CSS Button No Image Css3Menu.com

Baseball Prospectus home
  
  
Click here to log in Click here to subscribe
<< Previous Article
2016 Prospects: Colora... (02/11)
<< Previous Column
Fantasy Players to Avo... (02/05)
Next Column >>
Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avo... (02/23)
Next Article >>
Fifth Column: The Deat... (02/12)

February 12, 2016

Fantasy Players to Avoid

Shortstops

by BP Fantasy Staff

the archives are now free.

All Baseball Prospectus Premium and Fantasy articles more than a year old are now free as a thank you to the entire Internet for making our work possible.

Not a subscriber? Get exclusive content like this delivered hot to your inbox every weekday. Click here for more information on Baseball Prospectus subscriptions or use the buttons to the right to subscribe and get instant access to the best baseball content on the web.

Subscribe for $4.95 per month
Recurring subscription - cancel anytime.


a 33% savings over the monthly price!

Purchase a $39.95 gift subscription
a 33% savings over the monthly price!

Already a subscriber? Click here and use the blue login bar to log in.

These introductions have been filled with C- jokes and should probably be avoided. Just like the players below should be avoided, based on the recommendations of our Baseball Prospectus staff.

(You see, this is a joke that should be avoided which makes it like the jokes I am describing so it is meta. This paragraph fits this model as well, so it is another joke of this ilk. This is awful and I apologize for subjecting you to it.)

Brandon Crawford, Giants
Lots of players get underrated because of “boring” production. At shortstop, though, it seems, that the boring players who show some power relative to their peers (in the past this was J.J. Hardy, Jed Lowrie, and Jhonny Peralta) become somewhat overrated. Home runs are great, but the scarcity of power at the position has apparently inflated some players’ price tags.

This season, that player is Crawford (currently about the eighth shortstop off the board), who broke out in 2016 with 21 home runs, besting his past high of 10. Crawford is certainly a fine option, but he neither steals many bases nor helps in batting average, and I am going to bet that he is unlikely to repeat his 16.2 percent HR:FB rate, which bested his previous career high of 7.0 percent in 2014. Even if Crawford does repeat his 2016, he was still only the seventh-most-valuable shortstop. Add in the fact that many might also be overrating him because he either (i) made us look good if we waited on shortstop last year or (ii) was a productive replacement option in shallow leagues, and we get a pretty decent reason to avoid Crawford at his current, little-profit-to-be-gained price. —Jeff Quinton

Ian Desmond, Free Agent
Less than a week from the start of spring training, the 30-year-old remains unsigned, casting an omnipresent shadow over his current fantasy value, and further amplifying his risk in early-spring drafts. A card-carrying member of the exclusive 20/20 club three of the last four seasons, Desmond failed to reach those lofty statistical peaks (hitting 19 home runs and stealing only 13 bases) in 2015. The glaring red flags in his profile, a rapidly increasing groundball rate (which climbed to 53 percent last season) an astronomical 30 percent strikeout rate, and rapidly eroding speed on the bases put his status as a top-10 fantasy shortstop in jeopardy in 2016.

Speaking of jeopardy, it’s time for every fantasy owner’s favorite game show: blind player comparisons, using PECOTA projections from the 2016 BP Annual. If you haven’t ordered your copy, I suggest you get on that right now.

  • Player A: 600 PA, 71 R, 20 HR, 72 RBI, 17 SB, .263 AVG
  • Player B 608 PA, 63 R, 16 HR, 71 RBI, 3 SB, .263 AVG
  • Player C 522 PA, 67 R, 14 HR, 54 RBI, 10 SB, .250 AVG

PECOTA has a long memory and is forecasting a slight rebound in steals and average for Desmond (Player A), who is currently going 114th in NFBC average draft position (ADP). Meanwhile, Jhonny Peralta (Player B) and Marcus Semien (Player C) are going nearly 130 picks later in ADP, at 241 and 253, respectively. While Peralta doesn’t offer any speed, he’s a lock to encroach upon 15-to-20-homer territory, and Semien, who hit 15 homers with 11 steals and a .257 average last season, is just entering his physical prime at age 25. The point of this exercise is to further illustrate that the gap between Desmond and “replacement-level” fantasy options at the position is evaporating. —George Bissell

Francisco Lindor, SS, Cleveland Indians
Lindor is probably a top-10 shortstop in baseball next year. His glove is special and he was a three-win player at 21 years old. He’s always been a better real-life prospect than fantasy prospect, though, and his surprising 2015 campaign at the plate doesn’t really sway me. He hit .313/.353/.482 with 12 homers and 12 stolen bases in just 438 plate appearances. The problem is that I get really nervous about players who suddenly outperform their professional track records, even if they’re young with big pedigrees. Lindor never hit above .306 in his minor-league career, aside from a five-game stop in Mahoning Valley in 2011, and only hit above .300 once. His minor-league average is a .279 batting average. He also only hit 21 homers in 1,880 minor-league plate appearances. I’m not ready to believe he’s a perennial double-digit home-run producer. I can easily see Lindor hitting .270 with six-to-nine homers and 20 stolen bases. That’s good, sure, but that ain’t worth grabbing as the fifth-overall shortstop—and that’s where he’s currently going in NFBC leagues. As much as I like him as a player, there’s no chance that I’m investing in Lindor this year. —J.P. Breen

Addison Russell, Chicago Cubs
Russell was ranked the fourth-best fantasy prospect in baseball entering 2015, and he was adequate in his rookie season, earning $5 in mixed leagues and $11 in NL-only formats. As George Bissell pointed out earlier this week, he is one of only four rookie shortstops aged 22 or younger to mash 13 or more taters. Without question, Russell’s future is bright and his fantasy value is enhanced by being a member of the 1927 Yankees 2016 Cubs.

