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Reymond Fuentes: 2009 Bowman Draft Picks and Prospects

November 30, 2009 by kris · 1 Comment 

BDPP83, Reymond Fuentes of the Boston Red Sox, Bowman Chrome Autograph

Buy or Sell: It’s About Value…

Projected Value: High+

Finally, we’ve got some sex appeal in our autograph checklist.  Fuentes is Carlos Beltran’s nephew, or cousin, or something — Only God knows because the internet’s called him about eight different variations of “relative”.

First off Fuentes was drafted by the Red Sox out of Peurto Rico.  The team affiliation is enough to drive the price up, but we’ll have to see where this opens.

Fuentes is young (b. 1991) and fast as fuck (under 6.3 in the 60,) but his frame and already advanced swing that gives hope.  At this point, Fuentes knows how to hit the ball hard from pole to pole.  It’s fair to project at least a slight uptick in power, but for the most part we’re talking a doubles (and triples) machine.

The Red Sox paid him a good amount for the 28th spot and you’ve got to assume that he’s more than just a trade chip.  Obviously, the most important aspect of value is whether or not he plays for the Red Sox — Which, I have to assume he will.

Right now, he’s only weighing in at a buck-sixty, which leaves plenty of room for growth without sacrificing speed.

The Tristar Cards are presenting pretty awesome deals right now, and I’m buying.  Whether or not his stock rises before BDPP (a good chance w/ BB America’s Organizational Lists heading towards the American League Soon)

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Tim Wheeler: 2009 Bowman Draft Picks and Prospects

November 30, 2009 by kris · 1 Comment 

BDPP78, Tim Wheeler of the Colorado Rockies, Bowman Chrome Autograph

Buy or Sell: Probably Buying

Projected Value: Medium +

Wheeler and Brett Jackson seem to be linked at the hip: a shared hip that’s pretty athletically gifted.  Selected one spot after Jackson, Wheeler saw his draft stock slowly rise as he played out his final season.  It didn’t hurt that Tim Wheeler was willing to sign for 900K, either.

In the Northwest League, Wheeler played well enough for Baseball America to place him a couple slots below Jackson on their yearly round-up of the Short Season Leagues.

If Wheeler had slipped into the second round, beyond the prying eyes of the common-prospector, his cards might be a very solid investment piece.

As it stands, Wheeler is just an athletically gifted kid that’s worth keeping an eye on.  Everything’s there for Wheeler to develop into an above-average, everyday, outfielder for the Rockies.

There’s quite a bit of untapped power in his frame and the kid can run well.   Wheeler’s final season at Sacramento State really opened some eyes, but you’ve got to take it with a grain of salt.  Ignorant eyes will view his 1.200 OPS in the WAC as something to bust a nut over — Don’t get *too* excited.

Wheeler’s got potential though.  Better yet, Wheeler has the tools and the make-up to get a strong following.  He’s definitely capable of putting up the jaw-dropping power & speed numbers required to make it into hot-lists, and thus raise his value considerably.

As long as his prices don’t go crazy out of the gate, I’d recommend purchasing a few medium numbered refractors.

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The Marlins and Maybin

August 3, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

The Florida Marlins are stubbornly perched just five games back of the Philadelphia Phillies in the NL East, and a measly three games behind the wild-card leading San Francisco Giants.

The Marlins recent acquisition of a Nick Johnson gives them tremendous flexibility for a playoff run.  It appears as though Johnson will take up first, with Cantu moving to third. Emilio Bonifacio should split time with Chris Coghlan in left field, but both are capable of playing multiple positions, if need be.

I whole-heartedly agree with the Nick Johnson rental, but the Marlins have someone already in their system that could have provided a similar boost for the playoff run.  You guessed it, Cameron Maybin.

Unlike the majority of hard-core prospect watchers, I wasn’t enamored with Maybin to start this year, or last year, or as a Tiger.  Maybin’s always exhibited a sense of recklessness and a lack of discipline.  Defensively and at the plate, Maybin seemingly lacks the desire to capitalize on all of his natural talents, the desire to achieve greatness.

