Dynasty Leagues and a BABS Love Letter

Can BABS work in a deep, dynasty league format? I took it out for a spin in the XFL Experts league to find out.

The incidentals:

The XFL is the industry’s only experts league with keepers, but it’s really a hybrid keeper/dynasty competition. It is a 15-team mixed league that uses 9 of the 10 standard 5×5 categories, with OBP replacing batting average.

Each team has 40-man rosters. The 23-man active roster auction takes place each November at First Pitch Arizona. The 17-man reserve snake draft takes place at the end of March.

Drafted major leaguers receive an annual $5 salary increase each year. Players drafted as farm players receive an annual $3 increase once they are promoted. Any players can be kept for as long as you are willing to pay the increases, though each team can only protect 15 each year. Of the 225 players that could have been protected coming into 2016, 44 of them were farm players.

Here are the results of the November draft.

I enter 2016 in year #2 of a rebuild. Last season was the beginning of the construction process and this year it continues. I see myself as a marginal contender right now and will likely trade off any valuable assets if it becomes apparent that I will not be in the thick of it.

I scanned the list of available players and identified those that might be a consideration for my reserve draft. The only blatant hole on my active roster is Daniel Norris, who I had purchased for $3 back in November. I had protected a $6 Andrew Miller, whose saves value will likely only last for one month [whoops – that’s gone now!], so I’ll need to beef up there as well. I’m painfully short on speed. And my Chris Iannetta-Kevin Plawecki catching tandem is weak, though the available backstops provide little hope for an upgrade.

Hmm… Maybe my potential to contend is a little bit less than marginal.

Here was the BABS available talent pool I assembled:

ASSETS LIABILITIES
BATTER Pos Tm PT Pw Sp Av Pk Rg Av Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
+ Martinez,Victor 0 DET F p AV Ag
 
Pierzynski,A.J. 2 ATL M AV Ag
Avila,Alex 23 CHW M p + Rg AV inj- Nw
Knapp,Andrew 2 PHI P PW s a EX
8C Sanchez,Gary 2 NYY P PW a EX
7C Murphy,Tom 2 COL P P+ AV EX
Saltalamacchia,J 2 DET P P+ AV Nw
Conger,Hank 2 TAM P p AV Nw
Murphy,John 2 MIN P a EX Nw
Pena,Brayan 2 STL P a Nw
 
+ Trumbo,Mark o903 BAL F PW a Pk Nw
  Napoli,Mike 3 CLE F PW + Nw
Park,Byung Ho 3 MIN F PW EX
Shaw,Travis 3 BOS M PW a EX
Howard,Ryan 3 PHI M P+ Ag
Smoak,Justin 3 TOR M P+
Paulsen,Ben 3o COL M PW EX
Morrison,Logan 3 TAM M p inj- Nw
8C Reed,A.J. 3 HOU P PW a EX
Lee,Dae-ho 3 SEA P p a EX
White,Tyler 3 HOU M + EX
8C Shaffer,Richie 3 TAM P PW AV EX
Morse,Michael 3 PIT P p inj- Rg
7C Cecchini,Garin 30 MIL P s AV EX Nw
  Spangenberg,Cory 4 SD F SB a inj- EX
Schoop,Jonathan 4 BAL F PW inj- e
7C Johnson,Micah 4 LA P EX Nw
  Prado,Martin 5 MIA F AV inj-
+ Valencia,Danny 5o7 OAK M PW AV
Uribe,Juan 5 CLE M p AV Nw Ag
Headley,Chase 5 NYY F a
Lamb,Jacob 5 ARI M p a e
Valbuena,Luis 53 HOU M PW +
8C Drury,Brandon 5 ARI P p AV EX
Reynolds,Mark 35 COL P PW + Pk Nw
 
