Posts Tagged ‘Andrew Bailey’

Oakland Trades Andrew Bailey to Boston for 3 Players

The Oakland Athletics continued to remake their pitching staff as they rebuild with an eye on the future by dealing closer Andrew Bailey to the Boston Red Sox along with outfielder Ryan Sweeney for outfielder Josh Reddick, minor league catcher Miles Head and pitcher Raul Alcantara. The deal fills a hole in the Red Sox bullpen that Bailey will fill in the 9th inning. Recently acquired closer Mark Melancon will now move to a set up role in the 8th inning, making him a worthwhile handcuff to Bailey given Bailey’s injury history and the fact he has yet to post a 30 save season in his major league career. The left-handed hitting Sweeney is the lead candidate to start in right field in Boston, likely as part of a platoon role but he has little fantasy value even in AL-0nly formats with two home runs in his last 567 at bats.

Reddick will start in right field for the Oakland A’s and should hit close to the middle of the order given the lack of offensive talent in the lineup. Reddick has a .248 batting average in 375 major league at bats with 10 home runs and 37 RBI. Reddick turns 25 in February and will post a low average with some power which gives him value in AL-only leagues. Since he was expected to start for the Red Sox before being traded, there is really no change to his fantasy value except for less runs and RBI playing in a weaker lineup.

For fantasy baseball purposes, the biggest ramifications is in the Oakland bullpen which will now have a new closer in 2012. Veteran Brian Fuentes is still under contact for the A’s and posted 12 saves in 2011 filling in for Bailey and will see opportunities in the closer role unless he is dealt as part of the off-season purging. Grant Balfour will also see some chances to close after posting two consecutive seasons of a sub 2.50 ERA and a 1.10 WHIP. He has averaged closed to a strikeout per inning and his batting average against dropped for a third consecutive season.

2011 Fantasy Baseball Closer Report – Week 13

Houston Astros relief pitcher Brandon Lyon will miss the rest of the season with an injury to his pitching arm that will require surgery. Mark Melancon figures to remain as closer for the rest of the season which gives him a nice bump in value for his owners. Melancon has picked up three saves in June giving him six for the season to go with a 1.62 ERA and a 1.14 WHIP ratio.

J.J. Putz has struggled in June for the Arizona Diamondbacks with three blown saves and opposing hitters are batting .310 against him, leading to a 6.43 ERA and a 1.29 WHIP. Whether you own Putz or not, I would be grabbing David Hernandez on your reserve if you are in need of saves.

Fernando Salas hit a bump in the road for the St. Louis Cardinals this past week blowing a save and taking a loss. Salas has a 5.79 ERA (thanks to two home runs this month) and a 1.07 WHIP in June. With Eduardo Sanchez on the disabled list, Mitchell Boggs could be back in the mix for some save chances if Salas struggles. Boggs has worked 5 2/3 scoreless innings since coming back from the minor leagues.

No issues so far for closer Andrew Bailey of the Oakland Athletics in his return from injury as he has been a perfect 4-for-4 in save chances. Bailey’s numbers for 2011 have been right in line with previous seasons.

Week 12 Closer Stats – American League Saves:

Matt Capps – 3
Andrew Bailey – 3
Jordan Walden – 2
Chris Perez – 2
Joakim Soria – 2

Week 12 Closer Stats – National League Saves:

Joel Hanrahan – 3
Francisco Cordero  – 3
Carlos Marmol – 2
Drew Storen – 2
Brian Wilson – 2

2011 Fantasy Baseball Closer Report – Down Goes Bailey

The news was not as bad as originally was being speculated for Oakland A’s closer Andrew Bailey as his injury was diagnosed as a strained forearm by Dr. James Andrews. There has been no date set for his return, so in the mean time, several players will have the opportunity to step up in Bailey’s place. At the top of the list is Brian Fuentes who has closer experience, but there are also several other options if manager Bob Geren decides to play matchups with Grant Balfour, Michael Wuertz and from the right side and Fuentes along with Jerry Blevins from the left side.

Craig Kimbrel is starting to come on in the battle for the closer job in Atlanta. He has his ERA down to 5.68 as walks continue to be an issue for him with three in 6 1/3 innings. Meanwhile, Jonny Venters is still unscored upon in seven innings with one hit and one walk allowed to go with four strikeouts.

