producing.
23. C. Granderson -- Improvement against lefties have me optimistic again.
24. D. Young -- Finally.
25. C. Young -- Ditto.
26. N. Markakis -- Is there really a 20 HR cap?
27. Adam Jones -- Betting on the come.
28. C. Quentin -- He can get back to 30+ HR and he'll come cheaper than most that can.
29. C. Hart -- I picked him up last year,  Not paying for career two month stretch.
30. D. Stubbs -- Stats look good, prospect guys are baffled.  I trust prospect guys.
31. J. Pierre
32. M. Bourn
33. B. Gardner -- Put these three here or further down, but they go in that order.
34. A. Pagan -- Less speed, more pop, less of a guarantee,
35. T. Hunter -- Aging Angels veterans,
36. V. Wells -- will not be occupying,
37. B. Abreu -- a spot in my outfield.
38. T. Snider -- Nice sleeper power prospect.  I was a year early on him last year.
39. C. Lee -- Really looking old.
40. N. Swisher

There are really about 80 draftable OFs, and I'm not listing them all, but here are the guys that didn't make the list that I find intriguing at the right price.

Manny
Soriano
Kubel
Rayburn
Coghlan
Borbon
Tabata
Maybin
Crisp
Joyce
Morrison
Willingham
Brantley
Brown
Jennings
Gordon
L. Cain

As you can see, lots of potential cheap speed options, which is why I'd shy away from the expensive one cat types.  Lots of youthful upside too in guys like Jennings, Morrison and Dom Brown.

Keep in mind Zobrist, S. Rodriguez, Bautista, and Huff qualify, but I didn't rank them due to more value at their other positions (maybe not Huff, I guess).  Prospects other than Jennings and Brown include the two best in the game -- Bryce Harper and Mike Trout, though neither will make the bigs in 2011.

Cheers,
TFAM

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Ranking the shortstops

Usually, outside of catcher in a two backstop league, shortstop is the weakest position in the draft.  For me, that normally means I'm weak at short, because you know I don't overpay for the scarcity thing.  In my two leagues (In which I have three firsts and a second in the last two seasons), I've gone both ways.  In one, I've employed Hanley Ramirez for the last two seasons...the other relied mostly on Orlando Cabrera.  One player does not a team make, and I can see myself not overpaying for mediocre stats at a scarce position again this year.

1. H. Ramirez -- Though it should be noted I see his decline in fantasy value as real as he is less inclined to steal.
2. T. Tulowitzki -- If he figures out April and May he's the NL MVP and a huge fantasy factor.
3. J. Reyes -- The risk isn't worth a 40 SB reward.  He needs 60 to make it worthwhile and he isn't doing that, as much as I like him.
4. J. Rollins -- I guess I think his HR/SB total bests Jeter's BA.
5. S. Drew -- I know he is perenially disappointing, but I'm optimistic. He's 27, and that used to mean something.
6. D. Jeter -- Not seeing a huge bounceback.
7. A. Ramirez -- .270-15-15 sounds like stats I won't pay for.
8. E. Andrus -- SBs are worth more at positions where power is absent.
9. S. Castro -- BA regression candidate.  Growing pains likely, but hang on in keeper leagues for future.
10. R. Furcal -- Health keeps him here.  He's at least eight if he plays 150.
11. R. Brignac -- The bottom fell out here.  All the rest of the guys are $1 for me.  Upside rules.
12. J. Hardy -- Power potential
13. J. Bartlett -- Hoping for '09, expecting '10.
!4. Y. Escobar
15. A. Cabrera
16. C. Pennington
17. J. Uribe
18. I. Desmond
19. M. Scu-scu-Scuatro
20. A. Escobar -- No bat in Milwaukee, no bat in KC.

Shortstop really is ugly.  I could see myself drafting Brignac or Bartlett and playing musical SS if they don't work out.  Prospects including Grant Green, Dee Gordon, Jean Segura, Billy Hamilton and Manny Machado are all at least one year away.

Cheers,
TFAM

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Expert NCAA Bracket

Just joking.  I'm farther from an expert in this thing than anything else I write on here (though it should be noted even this guy can see that UAB DOES NOT pass the eye test).  I haven't really been competitive in the bracket since the days of Kenny Anderson, Dennis Scott and Brian Oliver.  For a while I was picking the winner one year too early (Michigan State 1999 and Maryland 2001 were two of my premature calls), but I can't even do that anymore ( I picked Kansas last year).  So, why am I even publishing my picks?  I want to at least show you how great I am just in case the sun shines on this dog in March.

One thing that has become apparent to me as the quality of that talent in the NCAA has eroded do to early NBA defections is that upperclassmen win in this tournament.  It almost doesn't matter anymore how high a profile your school has, it just matters that you have experienced players in your rotation.  Kentucky couldn't win with all those Freshmen last year, and neither they or Carolina will do it this year.  Purdue would have been my easy choice all year long, but the Hummel injury squashed that.  So, which teams does that leave?  Ohio State and Notre Dame.  The Buckeyes, who start three seniors, one junior and an All-American freshman will best the Irish who may be the most unheralded great team of the year and start an amazing five seniors.

The rest of the picks...

East Region
Ohio St.
UNC
Kentucky
Syracuse

Upset Alert
Washington over UNC?

