1 00:00:05,880 --> 00:00:10,040 Speaker 1: What's up, friends, and welcome into Fantasy Pros MLB. I 2 00:00:10,080 --> 00:00:12,559 Speaker 1: am the Welsh. There is no Joe Psipia here today, 3 00:00:12,920 --> 00:00:15,760 Speaker 1: but I have got a great replacement. He is my 4 00:00:15,800 --> 00:00:19,400 Speaker 1: dear friend, Ryan Bloomfield. The Bloomer is in the house 5 00:00:19,640 --> 00:00:24,360 Speaker 1: as we're going to be discussing the thirteen most undervalued 6 00:00:24,560 --> 00:00:27,520 Speaker 1: players that you guys have got to target. Most might 7 00:00:27,560 --> 00:00:30,360 Speaker 1: be a little contrite. Actually it just thirteen undervalued players 8 00:00:30,360 --> 00:00:32,159 Speaker 1: that we've targeted, and we're going to talk to you 9 00:00:32,240 --> 00:00:35,320 Speaker 1: about why are they undervalued? Why do you need them? 10 00:00:35,800 --> 00:00:38,800 Speaker 1: Hopefully we will give you some answers and you can 11 00:00:38,800 --> 00:00:41,280 Speaker 1: find all those answers as well over at Fantasy Pros. 12 00:00:41,280 --> 00:00:42,840 Speaker 1: If you guys are looking to get into your drafts, 13 00:00:42,880 --> 00:00:45,040 Speaker 1: the Draft Kit is out. Go and check that out today. 14 00:00:45,080 --> 00:00:48,320 Speaker 1: The Draft Wizard. You can start experimenting and having so 15 00:00:48,520 --> 00:00:51,800 Speaker 1: much fun with all your different draft settings and there's 16 00:00:51,800 --> 00:00:54,960 Speaker 1: some amazing tools you guys can get in and sink 17 00:00:55,000 --> 00:00:58,520 Speaker 1: your leagues can You can literally mock draft how your 18 00:00:58,600 --> 00:01:00,160 Speaker 1: league does it, and you can do a lot out 19 00:01:00,160 --> 00:01:01,800 Speaker 1: of that for free. You want to get a little 20 00:01:01,840 --> 00:01:04,080 Speaker 1: bit more, you can get into the premium product and 21 00:01:04,120 --> 00:01:07,080 Speaker 1: you can start getting all the insights, the draft assistants, 22 00:01:07,080 --> 00:01:08,720 Speaker 1: and more. So go and check it out today over 23 00:01:08,760 --> 00:01:12,840 Speaker 1: at Fantasy Pros fantasypros dot com slash Premium draftkit do 24 00:01:12,959 --> 00:01:16,640 Speaker 1: all the stuff. Get locked in today, Ryan Bloomfield, what 25 00:01:16,880 --> 00:01:18,800 Speaker 1: is up, brother? It's really good to see your face. 26 00:01:19,120 --> 00:01:20,160 Speaker 2: It's great to see you, man. 27 00:01:20,360 --> 00:01:23,679 Speaker 3: I'm very very jealous of of you being able to 28 00:01:24,280 --> 00:01:27,039 Speaker 3: kind of gallivant around the Phoenix area and check out 29 00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:30,360 Speaker 3: spring training as I used to live down there. But uh, 30 00:01:30,560 --> 00:01:32,160 Speaker 3: but yeah, I always love this time of year. So 31 00:01:32,240 --> 00:01:35,399 Speaker 3: doing well, man, Shout out to your Hillsborough Hops hat 32 00:01:35,440 --> 00:01:37,120 Speaker 3: by the way, that's just up the road from me, 33 00:01:37,160 --> 00:01:37,960 Speaker 3: and let's. 34 00:01:37,800 --> 00:01:40,280 Speaker 1: All, yeah, yeah, thank you. Actually, I get like I've 35 00:01:40,280 --> 00:01:43,440 Speaker 1: got a couple collection of hats that get the most attention, 36 00:01:43,680 --> 00:01:47,520 Speaker 1: and the two are the Hillsboro Hops and the Savannah Bananas, 37 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:50,160 Speaker 1: so I'm just trying to collectively. I've got one that 38 00:01:50,200 --> 00:01:53,360 Speaker 1: I haven't unveiled on camera yet. It's the Lake Elson 39 00:01:53,440 --> 00:01:56,040 Speaker 1: or Lookouts, but it's the one with the eyes, and 40 00:01:56,080 --> 00:01:58,160 Speaker 1: I think it's gonna weird everybody out if I have 41 00:01:58,280 --> 00:02:00,760 Speaker 1: two eyes looking at everybody, but I'll try it on 42 00:02:00,800 --> 00:02:01,640 Speaker 1: an episode. 43 00:02:02,000 --> 00:02:03,320 Speaker 2: You won't know until you try. 44 00:02:03,720 --> 00:02:06,280 Speaker 3: Yeah, switch it out mid mid episode and see who 45 00:02:06,320 --> 00:02:07,560 Speaker 3: notices that's right. 46 00:02:07,640 --> 00:02:09,640 Speaker 1: Well, this is gonna be great. This is awesome having 47 00:02:09,680 --> 00:02:12,200 Speaker 1: you here. Bloomfield is one of the best. You can 48 00:02:12,240 --> 00:02:15,320 Speaker 1: find him over at Baseball HQ and on one of 49 00:02:15,360 --> 00:02:19,239 Speaker 1: the hottest podcasts in the land, of course Joe and Myself, 50 00:02:19,320 --> 00:02:23,360 Speaker 1: but Bubba and the bloom k C Bubba, Deer Casey, 51 00:02:23,400 --> 00:02:26,280 Speaker 1: Bubba who does some writing over here Fantasy Pros and Bloomfield. 52 00:02:26,320 --> 00:02:28,760 Speaker 1: You guys have been rocking the podcast, and I imagine 53 00:02:28,840 --> 00:02:32,680 Speaker 1: you guys have probably hit on, like conceptually this interests me. 54 00:02:33,360 --> 00:02:39,639 Speaker 1: Sleepers and undervalued and breakouts. They're all kind of terms 55 00:02:39,639 --> 00:02:42,200 Speaker 1: that have like slight variations from each other. And I 56 00:02:42,200 --> 00:02:45,320 Speaker 1: imagine you guys have had these conversations when you think about, 57 00:02:45,320 --> 00:02:49,120 Speaker 1: like undervalued, how does that differ from sleepers or breakouts, 58 00:02:49,160 --> 00:02:52,160 Speaker 1: even if it's just like a minute little you know instance. 59 00:02:52,560 --> 00:02:54,520 Speaker 2: Yeah, it's tough to it's tough to tell. 60 00:02:54,560 --> 00:02:57,600 Speaker 3: Like what I what I think of undervalued is I'm 61 00:02:57,720 --> 00:03:00,720 Speaker 3: looking at average draft position at ADP and just comparing 62 00:03:00,960 --> 00:03:03,639 Speaker 3: guys to certain positions going you know, right around them, 63 00:03:03,639 --> 00:03:06,880 Speaker 3: and you take a cluster of three or four players 64 00:03:06,880 --> 00:03:08,720 Speaker 3: at the same position, say which one do you like 65 00:03:08,840 --> 00:03:10,919 Speaker 3: kind of out of that group going roughly at the 66 00:03:10,960 --> 00:03:12,959 Speaker 3: same time in the draft, and that would be my 67 00:03:13,800 --> 00:03:17,160 Speaker 3: quote unquote undervalued player for there, So. 68 00:03:17,400 --> 00:03:20,160 Speaker 1: I mean and that makes sense. So we've got thirteen. 69 00:03:20,520 --> 00:03:23,480 Speaker 1: We've got to buzz through them. If you guys like it, 70 00:03:23,800 --> 00:03:25,840 Speaker 1: go down and check into the comments and tell us 71 00:03:25,840 --> 00:03:29,400 Speaker 1: who's your favorite undervalued guy. When you do so, you 72 00:03:29,480 --> 00:03:32,560 Speaker 1: got opportunities to win some awesome stuff. We were talking 73 00:03:32,560 --> 00:03:34,440 Speaker 1: about the Jazz Chisholm Jersey last week. I gotta be 74 00:03:34,480 --> 00:03:36,320 Speaker 1: honest with you, I don't remember if when you're listening 75 00:03:36,400 --> 00:03:39,840 Speaker 1: to this you're still eligible. But there's always great prizes 76 00:03:40,080 --> 00:03:42,040 Speaker 1: that are out there, so make sure you're commenting on 77 00:03:42,080 --> 00:03:45,080 Speaker 1: the videos below because you never know what you're gonna win. 78 00:03:45,360 --> 00:03:48,240 Speaker 1: So let's get into this. Let's talk about undervalued player 79 00:03:48,520 --> 00:03:52,040 Speaker 1: number one. You actually came up in our atc Ario 80 00:03:52,160 --> 00:03:57,520 Speaker 1: Cohen Projections episode. How about Xander Bogarts. Xander Bogarts coming 81 00:03:57,520 --> 00:04:01,480 Speaker 1: in with an overall ADYP, which is great about Fantasy pros. 82 00:04:01,480 --> 00:04:03,480 Speaker 1: You can go and check out the ADP across all 83 00:04:03,520 --> 00:04:06,360 Speaker 1: the sites. It creates a collective ADP pulling all the 84 00:04:06,440 --> 00:04:09,920 Speaker 1: data in and the ECR he has got a rank 85 00:04:10,320 --> 00:04:13,280 Speaker 1: of ninety five, and he's actually got an ADP of 86 00:04:13,400 --> 00:04:15,720 Speaker 1: ninety six, so it's almost outside the top one hundred. 87 00:04:15,960 --> 00:04:18,760 Speaker 1: This was almost a twenty twenty guy last year. Projections 88 00:04:19,160 --> 00:04:21,960 Speaker 1: like him just about the same twenty twenty with high 89 00:04:22,000 --> 00:04:27,039 Speaker 1: batting average usually isn't a lower end to top one 90 00:04:27,120 --> 00:04:29,760 Speaker 1: hundred range. It's usually in the like seventy five plus. 91 00:04:30,080 --> 00:04:33,360 Speaker 1: So talk to us about why Xana Bogart's if and 92 00:04:33,640 --> 00:04:35,039 Speaker 1: is undervalued in your mind. 93 00:04:35,080 --> 00:04:37,680 Speaker 3: I think he is just because, like what one of 94 00:04:37,680 --> 00:04:40,880 Speaker 3: my crusades so far through through draft season has just 95 00:04:40,920 --> 00:04:44,760 Speaker 3: been prioritizing batting average as much as I can in 96 00:04:44,800 --> 00:04:46,800 Speaker 3: the kind of the early and early mid rounds, and 97 00:04:46,880 --> 00:04:50,560 Speaker 3: Xander Bogart's like totally totally delivers that last five years 98 00:04:50,600 --> 00:04:52,600 Speaker 3: batting average three or nine three hundred two ninety five, 99 00:04:52,640 --> 00:04:55,720 Speaker 3: three h seven two eighty five across a boatload of 100 00:04:55,760 --> 00:04:59,320 Speaker 3: played appearances. The power is not, you know, great, but 101 00:04:59,520 --> 00:05:01,760 Speaker 3: like you said, could go twenty home runs at nineteen 102 00:05:01,839 --> 00:05:04,960 Speaker 3: last year. I think the question is and whether Bogarts 103 00:05:05,040 --> 00:05:08,560 Speaker 3: returns his returns of profit here is at stolen based 104 00:05:08,560 --> 00:05:12,640 Speaker 3: total eight stolen bases in twenty twenty two nineteen last 105 00:05:12,680 --> 00:05:15,479 Speaker 3: year in twenty twenty three for San Diego. Was that 106 00:05:15,560 --> 00:05:18,520 Speaker 3: taking advantage of the new rules, a different organization philosophy. 107 00:05:18,560 --> 00:05:22,000 Speaker 3: Not sure, but I think despite that kind of variance, 108 00:05:22,000 --> 00:05:24,039 Speaker 3: and we don't know what the stolen base total will be, 109 00:05:24,680 --> 00:05:28,279 Speaker 3: the batting average, the runs he can play every single 110 00:05:28,400 --> 00:05:30,680 Speaker 3: day that he can. He's played hurt last year, He's 111 00:05:30,680 --> 00:05:33,120 Speaker 3: played hurt almost throughout his entire career. Kind of a 112 00:05:33,240 --> 00:05:36,560 Speaker 3: nagging risk thing, but he continues to deliver throughout. So 113 00:05:36,960 --> 00:05:39,080 Speaker 3: really like Xander Bogart's I kind of comp him to 114 00:05:39,160 --> 00:05:43,000 Speaker 3: Danceby Swanson going a little bit later at the same position. 