Maybin’s making a convert out of me with his stay in AAA-New Orleans, though. Prior to this year, Maybin had never spent time in AAA ball, he’d made the jump straight from AA ball in two consecutive seasons.  In 240 AAA plate appearances, Cameron Maybin’s hitting .329 with 3 home runs and six stolen bases.  This shouldn’t come as a surprise though, Maybin’s definitely been-there done-that with the power-speed combo.  What should come as a surprise is Maybin’s dedication to making each plate appearance count.  Even during Maybin’s most promising Minor League seasons, he couldn’t refrain from striking out between 25-30% of the time.  That impatient approach festered into a 37% MLB strike-out rate before Maybin was optioned early in the 2009 season.

In AAA-New Orleans, Maybin’s striking out under 20% of the time. Maybin’s also posted a 0.72 BB/K Ratio by maintaining his consistent above average walk-rate, while lowering his strike-outs.  Quite literally, Cameron Maybin has been earning his free passes rather than pitchers avoiding his strike-zone with intentional, unintentional walks.

Maybin’s continued to hit the ball hard through this transitional period; legging out 6  triples and 14 doubles to go along with his three home-runs.  Maybin does have a BABIP above .400 in New Orleans, so the .329 average isn’t completely legit, but Maybin is capable of posting a well above league-average BABIP.

As is often the case with hot young prospects, Cameron Maybin was overwhelmed by superior big-league talent.  He was quickly flustered and started pushing too hard to make a difference. Maybin’s settled down both in the batters box and mentally.  The numbers reflect a quick adjustment, and suggest that Maybin’s finally ready for the show.

Unfortunately, Florida’s probably going to have to fall out of the pennant race for Maybin to contribute regularly.  With the harem of league-average fielders that Florida’s amassed, there’s really no room for Maybin’s learning curve especially when you’re already five games back.  The curve won’t be that long, but even if it takes Maybin five games to hit his stride, that’s probably too long for a contender.

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Jose Guillen Is A Bad, Bad Man.

May 4, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

Jose Guillen is bound to be one of the more popular pick-ups on Monday after his 4 RBI Sunday afternoon against Scott Baker and the Minnesota Twins. Over the past week, Jose Guillen’s hit .357 with 3 HR and 10 RBI and has seen his Yahoo! ownership increase to 19% — Yes, Jose Guillen is a bad, bad man.  If you already know Jose’s enjoyable history, you can skip the next couple paragraphs and go directly to his fantasy analysis. Read more

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People Make Mistakes: Michael Bourn Edition.

May 3, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

Some think Cole Hamels was the 2008 World Series MVP — I don’t. No player contributed more to the Phillies winning the World Series than Michael Bourn.

The Phillies traded Bourn and a couple throw-ins to the Astros during the GM Meetings of 2007 and in turn acquired Brad Lidge and Eric Bruntlett. Lidge didn’t blow a save the entire year and Bruntlett performed marvelously in his utility role.  Do the Phillies win the World Series without Lidge or Brunlett? Do the Phillies even get to the play-offs without these two stand-outs? Read more

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Delmon Young: More Than A Feeling?

March 27, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

Derek Carty over at the Hardballtimes.com profiled Delmon Young late last year, and it’s a solid read.  It does however repeat what every fantasy owner already knows:

Young is a young guy who is a good athlete and a scout favorite—and has breakout potential on this basis—but improved numbers in 2009 will have to come from legitimate skill growth or good fortune.

youngerIn case you’re unsure of the Delmon Young story, here’s a quick recap.  Young was drafted first overall by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, way back in the year 2003, as  a standout highschooler.

Young smash-killed the ball in the low-minors as an 18 and 19 year old. During his time in the minors, Young ranked no lower than 3rd overall on the Baseball America Top-100 Prospects list.

