Edwin Jackson,
SP. He reportedly has two three-year offers, and the Red Sox, who are in on
many players, are there with a bid, as well. Has remarkable record of
durability for a young (still only 28) pitcher, but one bad early year in Tampa
skews his career stats. A clubhouse plus who always answers the bell, but hurt
himself with an uneven postseason. One of three active pitchers 28 or younger
with less than a 4.50 ERA, at least 199 innings and more than 140 strikeouts in
each of the last three seasons. The other three are Matt Cain, Tim Lincecum and
Felix Hernandez. http://www.cbssports.com/mcc/blogs/entry/33714192/34639146
Jeff Francis –
SP – signed with Reds - In an offseason where Jason Marquis nets a somewhat
lucrative one-year deal, it’s simply stunning to me that Francis, who for all
his faults was a 2.6-win pitcher last season, had to settle for a minor league
deal. Sure, there’s more red flags than a Chinese embassy here, but projection-wise
you have to believe Francis has matured greatly as a pitcher to be a nearly
3-win hurler despite an 84.7 mph average heater. Can you even call that a
heater? Maybe it’s a warmer. Joking aside, Francis hasn’t landed in an ideal
place with the Great American Ballpark (120-133 home run park factors via
StatCorner), but if he gains velocity back in his ongoing rehabilitation
efforts, as a lefty he could carve out a nice, long career in the back of a
number of rotations. http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/index.php/notable-recent-minor-league-pacts/
Jose Valverde
may
be affected more than the rest of the group. Converting 49 saves in as many
opportunities will have Valverde’s draft value at an all-time high, with Mock
Draft Central drafts currently averaging Valverde as the seventh reliever
taken. If Cabrera is being drafted due to his likely third and first base
eligibility, it is being assumed that he actually will appear at third base at
least semi-regularly. While he only needs a bit more than a handful of games to
qualify at third, Leyland’s comments give confidence in constructing drafts
around the thought that Cabrera will play third base often. This means other
players should be drafted under that same assumption, such as Valverde. There
is at least some risk that Cabrera is the Tiger’s third baseman, which adds
additional risk to Tiger pitchers. http://www.fangraphs.com/fantasy/index.php/downgrade-valverde/
T.S. Eliot evidently
was not a baseball fan, and even if he had been, he likely wouldn't have played
fantasy. But if he had, and he ceased writing long enough to construct a time
machine, and it worked, and he travelled to 2012, and his travel through time
didn't thereby create the prototypical parallel universe which nullified the
entire process, he would be just as high as me this year on Emilio Bonifacio! Yes,
Eliot fans, Emilio Bonifacio is the secret to
your 2012 fantasy baseball success. Or, he was. Or, he will be unless you play
in leagues that include managers influenced by RotoAuthority.com, which, is,
like, every league, so you're screwed. Go skittishly "like" the
picture that girl you've been stalking for the past year just posted to her
Wall. But, but, BUT, if, somehow, not everyone is heavily influenced by my
opinion of Emilio! Bonifacio!, draft him. And draft him late! Why, you ask,
insubordinately? Prepare to be bullet-pointed: http://www.rotoauthority.com/
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