  Escobar,Eduardo 6o7 MIN F p a
+ Cabrera,Asdrubal 6 NYM F p inj- Nw
Iglesias,Jose 6 DET F a e
Ramirez,Alexei 6 SD F a
8C Story,Trevor 6 COL P P+ SB AV EX
Gonzalez,Marwin 365 HOU M a
Villar,Jonathan 6 MIL M SB AV e Nw
8C Hanson,Alen 6 PIT P S+ AV EX
7B Polanco,Jorge 6 MIN P EX
+ Aoki,Norichika o7 SEA F s AV inj- Nw
+ Cabrera,Melky o7 CHW F AV
+ Santana,Domingo o98 MIL F PW AV EX
Jackson,Austin o89 CHW F s a Nw
Kim,Hyun-Soo 7 BAL F a EX
Naquin,Tyler 8 CLE M p s a EX
Broxton,Keon o MIL M p SB AV EX
Davis,Rajai o87 CLE M SB a Nw
9C Phillips,Brett 8 MIL P p SB a EX
Dyson,Jarrod o87 KC P S+ a INJ
Raburn,Ryan 0o COL P PW a
9D Brinson,Lewis 8 TEX P p s a EX
7B Mahtook,Mikie o TAM P P+ s EX
Gose,Anthony 8o DET M SB AV
Lambo,Andrew o OAK P p a INJ EX
Martin,Leonys 8o SEA M s Rg AV Nw
Rickard,Joey 7 BAL P SB a+ EX
8A Zimmer,Bradley 8 CLE P p SB AV EX
8C Quinn,Roman 8 PHI P S+ EX
Arcia,Oswaldo o MIN P p inj-
8D Thompson,Trayce o LA P p EX
8C Smith,Mallex 8 ATL P SB EX
+/- PITCHER Pos Tm PT Er K Sv Pk Rg Er Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
+ Grilli,Jason rp ATL ER K+ sv- INJ Ag
Perkins,Glen rp MIN e KK SV
Knebel,Corey rp MIL ER KK sv- EX
Cishek,Steve rp SEA e k SV Nw
Jeffress,Jeremy rp MIL ER k sv-
Ziegler,Brad rp ARI ER SV Ag Rg
Hernandez,David rp PHI e KK sv- INJ Nw
Bailey,Andrew rp PHI e k sv- INJ Nw
Kela,Keone rp TEX ER K+ EX
O Day,Darren rp BAL ER K+
Romo,Sergio rp SF ER K+
Strop,Pedro rp CHC ER K+
Benoit,Joaquin rp SEA ER KK Nw Ag
Herrera,Kelvin rp KC ER KK
Madson,Ryan rp OAK ER KK Nw
Pomeranz,Drew rp SD ER KK INJ Nw
Strickland,Hunter rp SF ER KK EX
Watson,Tony rp PIT ER KK
Hoover,J.J. rp CIN k sv-
Rodney,Fernando rp SD k sv- Ag
Dyson,Sam rp TEX ER k e
Hendriks,Liam rp OAK ER k Nw
Soria,Joakim rp KC ER k inj- Nw
Warren,Adam rp CHC ER k Nw
Colome,Alexander rp TAM e k e
Hudson,Daniel rp ARI e k INJ
Jepsen,Kevin rp MIN e k
Quackenbush,K rp SD e k e
Smith,Joe rp LAA ER
Cingrani,Tony rp CIN KK INJ e
Collmenter,Josh rp ARI
8D Meyer,Alex rp MIN -ER EX Rg
+ Velasquez,Vincent SP PHI M e KK EX
Miley,Wade SP SEA F e Nw
Maeda,Kenta SP LA M e k EX
Gibson,Kyle SP MIN F
7A Davies,Zachary SP MIL M e EX
Duffey,Tyler SP MIN M e EX
Porcello,Rick SP BOS M e inj-
7B Lamb,John SP CIN M k INJ EX
Norris,Bud SP ATL M k Nw
Nicasio,Juan SP PIT M k Nw
Tropeano,Nicholas SP LAA M k EX
Bassitt,Chris SP OAK M EX
Cain,Matt SP SF M -ER INJ
Conley,Adam SP MIA M EX
Heston,Chris SP SF M e
Medlen,Kris SP KC M INJ
Niese,Jon SP PIT M
Paxton,James SP SEA M INJ e
7B Rea,Colin SP SD M EX
Roark,Tanner SP WAS M
Skaggs,Tyler SP LAA M INJ e
Tomlin,Josh SP CLE M INJ
Young,Chris SP KC M -ER Ag
Lyons,Tyler SP STL e k e
9C Snell,Blake SP TAM e k EX
9D De Leon,Jose SP LA K+ EX
9D Newcomb,Sean SP ATL KK EX
Cooney,Tim SP STL e EX
8C Fulmer,Michael SP DET e EX
Hutchison,Drew SP TOR k
8C Almonte,Miguel SP KC -ER EX
9E Bradley,Archie SP ARI INJ EX
7A Cole,A.J. SP WAS EX
8C Gonzales,Marco SP STL -ER EX
Greene,Shane SP DET -ER e
7A Johnson,Brian SP BOS EX
Maurer,Brandon SP SD INJ
Nova,Ivan SP NYY INJ
Wright,Steven SP BOS -ER INJ e

