Posts Tagged ‘Sherpa Points’

Season-to-Date Top 10 AL-only 5×5 (Fri 5/1/09)

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Hi everyone,

Here are the Top 10 performers through April for an AL-only 5×5 format.  The leader in each category is given 1.00 Sherpa Points; all other players’ scores in that category are based on their results relative to the category leader’s (e.g. - if the league-leader has hit 9 HR, then a player with 3 HR would be given a score of 0.33 Sherpa Points).  The maximum Total Sherpa Points is equal to the number of categories (i.e. - 5.00).

  1. Zack Greinke (KC, SP) - 36.0 IP, 5 W, 0 SV, 0.50 ERA, 0.89 WHIP, 44 K, 4.00 Total Sherpa Points
  2. Ian Kinsler (Tex, 2B) - 86 AB, 7 HR, 20 RBI, 7 SB, .326 AVG, 18 R, 3.51 Total Sherpa Points
  3. Evan Longoria (TB, 3B) - 84 AB, 6 HR, 24 RBI, 1 SB, .369 AVG, 17 R, 3.26 Total Sherpa Points
  4. Aaron Hill (Tor, 2B) - 101 AB, 5 HR, 20 RBI, 1 SB, .376 AVG, 16 R, 3.16 Total Sherpa Points
  5. Kevin Youkilis (Bos, 1B/3B) - 76 AB, 5 HR, 15 RBI, 1 SB, .395 AVG, 20 R, 3.00 Total Sherpa Points
  6. Nick Markakis (Bal, OF) - 84 AB, 2 HR, 22 RBI, 0 SB, .381 AVG, 23 R, 2.97 Total Sherpa Points
  7. Adam Jones (Bal, OF) - 78 AB, 4 HR, 18 RBI, 1 SB, .359 AVG, 24 R, 2.94 Total Sherpa Points
  8. Robinson Cano (NYY, 2B) - 93 AB, 5 HR, 16 RBI, 1 SB, .366 AVG, 18 R, 2.91 Total Sherpa Points
  9. Torii Hunter (LAA, OF) - 77 AB, 8 HR, 16 RBI, 1 SB, .325 AVG, 19 R, 2.85 Total Sherpa Points
  10. Nick Swisher (NYY, 1B/OF) - 77 AB, 7 HR, 19 RBI, 0 SB, .312 AVG, 21 R, 2.76 Total Sherpa Points

If you’re interested in more details, here’s a description of our In-season Updates to Player Projections & Rankings.  These are the only rankings in the industry that are updated daily throughout the season - our Remainder-of-Season rankings reflect injuries, minor league call-ups, and role changes (e.g.- new Closers)! If you’d like to see the top performers by position, change the scoring categories, or change the league type, here’s a demo of our In-season Updates to Player Projections & Rankings.

Enjoy!

The Sherpa

FantasyBaseballSherpa.com

Remainder-of-Season Top 10 NL-only 5×5 (Fri 5/1/09)

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Hi everyone,

Here are the forecasted Top 10 performers for the rest of the season for an NL-only 5×5 format.  The leader in each category is given 1.00 Sherpa Points; all other players’ scores in that category are based on their results relative to the category leader’s (e.g. - if the forecast for the league-leader is 110 RBI, then a player with a forecast of 55 RBI would be given a score of 0.50 Sherpa Points).  The maximum Total Sherpa Points is equal to the number of categories (i.e. - 5.00).

  1. Johan Santana (NYM, SP) - 196 IP, 12 W, 0 SV, 2.71 ERA, 1.07 WHIP, 200 K, 3.85 Total Sherpa Points
  2. Albert Pujols (StL, 1B) - 482 AB, 35 HR, 110 RBI, 7 SB, .332 AVG, 96 R, 3.79 Total Sherpa Points
  3. Matt Kemp (LAD, OF) - 577 AB, 19 HR, 88 RBI, 31 SB, .308 AVG, 101 R, 3.55 Total Sherpa Points
  4. Alfonso Soriano (ChC, OF) - 567 AB, 37 HR, 85 RBI, 25 SB, .286 AVG, 102 R, 3.45 Total Sherpa Points
  5. Chase Utley (Phi, 2B) - 508 AB, 28 HR, 96 RBI, 12 SB, .313 AVG, 102 R, 3.44 Total Sherpa Points
  6. Hanley Ramirez (Fla, SS) - 549 AB, 29 HR, 81 RBI, 23 SB, .299 AVG, 98 R, 3.34 Total Sherpa Points
  7. Ryan Braun (Mil, OF) - 552 AB, 33 HR, 99 RBI, 18 SB, .292 AVG, 93 R, 3.33 Total Sherpa Points
  8. Carlos Beltran (NYM, OF) - 511 AB, 27 HR, 101 RBI, 19 SB, .295 AVG, 95 R, 3.25 Total Sherpa Points
  9. David Wright (NYM, 3B) - 514 AB, 23 HR, 93 RBI, 18 SB, .305 AVG, 93 R, 3.21 Total Sherpa Points
  10. Jose Reyes (NYM, SS) - 587 AB, 12 HR, 57 RBI, 51 SB, .291 AVG, 96 R, 3.19 Total Sherpa Points

