Hat tip to Judge Jude for starting this format of posts. My main league auction was today. Here's the first part of the anatomy of an auction thread. It only covers pre-draft, but is over two pages in Word, lol.
My last social interaction for a long time occurred today at my main local league auction, so I have tons of time to type of a crazy long anatomy of an auction post. I hope you enjoy it.
Predraft Part 1: Recent history:
The league is a 5x5 roto league with the standard categories and the standard hitting positions except only one catcher, so only 13 hitters. 11 total pitchers, 6 SP and 5 RP. Anyone with five starts the previous season is SP only; the only exception is for openers, and that just was made a rule this year. The other two weird rules for the league are that all major league keepers are locked in your lineup until September (or whenever this year) roster expansion, so you cannot bench them unless they are on the IL or serving a long drug or domestic violence suspension. (And all players who die can be released.) To get them out of your lineup, you have to do a hard buy out---you lose their final season keeper price from next year’s auction budget, the current year’s in-season salary cap (normally $350), and the next year’s in-season salary cap, with a minimum buy out price of $10. There is a $300 auction budget. Buyouts and contract renegotiations can also lower the auction budget (long story on contract renegotiations). The other is that keeper inflation is a flat $5 per year. If you sign a $1 player to a three year contract in the offseason, the price is $6 the next year, then $11, and $16. The only exception is “free keepers.” We do not have a separate minor league roster, just a 10-man reserve roster. Any player selected in the reserve rounds at auction can be kept as a reserve keeper if the player has not exceed rookie limits for the previous year. For example, Yordan Alvarez was a reserve round pick last year. He was still a free reserve round keeper this year, but he might as well be activated because he’ll be $6 and locked in the lineup next year if kept because he exceeded rookie limits last year. (There are weird rules for free keepers traded in the off-season, but I need not explain them here to explain the auction. This is long enough already.)
The last two or three years, pitching prices have gone through the roof for starters---they were always too high for closers, which is probably inevitable given the 5 RP slots. The total price split between hitters and pitchers was 60/40 last year and 61/39 in 2018. So, if you want pitching, you have to pay for it. One team, to avoid the plunger we give to the last place finisher, because he was drafting by phone, spent $223 on pitching last year. By going with a pitchers and pinch-runners strategy (tanking power sadly), he managed to finish in the final money slot at fifth because the top three were way above everyone. It should have been four teams way above everyone, but the guy in third dumped for keepers at the trade deadline because he couldn’t possibly win (his ratios were not salvageable). He ended up in fourth over the pitchers and pinch-runners guy because one team missed the IP minimum which gave him two extra points (the pitching heavy guy had already beaten that guy in ratios) which put him in fourth.
Predraft Part 2: This offseason:
Unfortunately, we lost four teams in the off-season; three for the normal life reasons (one should return next year) and one because he did not want to draft this far before the season due to the delay. We replaced three, but the fourth could not be replaced because he dropped out too late. When replace a team, they are an expansion team---no keepers and the leaving teams’ keepers are back in the draft pool. Due to expiring contracts and the four teams leaving having plenty of good keepers (Bellinger, Buehler, Judge, Jose Ramirez, etc.), inflation was far lower than normal this year.
The current situation also made things strange. Instead of our normal draft location at a public facility in Jefferson Parish (suburban New Orleans), which was closed, we draft at the commissioner’s house in LaPlace, LA, which is a bit farther out of town. This was good because gatherings of over 10 people are banned in Orleans Parish (which is the City of New Orleans; governments joined ages ago). Also, we had two people drafting by phone this year due to Covid-19; one because he is a local sports anchor and was requested by his TV station to be around in case he had to anchor the broadcast on draft day night if other anchors were quarantined. The other phoned it in because he and his wife are expecting, and she requested it. That brought us down to 14 people at the draft, which was a bit more responsible. As one of only two Orleans Parish residents there, I wore a mask and had gloves to open doors, etc., to try to be responsible. (Orleans Parish, likely due to Mardi Gras, has well over half of the cases in the state.)