115 00:05:43,080 --> 00:05:46,000 Speaker 3: Both rock solid shortstop options for you if you need 116 00:05:46,320 --> 00:05:47,679 Speaker 3: some stability up the middle. 117 00:05:47,760 --> 00:05:51,200 Speaker 1: But the different stands be pretty you know, significant drop 118 00:05:51,200 --> 00:05:51,960 Speaker 1: in batting. 119 00:05:51,680 --> 00:05:53,400 Speaker 2: Average, different types of players. Yep. 120 00:05:53,600 --> 00:05:57,320 Speaker 1: Why do you think you're honing in and targeting batting 121 00:05:57,320 --> 00:05:59,000 Speaker 1: average so much? Because I don't want to go too 122 00:05:59,000 --> 00:06:00,800 Speaker 1: far in this, But what I think is so interesting 123 00:06:00,880 --> 00:06:02,440 Speaker 1: is there was a couple of years ago. If people 124 00:06:02,480 --> 00:06:04,960 Speaker 1: are new to the fantasy baseball space and don't follow 125 00:06:05,000 --> 00:06:06,840 Speaker 1: like the trends or listen to a lot of the podcast, 126 00:06:06,960 --> 00:06:08,479 Speaker 1: there was this and I was kind of with this, 127 00:06:08,600 --> 00:06:10,520 Speaker 1: I liked it, and our friend who was just on 128 00:06:10,640 --> 00:06:13,080 Speaker 1: not too long ago, Justin Mason, kind of started this like, Hey, 129 00:06:13,400 --> 00:06:15,920 Speaker 1: I'm gonna punt batting average and this is like three 130 00:06:16,040 --> 00:06:17,919 Speaker 1: or four years ago, Like I'm going to like actively 131 00:06:17,920 --> 00:06:20,000 Speaker 1: go and punt batting average, And a lot of people felt, hey, 132 00:06:20,240 --> 00:06:23,159 Speaker 1: this is the POSI this is the spot that I 133 00:06:23,200 --> 00:06:25,520 Speaker 1: think I could punt in a Roto league, I could 134 00:06:25,520 --> 00:06:27,719 Speaker 1: actually start to punt batting average. Well, then in first 135 00:06:27,800 --> 00:06:30,520 Speaker 1: Pitch this year, there was a presentation I believe it 136 00:06:30,560 --> 00:06:33,279 Speaker 1: was Scott cho was talking about that batting average was 137 00:06:33,320 --> 00:06:36,640 Speaker 1: the most difficult position to pick up off the waivers 138 00:06:36,680 --> 00:06:40,240 Speaker 1: in season. So is it that versus the priority that 139 00:06:40,240 --> 00:06:42,440 Speaker 1: people don't really put on bat Like is it because 140 00:06:42,440 --> 00:06:44,760 Speaker 1: people don't prioritize batting average and you can take advantage, 141 00:06:44,839 --> 00:06:46,800 Speaker 1: or it's so hard to make up in season? 142 00:06:47,040 --> 00:06:50,000 Speaker 3: It's it's it's the most scarce, like stolen bases get 143 00:06:50,000 --> 00:06:52,719 Speaker 3: talked about all the time. Is maybe pre rule change 144 00:06:52,760 --> 00:06:54,760 Speaker 3: as the scarceest category batting average. 145 00:06:54,839 --> 00:06:56,520 Speaker 2: Batting average with. 146 00:06:56,320 --> 00:06:59,159 Speaker 3: The ability to do other things like bogarts can is 147 00:06:59,160 --> 00:07:02,560 Speaker 3: the scarcest modity out there. And I listened to Scott 148 00:07:02,640 --> 00:07:05,400 Speaker 3: Chow's presentation at First Pitch Arizona and kind of prove 149 00:07:05,520 --> 00:07:08,600 Speaker 3: that out during the season. It is very difficult to 150 00:07:09,240 --> 00:07:12,240 Speaker 3: uh to replace batting average. And I also think in 151 00:07:12,280 --> 00:07:15,360 Speaker 3: these later rounds, having a batting average cushion, having a 152 00:07:15,400 --> 00:07:17,920 Speaker 3: batting average floor on your team opens you up to 153 00:07:18,040 --> 00:07:21,320 Speaker 3: a lot of different options later in the draft. And 154 00:07:21,360 --> 00:07:24,360 Speaker 3: so I just like having that flexibility later in the 155 00:07:24,440 --> 00:07:26,120 Speaker 3: draft to be able to take you know, adult and 156 00:07:26,240 --> 00:07:29,080 Speaker 3: var Show or you know an Anthony Volpi or you 157 00:07:29,120 --> 00:07:32,280 Speaker 3: know whatever, those types of players. There's there's it seems 158 00:07:32,320 --> 00:07:33,920 Speaker 3: like there's a lot more of those, and you can 159 00:07:34,000 --> 00:07:35,360 Speaker 3: do that with a good batting average. 160 00:07:35,400 --> 00:07:38,400 Speaker 1: Here's a quick break in the action. MLB draft season 161 00:07:38,480 --> 00:07:40,840 Speaker 1: is here, friends, and the easiest place to play fantasy 162 00:07:40,840 --> 00:07:43,960 Speaker 1: baseball is a underdog Fantasy. Joe and I have already 163 00:07:43,960 --> 00:07:46,400 Speaker 1: been active in their best ball format fantasy drafts, where 164 00:07:46,440 --> 00:07:49,280 Speaker 1: you draft your team over twenty rounds and the best 165 00:07:49,280 --> 00:07:51,960 Speaker 1: score from the team you drafted becomes your score for 166 00:07:52,200 --> 00:07:55,680 Speaker 1: each week of the MLB season. Drafts are consistently filling 167 00:07:55,720 --> 00:07:57,960 Speaker 1: each and every day, So go to Underdog Fantasy right 168 00:07:57,960 --> 00:08:00,600 Speaker 1: now and draft in the dinger for your share of 169 00:08:00,760 --> 00:08:03,840 Speaker 1: seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars in prizes, with the 170 00:08:03,880 --> 00:08:06,960 Speaker 1: first place prize being a cool one hundred k. It's 171 00:08:07,000 --> 00:08:09,200 Speaker 1: only ten dollars to draft, and the tournament closes on 172 00:08:09,320 --> 00:08:12,320 Speaker 1: opening day, March twenty eighth, So jump in now. Sign 173 00:08:12,400 --> 00:08:15,520 Speaker 1: up for Underdog and use the promo code fp MLB 174 00:08:15,760 --> 00:08:18,760 Speaker 1: to get your first deposit match up to one hundred bucks. 175 00:08:19,000 --> 00:08:22,840 Speaker 1: That's ten free dinger drafts. Use that promo code fp 176 00:08:23,320 --> 00:08:26,480 Speaker 1: MLB and join Underdog today and get drafting for the 177 00:08:26,560 --> 00:08:30,560 Speaker 1: upcoming MLB season. Now back to the show. Next up 178 00:08:30,600 --> 00:08:33,160 Speaker 1: on the undervalue players. We're going into the pitching market. 179 00:08:33,160 --> 00:08:36,480 Speaker 1: We're actually staying in the average rank of the nineties 180 00:08:36,480 --> 00:08:39,720 Speaker 1: according to Fantasy Pros, and we're looking at Joe Ryan. Actually, 181 00:08:39,720 --> 00:08:43,240 Speaker 1: everybody's very excited about the other Minnesota pitcher, Im Pablo Lopez. 182 00:08:43,320 --> 00:08:45,040 Speaker 1: There's another guy that we're gonna talk about later that 183 00:08:45,080 --> 00:08:47,680 Speaker 1: I like, we're all like with baited breath, looking for 184 00:08:47,800 --> 00:08:50,000 Speaker 1: data on Chris Paddock to see what it looks like. 185 00:08:50,040 --> 00:08:53,400 Speaker 1: But Joe Ryan jumps out as an undervalue guy. Really 186 00:08:53,400 --> 00:08:55,840 Speaker 1: low walk rate, career, low walk rate into the five's 187 00:08:56,120 --> 00:08:59,600 Speaker 1: K percentage went way up. The strikeouts were there because 188 00:08:59,640 --> 00:09:02,480 Speaker 1: he added the split finger. This is one of those 189 00:09:02,559 --> 00:09:07,720 Speaker 1: pitchers that his return on value versus his rank ADP 190 00:09:08,120 --> 00:09:10,880 Speaker 1: really doesn't quite mesh, because this is the type of 191 00:09:10,880 --> 00:09:13,640 Speaker 1: player you would think would be twenty or thirty spots higher. 192 00:09:13,880 --> 00:09:15,240 Speaker 1: So talk to us about Joe Ryan. 193 00:09:15,360 --> 00:09:16,160 Speaker 2: I think Joe Ryan. 194 00:09:16,200 --> 00:09:18,079 Speaker 3: So you mentioned the splitter that was fantastic and a 195 00:09:18,200 --> 00:09:20,920 Speaker 3: nice compliment to one of the best fastballs in the game. 196 00:09:21,120 --> 00:09:24,520 Speaker 3: I think Joe Ryan from an actual fifth percentage on 197 00:09:24,559 --> 00:09:27,000 Speaker 3: the four steamer was like fourth best. He's definitely top 198 00:09:27,040 --> 00:09:29,880 Speaker 3: five in baseball last year, so he now has that 199 00:09:29,960 --> 00:09:32,640 Speaker 3: second kind of putaway pitch along with the fastball, and 200 00:09:32,679 --> 00:09:34,920 Speaker 3: the skills just soared last year. I think Joe Ryan 201 00:09:34,960 --> 00:09:37,640 Speaker 3: is being undervalued in the market because of the home 202 00:09:37,720 --> 00:09:39,600 Speaker 3: run problem. And there's two things to a home run 203 00:09:39,640 --> 00:09:41,760 Speaker 3: problem for a pitcher. There's the ground ball fly ball, 204 00:09:41,840 --> 00:09:44,280 Speaker 3: which the pitcher can control, and Joe Ryan does give 205 00:09:44,360 --> 00:09:46,600 Speaker 3: up a lot of fly balls fifty percent fly ball 206 00:09:46,679 --> 00:09:49,120 Speaker 3: rate last year. But there's also the home runs per 207 00:09:49,120 --> 00:09:52,480 Speaker 3: fly ball that is not as sticky year to year, 208 00:09:52,520 --> 00:09:55,360 Speaker 3: and Joe Ryan just got hammered down the stretch in 209 00:09:55,400 --> 00:09:57,880 Speaker 3: the second half. Had a twenty one percent homer to 210 00:09:57,920 --> 00:10:00,680 Speaker 3: fly ball rate league average on that is like twelve percent, 211 00:10:00,880 --> 00:10:04,160 Speaker 3: and so that's really what drove Joe Ryan's six 'oh 212 00:10:04,320 --> 00:10:07,640 Speaker 3: nine eer in the second half. And I just don't 213 00:10:07,720 --> 00:10:10,559 Speaker 3: think that home run variance is that sticky from year 214 00:10:10,559 --> 00:10:10,839 Speaker 3: to year. 215 00:10:10,840 --> 00:10:12,480 Speaker 2: I think if we get Joe Ryan with the league 216 00:10:12,480 --> 00:10:13,160 Speaker 2: average homer to. 217 00:10:13,160 --> 00:10:16,800 Speaker 3: Fly ball rate, the strikeout and walk skills are just fantastic. 218 00:10:16,960 --> 00:10:19,480 Speaker 3: And you alluded to Minnesota Welsh. They know what they're 219 00:10:19,520 --> 00:10:22,079 Speaker 3: doing as an organization, and I think they can they 220 00:10:22,080 --> 00:10:25,720 Speaker 3: can get Joe Ryan to ascend to an even higher 221 00:10:25,800 --> 00:10:27,320 Speaker 3: level than he's at right now. 222 00:10:27,400 --> 00:10:30,199 Speaker 1: A real oddity is like the fastball got hit up 223 00:10:30,240 --> 00:10:33,360 Speaker 1: more from a batting average standpoint one seventy four against 224 00:10:33,400 --> 00:10:37,080 Speaker 1: in twenty twenty two two forty, But the expect bio 225 00:10:37,120 --> 00:10:39,240 Speaker 1: would point out that's like a huge gap, but the 226 00:10:39,320 --> 00:10:42,320 Speaker 1: expected batting average against was actually closer year over year. 227 00:10:42,520 --> 00:10:45,720 Speaker 1: But he gave up nine homers against the forcing fastball 228 00:10:45,840 --> 00:10:50,320 Speaker 1: in twenty twenty two, gave up nineteen this past year. So, 229 00:10:50,600 --> 00:10:54,400 Speaker 1: you know, having a big adjusted pitch change, especially a 230 00:10:54,520 --> 00:10:58,120 Speaker 1: split finger, which isn't necessarily Nick Polck talked about it 231 00:10:58,160 --> 00:11:01,040 Speaker 1: on the Pitching Guide episode isn't viewed as like a breakaway, 232 00:11:01,080 --> 00:11:03,679 Speaker 1: punch away pitch. It's kind of the setup pitched everything 233 00:11:04,000 --> 00:11:06,920 Speaker 1: that that fastball fastball became a little bit more vulnerable. 