If you’re interested in more details, here’s a description of our In-season Updates to Player Projections & Rankings.  These are the only rankings in the industry that are updated daily throughout the season - our Remainder-of-Season rankings reflect injuries, minor league call-ups, and role changes (e.g.- new Closers)! If you’d like to see the top performers by position, change the scoring categories, or change the league type, here’s a demo of our In-season Updates to Player Projections & Rankings.

Enjoy!

The Sherpa

FantasyBaseballSherpa.com

Season-to-Date Top 10 NL-only 5×5 (Fri 5/1/09)

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Hi everyone,

Here are the Top 10 performers through April for an NL-only 5×5 format.  The leader in each category is given 1.00 Sherpa Points; all other players’ scores in that category are based on their results relative to the category leader’s (e.g. - if the league-leader has hit 9 HR, then a player with 3 HR would be given a score of 0.33 Sherpa Points).  The maximum Total Sherpa Points is equal to the number of categories (i.e. - 5.00).

  1. Albert Pujols (StL, 1B) - 83 AB, 8 HR, 28 RBI, 4 SB, .337 AVG, 22 R, 3.95 Total Sherpa Points
  2. Johan Santana (NYM, SP) - 32.2 IP, 3 W, 0 SV, 1.10 ERA, 0.95 WHIP, 44 K, 3.38 Total Sherpa Points
  3. Raul Ibanez (Phi, OF) - 78 AB, 7 HR, 17 RBI, 3 SB, .359 AVG, 20 R, 3.38 Total Sherpa Points
  4. Adrian Gonzalez (SD, 1B) - 81 AB, 9 HR, 20 RBI, 1 SB, .333 AVG, 19 R, 3.26 Total Sherpa Points
  5. Dan Haren (Ari, SP) - 35.0 IP, 2 W, 0 SV, 1.54 ERA, 0.74 WHIP, 36 K, 3.24 Total Sherpa Points
  6. Chase Utley (Phi, 2B) - 73 AB, 7 HR, 20 RBI, 2 SB, .342 AVG, 18 R, 3.12 Total Sherpa Points
  7. Jorge Cantu (Fla, 1B/3B) - 63 AB, 7 HR, 22 RBI, 1 SB, .365 AVG, 15 R, 3.01 Total Sherpa Points
  8. Chad Billingsley (LAD, SP) - 33.2 IP, 4 W, 0 SV, 2.14 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, 34 K, 3.00 Total Sherpa Points
  9. Alfonso Soriano (ChC, OF) - 88 AB, 7 HR, 14 RBI, 4 SB, .284 AVG, 21 R, 2.86 Total Sherpa Points
  10. Manny Ramirez (LAD, OF) - 78 AB, 5 HR, 15 RBI, 0 SB, .372 AVG, 19 R, 2.81 Total Sherpa Points

If you’re interested in more details, here’s a description of our In-season Updates to Player Projections & Rankings.  These are the only rankings in the industry that are updated daily throughout the season - our Remainder-of-Season rankings reflect injuries, minor league call-ups, and role changes (e.g.- new Closers)! If you’d like to see the top performers by position, change the scoring categories, or change the league type, here’s a demo of our In-season Updates to Player Projections & Rankings.

Enjoy!

The Sherpa

FantasyBaseballSherpa.com

Roid Rage (2/17/09)

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009


Towards the end of the 1983 classic Return of the Jedi Emperor Palpatine tells Luke Skywalker “I can feel your anger” as he implores Luke to join the Dark Side of the Force.  Yes, by making a Star Wars reference I’m dating myself, but as a friend of mine used to say, somebody’s got to do it.