When it comes to providing usable ratings for farm players, BABS can only pull from usable history, which is thin at this level. I added the ratings from the Minor League Baseball Analyst to supplement the effort. These two-character ratings are on a scale of 1-10, with “1” being a minor league roster filler, “5” being a major league reserve player and “10” being a future Hall-of-Famer. The second character is an alpha probability rating with “A” being 90 percent probability of reaching potential and “E” being 10% probability of reaching potential. An “8B” player, for instance, has a 70 percent probability of being a solid regular. A “9C” has a 50 percent probability of being an elite player.

Pre-Draft Thoughts

I finished in 6th place last year. The league winner is dropped to the bottom of the reserve draft seeding, leaving me seeded 5th. Given the tendencies of the league, I knew that the first names off the board would be farm-eligible foreigners who were not available back in November, like Byung Ho Park and Kenta Maeda. These are players who are expected to be major-league ready and will hit the ground running yet will incur only $3 salary increases to keep each year. The rest of the first round would be populated with a combination of high ceiling prospects and players who won jobs in spring training. There may be a few undrafted closers too. Names I expect will go quickly include Blake Snell, Trevor Story, A.J. Reed, Jeremy Jeffress and Tyler Naquin.

While I’d love to be able to grab Park or Maeda, that’s unrealistic at pick #5. You can never have enough pitching in this league and my goal for the first round would be to grab the best pitcher to replace Norris. I narrowed my list down to Kyle Gibson, Vincent Velasquez or Juan Nicasio. Yes, I’m being swayed by spring training numbers, but the weakness of the player pool forces me to look for any edge I can.

But then I realized… wait a minute. It’s just one pitching slot. There is a long season ahead and this is the only chance I get to grab a high ceiling talent. If I have to fill Norris’ slot later in the draft with a mediocre arm for a short period, that’s a worthwhile sacrifice so I can shoot for a much better player with my 5th pick. Forget Kyle Gibson. I’ll be shooting for a Blake Snell or maybe Trevor Story.

I think this is the train of thought of someone who is slowly coming to terms with the reality that this may not yet be the year. Hmm, let’s see how this draft goes.

Post Draft Thoughts

Here are the players I was able to get, in order:

BATTER Pos Tm PT Pw Sp Av Pk Rg Av Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
PITCHER Pos Tm PT Er K Sv Pk Rg Er Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
Park,Byung Ho 3 MIN F PW EX
Rickard,Joey 7 BAL M SB a+ EX
Nicasio,Juan SP PIT M k Nw
Phillips,Brett 8 MIL P p SB a EX
Jepsen,Kevin rp MIN e k
Greene,Shane SP DET -ER e
Avila,Alex 23 CHW M p + Rg AV inj- Nw
Iglesias,Jose 6 DET F a e
Valbuena,Luis 53 HOU M PW +
Fulmer,Michael SP DET e EX
Quinn,Roman 8 PHI P S+ EX
Strop,Pedro rp CHC ER K+
Quackenbush,K rp SD e k e
Nova,Ivan SP NYY INJ
Hutchison,Drew SP TOR k

Rule #1, always: Expect the unexpected. I was astounded to have Park drop to me, so my first pick was a no-brainer. Who went before him? Kenta Maeda, Blake Snell, Yulieski Gurriel and Anderson Espinoza. Some of the teams lower in the standings had traded up to get earlier picks and grabbed some longer-term names. Park does not fill an immediate roster need – my corners are Encarnacion, Machado and Adrian Gonzalez – though he is a potential replacement for Carlos Beltran at UT. My $42 Gonzalez becomes possible trade bait, though.

