Tag: Gordon Beckham

MLB Trade Rumors: Casey Kelly, Nine Prospects Set To Kill A Deadline Deal

Teams have needs. The Red Sox, Yankees, and Rays in the AL East. The White Sox, Twins, and Tigers in the AL Central. The Rangers and Angels in the AL West. The Braves, Phillies, and Mets in the NL East. The Cardinals and Reds in the NL Central. The Padres, Giants, Dodgers, and Rockies in the NL West.

Teams have needs, but some are too protective of their best prospects to ship them for a deadline deal.

The MLB-controlled Rangers weren’t. They dealt Justin Smoak for Cliff Lee.

The Angels tip-toed around the issue somewhat by sending Joe Saunders, Patrick Corbin, Rafael Rodriguez, and Tyler Skaggs to Arizona to acquire Dan Haren. What the Angels didn’t do was trade any of their prospects listed by Baseball America as some of the Top 100 in the nation: C Hank Conger, OF Mike Trout, or OF Peter Bourjos.

Among the remaining teams contending for a divisional title or a wild-card berth, many have similar prospects they are highly hesitant to deal.

Some are still pure prospects, and some have already cracked the majors for a prolonged cup of coffee, but they are all highly touted by their current ownership and highly coveted by the competition.

Here are some of the top prospects around who might be so protected by their current teams they’ll block a major deadline deal.

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The Chicago White Sox: The Team Nobody Wants To Face

For what seemed like an eternity, the AL Central was literally dominated by the Minnesota Twins at the beginning of the season, the Detroit Tigers following close behind at second, with the rest of the division basically unmentionable.

Kansas City entered the 2010 season with a lot of high hopes, but nobody really expected anything big from them.

The Cleveland Indians knew this year would be a struggle, and the team in general, has been a work in progress for the past two years.

But what about that other team, the other Chicago team?

The White Sox entered 2010 with a lot of promise and a lot of talent on both sides of the ball, but for the first two months the men in black basically swung for the fences so much, they redefined the term whiff.

They couldn’t hold games, they couldn’t win games, and they played competitively, but they always came up short.

Well, as baseball always seems to remind us…nothing is forever.

The Twins are on a downward spiral, currently in a mediocre third allowing the Tigers to temporarily enjoy a stay a second place with the White Sox… yup that’s right kids, the White Sox, a mere half-game ahead and currently your AL Central leader.

And of course the Royals and Indians still stink.

Paul Konerko is hitting .299/.382/.560 with a team leading 20 HR and 63 RBI, while Carlos Quentin is right behind him hitting .240/.342/.500 with 17 HR and 56 RBI.

But wait, there’s more!

Alex Rios is hitting .305/.361/.518 with an impressive 23 pilfered bases, and Juan Pierre is king of base pirating with 32.

In fact, aside from Gordon Beckham and Mark Kotsay , the whole damn team is functioning like a well-oiled machine riding the glory of an eight-game win streak.

Now that’s the way you start the second half of the season!

The White Sox have a golden opportunity to not only keep the wave going but to also capitalize on some key matchups after the break including a showdown with the Twins, followed by two series against the Mariners and two against the A’s

Conceivably, the White Sox could preserve place by the beginning of August with a wide open gap between them and the rest of the division, which would be an unbelievable feat.

And I’m a Cubs fan!

If you enjoyed this piece please check out our latest Fantasy Implications of Carlos Beltran’s Return!

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Time For Something To Be Done About Gordon Beckham

Gordon Beckham’s rookie season ended with him coming up just short of taking home the AL rookie of the year award. If his second season in the bigs continues how it’s been so far, he will be the shoe-in for sophomore slumped of the year.

Beckham has struggled mightily this year, a year where he was expected to be a doubles machine in the two-hole for Ozzie Guillen. His .205 average and lack of production has been a burden to the team all year.

Ozzie has shown confidence in the youngster this year by keeping him at the Major League level and a regular in the starting lineup. He just hasn’t snapped out of his funk. While guys like Pierzynski and Carlos Quentin have flipped the switch, Beckham continues to falter.

