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Strategy: Elite Prospets or Post Hype Sleepers

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  • Strategy: Elite Prospets or Post Hype Sleepers

    I have been playing fantasy baseball for almost 30 years, and the last 10 at least I have been heavily into keeper and Dynasty leagues. I have always liked trying to discover the next big arm, but to me more often than not even the best of pitching prospects don't start producing right away.

    Just last year I scored with Lucas Giolito, and Tyler Glasnow as post hype prospects.

    Historically speaking off the top of my head there seems to be many less Clayton Kershaw/Walker Buehler types than Max Scherzer/Lucas Giolito types.

    Personally I am starting to question investing in minor league pitching prospects, and instead trying to mine for post hype pitching prospects.

    What say you junkies?
    11
    Elite Prospects
    0%
    3
    Post Hype Sleepers
    0%
    8

    The poll is expired.

    Comparing a Fantasy Baseball Draft to an Auction is like comparing Checkers to Chess!!!

  • #2
    For just arms, I agree that drafting minor league pitchers is quite risky. Unless it's McKensie Gore, I don't usually consider it. Guys with a few cups of coffee, even if it's bad coffee, are better options. So, I am keeping an eye on Kolby Allard even if he starts in AAA. Adding a 2 mph to the fastball is something to hang a hat on. Draft skills not roles.

    J
    Ad Astra per Aspera

    Oh. In that case, never mind. - Wonderboy

    GITH fails logic 101. - bryanbutler

    Bah...OJH caught me. - Pogues

    I don't know if you guys are being willfully ignorant, but... - Judge Jude

    Comment


    • #3
      I am with you. Hitters are different, but for pitchers, I prefer to target post-hype sleepers and I generally trade my elite pitching prospects for older, more established arms. Of course, every rule has exceptions, and some pitching prospects start off great out of the gate. But generally, even the ones that do well, fall short of expectations, because, at the very least, they have innings limits. It is very rare indeed to see a pitcher reach his full potential at 22, 23, 24. Even if they are putting up great ratios, they usually do not exceed 200 IP. It takes time to build that strength.

      Comment


      • #4
        I don't know, it depends on what you are looking for and also how you are defining your terms of "post hype sleeper" and "elite prospect". What are you categorizing as elite? Also to be a post hype sleeper are you saying that you are targetting guys that were once elite?

        I don't think I'd ever hit on a Giolito type, for example. He's definitely post hype, and that's easy to see in retrospect. But how many other potential "post hype" guys would you miss on when you hit on Giolito? I'd think the number is very very high.

        But lets look at the top pitchers from last year just to make sure we agree with how each is categorized:

        Verlander - ROY/CYA7 in first full year, CY5 second year - elite prospect
        Cole - Good in PIT, great in HOU, but never really a "post hype" guy. The hype was always there. I'd put him in the elite prospect category.
        Strasburg - elite prospect
        DeGrom - never hyped, reach mlb at age 26. Doesn't fit in either category
        Greinke - CYA at age 25, his 5th season up? I guess post hype - 2005 was bad. But he was 21 years old still. I don't know.
        Bieber - looked great coming up, I don't think he was an elite prospect, but not post hype either
        Morton - no hype, doesn't fit in either category
        Flaherty - elite prospect
        Kershaw - elite prospect
        Ryu - foreign signing, doesn't really fit either category
        Scherzer - I guess post hype after a mediocre 2009 season. But even then there was a lot of talk about his strikeout abilities.
        Buehler - elite prospect
        Giolito - post hype
        Castillo - elite prospect
        Corbin - not an elite prospect, but I don't know that you'd call him post hype either?

        I'm not seeing a huge advantage for post hype here.

        Comment


        • #5
          I avoid minor league pitchers like coronavirus.
          I'm just here for the baseball.

