255M – 1,000 White Hot Suns
The round 1 regular season ended with me in second place overall. Looking ahead to this theme, it seemed obvious to me that Pedro and Maddux would be the top two picks in this draft, and I was happy that I’d presumably get one of them. Then the playoffs happened. Four of my five teams lost in the first round, and the other lost in the second, dropping me all the way to fifth place, fatefully behind schwarze.
Round 1 – Jacob deGrom
Once it became apparent that I wouldn’t be picking in the top two I decided that I wanted to be at the modern end of the timetable. I definitely wanted to be able to pick players at least as late as 2020, and quite possibly all the way to 2023, since there would be plenty of modern players (Maddux, for example) whose selections would prevent going that late and so the number of teams picking 2021-2023 would be low. Obviously I would’ve liked Arrieta, but equally obviously he went third overall. I honestly don’t know what I would’ve done if schwarze had taken deGrom. I don’t think I ever seriously considered Bonds, but who knows? Anyway, in most drafts, you can’t win the league with your first pick but you can lose it with your first pick. I think deGrom was pretty safe here.
As an aside, I would’ve considered taking a player from the earlier end of the spectrum if the divisional alignment had been chronological rather than salary-based. My fear was that if too many people chose earlier timeframes the talent would be diluted so much that there would be no way to compete with the modern teams, and obviously at #5 it was too early to tell whether that would happen. I wasn’t convinced that a salary-based alignment would duly compensate for this because having fewer franchises to choose from might mean having to draft too many PAs and IPs to get the players you want, leading to a disproportionately higher total team salary. Of course, there being so many smart people in this draft, the chronological distribution of teams ended up being pretty much optimized.
Round 2 – Kenta Maeda
This might have been a panic pick. Once the second round began, I looked ahead and hoped that somehow Dinelson Lamet would make it back to me. As often happens, he made it all the way back…until the last pick where he could’ve gone before mine. I had been so locked in on Lamet that I felt I needed to take a pitcher in his absence. Maeda has an amazing ERC# (1.40) but the elephant in the room is obviously his homers allowed (0.82 HR/9+). Still, I thought he was the best available. There was going to be no lack of quality available in this draft, especially on the modern end of the timetable, so his relative lack of innings didn’t concern me; my mantra in this draft was quality over quantity. There was only one position player who I considered here, but it seemed like the pitching run might continue so I hoped he would make it back to my third pick. In hindsight I wish I had taken him. That player, of course, was Chipper Jones, who schwarze nabbed with the very next pick. Not only do I think my team would’ve been better with Chipper, especially since third base ended up being my lineup’s weak link, but my team name likely would’ve ended up being 100,000, or even 1,000,000 White Hot Suns.
Round 3 – Corey Kluber
Chipper being off the board (along with Nomar and A-Rod, the other two position players I would’ve considered here), I thought the value at this pick was still at starting pitcher. To me Kluber was the best available in my timeframe, and I never seriously considered anyone else.
Round 4 – Jason Giambi
600 IP in with no offensive players, I decided to grab the best hitter available. The fact that he was at a strong offensive position was unfortunate but didn’t dissuade me. I needed an anchor for my lineup, and he was the guy.
Round 5 – Corey Seager
Clearly the best offensive shortstop on the board, a lefty hitter and an A/B+ glove to boot. Yeah, he only has 536 PAs, but hit him 9th and you only need 70 PAs of backup. Quality over quantity.
Round 6 – Christian Yelich
More quality over quantity, and the perfect leadoff hitter for a league like this. Wait, what? 44 RL HRs (which actually leads my team), a .648 SLG#, leadoff? Yes. To me, in a high cap DH league with no deadballers, any hitter who doesn’t provide power is a wasted opportunity, including the leadoff hitter. Because you only lead off the game once. After that, in a league like this the average number of men on base per plate appearance is not going to be appreciably different for your leadoff guy than for any other spot in your order. I’m probably hitting Posada 9th and his OBP# is .421, and my worst on-base guy is .386. In a league where the pitcher hits 9th and a weak hitter hits 8th it’s a waste to have power in the leadoff spot. In this league it’s a waste not to. Oh, and Yelich is 30/32 in steals.
Round 7 – Jeff Kent
See the above. Second base tends to be the domain of the slap-hitting speedster. Not on my team, not in this league. Give me another masher.
Round 8 – Jorge Posada
One of my all-time favorites, and apparently schwarze’s as well. I considered going third base here; the best third basemen available were Beltre and Rolen, who I knew would be chosen soon and were both similar players. If either was a LHH I would’ve taken them. But as long as I was going to end up with a righty at third, I looked ahead and saw that everyone in the modern era who needed a third baseman already had their Red Sox player, so I knew I could get Youkilis in the endgame, and he’s only slightly worse than Beltre/Rolen.
Round 9 – Brian Giles
I seem to like this guy more than most people do. LHH, .449 OBP#, 1.057 OPS#, some speed, steals a few bases. He also has an A-/B- version which I sometimes use in CF, because that’s how I roll. But I had other thoughts for 1999 so I penciled in the slightly better 2002.
Round 10 – Victor Martinez
The pick that launched a team name. My draft board was running low on good non-RHH candidates, and I knew that I would already have two of those in my starting lineup and didn’t really want a third, so it was time to lock in a great DH who can hit both ways. He can also play a few games at 1B if Giambi’s 671 PAs aren’t enough to see him through the season at 100%. And he always produces.