I will post only four keeper lists here because they are the only ones relevant to the story. There was one team well ahead in value (the team that dumped from third place last year; given his season last year, his keepers were almost all hitters). I think I had the second best keeper (but second through fourth were close enough to be interchangeable) list despite having only six keepers---my off-season maneuvering left me with 3 SP’s, 2 RP’s, and only one hitter because I wanted to avoid the ridiculous pitching prices I expected. (I finished second last year, my best ever finish in 16 years in the league. I should have won one year, up 20 points on Labor Day Weekend, but that was the year Josh Hamilton won the MVP despite crashing into an outfield wall Labor Day Weekend and missing almost all of the rest of the regular season. That killed me. I finished third, one point out of first. I had the hitter with the final AB of the season; if he hit a HR instead of flying out, I would have won.) The third best keeper list was the guy who finished third last year. The defending champ had to trade almost all of his keepers to fend me off, so he was not really in the running. The fourth keeper list I share is a guy who is not playing for this year. In the off-season, he took on a horrific contract that expires this year to get long-term keepers---and did it from the guy with the best keeper list, not exactly endearing him to the chase pack. There was one other team in the chase pack, but I do not need to post his keeper list---he kept so many players that he needed only two hitters and one SP. He had $80 or so left and bought the bullpen he needed. He can compete, but there is no need to list his keepers. Here are the lists (real names are used because there are no innocents).
Best Keeper List (Dave): Ozzie Albies 2B $11, Aldeberto Mondesi SS $11, Didi Gregorious SS $6, Mookie Betts OF $26, Juan Soto OF $6, Zack Wheeler SP $11, Ken Giles RP $24, Carlos Martinez RP $12, Liam Henriks RP $6, Yordan Alvarez UT Free, Luis Robert OF Free, Victor Victor Mesa OF Free. Auction available: $182 ($5 extra contract renegotiation penalty).
Second Best Keeper List (Me): Ronald Acuna, Jr. OF $11, Jack Flaherty SP $11, Frankie Montas SP $6, Eduardo Rodriguez SP $6, Nick Anderson RP $6, Ian Kennedy RP $7 (no free keepers). Auction available: $238 ($10 buyout from last year).
Third Best Keeper List (Jeff): Josh Donaldson 3B $23, Francisco Lindor SS $21, Andrew Benintendi OF $16, Bryce Harper OF $36, Mike Clevenger SP $20, Luis Castillo SP $20, Brad Hand RP $19, Bo Bichette SS Free, Joey Bart C Free. Auction available: $140 ($5 extra contract renegotiation penalty).
The guy playing for 2021 (Steve): Tommy LaStella 2B $6, Alex Bregman SS $16, Carlos Correa MI $26, Loudres Gurriel OF $6, Lewis Brinson OF $6 (the locked-in-lineup bad contract), Brendan McKay SP Free, Jo Adell OF Free, Christian Pache OF Free, MacKenzie Gore SP Free, Carter Kieboom SS Free, Casey Mize SP Free , A.J. Puk RP Free, Forrest Whitely SP Free. Auction available: $235 ($5 extra contract renegotiation penalty).
Predraft Part 3: My Plan:
I traded to get three SP’s I liked in the off-season so I could just skip the feeding frenzy at SP, but if things changed I could still get some bargains there. I also wasn’t worried about getting RP; I have two pseudo closers, which is enough to get through the early season, and closers appear during the season or can be traded for if necessary. I wanted to get hitting, where I thought there would be some bargains. The plan, given that I had tons of money, was to get one stud hitter, hopefully at value, and then go bargain shopping, but go the extra couple bucks for younger upside good hitters (which we usually don’t have available but did this year because of the leaving teams giving up all their keepers). For RP, the plan was to buy the other Rays RP’s just in case, assuming they were cheap. Definitely a $1 catcher because Realmuto and Sanchez were kept and there really wasn’t that much difference between the catchers 5-20. Then circle back and get some upside cheaper SP’s if available (silly me).