234 00:11:07,080 --> 00:11:09,160 Speaker 1: Be interesting to see if maybe the sweeper kind of 235 00:11:09,320 --> 00:11:11,360 Speaker 1: takes a tick up or something like that. That's year, 236 00:11:11,440 --> 00:11:13,360 Speaker 1: so the fastball doesn't get hit up so much. But 237 00:11:13,480 --> 00:11:17,080 Speaker 1: the low walk rates make him pretty exciting. And I'm 238 00:11:17,120 --> 00:11:19,560 Speaker 1: down with this one coming in at number three. This 239 00:11:19,640 --> 00:11:22,600 Speaker 1: guy has a new team, and this team is quite exciting. 240 00:11:22,920 --> 00:11:26,040 Speaker 1: He does not cost inside the top one point fifteen 241 00:11:26,080 --> 00:11:29,199 Speaker 1: as far as ranks go. According to Fantasy Pros. Lookame 242 00:11:29,200 --> 00:11:32,400 Speaker 1: across the board and his ADP is almost one thirty 243 00:11:32,520 --> 00:11:37,319 Speaker 1: across all of the sites combined. New Dodgers Taoscar Hernandez 244 00:11:37,320 --> 00:11:38,960 Speaker 1: is who we're going to be talking about as an 245 00:11:39,040 --> 00:11:42,440 Speaker 1: undervalued player. Hit twenty six home runs last year in 246 00:11:42,480 --> 00:11:46,080 Speaker 1: a not great pitching environment, goes to a much better spot. 247 00:11:46,320 --> 00:11:49,040 Speaker 1: The bat x actually has him projected as the most 248 00:11:49,080 --> 00:11:52,800 Speaker 1: homers with twenty eight at least versus ATC I could 249 00:11:52,800 --> 00:11:55,520 Speaker 1: see him easily going over thirty in that really really 250 00:11:55,600 --> 00:11:59,200 Speaker 1: strong lineup and good hitting environment. How undervalued is Taoscar 251 00:11:59,280 --> 00:12:01,640 Speaker 1: When you think about the scope of where he is, 252 00:12:01,840 --> 00:12:04,440 Speaker 1: the lineup protection, and really who he was lot. Even 253 00:12:04,440 --> 00:12:07,160 Speaker 1: in that environment last year, dude still hit twenty six homers. 254 00:12:07,200 --> 00:12:07,960 Speaker 2: I know, I know. 255 00:12:08,080 --> 00:12:11,920 Speaker 3: It's just absolutely you know, it's a perfect landing spot 256 00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:13,960 Speaker 3: for Taioscar because he's going to play every day in 257 00:12:14,120 --> 00:12:16,920 Speaker 3: LA and he's probably hitting behind like a Freddie Freeman, 258 00:12:17,000 --> 00:12:19,319 Speaker 3: Will Smith guys who it's perfect to hit behind those 259 00:12:19,320 --> 00:12:21,000 Speaker 3: guys because they don't really hit a ton of home runs. 260 00:12:21,040 --> 00:12:23,840 Speaker 3: They just get on base consistently, so there's always gonna 261 00:12:23,840 --> 00:12:27,439 Speaker 3: be ducks on the pond for Taoscar. He's also going 262 00:12:27,520 --> 00:12:29,760 Speaker 3: at a point in the draft, at least where I've 263 00:12:29,800 --> 00:12:32,560 Speaker 3: found so far in kind of feeling out, some of 264 00:12:32,600 --> 00:12:35,480 Speaker 3: my early drafts feel like around this time of the draft, 265 00:12:35,520 --> 00:12:36,520 Speaker 3: power starts. 266 00:12:36,240 --> 00:12:38,520 Speaker 2: To wane a little bit in the player pool. 267 00:12:38,360 --> 00:12:41,040 Speaker 3: And Taoscar is one of one of the last few, 268 00:12:41,080 --> 00:12:43,400 Speaker 3: Like Anthony Santander's another guy kind of going a little 269 00:12:43,440 --> 00:12:45,640 Speaker 3: bit later that I like too, But I feel like 270 00:12:45,640 --> 00:12:47,720 Speaker 3: Taoskcar is one of the last few guys who not 271 00:12:47,760 --> 00:12:52,600 Speaker 3: only gives you that power but doesn't really have deficiencies elsewhere. 272 00:12:52,880 --> 00:12:55,160 Speaker 3: A lot of projections have ta Oscar hitting right around 273 00:12:55,200 --> 00:12:58,360 Speaker 3: two sixty. And again the runs and RBI, those kind 274 00:12:58,360 --> 00:13:01,000 Speaker 3: of hidden counting stats that are so hoorton and fantasy. 275 00:13:01,760 --> 00:13:04,560 Speaker 3: Are you know the floor for that in la Is? 276 00:13:05,080 --> 00:13:10,160 Speaker 3: I think just just massive, so perfect landing spot, especially 277 00:13:10,200 --> 00:13:11,920 Speaker 3: compared to Seattle last year. 278 00:13:11,960 --> 00:13:14,480 Speaker 1: I mean, and it's still like an above thirteen percent 279 00:13:14,559 --> 00:13:17,040 Speaker 1: barrel rate. It was top ten percent tele in a league, 280 00:13:17,040 --> 00:13:19,640 Speaker 1: hard hit percentage, love all of those things. He's still 281 00:13:19,679 --> 00:13:22,160 Speaker 1: getting the ball in the air. The batting average you 282 00:13:22,240 --> 00:13:24,480 Speaker 1: expected batting average. If you're somewhere between two fifty and 283 00:13:24,480 --> 00:13:27,160 Speaker 1: two seventy for Taoscar, you're really in a great spot. 284 00:13:27,200 --> 00:13:29,600 Speaker 1: And you know you said something that's really important. I 285 00:13:29,679 --> 00:13:32,240 Speaker 1: was asked this question just the other day about like, hey, 286 00:13:32,240 --> 00:13:36,079 Speaker 1: what's your early round prioritization if you were looking for categories, 287 00:13:36,120 --> 00:13:38,520 Speaker 1: and I said, you know what, my surprise people, it's power, 288 00:13:38,760 --> 00:13:41,000 Speaker 1: because speed usually is that answer. That's why you say 289 00:13:41,000 --> 00:13:43,240 Speaker 1: that batting average might be one of those. It's kind 290 00:13:43,240 --> 00:13:45,800 Speaker 1: of a pseudo one, but like power, I want power 291 00:13:45,840 --> 00:13:49,040 Speaker 1: throughout the draft because I feel like we have a 292 00:13:49,640 --> 00:13:54,640 Speaker 1: bigger gap between supreme power versus like stolen base Obviously, 293 00:13:54,720 --> 00:13:57,400 Speaker 1: like if you had Ellie and a story Ruiz that 294 00:13:57,480 --> 00:13:59,240 Speaker 1: might change the whole game on speed, But you can 295 00:13:59,280 --> 00:14:01,240 Speaker 1: catch up speed every where you're mentioning we get to 296 00:14:01,240 --> 00:14:03,280 Speaker 1: the top one hundred or outside the top one hundred, 297 00:14:03,360 --> 00:14:05,959 Speaker 1: there's only so many more real power bats that can 298 00:14:06,120 --> 00:14:10,040 Speaker 1: maintain some average, you said, Anthony Santander. I would say, 299 00:14:10,040 --> 00:14:13,280 Speaker 1: like ta Oscar and Jorge Solaire are like two of 300 00:14:13,280 --> 00:14:16,560 Speaker 1: my big options. There's a couple corner infielders. We're actually 301 00:14:16,600 --> 00:14:18,520 Speaker 1: going to talk about one in a second. But chasing 302 00:14:18,600 --> 00:14:21,440 Speaker 1: power a little bit later is still something you have 303 00:14:21,520 --> 00:14:24,080 Speaker 1: to pay attention to and do. And outfield gets it 304 00:14:24,120 --> 00:14:26,160 Speaker 1: wanes out a little bit, like are you in the 305 00:14:26,200 --> 00:14:29,560 Speaker 1: camp that outfield absolutely gets away from you? Or do 306 00:14:29,600 --> 00:14:31,720 Speaker 1: you think that narrative is kind of getting overplayed? 307 00:14:31,960 --> 00:14:35,920 Speaker 3: So I just drafted the Labor Mixed League Tuesday night, 308 00:14:36,360 --> 00:14:38,960 Speaker 3: and it's a fifteen team mixed league, and did I 309 00:14:39,000 --> 00:14:41,720 Speaker 3: had one outfielder in the first twelve rounds. 310 00:14:41,240 --> 00:14:42,680 Speaker 2: And man, I was nervous. 311 00:14:43,640 --> 00:14:48,760 Speaker 3: I was very nervous when outfielder, outfielder, outfielder rounds thirteen, 312 00:14:48,800 --> 00:14:51,080 Speaker 3: fourteen to fifteen, because I could kind of see the 313 00:14:51,080 --> 00:14:55,760 Speaker 3: writing on the wall that this was starting to fade quickly. 314 00:14:55,880 --> 00:14:58,320 Speaker 2: So I feel like I got out just in time. 315 00:14:58,480 --> 00:15:00,240 Speaker 3: But I think you do need to kind of keep 316 00:15:00,240 --> 00:15:02,600 Speaker 3: track of where your outfielders are at, because once you 317 00:15:02,640 --> 00:15:05,280 Speaker 3: start to get into that, like those late teens rounds, 318 00:15:05,360 --> 00:15:07,640 Speaker 3: it's it starts to get pretty tough. It's a lot 319 00:15:07,640 --> 00:15:11,440 Speaker 3: of just like older platoon bats, and you kind of 320 00:15:11,440 --> 00:15:11,960 Speaker 3: don't want that. 321 00:15:12,080 --> 00:15:14,360 Speaker 1: Yeah, there's some guys I like, like, I'm into Jared 322 00:15:14,400 --> 00:15:16,520 Speaker 1: Kellnick this year. I'm into Jared Durant and stuff like that. 323 00:15:16,560 --> 00:15:18,840 Speaker 1: But again, if you're focusing in on power too, there's 324 00:15:18,840 --> 00:15:20,680 Speaker 1: only so many. Who was the one outfielder you did 325 00:15:20,680 --> 00:15:21,880 Speaker 1: get in the beginning. 326 00:15:22,400 --> 00:15:26,040 Speaker 2: It was Brian Reynolds's core piece. 327 00:15:26,080 --> 00:15:28,880 Speaker 1: I love that. Yeah, my tout I actually started with 328 00:15:28,920 --> 00:15:30,960 Speaker 1: Corbyn Carroll. But that's my only outfielder so far. But 329 00:15:31,080 --> 00:15:33,280 Speaker 1: draft and hold, we're like six rounds in or something 330 00:15:33,320 --> 00:15:36,080 Speaker 1: like that, So shocker that I got Corbyn Carroll. Let's 331 00:15:36,120 --> 00:15:40,880 Speaker 1: go into the fourth undervalued player and we're serving up burgers. 332 00:15:41,120 --> 00:15:44,160 Speaker 1: He is Jake Berger. Definitely heard this name a whole lot. 333 00:15:44,240 --> 00:15:46,920 Speaker 1: We know the hard hit numbers through the roof. He's 334 00:15:46,960 --> 00:15:50,840 Speaker 1: outside the top one fifty ECR ranks over on Fantasy Pros. 335 00:15:50,920 --> 00:15:55,080 Speaker 1: His ADP is even lower. Let's talk about Jake Berger 336 00:15:55,120 --> 00:15:57,920 Speaker 1: and those obscene hard hit numbers and why he is 337 00:15:57,960 --> 00:15:58,680 Speaker 1: so undervalued. 338 00:15:58,800 --> 00:16:01,280 Speaker 3: That's the main part. Art we all know Jake Berger 339 00:16:01,360 --> 00:16:03,960 Speaker 3: has power. I think it's I think it's elite power. 