 

Much like the Emperor Palpatine, I can feel the anger directed towards Alex Rodriguez by baseball fans in the wake of his recent admission that he used steroids from 2001-2003 while a member of the Texas Rangers.  What impact did A-Rod’s steroid use have on his fantasy baseball value?  Surprisingly, the answer is “not much”.

 

On my website FantasyBaseballSherpa.com I’ve created a method of evaluating players’ fantasy baseball impact called the Sherpa Points system.  For counting stats such as home runs, RBI, etc., the league leader in the category is assigned a Sherpa Points score of 1.00.  A player with half the league leader’s total in that category would receive a 0.50 Sherpa Points, a player with a quarter of the league leader’s total in that category would receive 0.25 Sherpa Points, etc. 

 

For rate stats such as batting average a proxy statistic can be used.  To get a player’s Total Sherpa Points across all fantasy categories, you simply add up his Sherpa Points in each individual category.  If your fantasy league uses n hitting categories, then the maximum Total Sherpa Points would be n.  Thus, we have a straightforward method of evaluating a player’s overall fantasy impact.  The same method can be used to evaluate pitchers.

 

For the standard five hitting categories (AVG, HR, RBI, SB, R) here are Alex Rodriguez’ Total Sherpa Points scores by year since he became a full-time player in 1996 (max possible score is 5.00):

 

  • 1996:  3.70
  • 1997:  2.37
  • 1998:  3.63
  • 1999:  2.57
  • 2000:  3.29
  • 2001:  3.35
  • 2002:  3.67
  • 2003:  3.34
  • 2004:  2.87
  • 2005:  3.89
  • 2006:  2.77
  • 2007:  3.80
  • 2008:  2.92

 

The preceding makes it clear that while Rodriguez may have been more consistent from 2001-2003 than over any other three-year period of his career, he definitely did not perform at a higher level relative to his peers during those years.  In fact, his best year during his “Steroid Period” (2002) stacks up as only the fourth-best fantasy season of his career, trailing 2005, 2007, and even 1996!

 

Perhaps you despise Rodriguez because you don’t like his personality, you think he doesn’t come through during the playoffs, you believe he’s still taking illegal substances, you hate the Yankees, or you get tired of reading about his off-the-field antics in the tabloids.  Whatever the reason, if you want to maximize your chances for fantasy baseball success in 2009, you need to set that all aside and take him this year if he’s available when it’s your turn to draft.

 

I project the following stats for Rodriguez for 2009:  .302 AVG, 44 HR, 133 RBI, 21 SB, 128 R, 3.65 Total Sherpa Points.  When you factor in Position Scarcity (the drop-off between the top-rated options and the mediocre options at each position), you could make an argument that Hanley Ramirez (3.44 projected Total Sherpa Points) should be the top overall pick.  However, given the relative uncertainty surrounding Ramirez (e.g. – will he be batting leadoff or third?  will his supporting cast be weaker this year than in the past?), I would argue strongly for Rodriguez as the first overall pick.

 

Let go of your anger – it will not serve you well.

Until next time,

The Sherpa

AL-only League - Top 10 Pitchers (Tue 7/29/08)

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

In this post I’ll take a look at the Top 10 Pitchers (both year-to-date and for the rest of the season) in an AL-only format (i.e. - Pitching categories are Wins, Saves, Strikeouts, ERA, and WHIP). Each player receives a Sherpa Point score ranging from 0 to 1 in each of the 5 categories; thus, the maximum possible score is 5.00.

For the counting statistics the league leader is assigned a score of 1.00; all other Pitchers’ scores are calculated by taking the ratio of their score in a particular category to the league leader’s score. For example, if the league leader has 15 Wins, a Pitcher with 10 Wins would receive a score of .67, a Pitcher with 5 Wins would receive a score of .33, etc. For average-based categories (e.g. - ERA and WHIP) a proxy statistic is used. Pitchers’ Sherpa Points scores in each individual category are added to calculate the Total Sherpa Points.