Then the Devil Rays rushed him through Triple-A and called him up to the bigs as a 20-year old and thus began Delmon Young’s power outage.

Young’s always been young for his level, and at this point in his career people are actually starting to give up on him with good reason.  The Minnesota Twins outfield is pretty jam-packed, and Delmon Young isn’t even guaranteed a starting spot.

Gomez and Span can both play center or left, possibly even right field.  Cuddyer’s got a great arm,  and is a solid corner outfielder who should be playing in RF.  These leaves Young, and Pirdie as the 4th and 5th outfielders vying for one of the starting spots.

It looks like Kubel, who could still play outfield in an emergency, will be manning the DH spot. Right now it looks like it’s really going to come down Delmon Young and Denard Span battling for the LF job. Cuddyer isn’t the epitome of health; so Young will nab RF at-bats even if he ends up starting the season as the 4th outfielder.

With that said, there’s absolutely no statistical data that says Delmon Young’s heading for improvement.  He’s not getting unlucky, he’s not being effected by a poor park.  When things look this bad for a former top-prospect / man-child, you’ve gotta assume that their pride is going to be taking a huge hit.

Athletes, even when they’re getting paid insanely massive-jumbo-jumbo amounts of money, are still competitive as all hell.  This is why I’m predicting one of those breakouts that two-months from now everyone will say they called it.

Delmon Young is still a very young 23 years old. Absolutely nothing points to him getting better, other than the fact he’s 23 years old.

With a late round pick, why not pick someone with all of the talent in the world?  Delmon Young lacks focus, he definitely makes up for in bat-throwing ability.


As the case with all of the sleepers that I recommend based on nothing more than a gut feeling, don’t draft them too high.  You can just cut bait with Delmon Young a month into the season if he still hasn’t displayed focus and better strike-zone judgment. Even if Young remains a free-swinging enigma, he still has the possibility of succeeding by ensuring he uses those quick wrists of his.

Here’s some of that off-season MLB.com fodder that says every players in better shape and ready for a breakout season:

“I feel really good right now,” he said. “At one point my body composition had changed a lot, but my weight stayed the same. Now, since we’ve been doing more power lifting the last month, the weight has been coming off. I just feel good.”

Photos Courtesy of Keith Allison and Trev Stair, Flickr
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Matt Joyce’s Bum-Leg Prohibits Smash-Killing of Baseballs.

March 25, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

It’s almost opening day, and it’s about time to look at some roster-fillers in moderately deep leagues. I’ve always been hesitant to blabber on about early round draft picks, because for the most part you’re not going to win or lose the draft in the first 10-rounds, unless your competition is a group of no-nothing idiots.

Matt Joyce

Joyce was acquired by the Rays late last year for Edwin Jackson, in what was widely heralded as a brilliant move for the Rays. The Rays, who are stuffed full of nutritiously delicious starting pitcher depth, magically turned a 2009-arbitration eligible starting pitcher  into a power hitting right fielder with a cheap price-tag for 2 more years.

Unfortunately for the Rays, Matt Joyce has been battling a mysterious calf strain.  The MRI’s have shown it to just be a strain, but it has plagued him essentially the whole of spring training. Joyce finally did pitch hit and DH against the Yankees on Sunday, the 22nd.

Joyce was originally slated to be the Rays starting right fielder, giving the Rays one of the better defensive outfields in the game.  At this point, after missing all of camp, it’ll be interesting to see what the Rays do.  Almost all of the media outlets are reporting that there’s a better than average shot that Joyce doesn’t even start the year in the Bigs.

While I understand Joyce is a young kid who needs all the seasoning he can get, he’s still a better option in right field than anyone the Rays can throw out there. Even if we assume Joyce doesn’t play for a month, or is limited to platoon duty — what should be expected?

  1. Hits Righties
  2. Good Power
  3. Low Average
  4. Lots of Strike-outs
  5. Lots of Walks
  6. Very Solid Defense

We’re basically looking at a guy, like Adam Dunn, who possesses less fantasy value than real world value (assuming your league doesn’t use OBP or award points for BBs).