The Sox have been hot lately and are only one more bat away from having a very potent lineup.  Beckham has had his opportunities to get it together at the plate and has not.

This weekend’s series against Kansas City should be pivotal for the second baseman. It’s now or never for him to heat up. He can’t continue to clog up the order when guys like Brent Lillibridge and Dayan Viciedo are hitting the ball better.

Mark Teahen’s impending return from the DL further complicates matters. Beckham is still a very talented player, it just hasn’t been showing this year. You can’t wait forever when you’re in the race like the South Siders are.

If Gordon doesn’t get hot this weekend, a change needs to be made. At this point, a possible demotion wouldn’t ruin his progression. 

Time to re-focus and clear his head in Charlotte could be just what the doctor ordered for both No. 15 and the Sox.

If he solves his issues at the plate in Triple A and comes back to the big leagues in last season’s form, the Sox would be the odds-on favorites to win the Central.

Until that happens, Viciedo and Lillibridge should see more and more at-bats.

No one knows what caused the sudden lack of production. Maybe it is indeed just a sophomore slump, maybe it was the switch from third base to second, or maybe it was just dropping “Your Love” by the Outfield as his at-bat song.

Whatever the culprit may be, the time has come for something to change.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Follow Up to “White Sox: Give Up Or Be Hopeful”

The White Sox have won ten games in a row, which is their longest winning streak since 1976. When I wrote my article just over a month ago, I was about to give up on the White Sox, but they have proved me wrong and I will now react to my past article .

Five Reason to Give Up

1. Gordon Beckham

Still in the sophomore slump, even though it seems like he is having good at-bats. Beckham will most likely be platooned with Omar Vizquel at second once Mark Teahan comes off the disabled list. Not a reason to give up, but the freshman phenom needs to work out his issues.

2. Bench Players

Vizquel is coming around, hitting over .350 during the current winning streak and the 43-year-old is playing like he is ten years younger. Ramon Castro has done his job as the backup catcher. Newcomer Dayan Viciedo is showing some promise, but as we know from the past, it is only a matter of time before opposing teams figure him out. Brent Lillbridge is back in the bigs with Jayson Nix being picked up by the Indians off waivers, but he has yet to make an impact. Mark Kotsay is starting to come around, but he has not solidified the DH spot that he held on Opening Day. Andruw Jones has been in and out of the lineup and has been struggling lately. No reason to give up because they have done their job especially since the injury to Teahan.

3. Inconsistent Starting Pitching

Not an issue anymore. Starting pitching has given the Sox a chance to win, with all of the starters going at least six innings each start. Enough said. Pitching has gone as was expected before the season started.

4. Lead-off Hitter

Juan Pierre has come around to be the best lead-off hitter since Scott Podsednik for the Sox. He has done his job and even the experiment with Jones leading off for the first time since 1988 may have lit a fire under Pierre. Still a weak spot, but Pierre is doing his best to make it stand out less.

5. Bobby Jenks

Converted the last 12 save opportunities and has been a workhorse. No need for Sox fans to cry for J.J. Putz .

 

Five Reasons to Be Hopeful

1. Speed

Sixty-eight stolen bases through mid-June, including Pierre leading baseball with 27 stolen bases, the runners have been more aggressive on the base paths, and A.J. Pierzynski has been throwing out runners better this year. Still a strength.

2. Paul Konerko

Has raised his average over .300 for the first time this season. He might have only four home runs in the past month, but he has also had key RBI and hits.

3. Andruw Jones

Jones has hit a slump, which has given him scattered starts and has transitioned to more of a situational pinch hitter, but he needs to prove himself to get back in the everyday lineup. May not be a hopeful point much more, but I could see him turning it around.

4. Alex Rios

.313 BA, 13 HR, 38 RBI, 20 SB, .546 SLG. He has been the most consistent player in the lineup. Enough said.

5. Bullpen

Jenks is back to closer form. Sergio Santos , Tony Pena , Matt Thornton , and Putz are all going strong. Still the best group for the Sox this year.

