Posts Tagged ‘Keeper Leagues’

2011 Fantasy Baseball Strategy: Keeper Leagues Draft Format

With fantasy baseball drafts only a month or two away, it is time to start preparing for your fantasy baseball keeper league draft. There are several more challenges that go into getting prepared for a keeper league than there is in doing an annual draft that starts new each season.

First you need to determine which players you are going to protect. There are several ways that you can go about determining who you want to keep. One is by projecting all of the keepers for the other teams in the league. This will give you an idea of what positions will have some decent players to draft from so you can plan your keepers accordingly.

If you play in an AL or NL only format, not only do you have to look at the players that may be cut from other teams, you also have to be aware of the new players that have come over from other leagues. This will have an impact on your keepers plus the position of where you are drafting.

For example, in an NL only league, say you get 10 keepers and plan on keeping five pitchers. Regardless of who other teams cut, you could argue that the first four picks of the draft will be Cliff Lee, Zack Greinke, Shaun Marcum and Javier Vazquez in some order. Now, with five pitchers on your team as keepers, you may not want to take a pitcher there but it is the best value on the board. If you know this ahead of time, you can trade one of your possible keeper pitchers for a hitter so your team ends up more balanced.

Once you have projected all of the keepers in the league as well as your team, then you want to conduct a mock draft. You can do this simply on your own and since you most likely will know where you are drafting from. By doing this for the first five to six rounds, you will quickly be able to see what positions will have players available to pick from as well as which positions may be weak. After running through the mock draft, you may soon realize that you need to keep player A over player B because you are not going to be able to fill that position with anyone of value in the draft.

Just like in a one year draft, you will want to be tracking your goals throughout the draft to make sure you are hitting targets in pitching and hitting categories to make sure you are not falling short of any of your goals. The idea is to target the top three in each category with the closer you can get to the top of each one the better off you will be.

If for some reason your team is at a big disadvantage heading into the season and you don’t feel like you have the keepers to compete this year, then right from the start you need to be focused on next year. That means thinking of players that are coming off of injury and will be ready 2012 such as Kris Medlen or Stephen Strasburg or going for the next wave of rookies that are coming such as Mike Moustakas or Eric Hosmer.

In NL or AL only leagues because the talent pool is so shallow, rookies tend to go early in the first few rounds even for teams that are trying to win as the value of that player even playing half of the season is higher than anyone on the draft board plus you will get to keep that player for “x” number of years afterwards.

Another thing to be aware of in AL or NL only leagues is the contract situation of players. Because you will lose the rights to that player in most leagues if he is traded or signs as a free agent in the other league in the offseason, it is important to plan for that in advance. Losing a top player in an only league can be a setback where the talent pool is not as deep as it is in mixed formats.

Auction Keeper League – How to Rebuild

If you are new to fantasy baseball auction leagues or have been playing in an auction league for a few years but have not had much success winning, this article will take you on a step-by-step guide of how to rebuild in an auction league format.

The majority of keeper auction leagues have contract limits which means you are likely going to be able to be competitive for a certain amount of years before you have to rebuild. Some owners think they can draft every year and have a shot at winning, but that is not the case. In an auction league with keepers, there is too much inflation to prices to be able to draft a team and make a run at the title unless you get extremely lucky, it is a shallow league and the rest of the owners are not very good.

Your best chance at rebuilding is by doing it from day one of the season. That way you can focus on which rookies you want to target in the draft as well get first dibs on the best keepers in trade from other owners. If you wait until June before deciding to throw in the towel and rebuild for next year, you are already behind the other rebuilding teams. At that point, you are rebuilding for two years away instead of being competitive the following season.

Heading into the auction there are two types of players you are trying to draft. Players that will help your team next year and form your core and the second group are players that you can trade to bring back in return younger players and draft picks.

Here is a look at my team from a NL only auction league from last season. This is a 14 team league with a $275 salary cap plus a six round reserve draft where the draft picks can be traded.  I went into the draft knowing I wanted to rebuild from day one.

My keepers:

  • Ryan Doumit – 11
  • John Baker – 10
  • Rickie Weeks – 25
  • Cameron Maybin – 16
  • Tim Lincecum – 22
  • Chad Qualls – 6

Out of this group, the only players I wanted to keep for this year were Lincecum, Qualls and Doumit; the other players were traded.

Drafted:

  • Edgar Renteria – 13
  • Matt Kemp – 36
  • Jake Peavy – 31
  • Aaron Cook – 13
  • Ricky Nolasco – 26

This entire group were players I wanted to trade. While Kemp was at a good price, there are always outfielders in the $30 range I knew I could grab in 2010.

Core: these were the main players I targeted to form the cornerstone of my team for the next few years:

  • Alcides Escobar – 2
  • Carlos Gonzalez – 3
  • Jonny Gomes – 3 (did not plan on him being a core guy but at $3 for 15-20 home runs makes him a core guy)
  • Jason Heyward – 1
  • Pedro Alvarez – 7
  • J.A. Happ – 2 — I was able to get him as a relief pitcher due to our rules based on a certain number of appearances as a starter / reliever.
  • Tim Hudson – 3 — injured players are a great place to look for keepers when you are rebuilding. If you are in an NL only league this season and are rebuilding, you should be targeting guys like Edison Volquez and Jordan Zimmermann.
  • Stephen Strasburg – 5

Farm System:

Before the auction I had several other players I did not want to keep going into the draft so I flipped those for draft picks, so instead of the usual six picks per team, I went into the draft with close to 20 picks to search for players that would be able to have an impact for me in 2010. As from my previous articles, I am always looking for players that have the best chance of helping me the following year so I am targeting guys that are in Triple-A or in Double-A with a shot to get to the major leagues based on the guys ahead of them at their position. Here is who I got:

  • Drew Stubbs – 5
  • Chris Coghlan – 5
  • Everth Cabrera – 10 – his salary was higher because he started the year in the major leagues
  • Gerardo Parra – 5
  • Bud Norris – 5
  • Aroldis Chapman – 10 – picked up September 1 when rosters expanded. Again, it pays to know and understand the rules of your league. In my league in September we can add three slots so I look for guys that may be coming over from Japan or were drafted in the June draft and could make a direct leap to the major leagues.

Picked up in trade:

  • Bronson Arroyo – 8
  • Omar Infante – 3
  • Eric Young Jr. – 5

In addition I have 23 out of the 84 draft picks in the reserve round. Six of my own picks plus 17 I picked up in trade, including three additional first round and second round picks.

So overall my team looks something like this heading into 2010:

  • C – Doumit – 11
  • C – open
  • 1b – open
  • 2b – Infante 3 / E. Young 5
  • ss – A. Escobar 2, E. Cabrera 10
  • 3b – open
  • of – C. Gonzalez 3, Gomes 3, Stubbs 5, Coghlan 5, Parra 5,
  • utility – Heyward 1, P. Alvarez 7
  • sp – Lincecum 22, Arroyo 8, Norris 5, Strasburg 5, Happ 2, Hudson 3, Chapman 10
  • rp – Qualls 6

You can see from the roster layout that there are several trade opportunities I will have to improve the team by moving a shortstop, outfielder and starting pitcher.

With the additional draft picks I will also be able to use those to trade for guys from other teams that will be rebuilding this season.

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