Top 10 Pitchers Year-to-Date

  1. Cliff Lee - 3.71 (Remainder-of-Season forecast = 3.00 Sherpa Points, which ranks 3rd overall)
  2. Roy Halladay - 3.61 (3.85, 1st)
  3. Justin Duchscherer - 3.04 (2.80, 6th)
  4. Ervin Santana - 2.72 (2.09, 20th)
  5. James Shields - 2.58 (2.90, 4th)
  6. Joe Saunders - 2.55 (1.64, 35th)
  7. Mariano Rivera - 2.37 (2.80, 5th)
  8. Mike Mussina - 2.32 (2.05, 21st)
  9. Josh Beckett - 2.20 (2.78, 7th)
  10. Felix Hernandez - 2.16 (2.77, 8th)
  11. Scott Kazmir - 2.16 (2.67, 9th)

Top 10 Pitchers for Remainder of Season

  1. Roy Halladay - 3.85 (Year-to-Date score = 3.61 Sherpa Points, which ranks 2nd)
  2. John Lackey - 3.21 (1.97, 19th)
  3. Cliff Lee - 3.00 (3.71, 1st)
  4. James Shields - 2.90 (2.58, 5th)
  5. Mariano Rivera - 2.80 (2.37, 7th)
  6. Justin Duchscherer - 2.80 (3.04, 3rd)
  7. Josh Beckett - 2.78 (2.20, 9th)
  8. Felix Hernandez - 2.77 (2.16, Tied for 10th)
  9. Scott Kazmir - 2.67 (2.16, Tied for 10th)
  10. Daisuke Matsuzaka - 2.63 (1.94, 20th)

John Lackey’s year-to-date results are obviously hampered by the fact that he didn’t pitch his first regular season game until May 14th. Still, with three bad outings in his last four starts, he may be a buy-low candidate today. I would also consider Daisuke Matsuzaka a buy-low candidate at this point in the season. On the flip side, three Pitchers I would be looking to sell high on if I owned them: (1) Ervin Santana, (2) Joe Saunders, and (3) Mike Mussina.
In my next post I’ll take a look at the Top 10 Hitters in an NL-only format.

Until then,

The Sherpa

AL-only League - Top 10 Hitters (Mon 7/28/08)

Monday, July 28th, 2008

Today I’ll take a look at the Top 10 Hitters (both year-to-date and for the rest of the season) in a standard AL-only league format (i.e. - Hitting categories are HR, RBI, AVG, SB, and Runs Scored). Each player receives a Sherpa Point score ranging from 0 to 1 in each of the 5 categories; thus, the maximum possible score is 5.00.

For the counting statistics the league leader is assigned a score of 1.00; all other Hitters’ scores are calculated by taking the ratio of their score in a particular category to the league leader’s score. For example, if the league leader has 25 Home Runs, a Hitter with 15 Home Runs would receive a score of .60, a Hitter with 10 Home Runs would receive a score of .40, etc. For average-based categories (e.g.- AVG) a proxy statistic is used. Hitters’ Sherpa Points scores in each individual category are added to calculate the Total Sherpa Points.

Top 10 Hitters Year-to-Date

  1. Ian Kinsler - 3.82 (Remainder-of-Season forecast = 3.65 Sherpa Points, which ranks 2nd overall)
  2. Josh Hamilton - 3.34 (3.00, 9th)
  3. Alex Rodriguez - 3.19 (4.35, 1st)
  4. Grady Sizemore - 3.06 (3.22, 3rd)
  5. Jermaine Dye - 2.98 (2.95, 11th)
  6. Carlos Quentin - 2.90 (2.90, 12th)
  7. Justin Morneau - 2.80 (3.07, 6th)
  8. Dustin Pedroia - 2.76 (2.62, 25th)
  9. Kevin Youkilis - 2.70 (2.63, 24th)
  10. Ichiro Suzuki - 2.58 (3.08, 5th)

Top 10 Hitters for Remainder of Season

  1. Alex Rodriguez - 4.35 (Year-to-Date score = 3.19 Sherpa Points, which ranks 3rd)
  2. Ian Kinsler - 3.65 (3.82, 1st)
  3. Grady Sizemore - 3.22 (3.06, 4th)
  4. Manny Ramirez - 3.16 (2.56, 11th)
  5. Ichiro Suzuki - 3.08 (2.58, 10th)
  6. Justin Morneau - 3.07 (2.80, 7th)
  7. Miguel Cabrera - 3.00 (2.33, 18th)
  8. Magglio Ordonez - 3.00 (2.35, 17th)
  9. Josh Hamilton - 3.00 (3.34, 2nd)
  10. Carl Crawford - 2.97 (2.17, 26th)

With fantasy league trading deadlines rapidly approaching, these lists can serve as a guide to potential sell high and buy low candidates. For example, if you currently own Josh Hamilton, and the Alex Rodriguez owner in your league is willing to trade A-Rod in a one-for-one deal for Hamilton, I’d do it in a heartbeat!