 

The Sox are in a good streak, so let’s see what happens when division play continues.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Thanks For Nothing!: Fantasy Baseball’s Ten Biggest Busts of 2010

Sex and the City 2 and Jonah Hex have not been the only flops this summer. Fantasy baseball has had its fair share as well.  

We are more than two months into the 2010 baseball season, so its not too early to label certain superstars as busts. Sure, they could turn things around. They could play phenomenally from here on out and salvage their seasons, but right now they are giving their fantasy owners ulcers every time they go 0-for-4, blow a save, or get torched for seven runs in four innings.   

Here are the ten biggest busts in fantasy baseball!

Jason Bay, New York Mets

The Mets needed to keep up with the Yankees in the big-ticket item department, plus they needed outfield pop because they knew Carlos Beltran was going to miss the first half of the season. So they inked Bay, who had hit 30-plus homers and driven in 100-plus runs in four of the last five seasons. Smart move, right?

Wrong. Even though Bay has dealt with intense media scrutiny before (in Boston) and hitting in a pitcher’s ballpark (in Pittsburgh) during his career, he has been swinging like a lost soul all season. 

With only four homers and 29 RBI at this point, his chances of another 30-HR, 100-RBI campaign are slimmer than a Slim Jim.  At least Bay has been kind enough to steal (10 SB) and walk (.378 OBP) in lieu of hitting homers.    

Aramis Ramirez, Chicago Cubs

The knock on Ramirez with fantasy owners has always been that he is injury-prone.  Getting 162 games out of him is harder than getting Mark Teixeira to take a day off. But at least when Ramirez was on the field he was as productive as any third baseman around, capable of hitting .300 with 30 homers and 100 RBI when 100 percent healthy.

Now Ramirez is injured AND hitting .162. He has actually increased his fantasy value by going on the disabled list. Here is a stat that should make you feel warm and fuzzy about him — in 47 games, Ramirez has been 0-for-3, 0-for-4, or 0-for-5 a grand total of 18 times. He also went 0-for-6 once, too. 

    

Trevor Hoffman, Milwaukee Brewers

Fantasy owners knew that sooner or later “Father Time” was going to throw Hoffman a curve of his own. What we didn’t know was that the curve was going to drop off the table like Barry Zito’s used to during his Oakland glory days.

Hoffman has gone from premier closer to premier failure in record time. After staving off old age with 37 saves and a 1.83 ERA in 2009, he has five saves, five blown saves, and a 9.00 ERA. He is now used in as many crucial late-game situations as Oliver Perez.

      

Chad Qualls, Arizona Diamondbacks

You know you are having trouble when Aaron Heilman is picked to save games over you.  Qualls made the transition from setup man to closer late last year and did quite well, but it looks like he was a one-hit wonder like The Baja Men.  

Qualls has an 8.87 ERA, a 2.27 WHIP, and more people after him than BP. He could very well get his closer job back eventually if he straightens out and Heilman falls to pieces, but for now it is nothing but non-save situations for him in the near future. 

   

Zack Greinke, Kansas City Royals

Greinke has gone from Cy Young to Anthony Young in less than one year. The poor guy had to post a 2.16 ERA last season just to win 16 games, so you knew there would be trouble for his win-loss record if he had the nerve to have a mortal 3.94 ERA.    

No run support, no defense, no miracles.  That has translated into a 2-8 record for Greinke, despite ERA, WHIP, and strikeouts numbers that should get him a winning record.  Figure this out — Chicago White Sox starter Freddy Garcia has a much worse ERA and WHIP, yet he is 8-3.

Prince Fielder, Milwaukee Brewers

Fantasy baseball’s largest vegetarian is eating more lettuce than driving in runs these days. His 27 RBI do not even rank him in the top 100 in the category as he trails lightweights like Yuniesky Betancourt, Juan Uribe, and Clint Barmes.  Jonny Gomes has almost driven in twice as many runs. 

Yes, Jonny Gomes.  

Is it that Corey Hart keeps knocking in all of the runners on base before Fielder comes to bat, leaving the porky power hitter with no RBI opportunities? No, Fielder has just not come up as huge as he did in 2009 when he racked up 141 ribbies. An RBI streak could be on the way knowing him, but for now Fielder is putting up the kind of stats Gaby Sanchez owners would be happy with, not Fielder owners.    