It’s going to be tough to project Joyce’s batting average this year. While he did hit a very solid .270 in triple-A before the call-up, which he followed up with a .252 AVG in Detroit; We may have a player who hits for somewhere between .220 and .240.

It’s somewhat painful projecting an optimistic-ceiling for Joyce’s batting average at .270, but it’s gotta be done.

Joyce should come in somewhere in the low-.250’s, if he’s played substantially from each side of the plate.  If Joyce is limited to platoon duty, he may emerge as a Jayson Werth-lite, posting somewhere in the neighborhood of .270ish with power.

Joyce’s consistent walk rate of 10+ percent, doesn’t negate his striking out over a quarter of the time, but it helps. If Joyce can float somewhere in the .50 BB to K rate, he’ll provide useful pop to the back-end of your fantasy line-up.

With the front of the Rays line-up solidified, it looks as though Joyce will be manning the 6 or 7th spot behind Iwamura, Crawford, Upton, Longoria, Pena and Burrell. You shouldn’t be fooled by Pena and Burrell’s low averages, as their high-OBP (both are projected above .375-OBP) will produce ample RBI opportunities for the power-hitting Joyce.

Even if Joyce bats at the tail end of the Rays line-up, he’s still in position to knock in his fair share with Barlett and Navarro manning the other two spots.  The depth in Tampa renders Joyce’s position in the batting order negligible when determining his fantasy value.  Joyce’s solid ~.35oOBP should also keep him on-base enough to score his fair share.

Assuming Joyce gets healthy, and nabs the starting gig no more than a month into the season — What should we expect?

65 to 70 of both Runs and RBIs should be in the cards, to go along with 20-25 HR power. The majority of the statistical models project Joyce below the 20-HR mark for the upcoming 2009 season, but I couldn’t disagree more.  The only thing keeping Joyce from hitting ‘taters is his playing time.  If he gets 460, or 451 AB as predicted by Zips and Oliver respectively, he’ll smash-kill the ball.

Whether or not a final line of 22HR, 68 RBI, 70 R, .245 AVG and 2 SB is useful, really depends on your league.

If it isn’t, I can guarentee you that there will at least be a few hot-streaks where Joyce is rosterable even in the shallowest leagues.  Of course a great month doesn’t make a great season.

Keep an eye out for Joyce, as Gross and Zobrist can only man that RF spot for so long.  If Joyce continues to be plagued by this injury, we’ve got a problem.  All the signs were there, and technically still are there, for a hidden gem but nothing kills a fantasy sleeper like missing Spring Training.

Assume Joyce goes for 16HR/60R/60RBI/.250 if he stays in that platoon for too long, and lower it further if his injury really lingers.  One bright spot, if you can call it that, is Joyce’s average will improve the more he’s platooned (to a ceiling of about .260 – .270, let’s not go crazy here).

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Carlos Gonzalez, CarGo – OF – Colorado Rockies

February 15, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

cargo2Carlos Gonzalez is a superior talent and will develop into a 25/25 or 35/15 player with superior defensive skills. This is of course true — IF — CarGo can get an idea of what the strike-zone is.

The sky is the limit with this guy, but the basement is not that pretty. We’re talking serial killer-type basement, with limbs in the freezer and Detroit Lions games  on a constant loop. We’re talking Wily Mo Pena + Juan Encarnacion + A Bit More Defense. 30% K-rate, and 5%-BB rate type basement.

Last year Baseball Prospectus came in with Carlos Gonzalez at 26th overall, while Baseball America had him at 22nd overall.  CarGo is a great player, but that strike-out rate and swing-rate are potential deal-breakers. Whether or not these two things are tied to skill level or just the lack of desire to improve is up for debate.