The rest of the draft was a combination of plucking off some interesting prospects (my focus was on speedy guys), filling holes and making sure I had at least one backup at every position. I missed out on the remaining frontline closers, so I stockpiled a few speculations.

And now we play it out.

Okay.

Time for some self-assessment.

I love BABS, and she loves me. But like any great marriage, it’s not always daffodils and rainbows 24/7/366.

It is becoming apparent that BABS has its greatest utility in a mixed league format. The deeper the penetration into the player pool, the more that BABS may fall a bit short. The main reason for this is that the BABS ratings mostly identify above average skill.

For mixed leaguers, this is more of a feature than a flaw. You want to find players who have at least one positive Asset and a minimum of Liabilities. For most mixed formats — 8-team, 10,12, 15 even 18 — the delineation between above average and below average is a sharp line carved in stone. BABS likes that line.

However, once you have to plumb the depths of the pool for the best of the below average talent, BABS almost turns a blind eye. The only exceptions are those players with AV and ER Liabilities. But there is a huge wasteland of players in between, and you would have to think there is a way to tell which ones are better than the others.

BABS says no (she’s stubborn). The potential volatility of small stats makes projections even more faulty. Sure, we’d all like to be able to roster the 12-HR hitter instead of the 6-HR hitter, but nobody can predict a variance that amounts to just one piece of contact per month.

An embryonic version of BABS (Beta-BABS) tested well in 2015, but the final verdict on BABS 1.0 will rest in the results this October. Several of you wrote to tell me you would have never drafted the type of team that BABS pushed you towards this year. Frankly, I hate my Tout Wars team too. (There, I said it.) But maybe that’s a good thing. Because the draft rosters we’ve liked better in the past haven’t necessarily resulted in the long-term fantasy dynasties that we all set out to achieve.

Good luck to those drafting this weekend. Starting next week, I’ll take a stab at using BABS to project the pennant races, describe a visit with a fantasy curmudgeon and then jump into some in-season content.

 

 

7 Comments

  1. David Fraenkel on April 1, 2016 at 10:25 am

    Hi Ron

    Below is my first stab in my AL only 10 team , partial keeper league.

    Was able to get decent hitting: exceptions were catchers (the “do no harm approach”). though I expect Joseph to benefit from injury and Ryan to benefit from Suzuki.

    Full time players – I fell short due to platoon splits but generally have strong side players. I took Hicks and Holt because I feel they will get mostly FT AB due to injury or underperformance. This already is the case for Holt and Shaw (reserve pick). Also Nava (reserve) will be the strong side starter and bat 2nd.

    I have too much risk in pitching (and some bad luck – Ramirez and Bauer to start in bullpen) in terms of injury and experience, but it may turn out better as the season progresses.

    David

    I have 3 more tries

    Assets Liabilities
    Player PT Pw Sp Av Pk Rg Av Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
    Justin Upton LF | DET P+ s a+
    Shin-Soo Choo RF | TEX F p AV+
    Carlos Gomez CF | HOU F PW s a Rg
    Pedro Alvarez 1B | BAL M P+
    Evan Longoria 3B | TB F PW a
    Ketel Marte SS | SEA F SB a EX
    Mark Trumbo RF | BAL F PW a Pk Nw
    Victor Martinez DH | DET F p AV Ag
    Brock Holt 2B | BOS P s a
    Seth Smith LF | SEA M PW a+
    Andrelton Simmons SS | LAA F AV Nw
    Aaron Hicks CF | NYY M s inj- e Nw
    Caleb Joseph C | BAL P p e
    John Ryan Murphy C | MIN P a EX Nw