340 00:16:04,160 --> 00:16:06,240 Speaker 3: I think it's elite power, and what we saw from 341 00:16:06,320 --> 00:16:08,800 Speaker 3: Jake Berger and I try not to go too much, 342 00:16:08,840 --> 00:16:11,480 Speaker 3: especially for hitters, into like first half second half stats 343 00:16:12,360 --> 00:16:15,000 Speaker 3: that much, but in Jake Berger's case, with the context 344 00:16:15,000 --> 00:16:17,600 Speaker 3: of kind of honestly just getting kind of jerked around 345 00:16:17,680 --> 00:16:19,880 Speaker 3: in the first half of the season with the White Sox, 346 00:16:21,000 --> 00:16:23,840 Speaker 3: inconsistent playing time, playing different positions, that sort of thing. 347 00:16:24,040 --> 00:16:27,000 Speaker 3: Berger finally, once he went to Miami, settled into a 348 00:16:27,080 --> 00:16:30,320 Speaker 3: role and not only kept the thump, kept the power, 349 00:16:30,760 --> 00:16:33,480 Speaker 3: but severely cut down on his strikeout right to the 350 00:16:33,520 --> 00:16:36,160 Speaker 3: point where, like I do think, maybe not as high 351 00:16:36,160 --> 00:16:38,360 Speaker 3: as like a Taoscar batting average, but I think Jake 352 00:16:38,400 --> 00:16:41,720 Speaker 3: Berger can hit two fifty. I don't think this is 353 00:16:41,800 --> 00:16:43,920 Speaker 3: just a power bat who's going to hurt you in 354 00:16:44,000 --> 00:16:48,440 Speaker 3: batting average. And so for all those reasons, Berger is 355 00:16:49,440 --> 00:16:53,120 Speaker 3: a very much target for me. And third base too, 356 00:16:53,240 --> 00:16:56,360 Speaker 3: just looking at kind of a macro level at that position, 357 00:16:56,680 --> 00:16:59,960 Speaker 3: you're a couple guys after Jake Berger, you're starting to 358 00:17:00,080 --> 00:17:03,000 Speaker 3: get in trouble at the hot corner. So Jake Berger 359 00:17:03,120 --> 00:17:05,080 Speaker 3: is just at the time of the draft and the 360 00:17:06,160 --> 00:17:09,640 Speaker 3: power batting average foundation that he provides, I think it's 361 00:17:09,680 --> 00:17:12,240 Speaker 3: a great fit for pretty much any team. 362 00:17:12,720 --> 00:17:16,159 Speaker 1: Yeah, I want to second this. Ariol Cohen beat the 363 00:17:16,160 --> 00:17:18,800 Speaker 1: Shift podcast. They just had me on and we did 364 00:17:19,280 --> 00:17:23,359 Speaker 1: a draft using Fantasy Pro's Draft Wizard. I had a 365 00:17:23,359 --> 00:17:27,880 Speaker 1: good team, but I tanked third base. When I say 366 00:17:27,920 --> 00:17:31,280 Speaker 1: I tanked it, I just at every level I was like, oh, okay, 367 00:17:31,320 --> 00:17:33,080 Speaker 1: I just missed him. We'll just wait for this guy. Oh, 368 00:17:33,119 --> 00:17:34,920 Speaker 1: we'll wait, and then all of a sudden we were 369 00:17:34,920 --> 00:17:37,439 Speaker 1: no longer waiting. I completely tanked it. Jake Berger was 370 00:17:37,520 --> 00:17:40,520 Speaker 1: one of those targets and I completely messed it up. 371 00:17:40,720 --> 00:17:44,040 Speaker 1: But I would remind everybody Fantasy pros check out the 372 00:17:44,080 --> 00:17:47,040 Speaker 1: Draft Wizard. You can even import your own cheat sheets. 373 00:17:47,240 --> 00:17:49,680 Speaker 1: You can take my ranks, multiple people's ranks. You can 374 00:17:49,720 --> 00:17:53,200 Speaker 1: really customize it however you want, and you can experiment, 375 00:17:53,280 --> 00:17:55,760 Speaker 1: you can play around with it. You also can set 376 00:17:55,800 --> 00:17:59,160 Speaker 1: priorities in drafts in the Draft Wizard, like third base, 377 00:17:59,200 --> 00:18:00,840 Speaker 1: you could say I want want to make sure I 378 00:18:00,880 --> 00:18:03,000 Speaker 1: am taking third base what that mock looks like and 379 00:18:03,080 --> 00:18:05,119 Speaker 1: the suggestions that gives you. So go and check it 380 00:18:05,119 --> 00:18:08,399 Speaker 1: out today. Fantasypros dot com slash Draft Wizard. Download the app, 381 00:18:08,680 --> 00:18:11,680 Speaker 1: start drafting. Download the app. Like my, uh my best 382 00:18:11,680 --> 00:18:13,520 Speaker 1: friend Justin Steel who has a Draft Wizard on his 383 00:18:13,600 --> 00:18:16,800 Speaker 1: phone and he likes the draft a guy, Yeah he does. 384 00:18:16,840 --> 00:18:18,920 Speaker 1: We we we were just hanging out. As I told 385 00:18:18,920 --> 00:18:20,919 Speaker 1: the story, people are so sick of me and I apologize. 386 00:18:20,960 --> 00:18:23,320 Speaker 1: But he found out I worked at Fantasy Pros and 387 00:18:23,320 --> 00:18:24,760 Speaker 1: he was like, are you serious. He's like, I love 388 00:18:24,800 --> 00:18:28,080 Speaker 1: Fantasy Pros and I was like, okay, let's give me 389 00:18:28,119 --> 00:18:30,760 Speaker 1: some extra credit at my job. And he pulled up 390 00:18:30,800 --> 00:18:32,560 Speaker 1: the Draft Wizard. He had the Draft Wizard on his 391 00:18:32,680 --> 00:18:35,080 Speaker 1: phone and we had a great time. So he might 392 00:18:35,160 --> 00:18:38,960 Speaker 1: have some swag come in his way, but be like Steel. 393 00:18:39,000 --> 00:18:40,320 Speaker 2: Moving him up the rings. Now. 394 00:18:40,640 --> 00:18:42,640 Speaker 3: I have used I have used the the mock Draft 395 00:18:42,680 --> 00:18:45,800 Speaker 3: tool and it is awesome, but the experimentation you get 396 00:18:45,800 --> 00:18:48,280 Speaker 3: to knock out a mock draft very quickly and just 397 00:18:48,280 --> 00:18:50,880 Speaker 3: play with different different types of bills and that sort 398 00:18:50,880 --> 00:18:53,080 Speaker 3: of thing. But yeah, to go back to third base. 399 00:18:53,280 --> 00:18:56,639 Speaker 3: In labor, I was in the same predicament as you 400 00:18:56,720 --> 00:18:59,600 Speaker 3: well did not take Jake Berger. I was actually a 401 00:18:59,640 --> 00:19:01,879 Speaker 3: snipe by Mike pod Ors or not that I'm keeping 402 00:19:01,960 --> 00:19:05,879 Speaker 3: track of how that work. Waited all the way to 403 00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:10,239 Speaker 3: get Matt Chapman, who does not have a home. I 404 00:19:10,240 --> 00:19:13,479 Speaker 3: think will I think I'll get signed. But that was 405 00:19:13,720 --> 00:19:16,840 Speaker 3: that was like the eighteenth nineteenth round. It's a bad 406 00:19:16,880 --> 00:19:19,320 Speaker 3: place to be if you wait on third base that long. 407 00:19:19,320 --> 00:19:21,639 Speaker 1: That mock I did. I would have killed for Matt Chapman. 408 00:19:21,760 --> 00:19:23,960 Speaker 1: That's how bad I did. So just you can't go 409 00:19:24,000 --> 00:19:25,640 Speaker 1: and check it out. I do a really bad job, 410 00:19:25,680 --> 00:19:28,359 Speaker 1: all right. Number five, Let's go to the next undervalue. 411 00:19:28,359 --> 00:19:30,040 Speaker 1: This is one of my favorites. I've talked about him 412 00:19:30,080 --> 00:19:33,800 Speaker 1: a decent amount. Nick Pavetta. Can you believe we're talking 413 00:19:33,840 --> 00:19:37,040 Speaker 1: about him here, Nick Povett. No, actually particular crazy order 414 00:19:37,080 --> 00:19:38,560 Speaker 1: outside of kind of the love and some of the 415 00:19:38,560 --> 00:19:41,920 Speaker 1: big value. When we're going through these thirteen names, there's 416 00:19:41,960 --> 00:19:44,000 Speaker 1: a little bit of like think of these as tiers, 417 00:19:44,080 --> 00:19:46,960 Speaker 1: not like insane numbers. But and the reason I say 418 00:19:46,960 --> 00:19:49,040 Speaker 1: that is Nick Pavett is ranked outside the top two 419 00:19:49,160 --> 00:19:53,960 Speaker 1: hundred right now on Consensus ECR. His ADP, though, is 420 00:19:54,119 --> 00:19:57,080 Speaker 1: higher than the rankers. That's a really interesting fact. And 421 00:19:57,119 --> 00:19:59,600 Speaker 1: I've mentioned a little bit on the last few pods. 422 00:19:59,680 --> 00:20:01,680 Speaker 1: One of the reasons I really love Nick Pavetta is 423 00:20:01,720 --> 00:20:04,560 Speaker 1: from July first on last year, he led baseball in 424 00:20:04,640 --> 00:20:07,359 Speaker 1: K percentage. And he also had and I'll say the 425 00:20:07,400 --> 00:20:11,600 Speaker 1: stat one last time, he had the highest wiff addition 426 00:20:12,400 --> 00:20:14,400 Speaker 1: from a starting pitcher year over year, if I could 427 00:20:14,480 --> 00:20:16,720 Speaker 1: even properly say that. So he had the highest whiff 428 00:20:16,800 --> 00:20:20,280 Speaker 1: addition like five or six percent to overall whiffs from 429 00:20:20,320 --> 00:20:22,840 Speaker 1: any sp because it's usually filled with RP. So either way, 430 00:20:22,960 --> 00:20:25,440 Speaker 1: like a big strikeout guy. They got body over there. 431 00:20:25,880 --> 00:20:27,200 Speaker 1: Why do you like Nick Pavetta? 432 00:20:27,760 --> 00:20:31,360 Speaker 3: It is that second half like dominance, but it's it's 433 00:20:31,400 --> 00:20:33,679 Speaker 3: not just again cherry picking that second half. It was 434 00:20:33,760 --> 00:20:36,480 Speaker 3: it was back by a pitch mix change, kind of 435 00:20:36,520 --> 00:20:40,240 Speaker 3: joined the sweeper revolution had that had that change. And yeah, 436 00:20:40,359 --> 00:20:42,600 Speaker 3: like I mean, my favorite, my favorite stat to look 437 00:20:42,600 --> 00:20:46,600 Speaker 3: at his strikeout minus walk great from first to second 438 00:20:46,680 --> 00:20:51,479 Speaker 3: half last year. The second highest jump in strikeout minus 439 00:20:51,480 --> 00:20:54,960 Speaker 3: walk greate behind Freddie Peralta was Nick Pavetta at twenty 440 00:20:55,000 --> 00:20:57,680 Speaker 3: nine percent, which is just which is just crazy. 441 00:20:58,160 --> 00:20:59,280 Speaker 1: It's an absurd number. 442 00:21:00,040 --> 00:21:03,639 Speaker 3: The the haters will say, yeah, but it was mostly 443 00:21:03,640 --> 00:21:06,360 Speaker 3: out of a relief role. But he's Pavetta still threw 444 00:21:06,359 --> 00:21:09,280 Speaker 3: over eighty innings in the second half, finished the season 445 00:21:09,280 --> 00:21:12,480 Speaker 3: in the rotation through five starts actually to end the season, 446 00:21:12,840 --> 00:21:15,760 Speaker 3: and in those five starts had I've got it right 447 00:21:15,800 --> 00:21:19,560 Speaker 3: here a two thirty seven ERA, four percent walk grade 448 00:21:19,560 --> 00:21:23,600 Speaker 3: and a sixteen percent swinging strike so just excellent stuff. 449 00:21:23,880 --> 00:21:26,760 Speaker 3: We've all been burned by Nick Pavetta at some point 450 00:21:26,800 --> 00:21:27,959 Speaker 3: in our fantasy lives. 