          Comment


          • #6
            The thing is that there's a limited quantity of each ... for each post hype sleeper that clicks there are guys who continue their mediocrity or worse - Eickhoff, Bundy, Godley, Velasquez, and so on. You can't have a whole staff of these kind of guys, you need some reliable innings too.
            It certainly feels that way. But I'm distrustful of that feeling and am curious about evidence.

            Comment


            • #7
              In response to Ken:

              A couple others from recent and not so recent vintage that come to mind.

              Tyler Glasnow: His 16-18 campaigns had people questioning his future.

              Blake Snell: He wasn't bad his first 2 years but the shine was definitely off.

              Luis Castillo: We differ here I think he does fit post hype (he was cheaper heading into 19 than he was 18.

              Trevor Bauer: Definitely struggled early, hard to say exactly what he is now.

              Carlos Carrasco: Seemed like it took forever for him to breakthrough.

              Roy Halladay: I know I'm going back with this one lol

              I do see what you are saying I think one of the big advantages is not spending the draft or investment capital on the elite prospects to begin with though.

              Check this article about the top 10 pitching prospects of the past decade:

              James Anderson ranks the best pitching prospects of the decade, featuring some cautionary tales mixed in with established aces like Stephen Strasburg.


              Only 3 of the 15 listed started to do well, and continued to well in their careers (1. Strasberg, 10. Fernandez, 12. Cole)

              I'm not necessarily saying post hype will get a better return but if you miss your not spending as much.

              Anyway good thought provoking discussion.
              Comparing a Fantasy Baseball Draft to an Auction is like comparing Checkers to Chess!!!

              Comment


              • #8
                My definition of post hype was inclusive of those that are doing well but not as well as their projected ceilings as prospects. So, not just the Giolito's who sucked and the suddenly were awesome. I specifically had in mind Cole, who I traded as a prospect, in the 2018 preseason right before he took it to the next level. He was certainly very good 2013-2017, especially 2015. I tried to get him back several times, but it wasn't until after the rises in era and whip from 2016 and 2017 over 2015 that his owner had decided, okay, this is where he is at now--varying from good to really good year to year--that he felt comfortable moving him. I still had to pay a steep price--Jesus Luzardo and Forrest Whitley, both the hottest pitching prospects at the time--but it obviously worked out in my favor.

                Some guys, like Carrasco, who I also had a prospect crush on, took so long I gave up on him. Giolito too. I missed the boat.

                Comment


                • #9
                  A post hype pitcher is simply an elite prospect who had a bad year.

                  Do young pitchers have bad years? Yes, very often.

                  But if we are interested in using this information, we need to go deeper. Just saying that young pitchers have bad years isn't getting us anywhere, other than focusing more on more established pitchers. But those cost much more.

                  So if you want to go with a cheap post hype guy, how are you specifically going about identifying which ones. Because for every failed prospect there's a failed post hype player who never made it as well.

                  Why was Giolito successful in 2019? Well primarily because he was able to double his strikeout rate while reducing his walks as well, and giving up fewer HRs. Should we have seen that coming? I don't know, why would we expect Giolito to do that and others not?

                  This is an interesting conversation, but I don't think the interest is trying to compare breakouts vs prospects as much as it's trying to determine if we are going to buy a breakout, how do we become more successful on hitting on it.
                  Last edited by Ken; 01-24-2020, 01:34 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    TINSTAAPP

                    For years in this game, my mantra has been "I hate pitchers." This is a main reason why.

                    I do not consider minor league pitchers as prospects in the same way that hitters can be prospects. I'll occasionally take a pitcher in the last round, because that pick rarely does anything anyway. Last year in the RJEL, I got Jordan Hicks in the last round. He paid off handsomely, until he succumbed to injury like seemingly every other pitcher.

                    I'll often target post-hype guys, because at least I'm not paying full price or using a high pick. Pitchers fill this game with misery and disappointment, but you HAVE to have them, so get them when you don't have to overpay.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      One thing to also discuss is who you are considering the top pitching prospects.

