Posts Tagged ‘Ryan Zimmerman’

2011 Fantasy Baseball Lineup Planner – Week 6

Here is a look at the latest news and notes from around major league baseball to help you set your fantasy baseball lineup for week 6 (May 2 – May 8)  of the 2011 fantasy baseball season.

American League:

Outfielder Rajai Davis returned from the disabled list for the Toronto Blue Jays and should be active in all formats. He stole five bases in three games since his return including including three today.Davis’ return will send Corey Patterson back to his role as a reserve outfielder.

Third basemen Evan Longoria is expected to return from the disabled list on Tuesday for the Tampa Bay Rays so he should be active in all types of leagues as you are likely not to have a better alternative unless you play in a shallow eight or 10 team league.

Jered Weaver missed Sunday’s start for the Los Angeles Angels due to illness on Sunday so he will now become a two start pitcher in week 6, swapping places with Tyler Chatwood. Weaver will get starts at Boston and at home against Cleveland.

Joel Pineiro made his first start of the season for the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday against the Tampa Bay Rays. He allowed one run in seven innings with three strikeouts. He should be activate in AL-only formats going forward and will get his next start on Thursday at Boston.

National League:

Cole Hamels looks like he will become a two start pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies in week 6 with Roy Oswalt still dealing with issues stemming from the tornadoes in Mississippi as Hamels moves up to start on Tuesday. There has been no definite date for when Oswalt is expected to return so you might want to reserve him for next week if you have a decent starting pitcher on your reserve to replace him with.

Zack Greinke is expected to make his National League debut on Wednesday for the Milwaukee Brewers as he comes off of the disabled list. Greinke will get the start at Atlanta against Tim Hudson. In his last rehab start at Triple-A, Greinke allowed two runs on seven hits in five innings with seven strikeouts.

With Ryan Zimmerman out of action for the next six weeks for the Washington Nationals after surgery, Jerry Hairston Jr. should see the majority of at bats at third base. Hairston is off to a slow start this season hitting .208 in 53 at bats, but he should be active in NL-only formats going forward while Zimmerman is out.

Pablo Sandoval will be out four-to-six weeks with a fractured hamate bone for the San Francisco Giants. In the interim, Miguel Tejada will move to third base with Mike Fontenot starting at shortstop, giving Fontenot some value in NL-only leagues. Fontenot went 2-for-4 on Sunday, batting seventh and playing shortstop.

With the St. Louis Cardinals now going with a closer by committee approach, NL-only league owners in need of saves should consider having active Mitchell Boggs, Fernando Salas and Eduardo Sanchez.

The Los Angeles Dodgers swapped out relievers in their bullpen activating Hong-Chih Kuo from the disabled list and demoting Kenley Jansen. The demotion of Jansen serves as a reminder how fickle relief pitchers can be from year to year unless they a longer track record of success in the major leagues. Kuo moves in the saves picture in the Dodgers bullpen with Jonathan Broxton and Vicente Padilla.

To help set your pitching rotation for next week, check out the week 6, two start pitchers.

2010 Washington Nationals Team Preview

This is the fifth part our series of 2010 fantasy baseball team previews looking at the National League East. The team previews will include the projected batting order, projected rotation, rookies that could make an impact in 2010 as well as each players current ADP for a 15 team mixed fantasy baseball league.

2010 Washington Nationals Projected Batting Order:

1.  CF Nyjer Morgan (ADP 125)
2.  SS Christian Guzman  (ADP 367)
3.  3B Ryan Zimmerman (ADP 35)
4.  1B Adam Dunn (ADP 71)
5.  LF Josh Willingham (ADP 249)
6.  RF Willie Harris (ADP ND)
7.  2B Adam Kennedy (ADP 355)
8.  C Ivan Rodriguez (ADP 361)

2010 Washington Nationals Projected Rotation & Bullpen:

1.  John Lannan (ADP 463)
2.  Jason Marquis (ADP 424)
3.  Garrett Mock (ADP ND)
4.  J.D. Martin / Livan Hernandez (ADP ND / ND)
5.  Scott Olsen / Craig Stammen (ADP ND/ ND)

Closer – Matt Capps (ADP 221)
Handcuff – Brian Bruney

2010 Washington Nationals prospects with potential impact this year:

1.  Stephen Strasburg – SP
2.  Drew Storen – RP
3.  Ian Desmond – SS


2010 Fantasy Baseball Draft Leagues – Draft Position

Now that we have been looking at fantasy baseball mock drafts, it is time to look at draft position and how that impacts your fantasy baseball team. For the purpose of this discussion, we will be using a 15 team mixed league format.