The other “sell high” candidates that jump out from the lists above are Red Sox Dustin Pedroia and Kevin Youkilis. If you’re looking for a “buy low” candidate, Carl Crawford is definitely a player worth pursuing for the home stretch.

I’ll take a look at the Top 10 AL-only Pitchers in my next post.

Until then,

The Sherpa

Mixed League - Top 10 Pitchers (Sun 7/27/08)

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

In this post I’ll take a look at the Top 10 Pitchers (both year-to-date and for the rest of the season) in a standard mixed league format (i.e. - Pitching categories are Wins, Saves, Strikeouts, ERA, and WHIP). Each player receives a Sherpa Point score ranging from 0 to 1 in each of the 5 categories; thus, the maximum possible score is 5.00.

For the counting statistics the league leader is assigned a score of 1.00; all other Pitchers’ scores are calculated by taking the ratio of their score in a particular category to the league leader’s score. For example, if the league leader has 15 Wins, a Pitcher with 10 Wins would receive a score of .67, a Pitcher with 5 Wins would receive a score of .33, etc. For average-based categories (e.g. - ERA and WHIP) a proxy statistic is used. Pitchers’ Sherpa Points scores in each individual category are added to calculate the Total Sherpa Points.

Top 10 Pitchers Year-to-Date

  1. Cliff Lee - 3.60 (Remainder-of-Season forecast = 2.48 Sherpa Points, which ranks 18th overall)
  2. Roy Halladay - 3.45 (3.68, 2nd)
  3. Dan Haren - 3.39 (3.59, 3rd)
  4. CC Sabathia - 3.22 (3.69, 1st)
  5. Brandon Webb - 2.94 (3.25, 5th)
  6. Justin Duchscherer - 2.93 (2.61, 13th)
  7. Cole Hamels - 2.93 (2.96, 8th)
  8. Tim Lincecum - 2.84 (2.44, 19th)
  9. Ben Sheets - 2.67 (2.52, 17th)
  10. Ervin Santana - 2.66 (2.03, 36th)

Top 10 Pitchers for Remainder of Season

  1. CC Sabathia - 3.69 (Year-to-Date score = 3.22 Sherpa Points, which ranks 4th)
  2. Roy Halladay - 3.68 (3.45, 2nd)
  3. Dan Haren - 3.59 (3.39, 3rd)
  4. Johan Santana - 3.35 (2.32, 16th)
  5. Brandon Webb - 3.25 (2.94, 5th)
  6. Jake Peavy - 3.25 (2.16, 22nd)
  7. John Lackey - 3.13 (1.88, 34th)
  8. Cole Hamels - 2.96 (2.93, 7th)
  9. Mariano Rivera - 2.83 (2.33, 15th)
  10. James Shields - 2.69 (2.27, Tied for 17th)

As you would expect, there’s more of a difference between the Year-to-Date and Remainder-of-Season results for Pitchers than there is for Hitters. While hitting stats are somewhat team dependent (e.g. - RBI, Runs Scored), a Pitcher’s Wins are much more team dependent, which makes them more difficult to predict accurately.

In my next post I’ll take a look at the Top 10 Hitters in an AL-only format.

Until then,

The Sherpa

Mixed League - Top 10 Hitters (Sun 7/27/08)

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

Today I’ll take a look at the Top 10 Hitters (both year-to-date and for the rest of the season) in a standard mixed league format (i.e. - Hitting categories are HR, RBI, AVG, SB, and Runs Scored). Each player receives a Sherpa Point score ranging from 0 to 1 in each of the 5 categories; thus, the maximum possible score is 5.00.

For the counting statistics the league leader is assigned a score of 1.00; all other Hitters’ scores are calculated by taking the ratio of their score in a particular category to the league leader’s score. For example, if the league leader has 25 Home Runs, a Hitter with 15 Home Runs would receive a score of .60, a Hitter with 10 Home Runs would receive a score of .40, etc. For average-based categories (e.g.- AVG) a proxy statistic is used. Hitters’ Sherpa Points scores in each individual category are added to calculate the Total Sherpa Points.