451 00:21:28,040 --> 00:21:30,320 Speaker 2: Yet here we are in the year twenty twenty four. 452 00:21:30,520 --> 00:21:33,919 Speaker 3: Still hyping this guy. But I do think the changes 453 00:21:33,960 --> 00:21:35,919 Speaker 3: that we saw from him, and you mentioned like Potty 454 00:21:36,000 --> 00:21:38,719 Speaker 3: and some of the organization changes, I think he can 455 00:21:38,760 --> 00:21:42,639 Speaker 3: reinvent himself and pitch very well over a full season 456 00:21:42,800 --> 00:21:43,720 Speaker 3: in twenty four. 457 00:21:43,840 --> 00:21:46,239 Speaker 1: You haven't played Fantasy baseball list. Nick Pavetta is her 458 00:21:46,320 --> 00:21:49,719 Speaker 1: new season, so you have not, no, So it's all 459 00:21:49,760 --> 00:21:51,439 Speaker 1: your turn this year because we're hyping them up. We're 460 00:21:51,440 --> 00:21:53,119 Speaker 1: getting excited about it. We're going to stay on pitchers 461 00:21:53,119 --> 00:21:55,400 Speaker 1: for a little bit. I alluded to this guy earlier. 462 00:21:55,400 --> 00:21:57,920 Speaker 1: There are things to like about the twins, and outside 463 00:21:57,920 --> 00:22:01,879 Speaker 1: of Pablo Lopez, they're actually all kind of undervalued. Like 464 00:22:02,119 --> 00:22:04,920 Speaker 1: Bailey Ober and probably should have let Bailey Over out 465 00:22:04,920 --> 00:22:07,000 Speaker 1: of here because he's come into a lot of conversations, 466 00:22:07,040 --> 00:22:10,000 Speaker 1: but he has continued. He continuously fits the mold of 467 00:22:10,040 --> 00:22:12,080 Speaker 1: the pitchers that I like. You talk about K minus 468 00:22:12,160 --> 00:22:15,800 Speaker 1: walk percentage. His strikeouts aren't insane, but the walk percentage 469 00:22:15,840 --> 00:22:17,880 Speaker 1: is really low, and he keeps it over a twenty 470 00:22:18,080 --> 00:22:21,919 Speaker 1: K minus walk percentage, which you really really love. Bailey 471 00:22:21,960 --> 00:22:26,560 Speaker 1: Over doesn't have a big power fastball, but has a 472 00:22:26,640 --> 00:22:29,240 Speaker 1: kind of absurd wifth percentage. You don't see like twenty 473 00:22:29,280 --> 00:22:32,119 Speaker 1: five plus wifth percentages on fastballs a whole bunch when 474 00:22:32,160 --> 00:22:33,520 Speaker 1: you go and take a look, and it was twenty 475 00:22:33,520 --> 00:22:36,879 Speaker 1: seven point seven. And all of his main three big 476 00:22:36,920 --> 00:22:39,680 Speaker 1: pitches that are over ten percent had a twenty seven 477 00:22:39,800 --> 00:22:42,440 Speaker 1: or higher percent wifth percentage. So it's a pretty eaven distribution. 478 00:22:42,600 --> 00:22:45,280 Speaker 1: With good control, ERA is going to be there. There's 479 00:22:45,320 --> 00:22:48,720 Speaker 1: good run support. Bailey Ober undervalued to what. 480 00:22:48,680 --> 00:22:52,320 Speaker 3: Degree, to a pretty good degree. Like honestly, I Baileyover. 481 00:22:52,640 --> 00:22:54,600 Speaker 3: He's a flyball pitcher, kind of like Joe Ryan. But 482 00:22:54,680 --> 00:22:57,280 Speaker 3: what that does for Bailey Ob is it kind of 483 00:22:57,320 --> 00:23:00,359 Speaker 3: locks in, especially with such a small walk rate, it 484 00:23:00,400 --> 00:23:03,080 Speaker 3: locks in a really good whip, and I don't think, 485 00:23:03,119 --> 00:23:04,920 Speaker 3: at least in you know, in road leagues, we don't 486 00:23:04,920 --> 00:23:08,240 Speaker 3: talk about whip enough, and Bailey Ober has all the 487 00:23:08,240 --> 00:23:09,840 Speaker 3: tools to be able to do that. The biggest thing 488 00:23:09,880 --> 00:23:11,840 Speaker 3: for me with Bailey Ober is the number one hundred 489 00:23:11,880 --> 00:23:14,120 Speaker 3: and sixty nine, one hundred and sixty nine innings from 490 00:23:14,160 --> 00:23:16,680 Speaker 3: Ober last year, Like he would never very nice. He 491 00:23:17,119 --> 00:23:19,880 Speaker 3: had never had a professional season with over one hundred 492 00:23:19,920 --> 00:23:23,600 Speaker 3: and ten innings in a single season before. So to 493 00:23:23,640 --> 00:23:26,320 Speaker 3: see Bailey ob jump from you know, one hundred eight 494 00:23:26,320 --> 00:23:29,440 Speaker 3: innings in twenty twenty one fifty six and twenty two 495 00:23:29,240 --> 00:23:33,760 Speaker 3: to one sixty nine last year across the miners and majors, 496 00:23:34,359 --> 00:23:36,840 Speaker 3: like that's kind of the last box I was waiting 497 00:23:36,880 --> 00:23:38,960 Speaker 3: for him to check, was that durability. So I think 498 00:23:39,000 --> 00:23:41,080 Speaker 3: he can think he can stick all year man. 499 00:23:41,280 --> 00:23:44,399 Speaker 1: Yeah, and you know the projections got I've only got 500 00:23:44,440 --> 00:23:47,439 Speaker 1: him around like one forty something, So I think we 501 00:23:47,480 --> 00:23:49,680 Speaker 1: can press. I think we can press our innings this year. 502 00:23:49,920 --> 00:23:52,680 Speaker 3: And I think yeah, And I think he's locked into 503 00:23:52,680 --> 00:23:53,760 Speaker 3: Minnesota's rotation. 504 00:23:53,920 --> 00:23:55,280 Speaker 2: I don't see I mean. 505 00:23:55,200 --> 00:23:59,000 Speaker 3: Unless there's another like bad fit with with the with 506 00:23:59,000 --> 00:24:02,000 Speaker 3: with gopher ititis, with home run ball. I can't see 507 00:24:02,320 --> 00:24:04,400 Speaker 3: Ober being out of that rotation. He's kind of gone 508 00:24:04,440 --> 00:24:06,080 Speaker 3: in and out a little bit the last few years. 509 00:24:06,080 --> 00:24:08,840 Speaker 3: But I think that role is pretty safe. 510 00:24:08,560 --> 00:24:11,240 Speaker 1: All right, coming in at number seven, we are going 511 00:24:11,280 --> 00:24:15,760 Speaker 1: to my Arizona Diamondbacks, I know, not World Series champs, 512 00:24:15,800 --> 00:24:16,080 Speaker 1: just to. 513 00:24:16,080 --> 00:24:20,520 Speaker 2: The World Series. Just the cameras cropped perfectly. It just 514 00:24:20,720 --> 00:24:24,840 Speaker 2: says World Series. Can we can forget what has to pretend? Yeah? 515 00:24:25,240 --> 00:24:27,880 Speaker 1: Boy can we? We can sure forget, But we won't 516 00:24:27,920 --> 00:24:31,480 Speaker 1: forget in our drafts Merrill Kelly. Because Meryl that ADP 517 00:24:32,160 --> 00:24:34,359 Speaker 1: every year. I mean, maybe it's a little bit higher 518 00:24:34,400 --> 00:24:35,879 Speaker 1: and maybe it gives people it's a little bit more 519 00:24:35,920 --> 00:24:38,800 Speaker 1: squeamish to people because he is boring. But ECR has 520 00:24:38,800 --> 00:24:42,080 Speaker 1: got him at around one forty eight. His ADP is 521 00:24:42,160 --> 00:24:45,359 Speaker 1: actually higher, so he's going higher in drafts, but that 522 00:24:45,520 --> 00:24:48,520 Speaker 1: variance doesn't push him inside the top one hundred. But 523 00:24:48,680 --> 00:24:51,880 Speaker 1: when you think about his ability to absolutely eat innings 524 00:24:52,119 --> 00:24:55,520 Speaker 1: in a landscape where pitchers do not eat innings with 525 00:24:55,600 --> 00:24:59,280 Speaker 1: a great defense and a great offense behind him, Marril 526 00:24:59,359 --> 00:25:01,679 Speaker 1: Kelly has been and as solid as all. He's just boring. 527 00:25:01,880 --> 00:25:03,919 Speaker 1: He's just a boring picture for a lot of people. 528 00:25:04,160 --> 00:25:06,240 Speaker 1: But what I do think that does is it makes 529 00:25:06,320 --> 00:25:09,480 Speaker 1: him undervalue to not only what he gives you, but 530 00:25:09,600 --> 00:25:12,600 Speaker 1: what he provides your whole team context when you take 531 00:25:12,640 --> 00:25:15,439 Speaker 1: some risk. I'm gonna take Cole Reagan's early on. But 532 00:25:15,520 --> 00:25:17,040 Speaker 1: you know what I love. I love some of these 533 00:25:17,080 --> 00:25:20,240 Speaker 1: boring pictures that can help just give me a baseline 534 00:25:20,240 --> 00:25:22,800 Speaker 1: a little bit later when I'm taking some of those risks. 535 00:25:22,480 --> 00:25:24,600 Speaker 3: And you need you need a Merrill Kelly or too 536 00:25:24,800 --> 00:25:26,760 Speaker 3: in your in your in your fantasy rotation. 537 00:25:26,880 --> 00:25:29,200 Speaker 2: Anyone who play has played the last couple of years. 538 00:25:29,480 --> 00:25:31,800 Speaker 3: If you look at the waiver wire for starting pitchers, 539 00:25:32,320 --> 00:25:36,000 Speaker 3: it is it is so barren. Yes, you can go 540 00:25:36,080 --> 00:25:37,960 Speaker 3: with some of the guys where you know, we just 541 00:25:37,960 --> 00:25:40,400 Speaker 3: talked about ober Cole Reagan's where like they you know 542 00:25:40,520 --> 00:25:43,359 Speaker 3: that they're not quite the horse that that Merril Kelly is, 543 00:25:44,320 --> 00:25:45,760 Speaker 3: But you're ope. If you get too much of those guys, 544 00:25:45,800 --> 00:25:47,520 Speaker 3: you're opening up some risks that you need to at 545 00:25:47,520 --> 00:25:50,960 Speaker 3: some point replace someone in your rotation. And that replacement value, 546 00:25:51,040 --> 00:25:55,119 Speaker 3: replacement level value is is really bad for starting pictures, 547 00:25:55,160 --> 00:25:57,480 Speaker 3: and it just gets worse in the deeper leagues that 548 00:25:57,520 --> 00:26:00,000 Speaker 3: you play. So I actually think too, Like, yes, Meryl 549 00:26:00,080 --> 00:26:03,040 Speaker 3: Kelly does get the boring label. We saw a nice 550 00:26:03,240 --> 00:26:07,400 Speaker 3: uptick in the k rate and swinging strike rate. When 551 00:26:07,400 --> 00:26:09,280 Speaker 3: I see both of those go up at the same 552 00:26:09,359 --> 00:26:12,840 Speaker 3: time in the same season, I get excited. Yes, Meryl 553 00:26:12,880 --> 00:26:15,840 Speaker 3: Kelly's thirty five years old, so like, is there truly 554 00:26:15,880 --> 00:26:19,199 Speaker 3: another level? I don't know, but I think you've got 555 00:26:19,240 --> 00:26:23,400 Speaker 3: a pretty good foundation with perhaps the ability to even 556 00:26:23,440 --> 00:26:26,120 Speaker 3: get a few more strikeouts and maybe ascended that two 557 00:26:26,200 --> 00:26:29,320 Speaker 3: hundred strikeout plateau he had one eighty seven last year. 558 00:26:29,359 --> 00:26:30,160 Speaker 2: He almost got there. 559 00:26:30,240 --> 00:26:31,720 Speaker 1: You know what I found out too, I didn't know 560 00:26:31,800 --> 00:26:34,520 Speaker 1: until this year. He went to my high school and 561 00:26:34,600 --> 00:26:37,399 Speaker 1: now now the high school. Yeah. Of course the famous 562 00:26:37,440 --> 00:26:40,480 Speaker 1: people at our high school, Mark Andrews, Merril Kelly, and. 563 00:26:40,440 --> 00:26:42,639 Speaker 3: Of course the Welsh. So those are your three that 564 00:26:42,680 --> 00:26:44,640 Speaker 3: are out knew. I knew the Mark Andrews, I did 565 00:26:44,640 --> 00:26:48,320 Speaker 3: not know, did not know Meryl. Yeah, And sadly I'm 566 00:26:48,320 --> 00:26:51,560 Speaker 3: older than all of them, so was he? Yuh was 567 00:26:51,560 --> 00:26:55,600 Speaker 3: hey you guys cross paths or old man is old 568 00:26:55,640 --> 00:26:57,280 Speaker 3: man Kelly younger than you? 569 00:26:57,440 --> 00:27:00,360 Speaker 1: Old Man Welsh was out of that high school when 570 00:27:00,400 --> 00:27:03,480 Speaker 1: Merrill was popping in. So that's the that's the sadness. 