Usually there are several positions I want to grab in the early rounds of the draft based on the depth or lack of depth at a position. Some places in the draft order mean you will not have a shot at any of these positions. If you are not comfortable with having either a weak shortstop of second basemen or whatever position you value, than you might need to adjust your strategy or grab a player a round earlier than you wanted to because he will not make it back to your pick in the next round.

Some fantasy baseball leagues offer you the chance to list a preference for your draft order. If that is case, it pays to have made sure you have done several mock drafts from multiple positions before the real event. Every year I feel there is a stronger part of the draft order where an owner might have a slight advantage for drafting. Knowing where this spot is in your draft can make a huge difference in you winning or losing you fantasy baseball league.

Let’s take a look at some of the sections of the draft and assess the strengths and weaknesses of each group.

Picks 1-5: If you value a shortstop, unless you get Hanley Ramirez, you are most likely in trouble. From the previous fantasy baseball mock draft article we know it is likely that Jose Reyes and Jimmy Rollins are not going to make it back in the second round. Derek Jeter is there in the third round but it is probably a little early to take him based on other value on the board.

Also at risk picking in these slots are your team stolen base totals. I usually try to set a goal of getting 40% of my teams stolen bases from my first three picks of the draft. Unless you grab Matt Kemp in the top five, chances are you are getting 15-20 steals from your first round pick. On the way back in the second round unless Justin Upton or Grady Sizemore slide to you, the only real stolen base numbers come from second basemen like Brandon Phillips, Dustin Pedroia or Brian Roberts. Chances are though that if you took Chase Utley in the first round, you are not going to grab another second basemen in round two so you have to look elsewhere for steals.

In the third round, stolen base options would be a second basemen if you did not grab one in round two, Jayson Werth or reaching for Ichiro Suzuki or Derek Jeter. So if your goal for stolen bases is 170, and we are aiming for 40%, then we want to try and get 68 steals from the first three picks. Picking in the top 5 spots assuming no Kemp and unless Upton or Sizemore slide, you are most likely only going to be at around 40 to 50 steals so you need to keep that in mind as you prepare for the draft.

Picks 6-10: This is not a bad spot to be in as after the top five, the opinions widely vary on the next group of players so sitting at 10, there is a good chance that you could get one of the top players on your draft board.

Same potential problems with missing out on a shortstop lie in this draft range. Also at issue is possibly second base assuming Utley does not slide. There is a very good chance that Phillips, Pedroia and Roberts are all gone by the time the third round pick comes. That leaves possible options of Robinson Cano, Aaron Hill, or Ben Zobrist coming back in the fourth round.

Third base could be an issue as well as you miss out on A-Rod in the first round and on David Wright in the second round. Mark Reynolds might slide to this group, but if you take Ryan Howard in the first round, it would be hard to take Reynolds here because you would start in a huge hole from a batting average perspective. Ryan Zimmerman and Kevin Youkilis are gone by the end of round two / start of round three so you miss them in the third round which leaves possibly Pablo Sandoval or Aramis Ramirez in the third round or else take the risk of hoping Ramirez slides back to your spot in the fourth round.

If you like to take catchers early, this spot could work to your advantage as you would like have a shot at Joe Mauer in the first, Victor Martinez in the second and Brian McCann in the third.

Picks 11-15: If you are a fan of position scarcity, this spot of the draft will give you some great draft selections with David Wright, Jimmy Rollins, Jose Reyes, Troy Tulowitzki and Ian Kinsler all in this range. It is also a good spot to grab stolen bases with the above listed players as well as Carl Crawford and Jacoby Ellsbury in the mix as well.