Top 10 Hitters Year-to-Date

  1. Lance Berkman - 3.59 (Remainder-of-Season forecast = 3.68 Sherpa Points, which ranks 2nd overall)
  2. Ian Kinsler - 3.44 (3.22, 5th)
  3. Josh Hamilton - 3.19 (2.76, 17th)
  4. Hanley Ramirez - 3.16 (3.40, 4th)
  5. Matt Holliday - 2.99 (3.64, 3rd)
  6. Jose Reyes - 2.98 (3.07, 10th)
  7. Ryan Braun - 2.96 (3.09, 8th)
  8. Alex Rodriguez - 2.88 (3.84, 1st)
  9. Chipper Jones - 2.84 (2.89, 15th)
  10. David Wright - 2.82 (3.08, 9th) and Chase Utley - 2.82 (3.11, 7th).

Top 10 Hitters for Remainder of Season

  1. Alex Rodriguez - 3.84 (Year-to-Date score = 2.88 Sherpa Points, which ranks 8th)
  2. Lance Berkman - 3.68 (3.59, 1st)
  3. Matt Holliday - 3.64 (2.99, 5th)
  4. Hanley Ramirez - 3.40 (3.16, 4th)
  5. Albert Pujols - 3.22 (2.80, 12th)
  6. Ian Kinsler - 3.22 (3.44, 2nd)
  7. Chase Utley - 3.11 (2.82, Tied for 10th)
  8. Ryan Braun - 3.09 (2.96, 7th)
  9. David Wright - 3.08 (2.82, Tied for 10th)
  10. Jose Reyes - 3.07 (2.98, 6th)

It’s very interesting to see the majority of the Hitters appear in both lists, indicating that over the course of a 162-game season, the top Hitters are generally the ones you would have expected to see at the top of this list before the season began.

I’ll take a look at the Top 10 Mixed League Pitchers in my next post.

Until then,

The Sherpa

Streaming Consciousness (6/7/08)

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

In leagues that allow weekly lineup changes many fantasy baseball team owners choose to rotate different starting pitchers each week through the same roster spot. Commonly known as streaming, this practice usually involves looking for pitchers with either two starts or one very favorable match-up during the upcoming week.

How do you assess which pitchers have the most favorable match-ups? There are three main criteria to consider: (1) the quality of the pitcher you’re considering, (2) the quality of the pitcher’s probable pitching opponent(s), and (3) the opposing team’s strength in the areas relevant to your league’s pitching categories.

Most fantasy team owners are fairly confident in their ability to assess the first two factors. However, most owners don’t give sufficient consideration to the opposing team’s capabilities. Some owners make a quick, qualitative judgment (e.g. – the Royals’ offense stinks) and move on. Others focus on a statistics that either don’t tell the whole story by themselves (e.g. – batting average, number of runs scored), or worse yet, may have limited relevance (e.g. – number of home runs hit, unless HR Allowed is one of your pitching categories).

Fortunately, teams’ strength in the areas relevant to your league’s pitching categories can be quantified and used to your advantage. Let’s assume that you’re playing in a league that uses the standard five pitching categories (Wins, Saves, ERA, WHIP, and Strikeouts). Obviously, Saves aren’t a consideration in selecting your starting pitchers. We want to find teams that combine a low number of wins, runs scored, and hits + walks with a high number of strikeouts.

The Sherpa Points system involves assigning each team a score between 0 and 1.00 in each category, then summing across categories to get an overall score. The calculations are straightforward for counting categories in which we want the opposing team to have a low score (e.g. – Wins, Runs Scored, Walks+Hits). The team with the highest total in each category receives a score of 1.00; a team with 75% of the leading team’s total would receive a score of .75, a team with 50% of the leading team’s total would receive a score of .50, etc. For counting categories such as Ks (where lower values are better for hitting teams) or average-based categories such as K/BB or K/9, you can choose a proxy statistic that can be minimized. Again, we want to be able to minimize all the opponents’ statistics that we’re considering.

