Monday, November 06, 2006

WHERE THEY PLAYIN?

As many of you know the free agent filing period has begun. Instead of going over who filed and who didn't then speculating on where individuals might end up, I prefer to look at things in a more "general" manner. Meaning that where a player plays 81 games as a major effect on that players fantasy output/value. (For those of you might doubt this we humbly submit the names Neifi Perez in his Colorado days or Preston Wilson in his Houston/Colorado days.) In other words look over a players strengths and weaknesses and how they are effected by the new place he calls home, and don't for a minute believe a player actually uses his head and thinks things like this through on his own (Millwood in Texas ring a bell?) so the theory of players left to own devices will sign where they can be most effective is pretty much garbage. (It's all about the greenery to the majority of these guys)

Some generic examples of a win/win would be a fly ball type pitcher in San Francisco, Seattle, or Detroit. Jarrod Washburn in Seattle is an example of a player going to a place that would allow him to maximize his abilities-such as they may be (although 2006 didn't bear this out). Any player who is going to get 450 or more AB's and can hit the ball out of the infield, that signs with Houston, Philadelphia or Cincinnati would be another example of a player enhancing his fantasy value.

The trick is to know the environment a player is to be playing in (dimensions of the ballpark, left or right field wall in relation to a left or right handed batter), and stacking them against that environment. Obviously, there are players who will be fantasy gods no matter where they play, and conversely players that are going to be of little value no matter where they call home.

Specifically you think Aramis Ramirez’ value might be affected one way or the other if he was to sign in Colorado as opposed to, lets say, San Francisco? YOU BET IT WOULD.

On a non-fantasy related note, congrats to the Cardinals who once again proved the best single word that can be used to describe baseball is "You never know!"

1 Comments:

Blogger roughrider said...

hey askinstoo why don't you find real work, lets say flippen burgers at McDonalds or find a busy street corner and hold up a cardboard sign that says homeless on it. Stay off our blog idiot.

8:46 AM

 

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