Downside to this spot is you miss out on a top tier first basemen most likely. Five first basemen are off the board if the current average draft position (ADP) numbers hold up, as well as missing out on Joey Votto, Adrian Gonzalez, Kevin Youkilis and Justin Morneau in the second round on the way back. Possible options in the third or fourth round would be Kendry Morales, Lance Berkman or Pablo Sandoval if he slid. If you pass on all of the above players, the last shot at an upper tier first basemen is Derek Lee or Billy Butler in the fifth round but there is no guarantee they make it back to your turn.

That would leave one power hitting first basemen left on the draft board in Carlos Pena. The power would help but depending on what you do in the first few rounds would impact whether you can afford to pick him or not. If you happened to grab Ian Kinsler and Jimmy Rollins in rounds 1 and 2, two guys that hit around .280 or lower, adding Pena to the mix would put at risk your points in the batting average category.


Fantasy Baseball – the Daily Dirt for Saturday

by Todd Lammi

Raul Ibanez went 3 for 5 with two home runs and four RBI in the first game of a doubleheader against the Washington Nationals. He then went 2 for 3 with three RBI in the nightcap, including his third home run of the day, number 13 on the season. At age 36, Ibanez is currently on pace for 60 home runs. In other fantasy baseball news around the diamond on Saturday…

Hitters:

Alex Rodriguez hit a walk-off two-run home run to give the New York Yankees a 6-4 win over the Minnesota Twins.

Ryan Zimmerman hit his ninth home run of the season and drove in two runs giving him 29 RBI on the year. Zimmerman is now batting .366.

Mark Teixeira went 4 for 4 with 4 RBI and his eighth home run of the season. He should benefit from having Alex Rodriguez hitting behind him, so his current .238 batting average should be on the upswing.

Justin Morneau went 2 for 3 and slugged his 12th home run of the year. Morneau has now homered six time in his last eight games with 10 RBI.

Carlos Lee went 3 for 4 and homered for the second consecutive game. Lee now has eight home runs with 29 RBI and is batting .341.

Pitchers:

Rich Hill returned from the disabled list for the Baltimore Orioles and allowed two runs in 5 2/3 innings with six strikeouts to pick up his first win of the season.

Joba Chamberlain allowed two runs in six innings with six strikeouts but did not factor in the decision. He is going to struggle to pick up wins if he cannot make it past the six inning due to a high pitch count. His last three starts have only lasted a combined 17 2/3 innings, with pitch counts of 108, 104 and 108 on Saturday.

Randy Wells tossed six shutout innings with four strikeouts, giving him 11 scoreless innings in 2009.

Rookie Robert Ray picked up his first win of the year for the Toronto Blue Jays, hurling eight shutout innings and recoding three strikeouts.

Jeff Suppan out dueled Adam Wainwright in a 1-0 victory. The lone mistake by Wainwright was a home run hit by Corey Hart. Suppan tossed seven shutout innings with two strikeouts. Wainwright allowed one run in eight innings with seven punch outs.

Max Scherzer picked up his first win of the year, tossing six shutout innings with four strikeouts.

Rick Porcello allowed one run in six innings with five strikeouts to move to 4-3 on the season. Porcello has now allowed only two runs in his last 18 innings.

Eric Milton’s return to the major leagues was not too successful. Milton lasted only four innings, allowing two runs and four walks before being lifted after 84 pitches.

Carlos Zambrano is scheduled to throw a rehab start on Sunday and if that goes well, he will return to the rotation Friday against the San Diego Padres.

John Lackey’s return from the disabled list was short lived after he was ejected after only two pitches. After throwing behind Ian Kinsler on his first pitch, Lackey drilled him with his second pitch and was tossed from the game.

Closers:

Kevin Gregg allowed four runs in the ninth inning without recording an out against the Houston Astros.

Brad Lidge was sent to the mound for a third consecutive day and this time recorded his sixth save of the year with a scoreless inning.

Frank Francisco was placed on the disabled list retroactive to May 7th, so he could return by next weekend. C.J. Wilson will continue to close in his place.

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