571 00:27:03,560 --> 00:27:07,040 Speaker 1: Let's go to number eight. This was a bloomer hand 572 00:27:07,119 --> 00:27:11,200 Speaker 1: picked thyroi Strada. Gotta love stolen bases that you can 573 00:27:11,200 --> 00:27:14,960 Speaker 1: get later in drafts and multiple qualifications. So talk to 574 00:27:15,040 --> 00:27:18,000 Speaker 1: us about how and why thyro Strata is undervalued. 575 00:27:18,520 --> 00:27:21,240 Speaker 3: Kind of have been in love with Thyrostrata ever since 576 00:27:21,280 --> 00:27:23,200 Speaker 3: I wrote I wrote his player box in. 577 00:27:23,200 --> 00:27:26,200 Speaker 2: The Baseball Forecaster. What Baseball HQ puts. 578 00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:29,360 Speaker 3: Out every fall and we pump it out and get 579 00:27:29,400 --> 00:27:31,000 Speaker 3: it out and by Thanksgiving. 580 00:27:31,160 --> 00:27:34,520 Speaker 2: But I wrote Estrada's box back in October, and I 581 00:27:34,720 --> 00:27:37,000 Speaker 2: just there it is there. 582 00:27:37,040 --> 00:27:38,240 Speaker 1: It is a little little plug. 583 00:27:38,400 --> 00:27:41,720 Speaker 3: There you go, my boys, I gotta take my gnome down, 584 00:27:41,800 --> 00:27:45,160 Speaker 3: but beneath my gnome is senior Acunye. 585 00:27:45,640 --> 00:27:48,280 Speaker 1: Yeah, sorry, completely completely broke the podcast, but I wanted 586 00:27:48,280 --> 00:27:50,240 Speaker 1: to give you guys a plug. You guys sent me one, so. 587 00:27:50,320 --> 00:27:51,840 Speaker 2: Put it out there. Excellent. 588 00:27:52,400 --> 00:27:56,280 Speaker 3: So, yes, I I had mister Estrada's box in that book, 589 00:27:56,400 --> 00:27:58,679 Speaker 3: and I'm just I think the batting I would hit 590 00:27:58,720 --> 00:27:59,680 Speaker 3: two seventy one last year. 591 00:27:59,680 --> 00:28:01,320 Speaker 2: I think he can totally repeat that. 592 00:28:01,640 --> 00:28:05,040 Speaker 3: I think the stolen bases and talking with Bubba, who's 593 00:28:05,320 --> 00:28:09,200 Speaker 3: very much plugged into San Francisco. Bubba's confident that Estrada 594 00:28:09,240 --> 00:28:11,840 Speaker 3: is going to get that green light. Had a, you know, 595 00:28:11,840 --> 00:28:14,680 Speaker 3: almost an eighty percent success rate on the bases last year, 596 00:28:14,720 --> 00:28:18,200 Speaker 3: and that helps. So I think there's thirty stolen base 597 00:28:18,240 --> 00:28:22,040 Speaker 3: potential with the strata. And I'm more bullish on the 598 00:28:22,160 --> 00:28:25,040 Speaker 3: power most of all than I think everyone else. I 599 00:28:25,040 --> 00:28:27,080 Speaker 3: think a lot of the projections have a strata like 600 00:28:27,200 --> 00:28:30,000 Speaker 3: in the low teens for home runs. I think he 601 00:28:30,080 --> 00:28:33,800 Speaker 3: can get into the high teens maybe best case pop 602 00:28:33,840 --> 00:28:36,879 Speaker 3: twenty home runs. And if that's the case, I'm not 603 00:28:36,960 --> 00:28:39,320 Speaker 3: calling for that. I think it's probably more fifteen sixteen. 604 00:28:39,400 --> 00:28:42,760 Speaker 3: But I think this is a five category guy eligible 605 00:28:42,800 --> 00:28:46,360 Speaker 3: at two positions that's gonna play every day in San Francisco. 606 00:28:46,760 --> 00:28:48,880 Speaker 3: The big thing too, with the strata, like we kind 607 00:28:48,880 --> 00:28:50,120 Speaker 3: of had a little bit of a fade in the 608 00:28:50,160 --> 00:28:53,120 Speaker 3: second half, but he broke his hand in June or 609 00:28:53,160 --> 00:28:57,920 Speaker 3: in July, and I think that I think that affected 610 00:28:57,920 --> 00:29:00,920 Speaker 3: things for Estrata in the second half. So I'm much 611 00:29:00,960 --> 00:29:04,680 Speaker 3: more willing to believe the early breakout path that we 612 00:29:04,720 --> 00:29:07,000 Speaker 3: saw from Estrata in the first half last year. 613 00:29:07,040 --> 00:29:11,120 Speaker 1: ADP One, p. Fifty two. For Estrata, you don't usually 614 00:29:11,200 --> 00:29:14,760 Speaker 1: see guys get higher projections stolen bases when they've played 615 00:29:14,760 --> 00:29:17,800 Speaker 1: over one hundred games. Now it's simple because they're projecting 616 00:29:17,840 --> 00:29:20,240 Speaker 1: more games, so his stolen base numbers are higher. But 617 00:29:20,400 --> 00:29:22,760 Speaker 1: even still you don't see that. Sometimes you'll see a 618 00:29:22,760 --> 00:29:25,160 Speaker 1: guy that plays one hundred games, their projections will then 619 00:29:25,160 --> 00:29:26,760 Speaker 1: put him at one hundred and forty and then the 620 00:29:26,760 --> 00:29:29,880 Speaker 1: stolen bases are about the same. These are actually higher. 621 00:29:30,240 --> 00:29:33,479 Speaker 1: If he were to go twenty twenty, you are easily 622 00:29:33,480 --> 00:29:35,600 Speaker 1: breaking inside the top one hundred, and this would be 623 00:29:35,600 --> 00:29:39,920 Speaker 1: one of the bigger, bigger, most undervalued players with all 624 00:29:39,920 --> 00:29:42,720 Speaker 1: the other position eligibility. So that is a very fun 625 00:29:42,720 --> 00:29:46,040 Speaker 1: one coming in at number nine. I'm excited to hear 626 00:29:46,080 --> 00:29:49,840 Speaker 1: your take on this one. Cedric Mullins stolen bases again, 627 00:29:50,120 --> 00:29:53,160 Speaker 1: Cedric Mullins was underwhelming, hitting two thirty three last year. 628 00:29:53,280 --> 00:29:56,280 Speaker 1: Fifteen homers was a three year low, the nineteen stolen 629 00:29:56,280 --> 00:29:58,840 Speaker 1: bases were a three pretty much three year lows across 630 00:29:58,840 --> 00:30:02,800 Speaker 1: the board with strikeouts coming up, but projections they throw 631 00:30:02,800 --> 00:30:04,320 Speaker 1: it all out the window because you do have a 632 00:30:04,320 --> 00:30:07,280 Speaker 1: three year a three year window that it's working off of, 633 00:30:07,400 --> 00:30:09,720 Speaker 1: so they really see last year as more of the outlier, 634 00:30:10,040 --> 00:30:13,480 Speaker 1: his cost is cheap, and is it that outlier season 635 00:30:13,520 --> 00:30:15,320 Speaker 1: that makes him such a good value right now? 636 00:30:15,880 --> 00:30:18,600 Speaker 3: That's what I'm banking on, I think Cedric Mullens. So 637 00:30:18,640 --> 00:30:21,640 Speaker 3: we do have that two year track record of over 638 00:30:21,760 --> 00:30:25,160 Speaker 3: thirteen hundred played appearances from twenty twenty one and twenty 639 00:30:25,200 --> 00:30:28,360 Speaker 3: twenty two where Cedric Mullins was just an absolute monster 640 00:30:28,480 --> 00:30:29,360 Speaker 3: for fantasy this time. 641 00:30:29,400 --> 00:30:31,760 Speaker 2: Last year, Mullins I believe was like a third round pick. 642 00:30:31,960 --> 00:30:33,080 Speaker 2: I think, yes. 643 00:30:33,600 --> 00:30:36,200 Speaker 3: One of my kind of things is we and I'm 644 00:30:36,200 --> 00:30:38,440 Speaker 3: guilty of it all the time focus on just last 645 00:30:38,480 --> 00:30:41,640 Speaker 3: season so much we tend to forget what this track 646 00:30:41,680 --> 00:30:44,680 Speaker 3: record was for a player who is still not even thirty. 647 00:30:44,720 --> 00:30:47,320 Speaker 3: This is Cedric Mullins is age twenty nine season, so 648 00:30:47,400 --> 00:30:49,400 Speaker 3: I think he's young enough to turn things around. I 649 00:30:49,520 --> 00:30:52,200 Speaker 3: wonder there was a similar to like the broken hand 650 00:30:52,200 --> 00:30:54,320 Speaker 3: with the strata that I just mentioned. Love to go 651 00:30:54,400 --> 00:30:55,960 Speaker 3: in and look at injuries and kind of see the 652 00:30:56,000 --> 00:30:58,760 Speaker 3: before and after. Cedric Mullins had a pretty bad groin 653 00:30:58,840 --> 00:31:02,040 Speaker 3: strain in the middle of this season, and again those 654 00:31:02,040 --> 00:31:04,760 Speaker 3: second half numbers just absolutely tank. So this is a 655 00:31:04,800 --> 00:31:08,240 Speaker 3: guy who, quite honestly, in five of the last six 656 00:31:08,600 --> 00:31:11,480 Speaker 3: half seasons, if that makes sense, has been really good. 657 00:31:11,840 --> 00:31:15,480 Speaker 3: It's just his last half season was awful. 658 00:31:15,120 --> 00:31:16,720 Speaker 2: And there is some platoon risk. 659 00:31:16,960 --> 00:31:20,160 Speaker 3: I'll give you that, like he didn't play against lefties 660 00:31:20,200 --> 00:31:23,560 Speaker 3: down the stretch last year for Baltimore. But I think 661 00:31:23,600 --> 00:31:25,680 Speaker 3: he'll stay even if he hits lower in the order 662 00:31:25,720 --> 00:31:29,160 Speaker 3: against South Pause. I think Cedric Mullins is young enough 663 00:31:29,240 --> 00:31:31,960 Speaker 3: to turn this around and get back to the player 664 00:31:31,960 --> 00:31:33,680 Speaker 3: he was. Maybe not in twenty twenty one when he 665 00:31:33,720 --> 00:31:35,520 Speaker 3: went thirty thirty. I'm not going to sit here and 666 00:31:35,560 --> 00:31:37,880 Speaker 3: say that, but a lot closer to the twenty twenty 667 00:31:37,920 --> 00:31:41,280 Speaker 3: two version that hit sixteen homers, thirty four steals and 668 00:31:41,320 --> 00:31:42,360 Speaker 3: hit two fifty eight. 669 00:31:42,200 --> 00:31:44,760 Speaker 1: Pretty electric lineup that could potentially be as well, and 670 00:31:44,840 --> 00:31:48,560 Speaker 1: that the veteran hitting near the tippy top of it free. 671 00:31:49,320 --> 00:31:51,440 Speaker 1: Cedric Mullens is also one of those players. Why when 672 00:31:51,480 --> 00:31:53,479 Speaker 1: I look and I'm like, hey, I can get stolen 673 00:31:53,520 --> 00:31:57,800 Speaker 1: bases a little bit later Tyrostrada Cedric Mullins won thirties 674 00:31:58,120 --> 00:32:02,040 Speaker 1: ADP four in rank for Mullins, one fifties for Estrata. 675 00:32:02,080 --> 00:32:04,080 Speaker 1: You can find those stolen bases a little bit later. 676 00:32:04,160 --> 00:32:06,840 Speaker 1: You don't find all of those those big power numbers. 