As I mentioned in the Dexter Fowler article, the Rockies outfield is crowded.  Right now, it looks like the left-field job is a toss up between Carlos Gonzalez and Seth Smith. While Gonzalez has more upside, it looks like S. Smith is more MLB-ready which I’ll get into in the next article.

Carlos Gonzalez: Statistically Speaking

So the table isn’t particularly beautiful, but it is courtesy of fangraphs.com. Open Office was unstoppable in converting 5% to .050, but it’s 9am on a Saturday so we’ll wage that war at a later point in time.

Season Team G AB PA H 1B 2B 3B HR R RBI BB SO SB CS AVG
2006 DB (A+) 104 403 452 121 61 35 4 21 82 94 30 104 15 8 0.3
2006 DB (AA) 18 61 69 13 5 6 0 2 11 5 7 12 1 0 0.213
2007 DB (AA) 120 458 499 131 79 33 3 16 63 75 32 103 9 5 0.286
2007 DB (AAA) 10 42 48 13 7 5 0 1 9 11 6 6 1 0 0.31
2008 A’s (AAA) 46 173 189 49 35 9 1 4 23 28 16 35 1 1 0.283
2008 A’s 85 302 316 73 46 22 1 4 31 26 13 81 4 1 0.242
Season Team BB% K% BB/K OBP SLG OPS ISO BABIP wRC wRAA wOBA
2006 DB (A+) 0.069 0.258 0.29 0.356 0.563 0.919 0.263 0.36 78 16.8 0.392
2006 DB (AA) 0.103 0.197 0.58 0.294 0.41 0.704 0.197 0.234 7.8 0.4 0.328
2007 DB (AA) 0.065 0.225 0.31 0.33 0.476 0.806 0.19 0.339 69.4 9.9 0.357
2007 DB (AAA) 0.125 0.143 1 0.396 0.5 0.896 0.19 0.343 8.4 2 0.392
2008 A’s (AAA) 0.085 0.202 0.46 0.344 0.416 0.76 0.133 0.336 22.8 -2.8 0.329
2008 A’s 0.041 0.268 0.16 0.273 0.361 0.634 0.119 0.318 24.9 -13.1 0.278

The Strike-Out Rate stands out, as Gonzalez constantly puts up about 25%. It’s somewhat comical that whenever there’s a small sample size warning, Gonzalez has cut down on his K-Rate. His walk rate is atrocious for someone who strikes out that much.

We’ve almost got all of the bad out of the way:  Carlos Gonzalez swings at everything, absolutely everything.  Dave Cameron over at fangraphs put together an analysis of Cargo and his absolutely ridiculous Swing Rate, and O-Swing Rate (how often does he swing at pitches outside the zone). I really can’t praise the gentlemen over at fangraphs enough for putting together smart analysis and putting together the stats in an easily readable package.

Carlos Gonzalez in the Venezuelan Winter League: A New Hope

Carlos Gonzalez Regular Season VWL numbers:

Team League AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO SB CS OBP SLG OPS
ZUL VWL 0.292 25 89 8 26 2 0 2 14 34 11 21 1 1 0.369 0.382 0.751
MLB LINK

The 21 strike-outs in 100 PA, seems about in-line with Gonzalez’s regular numbers but an 11% BB rate is a nice improvement.  When you follow it up with his playoff numbers, we might just be on to something.

Gonzalez’s Venezuelan WL Playoff Numbers

Name Team POS G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO SB CS OBP SLG AVG OPS
Carlos Gonzalez ZUL OF 14 45 5 13 3 0 2 6 22 11 13 1 0 0.439 0.489 0.289 0.927
MLB LINK

Of course there is the requisite small sample size warning, but he walked 11 times in 14 games. Maybe Carlos is starting to come due, and understand the game?