   

Gordon Beckham, Chicago White Sox

Changing positions can sometimes be a bigger distraction than having Lady Gaga sitting in the stands.  hat seems to be the case with Beckham, who looked destined to win several batting titles throughout his career, but now will be lucky to stay in the majors throughout the year.   

The former first-rounder has been sidelined by a sophomore slump that has kept him around the Mendoza line all season long. Moving from third base to second base seems like it has done more harm for his bat than good for his glove. Fantasy owners can only hope that a batting coach, family friend, or rotisserie god from above can solve the Beckham riddle and get him back pasting line drives again.   

   

Ian Kinsler, Texas Rangers

This was supposed to be the season Kinsler challenged Chase Utley to be the most valuable second baseman in fantasy baseball. But while Utley has left the door open for Kinsler to take the title, Kinsler has fumbled it worse than Adrian Peterson would.

Kinsler, coming off a 31HR/31SB superstar season, has one homer and six steals so far.  Some of this has to do with his early season injuries and some of this has to do with him not hitting for power and not attempting to steal much. Kinsler might not still be 100 percent healthy, and he might be still shaking off some spring rust, but it certainly would be nice if his name started appearing more often in the HR and SB sections of the Texas boxscores.  


Aaron Hill, Toronto Blue Jays
    

Here is another American League second baseman who went from being the next Jeff Kent to being the next Jeff Keppinger. Hill burst onto the fantasy scene last year with 35 homers, 108 RBI, and 103 runs. He was a feel good, Lifetime movie worthy story because of how he came back from a serious concussion that ruined his 2007 season.  

And now Hill is hitting .187.  

The power stroke is still kinda there (ten homers) and Hill has been kinda hitting better this month (.211 average in June). Still, .187 is .187. That will single handedly ruin a fantasy team’s batting average. You need a couple Joe Mauers in your lineup to even Hill’s average out. And you cannot rely on Hill’s track record to think he will bounce back because he has only had one great season in five-plus years.  

 

Nate McLouth, Atlanta Braves

Remember when Pittsburgh Pirates fans were rioting in the streets when McLouth was traded to Atlanta in the middle of last season?  You would have thought Sidney Crosby had been dealt to the Los Angeles Kings for a bunch of draft picks and pucks with the way people reacted.  

McLouth has hit like someone in serious need of glasses. He has a .176 batting average, and before he can turn things around and climb towards the .200 plateau, he first has to get off the disabled list. He is suffering from post-concussion symptoms after an outfield collision.  

McLouth is a 20-HR/20-SB guy when his mind and body are right.  The problem is we don’t know when both will be right again.  It may not be until 2011 (or ever) the way things are going.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


The 2010 All-Chicago Baseball Team

With half of the Crosstown Classic played, it is almost as traditional to pick the best of the two clubs as to play the series.

To the disdain of the North and South sides of Chicago, both the Cubs and White Sox are less than stellar this year, combining for a record of 56-69 before action on Tuesday. Despite the lack of pizazz in this year’s series and the addition of the BP Cup, fans still come out in droves to watch.

The basics determine who gets the nod at each position (hitting, defense, etc.), but looking at how a certain player is performing may get him the nod over a player with better statistics.

This is the list, for better or for worst…

Reminder: All stats are from before play on Tuesday.

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The MLB Fantasy Fix Roundtable: Post All-Star Break Targets

The Fantasy Fix (www.thefantasyfix.com) asked five of the top up-and-coming Fantasy Experts out there the following question:

As we approach the 2010 All-Star Break, who will you be targeting to trade for as a buy-low candidate or sleeper? Name one batter and one pitcher that will make a big 180 for the 2nd half.

Let’s hear some realistic and unique options.

 

Batter: Carlos Pena, 1B, TB

My, what a disaster Pena’s season has been, at least up until his barrage of home runs last week. Trend or slight uptick? I say it should be more trend than mirage.

