A Fantasy Baseball Blog

  • Home
  • 2008 Fantasy Baseball Mock Draft
  • Bottom of the 9th...
  • Fantasy Resources
  • MiLB Draft
  • Prospect Watch Top 50

Player Updates

Sponsors

Categories

  • 2008 Projections
  • Draft Advice
  • Fantasy Baseball
    • Baseball - 1B
    • Baseball - 2B
    • Baseball - 3B
    • Baseball - C
    • Baseball - Keepers
    • Baseball - OF
    • Baseball - RP
    • Baseball - SP
    • Baseball - SS
  • Fantasy Football
  • Mailbag Questions
  • On The Wire
  • PCP
  • Prospect Watch
  • Roundtable
  • Splitsville
  • Uncategorized
  • What’s Your deal?

Archives

  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007

Sponsors

Calendar

April 2008
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
« Mar   May »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Contact Info

Contact Kelly through:
AOL IM - winabango
E-mail - winabango

Contact Contributors:
E-mail - Tyler Norton
E-mail - Chuck Anderson
E-mail - Ivar Anderson
E-mail - Jordan Simon
E-mail - Joshua Bakal

Sponsors

Rss

  • Main Entries RSS

Another Great Site

Sponsors

Other Great Sites

  • Baseball Notebook
  • Baseball reference
  • Brock for Broglio
  • Dr. U Fantasy Football
  • Draft Day Baseball
  • Fantasy Baseball Ad
  • Fantasy Baseball Bible
  • Fantasy Baseball Generals
  • Fantasy Baseball Mafia
  • Fantasy Football Maniaxs
  • Hit Tracker
  • Melnick and Greco
  • MLB Front Office
  • MLB Trade Rumors
  • NFL Guru
  • Roto Authority
  • Saber-Scouting
  • The Saberoticians

Meta

  • Login
  • Valid XHTML
  • WordPress
  • FG Leagues
The GNUru's Top Sports Blogs Blog Flux Directory

Sponsors

Underperforming First Basemen

Apr 29th, 2008 by Joshua Bakal

Across baseball, there seems to be a drought of offensive production from what is arguably the deepest position out there, first base. Ryan Howard is batting under .200, and Mark Teixeira and Travis Hafner aren’t faring much better in that department. Prince Fielder has only one homerun, and perhaps his new vegan lifestyle is exacerbating things. The most disappointing thus far, however, might be David Ortiz. Entering Friday, he had the lowest batting average in the majors among regular players, with a miserable .111. He also hadn’t hit a homerun since April 2nd, before connecting for a grand slam against the Rangers. Don’t be fooled by the early struggles; it’s important to stick to your convictions and stand by your early round draft picks. You paid a lot to draft some of these power hitters in March, and it would be detrimental to your long-term plans to trade them away on the cheap.

In the case of Ortiz, April has traditionally been a rough month for him throughout his career, as he has batted 20 points lower than his career average during that month. However, he heats up as the summer progresses, and that spells danger for opposing pitchers. He has driven in at least 100 runs every year since arriving in Boston, and has scored at least 115 runs the past three years. He benefits from tremendous protection in the heart of the Red Sox lineup, and even J.D. Drew is hitting these days. Even while missing a bunch of games last year, he still hit 35 homeruns and batted a sensational .332. There is a reason why he is one of the most feared hitters in the league.

It’s easy to see someone like a Casey Kotchman tearing it up in the early weeks, or getting excited over a trendy youngster like Joey Votto, but they are not at the level the premier first basemen are yet. When it comes to trade discussions or waiver wire acquisitions, you need to be careful with how you value the outgoing and incoming players. You don’t want to regret letting go of an underperforming all-star caliber player thinking that you can marginally improve another position on your roster. Treat your 40-homer threats like the commodities they are, because they’re hard to find and don’t come often. Of course, if you’re blown away by an offer you can’t refuse, like getting a Brandon Webb to save your ace-less pitching staff, then you’re filling a serious need on your team and improving your chances of being on top in September. Aside from that, healthy 40/100/100 players who get the job done each year have too much to offer to be dangled as trade bait. Remember, players like Lyle Overbay and Kevin Millar are a dime a dozen, so trading away a struggling top-10 first basemen thinking you can fill the slot with one of them may hurt you in the end. Don’t resort to desperate measures; stick with early disappointments like Ortiz through the bad times, so you can reap the benefits of their successes later when they get back on track. You won’t want to miss that.

Posted in Fantasy Baseball, Baseball - 1B | 2 Comments

2 Comments to “Underperforming First Basemen”
  1. on 29 Apr 2008 at 2:01 pm#1guffybear

    Fielder has 4 home runs including 2 off of Cole Hamels. I think it was only 5 last April and 45 the rest of the season

  2. on 05 May 2008 at 1:08 am#2Joshua

    Another example of why not to make rash decisions to start the season. Though I had downgraded Fielder a little before the draft because of the new vegan diet, he is still a cornerstone for many fantasy teams, and needs to be treated as such. Slow Aprils shouldn’t be the basis for proposing trades that sell off top commodities in favor of streaky hitters.

Fantasy Gameday © 2008 All Rights Reserved.
Finishing Touch by Cute Animals
Venetian Blinds - Shower Enclosures - Cyprus Villas - Vista Themes
Back to Top