Opportunity and Final Analysis

The Rockies starting left-fielder job is about an open a competition as there is. Currently Gonzalez is listed as the starting left-fielder, but other than Brad Hawpe in RF no-one’s assured a job. (CBS seems to have the most-updated Depth Charts, why? no-one knows)

Gonzalez could hold onto the job with a strong camp, but Major League Ready Seth Smith could also nab the job.  Matt Murton was once listed as one of the Cubs’ better prospects, so technically he’s also got a shot at the job.  If Dexter Fowler breaks camp with the starting CF job, there’s a chance that Clint Hurdle could even move Ryan Spillbroghs over to left. If Spillbroghs ends up in CF, Scott Podsednik may steal the LF job as the Rockies desperately need a lead-off hitter.

There’s probably a few more possibilities, but for the most part — those are the more likely scenarios.

I have Gonzalez listed as a top-100 OF, as odds are that he’ll break camp with the job.  We all know how hitter-friendly Coors Field is, and Gonzalez has pop.  Even if Gonzalez can get his BB-Rate up to 8 or 9 percent, it’ll make a 20 percent K-Rate more palatable.

Gonzalez has about a 75 percent chance of breaking camp with the job, and I’d imagine he’d bottom out at about 350AB.  The Rockies should be looking to shop one of their young outfielders, or veterans as the depth is nutty.

Carlos Gonzalez has the opportunity to put up top-30 OF numbers if everything goes well, but a more realistic goal is top-50.

Gonzalez is one of my favourite sleepers going into 2009, but the bust potential is massive.

If you buy Cargo’s hype, then you better have a back-up plan or at least have suitable replacements on the waiver-wire.  He could be a very nice late round gamble though as there are very few players that you can nab in the very late rounds that have the potential to put up early mid-round numbers. Most of them have already been through the ringer more than a few times and everyone in your fantasy league will know their name.

If you’re in a keeper league, regardless of Gonzalez’s Baseball America and Baseball Prospectus ratings, he’s far from a sure thing.  The risk and reward is exponentially increased when you’re dealing with Gonzalez in a dynasty-type league. Devaluing Gonzalez in a dynasty league is probably a wise move as there are safer “top prospects”.

Photo Provided By Kimberly* Flickr
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Dexter Fowler – CF, OF – Colorado Rockies

February 14, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

Dexter Fowler - COL - Dave Nelson Flickr

Dexter Fowler - COL - Dave Nelson Flickr

Dexter Fowler – Centerfielder – Colorado Rockies

The Rockies have put together the best of both worlds with their outfield.  It’s stacked with average to above-average veterans that will do an admirable job filling in until the youngsters come due.

The depth allowed them to trade away one of the best corner-outfielders in the game, in Matt Holliday.

The Veterans: Scott Podsednik, Ryan Spillbroghs, and Brad Hawpe.

The Rookies: Carlos Gonzalez, Dexter Fowler, and Seth Smith.

The Inbetween-ers: Matt Murton, Chris Frey, Dan Ortmeier and Matt Miller

If you wanted to put together an outfield, this is a great way to go about doing so.  Unfortunately for fantasy owners, the Rockies outfield depth may negatively effect any single prospects fantasy value.

Dexter Fowler — Center-field-prospect-extraordinare.

Baseball Prospectus, which I generally always use as my starting point, just released their 2009 top prospect rankings/ratings.  Fowler comes in at an improved 12th overall. Sandwiched between two uber-prospects in the Marlins organization, Cameron Maybin and Mike Stanton.

SKILLS AND STATS:
Year Age Lg Level G Team R AB H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO AVG OBP SLG OPS
2005 19 Pio Rk 62 CAS 43 220 60 10 4 4 23 18 6 27 73 0.273 0.357 0.409 766
2006 20 SAL A 99 ASH 92 405 118 31 6 8 46 42 23 43 79 0.291 0.368 0.457 825
2007 21 Calif A+ 65 MOD 43 245 67 7 5 2 23 20 11 44 64 0.273 0.397 0.367 764
2008 22 Tex AA 108 TUL 92 421 141 31 9 9 64 20 8 65 89 0.335 0.431 0.515 946
22 NL MLB 13 COL 3 26 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 0.154 0.185 0.154 339

When scouts draw up a five-tool player, they draw up guys like Torii Hunter and Andruw Jones before he turned on the suck-switch.  These are the type of players that the scouts have compared Fowler to.  Defense doesn’t convert to fantasy value, so we’ll just huck that out.  While this probably lowers Fowler on the prospect list, he’s still a switch-hitting baller with speed to spare.