If you’ve been paying attention, you already know he is streaky (see last week for example). But what you might not see is that he can’t possibly continue to be as horrible as he was in the early going. Let’s look at some numbers to date (valid through Wednesday June 9, 2010):

BABIP = .200 (.250 in 2009, .283 in career)

Walk Rate = 13.4% (15.3% in 2009, 13.3% in career)

GB% = 44.1% (29.0% in 2009, 36.2% in career)

FB% = 44.9% (54.1% in 2009, 45.7% in career)

LD% = 11.0% (16.8% in 2009, 18.0% in career)

What does this all mean?

Well, since his strikeout rate is right on par with previous performances, it explains a lot. First, his BABIP indicates that he has been very unlucky on batted balls into play. As compared to career numbers, he could be batting up to 50 points above his current .184 on luck alone.

A deeper look at his GB/FB/LD split shows that he is hitting the ball weakly into the infield a ton this year (GB percent is a career high and LD percent is a career low for him in seasons of 100+ AB). Even a speed demon, like Juan Pierre, would have trouble getting on base with those splits.

The root cause of those symptoms is his Chase Percentage (O-Swing percent), or how many pitches outside of the strike zone he is hacking at, which sits at 31.2 percent (also a career high for seasons of 100+AB). That may be a result of pitchers trying to keep him off balance by throwing more changeups and cutters, rather than fastballs, which he can lace into the stands.

Since his walk rate is holding steady as compared to career averages, I say it is only a matter of time before Pena settles down and adjusts to the pitching mix. Buy now and get the good part of his season stats on your roster.

 

Pitcher: Jason Hammel, SP, COL

The Rockies have really improved their rotation over the past few years, and the most under-appreciated member of the starting cast is Jason Hammel. Ignore the ERA he has posted to date, because much of that damage was done back when he was battling a nagging groin injury, the same one that sent him to the DL for a couple of weeks in early May.

Now that he is back and healthy, I see nothing but sunny skies ahead.

Hammel actually pitched very well in 2009, despite finishing with a 4.33 ERA. If you look deeper at FIP (Fielding Independent Pitching), or what he would have done with even luck and quality fielding across the board, he should have finished with an ERA of 3.71.

Curiously enough, his FIP to date is 3.73, almost identical to what he posted last season. Since the start of the 2009 season, he has also fixed problems with gopheritis (0.87 HR/9 over that span, 1.07 in career) and free passes (BB/9 in the 2.55 range, 3.14 in career).

For the third stright year, Hammel is forcing groundballs at least 46 percent of the time a batter makes contact, and he has kept his FB percentage right around 30 percent. You can attribute some of this to experience and the rest to his move away from changeups (11.2%, 9.5%, and 5.6% in 2008/2009/2010 to date) to more of a focus on curveballs (10.0%, 15.6%, 16.9%).

Whatever the reason, Jason Hammel has been pitching like a sub-4.00 ERA pitcher for 39 starts now, so it’s time to give the kid his due. The best part is that he can be had for a waiver claim in the majority of leagues, so the price is most certainly right!

Tommy Landry, co-founder of RotoExperts.com, has a long track record of success in entrepreneurship, marketing, and the fantasy sports business. You can also join in the conversation with him on Twitter at http://Twitter.com/Tommy_Landry

 

Batter: Aaron Hill, 2B, TOR

Hill was a guy I earned a lot of money on last year.  The problem is that I got him for $1 in keeper leagues, so there was no way I could let him go.  Knowing this, I knew he was a classic stay-away guy in 2010 because of the over-achievement.

What killed Hill was the hamstring injury right off the bat.  Some of Hill’s fantasy numbers are very ugly and scream stay away. 

But if you dig deeper and look at why Hill has been so bad this year, here is what you will find:

    •    Contact Rate is 83 percent (only a matter of time before they become base hits)

    •    Walk rate is up from 5.7 percent to 11.7 percent (very good indicator of improved patience)

    •    BABIP is .178 vs. .288 last year (terrible luck)

    •    BA is .188 vs. .286 last year (BABIP and BA correlation)

    •    FB percentage up to 49 percent vs. 41 percent last year

2B is very deep in the American League and in the majors overall. Hill could be a guy you use at UTIL/MI and get great insurance.