West Region
Duke
Texas
UCONN
SDSU

Upset alert
Texas over Duke

Southwest Region
Kansas
Louisville
Purdue
Notre Dame

Upset Alert
Richmond over Vandy

Southeast
PITT
Wisconsin
St. John's
Florida

Upset Alert
Utah St. over Kansas St.

Cheers,
TFAM

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Ranking the third basemen

I've gotten some suugestions to change the name of the blog back to The Fantasy Answer Man.  Apparently I have some peeps who are thinking I'm writing about home improvement?  I may switch back.  I'm just looking for something with a little less ego and a little more creativity.

And before I get to baseball, Nick Watney...look out Augusta.  I think he and Matt Kuchar are the main challengers to Mickelson and Woods.

Baseball...

Third base is certainly one of those sneaky shallow positions in fantasy.  I'm not a big position scarcity guy, as you know, but as a tiebreaker, I'd take a 3B over an OF.

1. E. Longoria -- He'll be much better in 2011, no concerns at all.  Top five overall.
2. D. Wright -- Rebounded like expected.  He'll do it again.  Safe pick.
3. A. Rodriguez -- I'd way rather have one of the top two, age becoming a factor.
4. R. Zimmerman -- Most would have him in front of A-Rod. I haven't gotten on board yet.
5. A. Beltre -- Drop off starts here, though not if he hits like he did last year.
6.  P. Sandoval -- And a bigger drop off here.  I think he recaptures the Fu.
7. J. Bautista -- Does he hit 30 HR and .250?  That seems even a bit optimistic.
8. M. Young -- Gets torn apart by sabers, but still is a useful fantasy option.
9. P. Alvarez -- You know I always go with upside.
10. A. Ramirez -- There is some sleeper potential here with a bit of health.
11. M. Reynolds -- A year ago he was borderline top 5.  This seems more realistic.
12. M. Prado -- Empty average is green peppers to me.  Gross.
13. I. Stewart -- One post-hyper I'm not so high on.
14. J. Lopez -- I prefer him as a 2B, but I think there is some sleeper potential here.
15. S. Rolen -- The bottom has fallen out.
16. C. McGehee -- Whatever happened to Mat Gamel?
17. D. Valencia -- No prospect pedigree, but upside after big 2010.
18. C. Jones -- A head-to-head headache, but roto value here.
19. M. Mora -- Does he have the gig?  The last sleeper.
20. C. Headley -- Nothing more than filler.
21. P. Polanco -- We've all ridden this train.

Don't forget about...

I think Wigginton has upside with a starting gig.  There really isn't much different about the last six or seven on the list and guys like Casey Blake or Miguel TejadaTejada will qualify for SS though.  Prospects here include the incredibly powerful Mike Moustakas, though there is a bit of Brandon Wood risk there.  Lonnie Chisenhall of Cleveland is the second best 3B prospect who will likely debut in 2011.

NCAA tomorrow, shortstops on Tuesday.

Cheers,
TFAM

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Ranking the second basemen

The big news here is that the guard has changed, with Mrs. Robinson Cano riding his batting average and Little League stadium to the top of the rankings at the position.  Chase Utley's injury is huge, and Dustin Pedroia may have already reached his peak.  Gordon Beckham is the one guy here with the chance to break the glass ceiling in 2011.

1. R. Cano -- Would have had this spot anyway, but Utley injury locks it in.
2. D. Pedroia -- The batting average helps, but 15-15 may be the ceiling.
3. R. Weeks -- Is he any more of an injury risk than Kinsler or Utley?
4. B. Phillips -- Can I say that I'm not as much of a fan of the second base pool as others?
5. C. Utley -- Dice roll if you have to draft him now.  Healthy he is number two.
6. D. Uggla -- Thirty jacks in four straight years.  Why don't I like him again?  BA spiked in 2010 too.
7. I. Kinsler -- 103 G, 9 HR, 15 SB. Sounds like Orlando Cabrera.
8. G. Beckham -- First guy on my radar.  Big second half in 2010 well documented.
9. A. Hill -- One year removed from .286 & 35 HR.
10. H. Kendrick -- I'm a sucker for post hyped post hype prospects.
11. B. Zobrist -- The steals are there even if the power is spotty.
12. M. Prado -- Empty average equals Freddy Sanchez.  I've never owned Freddy Sanchez.
13. S. Rodriguez -- Love him. Nine HR, 13 SB.  Hey, Orlando Cabrera!  Could be 15-20 with ABs.
14. K. Johnson -- I hate paying for a career month.
15. C. Figgins -- Can help in SBs, and that counts for something.
16. B. Roberts -- Nothing more than a flier with injury reports again.  We're in flier territory.
17. T. Nishioka -- Wildcard is at least somewhat interesting.
18. N. Walker -- Youth is on his side, pedigree is not.
19. D. Espinosa -- NO. THANKS.
20. T. Wigginton -- Is in Colorado now.
21. O. Hudson
22. C. Barmes -- Houston
23. F. Sanchez
24. M. Ellis
25. E. Young -- Steals if he gets ABs.

I find the Colorado situation interesting.  You have Wigginton, Ian Stewart, Eric Young, and Jose Lopez vying for time at 2B/3B.  Whichever guys get the ABs have a chance to be valuable.  Keep an eye on prospects Dustin Ackley and Brett Lawrie, who could see the show at some point in 2010 though may not see April or May.  Ackley is a top ten prospect in the game.  I also like Jean Segura of the Angels in a keeper league.


Cheers,
TFAM