Much like Cameron Maybin, Fowler can steal a shit-tonne of bases if he’s given the opportunity.  The Raw speed isn’t in question — He does however need to work on his base running skills.  Luckily, getting caught stealing isn’t a negative in fantasy baseball.  The Rockies let Willy Tavares go, because even at such a young age Fowler can do everything that Tavares could.

At this point, Fowler’s power is still pretty raw and his ceiling is probably about 12-15 HR given a full-time gig.  Eventually Fowler will top out about 20 HR potential, which is just dandy for your lead-off man.  Fowler seems to understand that he’s being groomed for the CF-gig and has been using his power to pound doubles, rather than whack home-runs.

A quick note on Fowler’s picking up switch-hitting after an entire amateur career of only hitting from one side of the plate: WOW.  He’s kept his lefty-average over .275 which is darn impressive. The Gents over at baseball-intellect.com put together a nice piece on Fowler vs. Tyler Colvin — just remember, it was put together at the start of 2008 prior to Fowler’s ridiculous .946 OPS bounce-back season.

His Strike-Out Rate is a bit concerning, although he did improve on his 26% High-A rate posting a respectable 20% K-Rate in AA last year. A minor league BB-Rate of between 10-15 percent keeps his OBP at a very solid .400+

Forget about 2007, as 2006 and 2008 appear to be the real Dexter Fowler.

Opportunity

Looking at the remainder of the Rockies line-up, there’s really no typical lead-off hitter.  If Fowler gets the job, he’ll almost certainly lead the line-up off — which will result in a whole hoot of a lot of RUN opportunities.

Clint Barmes and Willy Tavares spent the majority of 2008 atop the Rockies line-up, and Tavares is in Cincinnati and Barmes may lose his job to Ian Stewart who is about as far from a lead-off hitter as you can get.

Right now, it’s looking like the Rockies can either lead off with Spillbroghs or Fowler and it’ll be interesting to see how it pans out.

Maybe Seth Smith is more Major League ready at this point, but he’s not a lead-off hitter.  Carlos Gonzalez is still swinging at everything, and striking out too much — which is unfortunate.

Watch Fowler in the pre-season, as he could use at least a few months in Triple-A.  Unfortunately with the depth the Rockies have in the OF, a slump may relegate Fowler to the minors for a few months of seasoning.

Conclusion

If you’re in a deep league, consider Fowler. His upside is equal to that of Cameron Maybin who’s been flying off draft-boards.  A slump is almost inevitable, and impatient owners will more than likely drop him. If you can afford the roster-spot, he’s definitely worth the gamble.  Even with limited at-bats in 2009, he’ll produce in at least the stolen base category.

Maybe Fowler isn’t worth a starting spot in your line-up at this point, but he should be the first guy off your bench.

Buy the Hype.

Even if he doesn’t make the club out of camp, he’s worth rostering in a 5-6 OF 12 team league, or your first, possibly second, bench spot on a 14 team 4-OF league. It’ll be an interesting fight between Gonzalez, Smith and Fowler.

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Bobby Abreu: Well Someone Has To Score Runs In Anaheim, right?

February 12, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment 

Bobby Abreu has apparently inked up a 5-million dollar, 1 year deal, which could end up being 8 million if he fulfills all of the lovely incentives contracts have now-a-days.  I’m guessing it’s your basic 500+ PA = 1 Million, 100RBI = 500K, 100 R = 500K, Curing Colo-Rectal Cancer = The Remainder.

phillenium1979 - Flickr

phillenium1979 - Flickr

You know the economy is in the tank when elderly-sluggers are agreeing to short term contracts that pay them around their current value, rather than past value.  It wasn’t that long ago when the Angels had to doll out 50 million over 5-years to nail down a 32-year old Gary Matthews Jr.