All of that said, I think we’re jumping the gun by tagging Russell as top 6-8 option at the position. For starters, Russell had all of 74 games of experience at Double-A and Triple-A before making his major league debut last season. The fact that Russell held his own in 2015 despite limited experience in the upper levels of the minors is a testament to his innate ability and capacity to make adjustments on the fly. He took some lumps in the process—a .242 batting average and 28.5 percent strikeout rate, for example—and I think it’s reasonable, if not probable, that he takes some more in the short term given his inexperience.

About those 2015 adjustments: Yes, Russell made some mechanical tweaks and experienced a autumn power surge, hitting more than half of his seasonal home run total in August and September. On the flip side, his contact rate was more than four percentage points lower from August on than it was previous. He became extremely pull happy while skewing his batted ball profile more heavily towards fly balls. The resulting 12.5 percent HR:FB rate doesn’t seem outrageous but Russell’s exit velocity ranked in the bottom third of players with 200 or more at-bats and his batted ball distance in the bottom half. I don’t think he’ll hit for an acceptable average if that approach doesn’t change and I’m skeptical about the power sticking around, barring an adjustment.

Oftentimes we make the mistake of seeing only upside in a young player who has shown something at the major league level without accounting for an appropriate amount of downside risk as he’s still developing. At a cost that takes most of the profit potential away, I’m happy to let someone else pay for the early portion of Russell’s learning curve. —Greg Wellemeyer

J.J. Hardy, Baltimore Orioles

Obviously this is geared toward those of you playing in deeper leagues—no one is clamoring for Hardy in a 12-team format. But as much as it pains me to write this (Hardy was one of my favorites growing up), the time to look at Hardy as a useful fantasy asset has passed. Hardy hit just .219/.253/.311 last season, losing much of the trademark power that made him a solid option for years in his prime. In truth he hasn't hit for decent power in two full seasons now, and while you can partially attribute that to injury, it's unlikely that Hardy will suddenly become the picture of health as he enters his age-33 season. The Orioles have a good lineup and play in a great park, so I understand the temptation to take Hardy as a bounce-back candidate. If you want to do so and count on him as your backup SS or your MI in a 20-team league, that's fine. But right now he's the 21st shortstop going off the board, per Fantasy Pros early ADP count, and that's too early. Guys like Alexei Ramirez, Jed Lowrie, Erick Aybar and even Andrelton Simmons are better bets to produce some value but are going later, as are high-upside candidates like Javier Baez. That ain't right. - Ben Carsley

BP Fantasy Staff is an author of Baseball Prospectus. 
Click here to see BP's other articles. You can contact BP by clicking here

Related Content:  Fantasy,  Shortstops

6 comments have been left for this article.

<< Previous Article
2016 Prospects: Colora... (02/11)
<< Previous Column
Fantasy Players to Avo... (02/05)
Next Column >>
Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avo... (02/23)
Next Article >>
Fifth Column: The Deat... (02/12)

RECENTLY AT BASEBALL PROSPECTUS
Playoff Prospectus: Come Undone
BP En Espanol: Previa de la NLCS: Cubs vs. D...
Playoff Prospectus: How Did This Team Get Ma...
Playoff Prospectus: Too Slow, Too Late
Premium Article Playoff Prospectus: PECOTA Odds and ALCS Gam...
Premium Article Playoff Prospectus: PECOTA Odds and NLCS Gam...
Playoff Prospectus: NLCS Preview: Cubs vs. D...

MORE FROM FEBRUARY 12, 2016
Premium Article Prospect Debate: Turner 'Round and Lemme' Ar...
Pebble Hunting: I Read the Entire Collective...
Fifth Column: The Death of Nostalgia in Base...
Fantasy Article TTO Scoresheet Podcast: Episode 75: Shortsto...
Fantasy Article Player Profile: Eugenio Suarez
Fantasy Article Baseball Prospectus Mock Draft
Fantasy Article The -Only League Landscape: American League ...

MORE BY BP FANTASY STAFF
2016-02-24 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Target: Starting Pitchers
2016-02-23 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: Outfielders
2016-02-15 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Target: Outfielders
2016-02-12 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: Shortstops
2016-02-08 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Target: Shortstop
2016-02-05 - Fantasy Players to Avoid: Third Base
2016-02-01 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Target: Third Basemen
More...

MORE FANTASY PLAYERS TO AVOID
2016-03-11 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: Relief Pitchers
2016-03-04 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: Starting Pitchers
2016-02-23 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: Outfielders
2016-02-12 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: Shortstops
2016-02-05 - Fantasy Players to Avoid: Third Base
2016-01-29 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: Second Base
2016-01-22 - Fantasy Article Fantasy Players to Avoid: First Base
More...