The shaky start by Drew Storen in Washington has manager Jim Riggleman singing the closer committee song which is not what fantasy baseball owners want to hear. The job will eventually be Storen’s at some point this year, but to start the season, there is a chance that Tyler Clippard as well as Sean Burnett could grab a couple of saves.

The Toronto Blue Jays are looking at their third string closer at this point in spring training with closer Frank Francisco battling shoulder soreness and Octavio Dotel dealing with hamstring issues. Jon Rauch would start the year as closer for the Blue Jays if Francisco and Dotel are not ready to go.

2010 Fantasy Baseball Rankings – Closers (Part I)

by Todd Lammi

This is the ninth report in the series of our 2010 fantasy baseball rankings looking at the closers. This is the most volatile position on your fantasy baseball team despite having the smallest category impact compared to other spots on your roster.

Each year there are usually 10 or more people that did not start the season at closer that end up getting a good amount of saves. That means that roughly 1/3 of the major league baseball teams are going to have closer issues. This makes the top tier of closers that much more valuable for their dependability and consistency. It also means once the top tiers of closers are gone, you don’t need to chase saves because there is a good chance multiple people  from the middle to low tier is going to lose their job that you draft, and / or you are going to be able to get extra saves through free agency during the season.

With that said, let’s examine the 2010 fantasy baseball rankings for slots 1-15.

1) Jonathan Broxton – dominant first year as closer, highlighted by 114 strikeouts and a .165 batting average against. Strikeout value pushes him to the top of the closer list.

2) Joe Nathan – 2008 and 2009 seasons were pretty identical except for a few more saves and a couple of more home runs allowed that boosted his ERA up.

3) Jonathan Papelbon – numbers look okay on the surface, but underneath stats give me some pause. Reverted back to fly balls ways like 2007. Of course the higher fly ball percentage means there is more of a chance for home runs to be surrendered.

4) Mariano Rivera – keeps getting older and every year people question will this be the year his performance finally drops off and every season he answers the bell. I predict he answers the bell once again in 2010.

5) Joakim Soria – shoulder problems and time on the disabled list kept his numbers down, except for his strikeout rate which jumped 2.9 per nine innings.

6) Francisco Rodriguez – three straight seasons of walk rate going up and strikeout rate going down. Second half was brutal with a 6.75 ERA and a 1.42 WHIP ratio.

7) Andrew Bailey – was a starter for three years in the minors. Spent some time as a reliever in Double-A in 2008 and then again the in Arizona Fall league. Reliance on cutter seems to suit him better as a closer.

8.) Heath Bell – throttled right-handed hitters, holding them to a .138 batting average  which was 116 points better than 2008. Surrendered zero home runs in the first half but then gave up three long balls after the All-Star break which jacked up his ERA.

9) Jose Valverde – missed a month and half of the early part of the season on the disabled list with a strained calf. Second half stats were back at his elite level with a 1.64 ERA and a 1.15 WHIP ratio.

10) Huston Street – lost his job as closer in April and once he got it back he was lights out converting 35 of 37 save opportunities. Stats were similar to his 2007 year. New contract extension gives him stability as the Colorado Rockies closer.

11) Brian Wilson – lowered his bating average against by 40 points and controlled home runs better in 2009; result was a 1.88 drop in ERA. Was better in the second half of the season with a 1.64 ERA and 1.15 WHIP ratio.

12) Francisco Cordero – 2009 ERA and WHIP ratio look good on paper, but of concern is the drop in the strikeout rate of 2.2 per nine innings. Has been easier to hit by right-handers the last two seasons so expect some regression for his ERA in 2010.

13) Billy Wagner – came back from Tommy John surgery and looked good in a small sample size at the end of 2009. Good enough that he landed the closer job for the Atlanta Braves. The Braves have some options in the bullpen to close games out so there will be some innings and saves he loses out on, even assuming full health.

14) Rafael Soriano – has had a big jump in his strikeout rate over the past two seasons, increasing his rate by 3.3 per nine innings. Injury history knocks his value down a few spots after spending time on the disabled list in three of the past five seasons.

15) Brian Fuentes – left Coors Field and somehow got worse. Possible combination of age plus the move to the American League impacted his numbers. Strikeout rate had a big drop going down by 4.3 per nine innings from 2008.

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Next up in the series for the 2010 fantasy baseball rankings will be closers 16 – 30.

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