677 00:32:06,840 --> 00:32:08,720 Speaker 1: All right, we're coming into the last couple. We've actually 678 00:32:08,760 --> 00:32:11,800 Speaker 1: got two, and then we're gonna do a final undervalued 679 00:32:12,040 --> 00:32:15,320 Speaker 1: battle between these guys. But I want to remind you 680 00:32:15,360 --> 00:32:18,440 Speaker 1: guys to make sure that you guys have subscribed to 681 00:32:18,520 --> 00:32:21,480 Speaker 1: the YouTube channel YouTube dot com slash Fantasy Pros because 682 00:32:21,520 --> 00:32:24,200 Speaker 1: we've got Fantasy Fest coming up. They didn't even ask 683 00:32:24,240 --> 00:32:26,040 Speaker 1: me or tell me to do a promotion for this, 684 00:32:26,080 --> 00:32:27,960 Speaker 1: but this is going to be coming up here very 685 00:32:28,080 --> 00:32:31,440 Speaker 1: very soon. We are gonna have an amazing, amazing set 686 00:32:31,480 --> 00:32:34,240 Speaker 1: of stuff going on, so make sure you are locked 687 00:32:34,280 --> 00:32:36,840 Speaker 1: in to the podcast feed. You can follow it wherever 688 00:32:36,880 --> 00:32:38,760 Speaker 1: you listen to podcasts, where I think we usually have 689 00:32:38,840 --> 00:32:40,600 Speaker 1: kind of like a best of version of it, and 690 00:32:40,880 --> 00:32:43,600 Speaker 1: we are gonna have hours and hours of awesome content 691 00:32:43,920 --> 00:32:47,080 Speaker 1: content coming up here in mid March for Fantasy Fest. 692 00:32:47,120 --> 00:32:48,520 Speaker 1: I have the date. I'm not really sure if I 693 00:32:48,520 --> 00:32:50,640 Speaker 1: should say it because we're still finalizing it, but put 694 00:32:50,640 --> 00:32:52,120 Speaker 1: it on your radar and make sure you're following the 695 00:32:52,160 --> 00:32:54,960 Speaker 1: YouTube channel Fantasypros dot com slash YouTube because if you 696 00:32:55,000 --> 00:32:56,840 Speaker 1: do and we get hordes of them, Joe and I 697 00:32:56,920 --> 00:32:59,320 Speaker 1: will be forced to wear wigs and mustaches for the 698 00:32:59,360 --> 00:33:01,640 Speaker 1: opening day of leading off. That's what we've that's what 699 00:33:01,680 --> 00:33:04,760 Speaker 1: we've yessed. A good, good old mustache. I was thinking 700 00:33:04,760 --> 00:33:06,480 Speaker 1: maybe like like a long one, like I'll do like 701 00:33:06,520 --> 00:33:08,320 Speaker 1: a handlebar. How about like that, like that, like a 702 00:33:08,320 --> 00:33:09,200 Speaker 1: good handlebar one. 703 00:33:09,440 --> 00:33:10,040 Speaker 2: I like that. 704 00:33:10,200 --> 00:33:13,360 Speaker 3: I you can you can always do the the Valentine 705 00:33:13,400 --> 00:33:14,800 Speaker 3: disguise as well. 706 00:33:14,880 --> 00:33:17,720 Speaker 2: You can do with the mustache. Remember when you got 707 00:33:17,720 --> 00:33:18,200 Speaker 2: thrown out. 708 00:33:19,200 --> 00:33:21,120 Speaker 3: Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yea, yeah yeah, put in the 709 00:33:21,160 --> 00:33:22,280 Speaker 3: disguise and the dugout. 710 00:33:22,400 --> 00:33:24,520 Speaker 1: This was I didn't even think about doing like we 711 00:33:24,560 --> 00:33:26,239 Speaker 1: could just wear the glasses. That would be good. So 712 00:33:26,320 --> 00:33:27,720 Speaker 1: we'll make sure you guys do that, so we'll have 713 00:33:27,760 --> 00:33:29,440 Speaker 1: some fun with it. All right. Here are the last 714 00:33:29,480 --> 00:33:32,000 Speaker 1: couple ones. Here. The last one is gonna be a 715 00:33:32,360 --> 00:33:35,400 Speaker 1: battle of versus. But let's stop over to actually the 716 00:33:35,440 --> 00:33:38,160 Speaker 1: camp that I was just over at the Brewers with 717 00:33:38,280 --> 00:33:41,920 Speaker 1: Willia Damas. Now, Willia Damas was one of those kind 718 00:33:41,920 --> 00:33:45,720 Speaker 1: of premier power shortstops, one of the guys that everybody 719 00:33:45,720 --> 00:33:48,240 Speaker 1: wanted to target. He was why you could skip out 720 00:33:48,240 --> 00:33:50,640 Speaker 1: on shortstop early on in draft. If I could get 721 00:33:50,640 --> 00:33:54,880 Speaker 1: myself a Willia Damas well, the battang average just started 722 00:33:54,920 --> 00:33:57,880 Speaker 1: to sink two seventeen after a two thirty eight year. 723 00:33:58,200 --> 00:34:01,920 Speaker 1: Except here is the addit. He is projected for a 724 00:34:02,000 --> 00:34:04,360 Speaker 1: higher batting average of this year on every single projection 725 00:34:04,480 --> 00:34:08,640 Speaker 1: system than he has hit over the last two seasons. 726 00:34:09,000 --> 00:34:12,760 Speaker 1: So XBA is higher, expected slug is higher, every expected 727 00:34:12,840 --> 00:34:16,719 Speaker 1: number is higher for Willia Damas. So talk to me, 728 00:34:17,280 --> 00:34:20,319 Speaker 1: mister Ran Bloomfield, about Willia Damas and can he be 729 00:34:20,600 --> 00:34:23,680 Speaker 1: a massively undervalued draft target this year? 730 00:34:23,760 --> 00:34:25,480 Speaker 3: Yeah? I mean taking the longer view with the Damas. 731 00:34:25,560 --> 00:34:28,279 Speaker 3: He was a consistent two fifty two to sixty hitter 732 00:34:28,680 --> 00:34:31,440 Speaker 3: with Tampa earlier, earlier in his career, And so I 733 00:34:31,680 --> 00:34:34,360 Speaker 3: actually buy the at HQ and the forecaster we have 734 00:34:34,400 --> 00:34:37,440 Speaker 3: a damis projected for two forty five, which is higher 735 00:34:37,440 --> 00:34:39,720 Speaker 3: than two thirty eight and two seventeen his last two seasons. 736 00:34:39,760 --> 00:34:44,319 Speaker 3: As well, the babbitt was insanely low last season. This 737 00:34:44,480 --> 00:34:48,160 Speaker 3: is not a two seventeen hitter. A. Damas also had 738 00:34:48,160 --> 00:34:52,920 Speaker 3: a concussion in May, I believe, and I it seemed 739 00:34:53,000 --> 00:34:55,879 Speaker 3: like that linger June was by far Willia Damas's first 740 00:34:55,920 --> 00:34:58,919 Speaker 3: month started to turn things around after that hit two 741 00:34:59,080 --> 00:35:02,440 Speaker 3: thirty who kind of started to come back up in 742 00:35:02,520 --> 00:35:04,520 Speaker 3: the second half. The biggest thing for me, it's just 743 00:35:04,560 --> 00:35:07,239 Speaker 3: the power. If you need a power hitting shortstop. At 744 00:35:07,239 --> 00:35:10,319 Speaker 3: this point in the draft, I think Adamis is fine. 745 00:35:10,320 --> 00:35:13,960 Speaker 3: He's gonna play every day in a decent lineup. So 746 00:35:14,320 --> 00:35:18,040 Speaker 3: so I mean I like Estrata more, but where Adamas 747 00:35:18,080 --> 00:35:20,319 Speaker 3: is going it makes sense. And then again different types 748 00:35:20,360 --> 00:35:22,160 Speaker 3: of players if you need batting averager speed. 749 00:35:22,360 --> 00:35:25,600 Speaker 1: Actually also maybe two compliments with the strata's ability for 750 00:35:25,960 --> 00:35:29,320 Speaker 1: multiposition eligibility, you can throw a Damis in a middle infield. 751 00:35:29,320 --> 00:35:32,040 Speaker 1: He is ranking one seventy one. I also want to 752 00:35:32,040 --> 00:35:35,040 Speaker 1: point out in all those projections he is just at 753 00:35:35,120 --> 00:35:37,720 Speaker 1: the thirty home run marker. It's somewhere between twenty six 754 00:35:37,920 --> 00:35:41,279 Speaker 1: and twenty eight home runs. You get one little bit 755 00:35:41,360 --> 00:35:43,880 Speaker 1: of a pop and a bus back, you might have 756 00:35:43,920 --> 00:35:46,080 Speaker 1: thirty plus home runs with that two to fifty batting 757 00:35:46,120 --> 00:35:49,120 Speaker 1: average for a Damas, and he might be a trade 758 00:35:49,160 --> 00:35:53,000 Speaker 1: candidate to go to an amazingly incredible destination that makes 759 00:35:53,040 --> 00:35:56,440 Speaker 1: his fantasy output even more exciting. Let's not say that 760 00:35:56,440 --> 00:35:59,960 Speaker 1: that's not a possibility. As I saw self Frielick actually 761 00:36:00,120 --> 00:36:02,560 Speaker 1: working at shortstop in the outfield here the other day, 762 00:36:02,600 --> 00:36:05,200 Speaker 1: So I would not throw that under the bus quite 763 00:36:05,280 --> 00:36:07,319 Speaker 1: yet for him. All right, this is the last one 764 00:36:07,360 --> 00:36:10,520 Speaker 1: before our battle, and we're going to talk about Jamer Candelario, 765 00:36:10,600 --> 00:36:12,440 Speaker 1: who goes to the Reds. This is going to be 766 00:36:12,719 --> 00:36:15,279 Speaker 1: pseudo number eleven because twelve and thirteen are going to 767 00:36:15,320 --> 00:36:17,319 Speaker 1: be a battle. Hit twenty two home runs last year 768 00:36:17,320 --> 00:36:19,799 Speaker 1: with a two fifty one batting average, now goes to 769 00:36:19,920 --> 00:36:23,319 Speaker 1: the world's greatest ballpark factor you could possibly have, and 770 00:36:23,440 --> 00:36:27,080 Speaker 1: is going to play all day. Yet his value really 771 00:36:27,400 --> 00:36:29,640 Speaker 1: has not. Let me look at it here. One ninety 772 00:36:29,800 --> 00:36:33,000 Speaker 1: seven is his average, his expert consensus rank with an 773 00:36:33,080 --> 00:36:35,960 Speaker 1: EIGHTYP on all the major sites take away our ranks 774 00:36:36,280 --> 00:36:39,360 Speaker 1: outside the top two hundred. So is Candelario one of 775 00:36:39,360 --> 00:36:42,520 Speaker 1: the better corner infield targets you could have. And we 776 00:36:42,560 --> 00:36:44,879 Speaker 1: talked about missing out on third base. That might work 777 00:36:44,880 --> 00:36:47,360 Speaker 1: out for you. So talk to me about Jamer Candelario. 778 00:36:47,280 --> 00:36:51,040 Speaker 3: Exactly one of those few kind of semi shining stars 779 00:36:51,200 --> 00:36:55,759 Speaker 3: at third base in an otherwise vast array of blackness. 780 00:36:55,840 --> 00:37:01,399 Speaker 3: So Candelario is I like him. Hark factor is fantastic. 781 00:37:01,480 --> 00:37:04,000 Speaker 3: The question is the playing time That we know there 782 00:37:04,000 --> 00:37:09,160 Speaker 3: are approximately thirty five infielders in Cincinnati buying for playing time, 783 00:37:09,440 --> 00:37:11,200 Speaker 3: but I think it's pretty safe. 784 00:37:11,200 --> 00:37:13,320 Speaker 2: I think it's pretty safe for Candelarios. 785 00:37:13,320 --> 00:37:16,000 Speaker 1: So I said it was they told that. 786 00:37:16,040 --> 00:37:19,080 Speaker 4: They said, like, he's playing every day, like you can't, 787 00:37:19,160 --> 00:37:22,040 Speaker 4: and like I believe that more than oh, we don't 788 00:37:22,120 --> 00:37:24,520 Speaker 4: know he's going to play every day because maybe you're 789 00:37:24,560 --> 00:37:26,040 Speaker 4: just trying to incite some competition. 