A life-long baseball and football fan, John has been a contributor to
Sports Grumblings since 1997. John also has experience in brodacst
radio, going back to his days as a newscaster at Fordham University's
famous WFUV station, as well as guest sports at various sports talk
radio stations around the country. John currently is the co-host of Gridiron Grumblings Live!.
In 2007, John
was the recipient of the Fantasy Sports Writers Association (FSWA)
award for Best Fantasy Football Series, for his outstanding column Snap, Crackle and Pop.
Dave Bush has pitched well, but has few wins to show for it.
I
love Rotisserie. But if you are in multiple Roto leagues, there is sameness to
it.The vast majority of leagues are 5x5
leagues with identical categories. As Yogi Berra would say, “it’s like déjà vu
all over again.”
A
little variety is good. I like OPS, a frequent addition in the 6x6 format. I
like the hold, a common companion to OPS in the 6x6 format. I like having OBP
and slugging percentage as separate categories even more than OPS. Next year,
try this: drop batting average and use both OBP and slugging in a 6x6
format.Or better yet, try a really
unorthodox format, 7x7, 10x6, or whatever. Use an OBS (Off-Beat Stats) -- It
will spice things up.It’s like getting
the wife to put on a blonde wig.
If
you participate in league with non-traditional categories, I salute you. It
requires extra skill to manage the additional categories.You also have more trade-offs to ponder.For example, you have to consider specialists
that might go unclaimed in more traditional formats.
Let’s
look at some of the OBS categories and let the 5x5 owners see what they’re
missing. All of the following players are available in the majority of
traditional formats. The ones with value beyond their statistical specialty are
for better. Those that are merely niche-fillers in esoteric OBS leagues
are for worse.
For
Better
Quality
Starts:Dave Bush, SP, Brewers: Wins is a frustrating category in Rotisserie. A Cliff
Lee can pitch his heart out with nothing to show for it. (Lee is only 2-5.)
A win has a lot to do with run support and luck.Adding Quality Starts as a category can
balance things out.Lee, for example,
has six QS, which is only two behind the MLB leaders, Chad Billingsley and
Dan Haren.Heck, even Haren is
only 3-4.Bush, like Lee, has six QS and
is among the league leaders.Bush has
only two decisions, which is why he is available in most leagues despite a 1.04
WHIP and 36 strikeouts.Bush is
available in nearly 80% of leagues.
OBP:Nick Johnson,
1B, Nationals:Johnson is healthy, at
least for now, and doing what he does best. His .433 OBP is 11th in
the majors. Johnson’s lifetime OBP is .398.Johnson is good in leagues with OPS (.893) as well.Nevertheless, Johnson is only owned in 25% of
leagues.
Slugging Percentage:Alberto Callaspo,
2B/SS, Royals: This may seem surprising since Callaspo is not a homerun hitter.
However, his .524 slugging is better than Ryan Howard’s.Combine a .341 average with 15 doubles and
you get a slugger’s slugging percentage. Callaspo is not a niche player,
however, and he should be owned in all formats.Strangely he is still available in 2/3 of leagues.
Doubles:Freddy Sanchez, 2B,
Pirates:Callaspo and Sanchez are tied
for second in the majors with 15 doubles, just behind Evan Longoria.Sanchez is a lifetime .301 hitter and has had
as many as 53 doubles in a season, in 2006. Sanchez is owned in less than half
of all leagues.
For
Worse
Triples:Coco Crisp, OF, Royals:
Triples are a bit of a crapshoot, having such a short list of suppliers.Crisp is on his way to eclipsing his personal
best of seven triples. He already has five, which leads the majors and is three
more than Jose Reyes. In traditional leagues Crisp has some value as a
base-stealer, but if you are in a peculiar league with triples as a category,
Crisp is golden. Absent that, he is only a marginal fantasy player. Crisp is
available in 60% of leagues.
Walks:Jeremy Hermida,
OF, Marlins: If you are in a league that counts both OBP and walks, then Billy
Beane must be your commissioner. Hermida is on pace for 100+ walks this
season.The rest of his numbers are
quite ordinary: .258 average and only 3 HR.Having to consider Hermida undermines the argument for walks as a Roto
category – sorry Billy.