I think right now is the perfect time to get Hill and you can still get him very cheap. Buy now and speculate that his second half numbers will turn around.

 

Pitcher: Brandon Morrow, SP, TOR

It feels like Morrow has been around for 10 years and every year, we wait for the breakout. 

He never got a true shot to settle into a rotation spot with Seattle and then was dealt to Toronto in the Cliff Lee/Roy Halladay deal.  Going with pitchers in the AL East is always a tough choice, but again, like Hill, there are some underliers that show me Morrow could be on his way to truly developing into that fantasy relevant pitcher.

    •    K/9 10.41 – always love guys who get the k’s

    •    .341 BABIP – this number is bound to settle in at .290.-.300

    •    June has a .254 BABIP

    •    5.48 ERA but XERA 3.53

    •    4.52 BB/9—this number has to come down for Morrow to start being a good pitcher

    •    June has a 1.29 BB/9

I recently added Morrow in two leagues that have deep pitching requirements and I love the upside.  In the past, guys, like Jonathan Sanchez and Jorge De La Rosa, have had similar profiles and finally broke through.

Michael Rathburn: Fantasy Baseball writer for MidWestSportsFans.com and www.aroundthecooler.com
Follow Michael at http://twitter.com/cooler_guy

Batter: Adam Lind, OF, TOR

Highly-touted coming into this year (average draft position, third or fourth round) and coming off a monster season that finally saw him put his potential to good use, Lind has so far had a horrendous start to 2010.  .209 average, eight home runs, a paltry 26 runs, and 31 RBI — all this for the team leading the majors in home runs — and just 49 hits. 

Yet, if you look deeper, some of his stats echo how atrocious he has been.  Yes, he is chasing more pitches outside the strike zone than last year.  Yes, he is striking out a slightly higher rate than last year.  Yes, he has shown an alarming drop in power to center field. 

BUT, his BABIP (batting average on balls in play) is .247, or nearly 60 points below his career BABIP of .305.  That’s right — SIXTY points.  Aside from his stint with the Jays in 2007, when he proved he was not yet ready for the big time, he has never had a BABIP lower than .317. 

In the minors, his BABIP routinely reached the .360s and higher.

I don’t expect Lind to hit 25 home runs the rest of the season, but from this point forward, I expect that as his luck changes, so do his stats, and for the better.

 

Pitcher: Jake Peavy, SP, CHW

People forget that he’s still not so far removed from major arm surgery and had to deal with switching leagues, going from a great pitcher’s park to one that’s horrible, and learn a whole new set of hitters.

I think he’ll improve because we’ve seen flashes—his K/9, BB/9 and GB (ground ball) percentage have improved month-by-month this season, and he is still averaging 7.5 K’s per 9 innings this year.

Plus, his LOB percent is the lowest of his career and his BABIP is close to the highest — not a good combination to have. 

I expect, though, that as his luck starts changing and he leaves more runners on, his K rate will continue to rise, his ERA will fall, and he will pitch deeper into games and help himself to more wins.

Jesse Mendelson is Partner and Senior Writer for www.fantasybaseball101.com
For more up-to-the-minute analysis, trade mediation, roster evaluation, weekly tip, chats, and more, make sure to check out www.fantasybaseball101.com and follow us on Twitter on @fb101.

 

Batter: Gordon Beckham, 2B, CHW

Gordon Beckham has basically played like garbage and polluted the fantasy landscape thus far.

His .206 Batting Average and one home run have left a single tear welling in the eye of his owners. Some people have a deep abiding respect for the natural beauty that was once this highly touted prospect; and some people don’t.

Gordo is currently owned in only 38 percent of Yahoo! leagues. If he isn’t a free agent in your league, his recent 102 At Bat streak without an Extra Base Hit should make him a cheap buy.

What many people don’t realize is that Beckham has been plagued a .250 BABIP. His 15.5 percet Line Drive and 51 percent Ground Ball Percentages suggest this number should be higher. The league average for BABIP is .298. 

Beckham has also been unlucky with a 1.9 Home Run to Fly Ball Percentage. The league average for HR/FB percentage is around 10-11 percent. The eighth-overall pick in the 2008 draft is much too talented to continue hitting this poorly.

