Mailbag: September 21, 2011
September 21st, 2011 | by Ray Flowers |
There are only days left in the 2011 fantasy baseball season. With that fact, let’s look forward to 2012 with today’s mailbag piece from questions that were submitted at the BaseballGuys’ Twitter account.
Is Melky Cabrera a top-20 OF going into 2012 season and is he worthy of a keeper spot in 16 team league (keeping eight)?
– @JakobMD
This will likely be a hot button question for many heading into 2012, so why not address it in 2011.
Coming into the 2011 season, Cabrera was one of those guys that you weren’t overly happy to have as your fourth or fifth outfielder in a 12 team mixed leagues. He wasn’t going to kill you you any category, but he also wasn’t going to a big help. In fact, the best 5×5 numbers that he posted from 2005-10 would lead you to a season of .280-13-73-75-13. Again, those aren’t horrible numbers, but nothing in that line really pops. In addition, his slash line of .267/.328/.379 from 2005-10 was actually worse than the league average of .269/.337/.425. He just wasn’t anything other than average.
This year that’s changed. Cabrera is two homers away from going 20/20, and he’s also hitting a career best .305. Mind you, he’d only hit better than .275 once, and had never hit 15 homers or stolen 15 bases in a season. One of the reasons for that counting category growth is that he’s posted a whopping 686 plate appearances, 158 more than he averaged from 2005-10. When a guy racks up 700 plate appearances he’s going to have solid counting numbers.
The real question I have is has he shown any skills growth? Let’s take a look.
This year his line drive rate is 20.5 percent. His career mark is 19.4 percent.
This year his ground ball rate is 47.1 percent. His career mark is 48.7 percent.
This year his fly ball rate is 32.4 percent. His career mark is 31.9 percent.
Nothing has changed there.
This year his walk rate is 4.8 percent. Not only is that well below his career rate of 7.4 percent, it’s also a career worst.
This year his K-rate is 13.3 percent. Not only is that worse than his career mark of 12.0, it’s also a career worst.
Those are not changes for the good.
This year Cabrera has a BABIP mark of .330. The owner of a career mark of .298, Cabrera’s BABIP has been under that .298 mark in each of his previous four seasons.
This year his HR/F ratio is 10.2 percent. That’s certainly not a crazy number, but it’s 40 percent higher than his 7.0 career rate. This will also mark only the second season of his career with a mark above his 7.0 percent career rate.
So what does all of that mean? It means that the reason that Cabrera has been so impressive this year is a little luck (BABIP, HR/F) and a big time result of all of his plate appearances. Throw in a declining walk rate and a rising K-rate, and the smart money would be on Cabrera failing to duplicate his 2011 efforts next season. Given that, I simply cannot suggest to anyone that Cabrera has a legitimate shot at being a top-20 outfielder in 2012, but that doesn’t mean he shouldn’t be kept if 128 players are being protected in your league.
Thanks for the great advice and info. Came in 2nd in my 12T H2H league. Quick Q: Why do you prefer roto over H2H?
– @samuelrsantana
There are so many reasons why baseball should be rotisserie over head to head (H2H), let me count the ways.
(1) Baseball is a marathon with 162 games. H2H turns that marathon into a sprint. If you’re looking for the fantasy game to somewhat approximate the on field product, then the fantasy game should operate as a mirror image of that actual game. In baseball that means you should play a season of 1-162 games played, not some artificially contrived session of a weekly match up. Let me give you a concrete example of why this is in point #2.
(2) We all know that Albert Pujols will hit .300-30-100 (he’s on the cusp of doing it for the 11th straight season to start his career). However, we really have no idea when he will go deep, when he will produce hits, and when he will knock runners in. If you’re playing in a H2H match up what happens if Pujols hits .450 with three homers and 10 RBI? You’ll likely win that week. What happens though if he hits .150 with no homers and no RBI the following week? You would likely loose that week. Still, if Pujols followed this path, alternating greatness with putrid work, he’d end the year batting .300 with something like 39 homers and 130 RBI. That’s a phenomenal season, right? However, in H2H he’d be a killer to your club in those 13 weeks that he disappeared. Baseball is about consistency and working through the grind as much as anything. When you play H2H you remove that aspect of the game completely.