790 00:37:26,160 --> 00:37:26,480 Speaker 3: It is. 791 00:37:27,239 --> 00:37:29,239 Speaker 2: I trust a team when they I trust a team 792 00:37:29,280 --> 00:37:29,919 Speaker 2: a little bit more. 793 00:37:29,960 --> 00:37:32,480 Speaker 3: I never fully trust a team, but I trust him 794 00:37:32,480 --> 00:37:34,440 Speaker 3: a little bit more when they say they come out 795 00:37:34,480 --> 00:37:35,920 Speaker 3: and say he's going to play every day. I think 796 00:37:35,920 --> 00:37:37,680 Speaker 3: you do need to take that at face value. So 797 00:37:37,760 --> 00:37:40,080 Speaker 3: for all those reasons, Candelario like it doesn't have the 798 00:37:40,160 --> 00:37:42,839 Speaker 3: highest ceiling in the world, But if you can get 799 00:37:42,880 --> 00:37:46,200 Speaker 3: a third basement that hits two fifty twenty twenty five 800 00:37:46,239 --> 00:37:50,120 Speaker 3: home runs in that park in a really good lineup, again, 801 00:37:50,920 --> 00:37:52,040 Speaker 3: I think it works very well. 802 00:37:52,120 --> 00:37:55,279 Speaker 1: Qualifying it first and third is going to be a 803 00:37:55,280 --> 00:37:57,240 Speaker 1: big key to for where you can move him around 804 00:37:57,239 --> 00:38:00,000 Speaker 1: for any deficiencies. Maybe you take on a little bit 805 00:38:00,040 --> 00:38:02,640 Speaker 1: a risk at third or first base, a little bit 806 00:38:02,640 --> 00:38:05,239 Speaker 1: of injury risk out there. Having that guy with a 807 00:38:05,280 --> 00:38:08,560 Speaker 1: ballpark factor that can go twenty five plus. In all 808 00:38:08,600 --> 00:38:10,799 Speaker 1: of this other thing aside. Think of how exciting and 809 00:38:10,880 --> 00:38:13,480 Speaker 1: kind of amazing that lineup could be if all the 810 00:38:13,480 --> 00:38:16,280 Speaker 1: things work out with Spencer Steer and Elie da Lacruz 811 00:38:16,360 --> 00:38:19,480 Speaker 1: and if everybody's going that could be like this year's 812 00:38:19,480 --> 00:38:22,960 Speaker 1: Diamondbacks as far as how they're running and how you know, 813 00:38:23,080 --> 00:38:25,400 Speaker 1: aggressive they are offensively, and he could be at the 814 00:38:25,400 --> 00:38:27,160 Speaker 1: forefront of it. He really could be kind of like 815 00:38:27,239 --> 00:38:30,160 Speaker 1: the Lords Guriel breakout Lord has kind of broke back 816 00:38:30,200 --> 00:38:33,799 Speaker 1: out post post post post h sleeper type of guy 817 00:38:33,800 --> 00:38:35,920 Speaker 1: from last year. Jamer could be one of those as well. 818 00:38:35,960 --> 00:38:38,560 Speaker 1: All Right, so this last one, this is a pitcher 819 00:38:38,800 --> 00:38:43,680 Speaker 1: duel for undervaluedness, and they're very different because I think 820 00:38:44,280 --> 00:38:48,080 Speaker 1: perception is different. One was kind of a reliever going 821 00:38:48,080 --> 00:38:51,840 Speaker 1: into starter and one we really don't know anything about, 822 00:38:51,960 --> 00:38:55,000 Speaker 1: so how can they be undervalued? We are pitting Shota 823 00:38:55,120 --> 00:38:57,480 Speaker 1: Amonica versus Christopher Sanchez. 824 00:38:57,560 --> 00:38:57,680 Speaker 2: Up. 825 00:38:57,719 --> 00:39:00,480 Speaker 1: What a weird collection of names. I know you're saying that, 826 00:39:00,560 --> 00:39:04,960 Speaker 1: but Christopher Sanchez is a very popular sleeper in a 827 00:39:04,960 --> 00:39:08,160 Speaker 1: lot of lands, so much so mister Ryan Bloomfield gave 828 00:39:08,200 --> 00:39:09,600 Speaker 1: me him as one of the names he wanted to 829 00:39:09,640 --> 00:39:13,160 Speaker 1: talk about. I threw on show to Amonica because everybody 830 00:39:13,160 --> 00:39:16,440 Speaker 1: can't stop talking about if Justin Steele couldn't stop talking, 831 00:39:16,520 --> 00:39:19,400 Speaker 1: Nick Pollock had him in the thirty fives. A Monica 832 00:39:19,640 --> 00:39:22,439 Speaker 1: might be a monster. But people don't know what they're 833 00:39:22,480 --> 00:39:26,440 Speaker 1: in for. So here's the question, what you know versus 834 00:39:26,440 --> 00:39:28,920 Speaker 1: what you don't know? And what we do know is 835 00:39:28,920 --> 00:39:31,840 Speaker 1: both of these guys are outside the top two hundred. 836 00:39:32,440 --> 00:39:37,399 Speaker 1: So who is more undervalued, Christopher Sanchez or Choto Amonica. 837 00:39:37,880 --> 00:39:42,319 Speaker 3: Yes, I pleaded incessantly that we add Christopher Sanchez on 838 00:39:42,400 --> 00:39:47,080 Speaker 3: the on the rundown here. He is my pitcher that 839 00:39:47,120 --> 00:39:49,480 Speaker 3: I'm trying to get in every single draft outside the 840 00:39:49,480 --> 00:39:53,000 Speaker 3: top two hundred. I will admit that the track record, 841 00:39:53,000 --> 00:39:56,520 Speaker 3: the minor league numbers with Christopher Sanchez were not that great. 842 00:39:56,600 --> 00:39:59,800 Speaker 2: The schedule down the stretch was pretty soft. 843 00:40:00,080 --> 00:40:02,719 Speaker 3: But this change up that he refined and threw more 844 00:40:02,800 --> 00:40:06,520 Speaker 3: as throughout the season went on, Christopher Sanchez. It was 845 00:40:06,560 --> 00:40:08,680 Speaker 3: one of the best pitches in baseball in terms of 846 00:40:08,719 --> 00:40:11,400 Speaker 3: ground balls and whiffs, and that's what you want a 847 00:40:11,520 --> 00:40:13,000 Speaker 3: change up to do. You want to get that on 848 00:40:13,040 --> 00:40:14,960 Speaker 3: the ground and you want it to miss bats. The 849 00:40:15,040 --> 00:40:19,200 Speaker 3: walk rate was fantastic. I use ball percentage to kind 850 00:40:19,239 --> 00:40:23,200 Speaker 3: of validate a walk rate and Christopher Sanchez through strikes consistently. 851 00:40:23,440 --> 00:40:25,719 Speaker 3: Anytime you have someone with like a four to five 852 00:40:25,760 --> 00:40:27,880 Speaker 3: percent walk rate with the ground ball rate that's in 853 00:40:27,880 --> 00:40:30,959 Speaker 3: the upper fifties, it's just it just does so much 854 00:40:31,000 --> 00:40:34,200 Speaker 3: for you in terms of run prevention. And yes, like 855 00:40:34,280 --> 00:40:37,239 Speaker 3: the strikeout upside may not quite be there, but if 856 00:40:37,239 --> 00:40:39,600 Speaker 3: that change up continues to kind of do what we 857 00:40:39,640 --> 00:40:43,000 Speaker 3: saw in the second half, I think Christopher Sanchez is 858 00:40:44,040 --> 00:40:46,799 Speaker 3: an absolute breakout this year. Like I said, having him 859 00:40:46,840 --> 00:40:48,680 Speaker 3: on every single one of his one of my teams. 860 00:40:48,719 --> 00:40:53,160 Speaker 3: No shade to Amonaga, but I'm going Sanchez. 861 00:40:52,680 --> 00:40:56,360 Speaker 1: Man, okay, so clearly over so Chris Sanchez wins that battle. 862 00:40:56,800 --> 00:41:01,000 Speaker 1: But show too, Monica is still a potential big underva 863 00:41:01,280 --> 00:41:04,319 Speaker 1: because he has not jumped in value. He is too. 864 00:41:04,640 --> 00:41:06,080 Speaker 1: Let me like I just had it up here. He 865 00:41:06,400 --> 00:41:10,239 Speaker 1: was two oh eight on the consensus rank and or no, 866 00:41:10,280 --> 00:41:12,239 Speaker 1: I'm sorry that was his ADP was two o eight. 867 00:41:12,280 --> 00:41:15,040 Speaker 1: He was around two twenty. Chris Sanchez has an ECR 868 00:41:15,080 --> 00:41:17,600 Speaker 1: of two sixty, but is two eighty three, So that 869 00:41:17,680 --> 00:41:20,240 Speaker 1: is a difference. There's almost eighty spot difference in eighty 870 00:41:20,320 --> 00:41:24,560 Speaker 1: P versus these two guys, it's just will Sanchez's innings 871 00:41:24,560 --> 00:41:28,280 Speaker 1: and strikeouts go to a level if Amnaica works out 872 00:41:28,600 --> 00:41:31,839 Speaker 1: where I think in some people's minds the Monica might 873 00:41:31,880 --> 00:41:35,919 Speaker 1: be way closer than Yoshinobu Yamamoto than anybody actually really 874 00:41:35,920 --> 00:41:37,840 Speaker 1: expects and could be one of the front runners in 875 00:41:37,880 --> 00:41:41,480 Speaker 1: that cub's rotation. But Christopher Sanchez is a free square. 876 00:41:41,600 --> 00:41:44,399 Speaker 3: That's kind of the big one, right, Yeah, and then 877 00:41:44,400 --> 00:41:46,520 Speaker 3: the thing all out about Amanica too. Yeah, Go go 878 00:41:46,680 --> 00:41:51,240 Speaker 3: compare Yamamoto and Amonica's numbers last year and then compare 879 00:41:51,680 --> 00:41:55,480 Speaker 3: their ADP this year. I think I think you'll be surprised. 880 00:41:55,560 --> 00:41:58,120 Speaker 3: I think that's yeah. I think that's the big thing with. 881 00:42:00,800 --> 00:42:02,840 Speaker 1: So Minic got and you got a great splitter to 882 00:42:02,880 --> 00:42:05,560 Speaker 1: go with the you know, the number one stuff. Plus 883 00:42:05,640 --> 00:42:09,640 Speaker 1: in the WBC. You can say all of that, God can't. 884 00:42:09,920 --> 00:42:12,720 Speaker 1: If you can say it, you're hired. I cannot. Those 885 00:42:12,840 --> 00:42:15,840 Speaker 1: are the thirteen undervalued players that you guys need to target, 886 00:42:15,920 --> 00:42:19,800 Speaker 1: according to myself and Ryan Bloomfield. You can find Bloomer, 887 00:42:19,960 --> 00:42:23,879 Speaker 1: my boy Bloomer over at Baseball HQ. I'd also follow 888 00:42:23,960 --> 00:42:26,680 Speaker 1: him on Twitter at Ryan BHQ. You can check out 889 00:42:26,680 --> 00:42:29,439 Speaker 1: all the great bloom boards, and of course you've got 890 00:42:29,480 --> 00:42:32,040 Speaker 1: Bubba in the bloom anything else that everyone needs to know. 891 00:42:32,000 --> 00:42:33,719 Speaker 2: About, that's pretty much it. Man. 892 00:42:33,800 --> 00:42:36,280 Speaker 3: Check out Yeah, check out our podcast after of course 893 00:42:36,320 --> 00:42:39,319 Speaker 3: listening to Fantasy Pros every day, but check us out 894 00:42:39,360 --> 00:42:41,440 Speaker 3: Monday or Wednesday and Friday new episodes. 895 00:42:42,200 --> 00:42:45,680 Speaker 1: Perfect and like I said, follow him on Twitter, Ryan Bhq. 896 00:42:45,920 --> 00:42:48,000 Speaker 1: You'll get all the updates and everything that's going on Bloomer. 897 00:42:48,040 --> 00:42:50,000 Speaker 1: Thank you so much for taking the time. He's one 898 00:42:50,000 --> 00:42:52,120 Speaker 1: of the best in the industry. So make sure that 899 00:42:52,200 --> 00:42:55,120 Speaker 1: you are supporting and following because it's going to make 900 00:42:55,160 --> 00:42:58,120 Speaker 1: you a better fantasy player, just like the tools over 901 00:42:58,120 --> 00:42:59,919 Speaker 1: here at Fantasy Pros are going to do as well. 902 00:43:00,160 --> 00:43:02,560 Speaker 1: Check out the draft kit. I got a bunch of articles. 903 00:43:02,840 --> 00:43:05,239 Speaker 1: Mike Mayer, by the way, you finished top five in 904 00:43:05,320 --> 00:43:08,720 Speaker 1: Baseball accuracy ranks this year. He's got all his stuff 905 00:43:08,719 --> 00:43:10,560 Speaker 1: in there. Check out all the great so we got 906 00:43:10,600 --> 00:43:13,360 Speaker 1: articles going. We got some premium content as well. My 907 00:43:13,960 --> 00:43:16,759 Speaker 1: Draft Day targets article is officially out. If you want 908 00:43:16,800 --> 00:43:20,040 Speaker 1: to see the player at every position that I must have, 909 00:43:20,239 --> 00:43:22,040 Speaker 1: you can go and check that out. So go over 910 00:43:22,080 --> 00:43:25,040 Speaker 1: to Fantasypros dot com peruse all the great stuff, sign 911 00:43:25,120 --> 00:43:27,640 Speaker 1: up for premium, get in the discord, hang out with us, 912 00:43:27,680 --> 00:43:30,400 Speaker 1: and have so much fun. Thank you guys all for 913 00:43:30,480 --> 00:43:32,840 Speaker 1: hanging out with me and Bloomer. You can find me 914 00:43:32,920 --> 00:43:34,680 Speaker 1: on Twitter at is at the Welsh and we will 915 00:43:34,680 --> 00:43:37,680 Speaker 1: talk to you next time right here on Fantasy Pros, 916 00:43:37,800 --> 00:43:38,320 Speaker 1: my friends,