The White Sox GM, Kenny Williams, sat down with Gordon and told him to go back to his aggressive approach at the plate and he has responded well. Since the two had a pow-wow, Beckham has strung together a four-game hit streak, going 4-for-13 with three doubles in the process.

Last season, Beckham hit 14 HR and stole seven bases in 103 games, his price won’t be any lower than it is now. If you need some cheap, productive help at the 2B position, look no further.

 

Pitcher: Chad Billingsley, SP, LAD

Chad Billingsley is a well-known gunslinger. Tickets to Buffalo Billingsley’s Wild NL West Show could be expensive, unless you can find an owner who is fed up with his 1.40 WHIP.

Billingsley currently ranks 84th among all SP eligible pitchers on Yahoo! and his overall rank of 289 may help you acquire his services at a reasonable price. Chad’s ugly WHIP is not the result of him walking too many batters; he has actually reduced his walk rate from 3.94 BB/9 down to 3.17 BB/9.

The issue is his .332 BABIP. He has a career BABIP of .308 and he is actually giving up less line drives this year than he has in the past (17.4 LD percentage). His 1.40 WHIP should be considered bad luck, not bad pitching.

He is still striking out eight batters per nine and inducing a good number of ground balls (47.8 percent, 1.38 GB/FB), so I would also consider his 69.2 percent Strand Rate to be unlucky.

His career average for LOB percentage is 75.4 percent. His owners may believe that Billingsley is pitching his worst ball in the past four years, but all this adds up for me to believe that he should be posting the best numbers of his career when it comes to ERA and WHIP.

Look for a big turnaround in the second half of the season.

Andrew Holm (aka MDS) is the brainchild behind http://milliondollarsleeper.com. Follow Andrew on twitter at http://twitter.com/andrewakamds

 

Batter: Aramis Ramirez, 3B, CHC

Aramis Ramirez’s season has been a disaster of epic proportions.  The once-mighty run producer has seen his numbers washed away by a tsunami of strikeouts and lazy fly balls.  By some measures, he’s been the worst regular position player in all of baseball. 

Now on the 15-day DL due to a strained thumb, he also hasn’t done much to shed the “injury-prone” label that he’s earned over the past few years.

Since A-Ram has never had a stretch this bad, I’m willing to assume that the thumb problem has exacerbated his usual slow start.  Sure, he’s on the downside of his career, but he’s about to turn 32, not 37. 

Just last year, he put up a .317 BA with 15 HR and 65 RBI, despite playing in just 82 games.  A-Ram has always been a second-half hitter (second half OPS of .870 vs. .807 in the first half), and has always thrived at Wrigley Field (career .918 OPS).

If he comes back healthy for the hot summer months at Wrigley, he should put up a .285+ BA and approach 15 HR and 50 RBI in the second half.  That should be enough to outperform popular third-sackers, like Jose Bautista, Scott Rolen, Casey McGeehee, Chase Headley, Placido Polanco, Alberto Callaspo, Juan Uribe, Ty Wigginton, and David Freese.

See if you can lowball his frustrated owner and reap the benefits.

 

Pitcher: Ricky Nolasco, SP, FLA

After Saturday night’s shelling in Tampa Bay, Ricky Nolasco’s ERA stands at 5.05 and his strikeout rate is down to 6.6 per nine innings.  That’s a bitter pill to swallow for fantasy owners who looked past his bloated 2009 ERA and drafted him 20th among starting pitchers in ESPN leagues.

Maybe this is déjà vu all over again as Ricky was awful in the first part of 2009, when he was rocked over his first nine starts to the tune of a 9.07 ERA.  He turned his season around after a two-week stint in the minors and was a true ace over his last 22 starts, with a 3.82 ERA and an elite 10.5 strikeouts per 9 innings.

Unless there’s a secret injury, we might just be seeing a mini-repeat of 2009.  He’s still in his prime and has shown the ability to lose his mechanics for a stretch and then bounce back. 