(3) Would you ever draft Gavin Floyd over Dan Haren? That’s like saying you would prefer to cuddle up with Cate Blanchett over Brooklyn Decker? However, there are scenarios where you would end up starting Floyd over Haren simply because you’re looking at one week segments (there is no scenario in which Cate would be the choice over Brooklyn). What if Haren was facing the Yankees and Floyd was pitching in Seattle and Oakland – would you start Floyd because he was a two start pitcher on the road, where he has success, in two parks that favor the hurler? Even worse, would you start a guy like Rick Porcello or Luke Hochevar over Haren if they had two starts? The answer is you might, and we’ve all made that decision at one point or another. However, does this make any sense? Of course it doesn’t. We’re sometimes “forced” to go with an inferior pitcher merely because we need the starts to keep up with our opponent in the H2H format. In this instance we’re not rewarding the fantasy owner who rostered the players with the best skill, we’re merely rewarding those that were first two the waiver-wire to add a 2-start pitcher. There isn’t any skill in that.
I’m just going to say it: H2H has infected baseball because of it’s proliferation in fantasy football. It’s one of the worst trends to hit fantasy baseball – ever. If you want to go soft and set your lineup once a week, I can live with that. However, if you want to make baseball a one week match up against an opponent you’re bastardizing the game of baseball completely.
There, I said it.
Ray Flowers can be heard daily on Sirius/XM Radio on The Fantasy Drive on Sirius 210 and XM 87.
Tags: Albert Pujols, Brooklyn Decker, Cate Blanchett, Dan Haren, Gavin Floyd, H2H, Head to Head, Melky Cabrera
















By johnnyutah96 on Jan 26, 2012
H2H versus Rotisserie: The problem with this well written segment is that it is a hypocritical statement upon itself! Yes a baseball “regular season” is a marathon, but does baseball end with the regular season finale…. ? Last I looked the most important time of the MLB season was the PLAYOFFS! Was St. Louis the best team throughout the 2011 season or did they adjust at the trade deadline and then win the World Series… ? If you want to operate as a mirror image of that actual game, as the article states, you must have a playoff! Which your article conveniently forgets to mention!!!
By Ray Flowers on Jan 26, 2012
Johnny Utah – Loved your movie by the way. The problem with your statement is that I’m sure you are looking at fantasy football as a guide. Yes there is a playoff in fantasy football, but it’s held during the regular season so it’s really a “fake” playoffs. You can only have a true playoffs if you use the on field product for the playoffs. However, since so few teams actually make the playoffs, it just doesn’t translate to the fantasy game. Give me 162 games of baseball – that’s plenty to decide a winner = versus the 15 games we use in most fantasy football leagues.
By jake on Jan 27, 2012
The problem I had running my first ROTO league last year was that, about halfway through the season, teams that started falling out of contention started losing interest. Without some sort of playoffs I think it is difficult to keep teams intersted throughout the season.
I am playing with baseball fans, but they are not diehard fantasy baseball fans. They love fantasy but obviously not enough to stay 100% involved no matter how poorly their teams are doing.
Long story short, is there any sort of format that you might suggest that combines a season long ROTO format along with some type of playoff at the end of the season?
Thanks.
By Ray Flowers on Jan 27, 2012
Jake – Your issue of people stopping to care late in the year is common. Unfortunately, I don’t have a good answer on how to stop this. Reason being is this — playoffs take skill out of the mix and go more with luck. Do you want to give someone a “win” because they picked up Brandon Crawford and he had a better week than Tulowitzki? Do you want to reward a 2-start James McDonald over a one start Roy Halladay? When you break the game down into playoff segments the sample size shrinks, and with it the luck factor goes up. To me, we are best served rewarding year long excellence versus weekly luck.
By Nate on Feb 7, 2012
Wanted to interact with Ray’s article here, as I think H2H is better than roto, so wrote this piece. Would be interested to hear Ray’s thoughts.
http://thesportsmithy.wordpress.com/2012/02/08/fantasy-baseball-roto-vs-h2h/
By Steve on Feb 8, 2012
I prefer pts leagues, but I think H2H is inferior for the reasons you stated.
So tell me why Roto is better than a straight pts league? No weekly match ups, just a year long marathon collecting points.
Roto ignores many stats both good and bad. Michael Bourn was in the top 15 overall in roto last year because of his steals. He wasn’t even in the top 30 bats in a pts league.
Points leagues tell the whole story and definitely mirror the on field game.
By Ray Flowers on Feb 8, 2012
Steve – I never said that roto was better than points. You can make a very valid argument that points based leagues are better. It’s kind of like gas engines vs. hybrids. Everyone knows/understands is use to gas (roto), even though hybrids are better for the enviornment (points). Points leagues should, by their very nature, be a more accurate representation of the on field product.