Round 11 – J.D. Drew
Another guy who I like more than most people seem to. When he came up with the Cardinals, I remember thinking that if I could be any baseball player I’d want to be him. I just thought he was so naturally and seemingly effortlessly talented. His career never quite panned out the way I thought it would, but he was still a very good player. And I ended up with an A-/B- in CF after all. I considered Beltran here for the better defense, but I just don’t like his bat nearly as much.
Round 12 – Terry Shumpert
I’m almost certain that this was a massive reach, and I’m 100% certain that I don’t care. I used to spend far too much of my free time playing the computer game Civilization IV against the computer. In that game, I’ve always found that when you achieve the technology to build the Statue of Liberty, if you can afford to build it and still move toward your end goal of winning the game, it’s a bellweather that you’re doing well. Because it’s definitely a nice-to-have rather than a must-build, so if you have the excess capacity to build it you’re probably winning. For me, Terry Shumpert was the Statue of Liberty of this draft. He’s my absolute favorite player in the sim because he is almost absurdly useful and really, really good, but there was enough talent available in this draft that he was definitely a nice-to-have rather than a must. The fact that I felt that I could take him so early meant that I had accomplished the majority of my draft goals, or, in the case of Youkilis and my bullpen, would eventually do so without much trouble.
Round 13 – Fernando Rodney
I was kind of hoping that Kuo would drop here, but justinlee_24 grabbed him, so I settled for a 75 IP, 1.21 ERC# Tampa Bay Ray. I’ll take it.
Round 14 – Greg Holland
Another guy I seem to end up with a lot. It’s clearly bullpen time. Royals. Solid.
Round 15 – Mike Adams
Another bullpen arm. I wasn’t sure whether I’d use the 74 IP 2011, the 48 IP 2011, or the 37 IP, 0.62 ERC# 2009. I chose the latter. Stop if you’ve heard this one before: quality…
Round 16 – Ranger Suarez, Mark Melancon
Melancon is yet another guy I end up with a lot. Here is the one place I went with quantity, using his 71 IP 1.62 ERC# over his 30 IP 1.37 ERC# from the same team/season. Suarez is the prototypical Long A: 106 IP, 1.92 ERC#, 2.72 IP/G, meaning he can give you 40 pitches a pop.
Round 17 – Takashi Saito, Dallas Keuchel
Saito is the reason I wasn’t too sad about not getting Kuo in Round 13. The Dodgers have so much bullpen depth that you can get a 79 IP, 1.39 ERC# guy this late in the draft. Incredible. And yes, while I never checked precisely who I was screwing over, part of the reason for choosing Keuchel as my fourth starter, even though I’d need to use his second-best 2015 because I already had my 2020 player, was to prevent his 2020 from being used. So, to the rest of the league, you’re welcome.
Round 18 – Cliff Lee, TGGoW (The Greek God of Walks)
One of the weaknesses of the Excel workbook that I use for these drafts is that when I load it, I delete all but the most expensive versions of players who have multiple versions for the same season and team. This is because in team-based drafts I look at total team salary, and I don’t want those guys to be double-counted. The downside is that I sometimes forget about guys like Cliff Lee, whose full season 2010 was among the best SPs still available, but whose 104 IP, 1.86 ERC# partial season, which was not in my workbook, was definitely the best LR available to me. In fact, had I remembered that version I would’ve taken it instead of Suarez in Round 16, but it worked out because I got him anyway. And while I was 98% sure that no one would take Youkilis for the rest of the draft, there was no reason to continue to risk it. .309/.386/.549, A-/B+ at 3B with your 21st pick is pretty good value in my book.
Round 19 – Henry Blanco, Edgar Renteria
Endgame city. Blanco is nothing but a defensive replacement for Posada. Renteria is good enough that I’m OK using him in a quasi-platoon with Seager, enabling me to bat him a bit higher in the order. He’s also a great pinch-runner who can steal bases. The only downside is that he’s a full season, which kept me out of the cheapest cumulative salary division. But I think he’s worth it.
Round 20 – Todd Jones, Connor Overton, Sportsman’s Park III
I’ll be honest, I’d expected a little better than Jones for my second Long A. Even in the modern era, with so many franchises to choose from, pickins were pretty slim at the end of the draft. And I might have gotten a little too cute with Overton. I like him: 1.71 ERC# and a 5.50 IP/G. I love using guys like this as a RH Specialist. Sparky won’t use those guys until no one else is available, so they don’t get used much, but if you end up with a long extra inning game having a guy like that who can go 5+ innings is useful. However, this means that I only ended up with 1,478 innings. Will that be enough? I think it will be, especially because I have several guys in relief who can go many innings per game, including Lee who can spot start with 7.97 IP/G to rest the ‘pen. Obviously I thought it was enough innings at the time because I chose an offensive park to accentuate my team’s doubles-hitting ways, but it might’ve been safer to replace Overton with someone with more IP.
EPILOG
I like my team. It looks pretty much the way I thought it would except that the rotation is way too homer-prone. I hope it’s good enough to compete. We shall see.
6000 PA, .327/.425/.581 (not including Blanco, including only 71 PA of Renteria)
1478 IP, 1.71 ERC#, 0.41 HR/9+ (yikes that’s high)