Perhaps he’s turning out to be a second-half pitcher (he also pitched better in the second half of 2008).  See if you can pry him loose from a frustrated owner and hope that history repeats itself.

Follow Alex Shear on Twitter (@rotosleeperz) and check out his rarely updated blog at http://rotosleeperz.blogspot.com

Batter: Chone Figgins, 2B, SEA

2009 was Chone’s BIG contract year, and boy, did he not disappoint. Figgins finished the year with 114 Runs, 101 Walks, 42 SBs, and .298 BA from the leadoff spot. Getting himself a four-year, $36 million contract, and a new city (Seattle) to boot.

Now, you’d expect an All-Star caliber player like Figgins to handle a move to a new team like a pro, but after a forgeable first half, we are left with some questions. Let’s take a look at where we are and where it has gone wrong:

In his first 6 full seasons (2004-2009) Chone averaged:  44 SBs, 92.7 Runs, 52.2 RBIs, 162 Hits, .291 AVG

Now, for a prototypical leadoff hitter, these numbers are some of the tops in the sport. One of the things I preach the most is that baseball is a game of averages.

If you look back over five years, certain trends will appear for the better players. Now I understand that Chone is facing some different circumstances than before; Figgins is now batting in the two-hole (behind Ichiro), and becoming an everyday second baseman. But you can expect a monster second half as he becomes more comfortable with his roles, teammates, and city.

Bottom Line 2nd Half Expectations

Current 2010 1st Half:  ABs- 220, BA -.227, Hits – 50, RBIs -16 Runs – 26, SB – 13

Projected 2nd Half:  ABs – 400, BA – .300, Hits – 120, RBIs – 30, Runs – 75, SB – 25

 

Pitcher: Gavin Floyd, SP, CHW

It’s been a rough and, altogether, puzzling first half for White Sox starter Gavin Floyd. His staggering 6.18 ERA is the second highest in MLB among pitchers with at least 50 IP. In 206 1/3 innings in 2008, he allowed 190 hits. In 193 innings in 2009, he allowed 178 hits.

Through 67 innings of work in 2010, he’s allowed 84 hits. The usually tough to square up Floyd is finding too many barrels.

What’s gone wrong:  Right-handed hitters are batting .306 against Floyd. The same RHH he held to a .256 clip in ’09 and .226 in ’08. When he gets himself into a jam, he’s not escaping free of harm. He’s allowed 26 ER in RISP w/2-out situations through 12 starts, compared to 35 ER all of last season.

His LOB percentage is a dismal 62.6 percent. His BAA on balls put in play (BABIP) is .369, an obscenely high frequency of success for opposing hitters. Compare that figure to .268 in ’08 and .292 in ’09. Floyd is throwing more changeups and less curveballs, a recipe that doesn’t seem to be paying dividends.

Why things just don’t add up: He’s averaging 7.66 K/9 innings, the highest figure of his career. He’s only allowed 7 HR, or 0.94 HR/9, his lowest gopher ball rate at the major league level. His ground ball rate of 46.6% is also the highest he’s ever produced. His average fastball velocity has been 92.1 MPH, over a mile per hour higher (90.9) than he threw in his 17-win campaign in 2008.

Despite his abysmal numbers, there is reason for optimism. Floyd has delivered only four quality starts all season, and three of those starts came in his last four outings. In those three quality starts, he K’d 20 against only five BB in 19 1/3 innings. He did throw in a 2 2/3 inning, 6 ER disaster in between those starts, but we’re trying to accentuate the positive.

His line-drive percentage is down, so eventually, those groundballs with eyes will find some gloves. With a bit of good fortune and improved run prevention in RISP situations, Floyd’s numbers should slowly creep back towards his traditional pitching line. He makes for a great buy low option (if he’s not on the waiver wire) and should be solid piece for fantasy rotations in the second half.

Pitcher written by Adam Ganeles for The Fantasy Fix (www.thefantasyfix.com). Follow Adam here weekly or on twitter http://twitter.com/adamganeles. Batter written by DP (aka Fantasy Mechanic) for The Fantasy Fix, there’s a reason why he wins championships every year. Follow all our tweets @thefantasyfix

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