                      I bought in on Bieber as a prospect. I bought in on Paddack as a prospect. I'm buying in on Gore as a prospect.

                      I don't think all the hyped prospects make sense, but there are some that jump off the page for me and I'm in, even as a prospect.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I rarely draft pitching prospects anymore. Over the years, I've had more success with post-hype pitchers. A few years ago I owned Clevenger as a prospect, and he was pretty mediocre in his debut. I let him go (as he would have been $5), then got him in the draft for $1. Got 2 years at $1, then 3 more at $11. I also picked up Snell for $6 on FAAB, one of my better keepers, extended to $16.

                        I've also absorbed a lot of ratio beatings from young SP flyers over the years seeking post-hype keepers, so you need to limit the number of these guys that you roster unless you're intentionally rebuilding.
                        Larry David was once being heckled, long before any success. Heckler says "I'm taking my dog over to fuck your mother, weekly." Larry responds "I hate to tell you this, but your dog isn't liking it."

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Ken View Post
                          A post hype pitcher is simply an elite prospect who had a bad year.

                          Do young pitchers have bad years? Yes, very often.

                          But if we are interested in using this information, we need to go deeper. Just saying that young pitchers have bad years isn't getting us anywhere, other than focusing more on more established pitchers. But those cost much more.

                          So if you want to go with a cheap post hype guy, how are you specifically going about identifying which ones. Because for every failed prospect there's a failed post hype player who never made it as well.

                          Why was Giolito successful in 2019? Well primarily because he was able to double his strikeout rate while reducing his walks as well, and giving up fewer HRs. Should we have seen that coming? I don't know, why would we expect Giolito to do that and others not?

                          This is an interesting conversation, but I don't think the interest is trying to compare breakouts vs prospects as much as it's trying to determine if we are going to buy a breakout, how do we become more successful on hitting on it.
                          That's awfully narrow. Post hype is also those that fail to excel for two or three full years, those that linger an extra year in the minors, those that spend time in the bullpen waiting for an opening. Luis Castillo is a clear cut post hype, for example, but you call him an elite prospect.
                          Ad Astra per Aspera

                          Oh. In that case, never mind. - Wonderboy

                          GITH fails logic 101. - bryanbutler

                          Bah...OJH caught me. - Pogues

                          I don't know if you guys are being willfully ignorant, but... - Judge Jude

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by onejayhawk View Post
                            That's awfully narrow. Post hype is also those that fail to excel for two or three full years, those that linger an extra year in the minors, those that spend time in the bullpen waiting for an opening. Luis Castillo is a clear cut post hype, for example, but you call him an elite prospect.
                            I think I already said that the definitions were not at all clear about what we are calling post hype.

                            How is Castillo "clear cut post hype"? He was 8th in RoY voting after putting up a 3.12 ERA his first year out of AA. Obviously he's an elite prospect to make that jump. Then the following season he improved his control and had his best season as far as K/BB walk ratio and won 10 games with a 4.3 FIP, and in his 3rd season he improved to 15 wins and improved his HR rate down to 1.0, but also put up his worst year as far as walks.

                            But overall that just looks like the normal progression of a young pitcher.

                            He started out as an elite prospect, and he's done basically exactly what anyone would have reasonably expected.

                            What exactly is "post hype" about him that's so clear cut?

                            Giolito I can see, his peripherals changed, he's a completely different pitcher. But Castillo. No. Sorry, not "clear cut". (Obviously, since we are having to argue about it)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Castillo spent 5+ years in rookie and A ball, but then they rushed him up with only half a season in AA. When he came up, he had half a season of low 3 ERA and almost 10 K/9. After that, 2018 was a huge disappointment. How is that not post-hype?

                              J
                              Ad Astra per Aspera

                              Oh. In that case, never mind. - Wonderboy

                              GITH fails logic 101. - bryanbutler

                              Bah...OJH caught me. - Pogues

                              I don't know if you guys are being willfully ignorant, but... - Judge Jude

                              Comment

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