NEXT: POST II: THE START OF THE AUCTION
My last social interaction for a long time occurred today at my main local league auction, so I have tons of time to type of a crazy long anatomy of an auction post. I hope you enjoy it.
Predraft Part 1: Recent history:
The league is a 5x5 roto league with the standard categories and the standard hitting positions except only one catcher, so only 13 hitters. 11 total pitchers, 6 SP and 5 RP. Anyone with five starts the previous season is SP only; the only exception is for openers, and that just was made a rule this year. The other two weird rules for the league are that all major league keepers are locked in your lineup until September (or whenever this year) roster expansion, so you cannot bench them unless they are on the IL or serving a long drug or domestic violence suspension. (And all players who die can be released.) To get them out of your lineup, you have to do a hard buy out---you lose their final season keeper price from next year’s auction budget, the current year’s in-season salary cap (normally $350), and the next year’s in-season salary cap, with a minimum buy out price of $10. There is a $300 auction budget. Buyouts and contract renegotiations can also lower the auction budget (long story on contract renegotiations). The other is that keeper inflation is a flat $5 per year. If you sign a $1 player to a three year contract in the offseason, the price is $6 the next year, then $11, and $16. The only exception is “free keepers.” We do not have a separate minor league roster, just a 10-man reserve roster. Any player selected in the reserve rounds at auction can be kept as a reserve keeper if the player has not exceed rookie limits for the previous year. For example, Yordan Alvarez was a reserve round pick last year. He was still a free reserve round keeper this year, but he might as well be activated because he’ll be $6 and locked in the lineup next year if kept because he exceeded rookie limits last year. (There are weird rules for free keepers traded in the off-season, but I need not explain them here to explain the auction. This is long enough already.)
The last two or three years, pitching prices have gone through the roof for starters---they were always too high for closers, which is probably inevitable given the 5 RP slots. The total price split between hitters and pitchers was 60/40 last year and 61/39 in 2018. So, if you want pitching, you have to pay for it. One team, to avoid the plunger we give to the last place finisher, because he was drafting by phone, spent $223 on pitching last year. By going with a pitchers and pinch-runners strategy (tanking power sadly), he managed to finish in the final money slot at fifth because the top three were way above everyone. It should have been four teams way above everyone, but the guy in third dumped for keepers at the trade deadline because he couldn’t possibly win (his ratios were not salvageable). He ended up in fourth over the pitchers and pinch-runners guy because one team missed the IP minimum which gave him two extra points (the pitching heavy guy had already beaten that guy in ratios) which put him in fourth.
Predraft Part 2: This offseason:
Unfortunately, we lost four teams in the off-season; three for the normal life reasons (one should return next year) and one because he did not want to draft this far before the season due to the delay. We replaced three, but the fourth could not be replaced because he dropped out too late. When replace a team, they are an expansion team---no keepers and the leaving teams’ keepers are back in the draft pool. Due to expiring contracts and the four teams leaving having plenty of good keepers (Bellinger, Buehler, Judge, Jose Ramirez, etc.), inflation was far lower than normal this year.
The current situation also made things strange. Instead of our normal draft location at a public facility in Jefferson Parish (suburban New Orleans), which was closed, we draft at the commissioner’s house in LaPlace, LA, which is a bit farther out of town. This was good because gatherings of over 10 people are banned in Orleans Parish (which is the City of New Orleans; governments joined ages ago). Also, we had two people drafting by phone this year due to Covid-19; one because he is a local sports anchor and was requested by his TV station to be around in case he had to anchor the broadcast on draft day night if other anchors were quarantined. The other phoned it in because he and his wife are expecting, and she requested it. That brought us down to 14 people at the draft, which was a bit more responsible. As one of only two Orleans Parish residents there, I wore a mask and had gloves to open doors, etc., to try to be responsible. (Orleans Parish, likely due to Mardi Gras, has well over half of the cases in the state.)
