BY ADAM RONIS
Draft Strategy: Load up on offense
There are plenty of strategies that work in formulating a winning fantasy baseball team. I’ll share with you the one I have used for years that has resulted in a bevy of championships. Here’s a draft from one of the leagues I played in last season. It was a 12-team, 5 x 5 roto (on-base percentage was used instead of average), mixed league, and was 28 rounds. We started 22 players and had six on the bench. This was the third year I was in the league and won all three years. I won by 12 points last season.
5. Jose Reyes
20. Matt Holliday
29. Aramis Ramirez
44. Garrett Atkins
53. Paul Konerko
68. Johnny Damon
77. Prince Fielder
92. John Lackey
101. Michael Cuddyer
116. Dan Haren
125. Francisco Cordero
140. Frank Thomas
149. Rich Hill
164. Dave Bush
173. Scott Olsen
188. Joe Borowski
197. Jose Valverde
212. Orlando Cabrera
221. Chris B. Young
236. Ian Snell
245. Ty Wigginton
260. Dan Wheeler
269. Scott Linebrink
284. Jake Westbrook
293. Fernando Rodney
308. Dan Johnson
317. Juan Rincon
332. David Ross
Look at the first few rounds. I didn’t take a starting pitcher until the 8th round. I always load up on offense early. It’s important to have power. When someone hits a home run, you get a point in three categories and it helps average. Chris Carpenter was taken with the 30th pick and he got hurt. Of course, offensive players can get hurt too, but pitchers are more risky. Of my first seven offensive picks, the one that didn’t work out was Damon. I took him for speed, runs and average and expected 20 home runs playing in a prolific offense. He still hit .270, scored 93 runs, hit 12 home runs, had 63 RBIs and stole 27 bases and I eventually traded him.
You can find good pitching later in the draft. My pitching was anchored by John Lackey and Dan Haren. Not bad for 8th and 10th round picks. I also wait on closers. I got Francisco Cordero in the 11th round and he eventually was a centerpiece that landed me Carlos Beltran. Especially in a league that has bench spots, I’ll load up on closers and setup men that have the potential to get a starting job at some point late in the draft. If you stock your offense early, you don’t need to worry about it later. You can focus on filling your pitching.
Many closers lose jobs and you can get a solid one via free agency. None of the setup men I drafted wound up getting a closer job, but they usually help your ERA and WHIP.
I also don’t take a catcher early. We only started one catcher in this league, but even in a two-catcher league, I wait. It’s not worth the early pick when you can get a player who will perform better. Joe Mauer was taken ahead of my pick of Holliday in the second round. See my point? David Ross didn’t finish the season on my team. I rotated the position and found a hot free agent.
The key to winning a championship is how you pick in the middle to later rounds, free agent pickups, and trades. My pitching might not look good from this draft, but since I had such a huge lead in saves, I traded closers and added Ted Lilly, Adam Wainwright and Tim Wakefield. Of the guys I drafted, I traded nine. The draft is just the beginning. You need to always look to improve the team.
Still not sold on drafting offense and waiting on pitching? I had 52 points in offense and 53.5 points in pitching. Of course, if you’re in my league, take Johan Santana in the first round.
Comments (1)
This is definitely my favorite strategy as well, there is one downfall to this strategy and that is if several other managers in your league use the same philosophy then it will balance out>
But not many managers can stay as disciplined as you are when it comes to Drafting Offense early and Avoiding pitchers until the later rounds ...