    Player Pos Tm PT Er K Sv Pk Rg Er Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
    Keeper Chris Archer SP | TB SP TAM F ER KK
    Keeper Danny Salazar SP | CLE SP CLE F e KK
    Keeper Wade Davis RP | KC rp KC – E+ K+ SV
    Lance McCullers SP | HOU SP HOU M ER KK inj- EX
    Mike Fiers SP | HOU SP HOU M e k
    Erasmo Ramirez SP | TB SP TAM M
    Eduardo Rodriguez SP | BOS SP BOS M inj- EX
    Alex Colome RP | TB rp TAM – e k e
    Trevor Bauer SP | CLE SP CLE M k
    TOTALS

    Reserves PT Pw Sp Av Pk Rg Av Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
    Travis Shaw 1B | BOS M PW a EX
    Tyler Naquin CF | CLE M p s a EX
    Daniel Nava RF | LAA M AV inj-

    Pos Tm PT Er K Sv Pk Rg Er Inj Ex Nw Pk Ag Rg
    Daniel Norris SP | DET SP DET M k -ER INJ EX
    CC Sabathia SP | NYY SP NYY M k INJ
    Martin Perez SP | TEX SP TEX M INJ
    Koji Uehara RP | BOS rp BOS – ER K+ INJ Ag
    Zach McAllister RP | CLE rp CLE – e k



  2. Greg Mann on April 1, 2016 at 10:25 am

    I have used BABS in both of the drafts I’ve had this past week, and will take her to a 3rd tomorrow (4/2). Yes, there were directions she pointed me in that I wouldn’t have taken with other ratings systems, but I also didn’t always follow those directions, straying at my own risk. But I have to say that, overall, I think I’m pretty happy with what she did for me, because as you said, my system hasn’t exactly been working as well as I would like over the years. At the tail end of the drafts, I strayed to my own speculations instead of taking the top talent suggested by BABS. Some might say that the end game is a VERY good time to take advantage of BABS, grabbing the remaining talent while everyone else goes for their end game sleepers. However, part of the fun of playing this game is to grab up a few guys that I want to take a chance on, for whatever personal reasons (home team bias, the feeling of a little control over my own destiny, etc.), and see how they pan out. I figure, I’ll keep the final, depleted BABS sheets from each league around for each league for a little while, and if some of my end gamers don’t work out, then I can still refer to BABS to see if any of those higher talent guys are still out there on the free agent or waiver wires.



  3. shandler on April 1, 2016 at 11:54 am

    Certainly a good start. The great thing about BABS is she makes it easy to see where your strengths and weaknesses are, right up front, so you know what has to be done moving forward.



  4. shandler on April 1, 2016 at 11:55 am

    That’s a good plan. In a few weeks, I’ll be writing about in-season considerations.



  5. Michael Cabelin on April 1, 2016 at 3:22 pm

    I tied for 1st in my 10 team NL-only league last year using the Mayberry Method from the Baseball Forecaster. Also of great help was First Pitch Forums. Really excited to try out BABS this weekend. Any advice for my keeper roto league? 5×5 with OBP vs AVG, and Sv+H. Thanks for your great site and advice over the last 14 years!



  6. Thomas Dersham on April 10, 2016 at 9:17 am

    Heading into my AL/NL only drafts today and I was reading this article you wrote thinking “he hates his tout team?!” That made me a bit nervous having prepared for today with BABS, but I think I understand where you are coming from that maybe it’s not a team you’d usually draft, but October will prove if it’s one you should.
    On another note, after only a week played, if you were to name 5 players both with stock up and down, who would they be? Not as in their small sample changing value, but rather because of a hot or cold start resulting in being over or under valued? One obvious overvalue is likely to be Trevor Story, can’t wait to see what someone pays for him today. Just curious if you have any thoughts on this.
    Thanks Ron for your diligent work, I look forward to my BABS test drive today.



  7. shandler on April 10, 2016 at 6:58 pm

    I am tentatively planning to write my ESPN article this week on just such a topic. Requires a bit more research, though.