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March 3, 2017 Fantasy Auction ValuesFirst Edition, 2017
Welcome to the first installment of Baseball Prospectus’ 2017 bid prices for “standard” Rotisserie-style formats. In the tables below, you will find my recommended bid limits for AL-only, NL-only, and mixed leagues. For AL and NL-only, the bid limits are designed for 12 teams, $260 budgets per team, 14 hitters, and nine pitchers. For mixed leagues, the bid limits are for 15 teams, $260 budgets per team, 14 hitters, and nine pitchers. The bids are not predictions of what these players will do, but rather suggested prices. While most of what I expect these players to do is based on projected statistics and values, other factors play a role in the bid prices. These factors include:
These bids should serve as a starting point for your own auction preferences. If you think $17 for Jose Ramirez is too timid, then by all means push his price up to your preferred ceiling. Just make sure to take money off another player or group of players so that your aggregate bids add up to $3,120 in mono leagues or $3,900 in mixed. Later this month, I’ll be tweaking these bids every Friday in this space as we get closer to Opening Day. For most players on these lists, the prices you see are the prices I’m sticking with until Auction Day. The idea behind bid limits is to set a price that is reasonable without being unrealistic in either direction. I’m high on Kevin Kiermaier this year, but if I see enough evidence that his going price is sitting in the mid-teens, I’ll move my bid down modestly. I’ll probably get him in most of my leagues anyway, but I want my bids to have some semblance of reality. It is OK to use bids to show your affinity or dislike for a player, but you don’t want to be in a room of your own, and fool yourself into thinking that you’re buying a juggernaut, when you’re overestimating everyone on your squad. Below are some commonly asked questions about these bid prices. Why are these bids different from PECOTA and Baseball Prospectus’ PFM? I do a fantasy draft, not an auction. Can I use these bids for my draft? Why is Mike Trout’s bid higher in a mixed league than in AL-only? Many pricing systems significantly reward the superstars. I did this when I started putting these bid limits together in 2013, but have decided to scale back to try and more accurately reflect real world auction conditions. It might be a good idea to spend $50 or more on Trout or Betts, but if your league is more conservative than that, it isn’t useful to have a bid limit on these players that doesn’t accurately reflect your league’s market. I think your price on Ian Desmond in NL-only is ridiculous. Can I change his bid? If you are a beginner to auction formats — or if you simply don’t have the time to prepare for your auction and prefer to use these lists exclusively — I am confident that you can simply bring these lists to your auction and dominate. However, it will serve you better if you take the time to adjust the bids specifically for your league’s conditions. Your league might insist on paying $20-plus for every closer on the board. If this is the case, adjust your bids accordingly. Just make sure to take money off of some other pitchers or hitters so that the dollar values add up to $3,120 for a 12-team league or $3,900 for a 15-team league. I play in a 6x6 league that uses holds and OPS in addition to the standard 5x5 categories. Will you be providing bids for other formats?
Mike Gianella is an author of Baseball Prospectus. Follow @MikeGianella
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To head the most obvious question off at the pass, David Price's bid is pre-injury. I don't want to make a decision until the second opinion later today. If I had an auction this morning, I'd cut Price's bid in half, at least..