I will post only four keeper lists here because they are the only ones relevant to the story. There was one team well ahead in value (the team that dumped from third place last year; given his season last year, his keepers were almost all hitters). I think I had the second best keeper (but second through fourth were close enough to be interchangeable) list despite having only six keepers---my off-season maneuvering left me with 3 SP’s, 2 RP’s, and only one hitter because I wanted to avoid the ridiculous pitching prices I expected. (I finished second last year, my best ever finish in 16 years in the league. I should have won one year, up 20 points on Labor Day Weekend, but that was the year Josh Hamilton won the MVP despite crashing into an outfield wall Labor Day Weekend and missing almost all of the rest of the regular season. That killed me. I finished third, one point out of first. I had the hitter with the final AB of the season; if he hit a HR instead of flying out, I would have won.) The third best keeper list was the guy who finished third last year. The defending champ had to trade almost all of his keepers to fend me off, so he was not really in the running. The fourth keeper list I share is a guy who is not playing for this year. In the off-season, he took on a horrific contract that expires this year to get long-term keepers---and did it from the guy with the best keeper list, not exactly endearing him to the chase pack. There was one other team in the chase pack, but I do not need to post his keeper list---he kept so many players that he needed only two hitters and one SP. He had $80 or so left and bought the bullpen he needed. He can compete, but there is no need to list his keepers. Here are the lists (real names are used because there are no innocents).
Best Keeper List (Dave): Ozzie Albies 2B $11, Aldeberto Mondesi SS $11, Didi Gregorious SS $6, Mookie Betts OF $26, Juan Soto OF $6, Zack Wheeler SP $11, Ken Giles RP $24, Carlos Martinez RP $12, Liam Henriks RP $6, Yordan Alvarez UT Free, Luis Robert OF Free, Victor Victor Mesa OF Free. Auction available: $182 ($5 extra contract renegotiation penalty).
Second Best Keeper List (Me): Ronald Acuna, Jr. OF $11, Jack Flaherty SP $11, Frankie Montas SP $6, Eduardo Rodriguez SP $6, Nick Anderson RP $6, Ian Kennedy RP $7 (no free keepers). Auction available: $238 ($10 buyout from last year).
Third Best Keeper List (Jeff): Josh Donaldson 3B $23, Francisco Lindor SS $21, Andrew Benintendi OF $16, Bryce Harper OF $36, Mike Clevenger SP $20, Luis Castillo SP $20, Brad Hand RP $19, Bo Bichette SS Free, Joey Bart C Free. Auction available: $140 ($5 extra contract renegotiation penalty).
The guy playing for 2021 (Steve): Tommy LaStella 2B $6, Alex Bregman SS $16, Carlos Correa MI $26, Loudres Gurriel OF $6, Lewis Brinson OF $6 (the locked-in-lineup bad contract), Brendan McKay SP Free, Jo Adell OF Free, Christian Pache OF Free, MacKenzie Gore SP Free, Carter Kieboom SS Free, Casey Mize SP Free , A.J. Puk RP Free, Forrest Whitely SP Free. Auction available: $235 ($5 extra contract renegotiation penalty).
Predraft Part 3: My Plan:
I traded to get three SP’s I liked in the off-season so I could just skip the feeding frenzy at SP, but if things changed I could still get some bargains there. I also wasn’t worried about getting RP; I have two pseudo closers, which is enough to get through the early season, and closers appear during the season or can be traded for if necessary. I wanted to get hitting, where I thought there would be some bargains. The plan, given that I had tons of money, was to get one stud hitter, hopefully at value, and then go bargain shopping, but go the extra couple bucks for younger upside good hitters (which we usually don’t have available but did this year because of the leaving teams giving up all their keepers). For RP, the plan was to buy the other Rays RP’s just in case, assuming they were cheap. Definitely a $1 catcher because Realmuto and Sanchez were kept and there really wasn’t that much difference between the catchers 5-20. Then circle back and get some upside cheaper SP’s if available (silly me).
NEXT: POST II: THE START OF THE AUCTION
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