I performed season-to-date rankings based on this system for the 30 teams through the games of Thursday, 6/5/08. If you’re trying to find the best teams to stream a starting pitcher against, you want the teams with the lowest total scores. Here are the results of my study (ranked from most favorable team to pitch against to least favorable):

1. Kansas City Royals 2.96

2. Seattle Mariners 2.98

3. Washington Nationals 3.00

4. Colorado Rockies 3.07

5. San Francisco Giants 3.08

6. San Diego Padres 3.10

7. Cleveland Indians 3.15

8. Baltimore Orioles 3.18

9. Detroit Tigers 3.19

10. Los Angeles Dodgers 3.26

11. Florida Marlins 3.33

12. Milwaukee Brewers 3.33

13. Cincinnati Reds 3.34

14. Houston Astros 3.37

15. Arizona Diamondbacks 3.37

16. New York Mets 3.37

17. Chicago White Sox 3.39

18. New York Yankees 3.39

19. Tampa Bay Rays 3.40

20. Minnesota Twins 3.41

21. Pittsburgh Pirates 3.42

22. Oakland A’s 3.43

23. Toronto Blue Jays 3.45

24. Los Angeles Angels 3.46

25. Atlanta Braves 3.59

26. St. Louis Cardinals 3.74

27. Philadelphia Phillies 3.75

28. Texas Rangers 3.78

29. Boston Red Sox 3.87

30. Chicago Cubs 3.97

There are a number of surprises on this list (e.g. – Twins, Pirates, A’s, and Angels), but it can serve as a fairly informative guide if you’re trying to decide among several starting pitchers that you have rated fairly evenly for the upcoming week.

This approach can be used for either points-based leagues or roto-style leagues; just be sure that the categories you choose are relevant to your league. For example, if your league also uses Home Runs Allowed as a pitching category, Baltimore, Florida, and Milwaukee would become less desirable opponents.

You can update this analysis as often as you see fit. I don’t expect that the results would change significantly from week to week, but I would expect meaningful changes over time periods of a month or longer.

And oh yes, the Royals’ offense does indeed stink.

 

Until next time,

The Sherpa

Sherpa Forecast: Jay Bruce - Livin’ in the Future? (5/28/08)

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

So it’s finally happened. Jay Bruce, who is less than half Barack Obama’s age and less than one-third of John McCain’s age, but has seemingly generated more conversation in 2008 (at least among fantasy baseball enthusiasts) than Obama and McCain combined, has finally landed in Cincinnati.

Stripping away the hype, what does this mean for those with the foresight to stash Bruce at the beginning of the season or the waiver wire priority to claim him during the season? Will he make the immediate impact that rookies Ryan Braun and Hunter Pence did after the call-ups during the 2007 season? Will he disappoint the way that Alex Gordon did during his rookie season (also 2007)? Or, as the cliche goes, does the true answer lie somewhere in the middle?

Based on his minor league rate stats, with a few subjective adjustments, here’s what I think you can realistically expect from Bruce for the rest of this season:

  • 409 AB
  • 62 R
  • 114 H
  • 30 2B
  • 5 3B
  • 16 HR
  • 68 RBI
  • 12 SB
  • 36 BB
  • 115 SO
  • .279 AVG
  • .330 OBP
  • .494 SLG

So, where would these results place Bruce among his more established peers? The Sherpa Point scale assigns a score of 1.00 to the player with the top score in each category; all other players’ scores in that category are based on their result in that category compared to the league leader’s. For example, if the league leader is projected to hit 50 HRs, a batter projected to hit 40 HRs would receive 0.80 Sherpa HR pts, a batter projected to hit 25 HRs would receive 0.50 Sherpa HR pts, etc. For average-based categories such as AVG, OBP, SLG, and OPS, a proxy statistic is used. Thus, if you play in a league that uses 5 offensive categories, the maximum Hitter’s Sherpa Points score would be 5.00.

Pro-rating my Preseason Projections for all Hitters, I project that in a league using the 5 standard offensive categories (AVG, HR, RBI, SB, and R) Bruce would score 2.38 Sherpa Points. This would place Bruce roughly 20th overall, comparable to the projected Sherpa Point scores for fellow Outfielders Chris Young and B.J. Upton. Obviously, their Sherpa Point scores will vary by category (in some cases quite a bit), but on an overall basis, that’s where I believe Bruce’s value will fall. For the sake of comparison, the Top 3 Outfielders (based on Preseason Projected Sherpa Points) were Matt Holliday (3.56), Carl Crawford (3.19), and Vlad Guerrero (3.08).

So while Bruce should be a strong contributor to your fantasy team if you’re fortunate enough to have him, he will not carry you to your league’s championship by himself. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if he’s eventually a Top 5 Outfielder from a fantasy perspective, but that’s highly unlikely to happen in 2008. As long as you temper your expectations, you will not be disappointed.

Until next time,

The Sherpa