With that said, if you’re an Abreu owner or plan to become one sometime in the near future, this is probably what you were looking for. Elderly Eight-Figure Angels Attempting To Play The Outfield, is also in Disney pre-production with Danny Glover already signed on to play Bobby Abreu and Cheech Marin reportedly in talks for the role of Juan Rivera.

There’s a nice little post on fangraphs that examines where the AB are going to come from, because quite frankly I’m a bit perplexed — but whenever you can sign someone as consistent as Abreu for relatively cheap, you’ve gotta jump.

So, who’s value is affected the most?

Brandon Wood had one last shot to lose the perma-prospect, possible AAAA player, tag that comes with hitting 30 HR in AAA and following that up with a 30% K-rate and .551 OPS in the Majors.  Yes, that’s On Base Plus Slugging. I thought Wood had a shot at proving himself this year, but maybe another year concentrating solely on defense and strike-zone judgment will help him in the long run.

Gary Matthews Jr. looks like he’ll miss at least a month of the 2009 season, as he slowly and surely recovers from off-season knee surgery.  Matthews Jr. really stunk the joint up last year, batting sub-.250 with little power or speed to speak of. The signing of Abreu may actually help Matthews, allowing him time to genuinely recover.  Matthews Jr. goes from almost no fantasy value, to actually being a solid pickup once the injury bug hits or September rolls around.  Matthews Jr’s glove should keep him in the outfield when the going gets tough.

Juan Rivera just inked a 3-year 12-million dollar contract with the Angel’s this off-season, which at the time seemed like a solid move by the team. Rivera’s value is slightly decreased by the signing of Abreu, but I still think he’ll get his AB.  If Rivera can get somewhere in the neighborhood of 500 plate appearances, he’ll have value.  The previous two years have not been kind injury-wise to Rivera, but the Abreu signing doesn’t change that. What the Abreu signing does do is allow Rivera a better shot at scoring runs, or driving in runs.

Abreu is bound to bat second, there’s no way he doesn’t bat second so: Figgins, Abreu, Vladdy, Hunter, Rivera seems about right.

The Rest: Vladimir Guerrero, Torii Hunter, and the Arse End (Kendrick & Aybar/Izturis)

These gents should all benefit quite a bit with the Abreu signing.  Abreu brings a .300 AVG, and .380OBP to the table (Bill James has him at .389OBP) which should increase his, and his peers Runs Batted In. While Abreu is no longer the dude that smashed a .550 SLG percentage each and every year, he’ll still hit around .470-.480 on the SLG scale which means — Kendrick, Aybar and Figgins are going to be scoring at least 4 or 5 more runs.

The fantasy world doesn’t deal with defense, so from a purely offensive perspective — this is a great deal.  Abreu increases everyone’s value, almost completely across the board.

The Angels are aggressive by nature, but this may mean that Scoisca doesn’t give them the green quite as much.  We’re starting to get a bit trivial, but maybe take away 2 or 3 SB from each of Figgins, Aybar and Izturis.

If you expected Aybar or Kendrick to be batting second, obviously you’ve gotta downgrade them.

Onto Abreu, Bobby Abreu.

Abreu’s still going to get some beautiful pitches to hit and his eye is still going to come in handy.  Unless you think Abreu has fallen off the cliff skill-wise, you can expect similar numbers with possibly — just maybe — a slight increase in Stolen Bases.

20 HR, 100R, 100RBI, 25SB, and a 300 AVG are probably his ceiling and his basement.  The only issue is an injury issue.  When you’ve got a line-up and outfield as deep as the Angels, you’ll be given a couple days off here and there. Brandon Wood’s probably going to get some AB here and there, as will Willits.

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