The Z Files: Winning Tendencies, Part Three

The Z Files: Winning Tendencies, Part Three

This article is part of our The Z Files series.

Welcome to the third part of Winning Tendencies, an in-depth look at the 2019 National Fantasy Baseball Championship's Main Event contest, with an eye towards observations and strategies applicable to general rotisserie formats. This installment focuses on a few specific aspects of roster construction, breaking down how teams approached pitchers, catchers and multiple eligibility players.

By means of review, the 2019 NFBC Main Event consisted of 38 individual 15-team leagues, each crowning a champion. All 570 clubs were then lumped together in the overall to determine the Overall Winner.

Much of the data will be presented an average of each standings place. In addition, the majority of the forthcoming research involves the level of draft capital invested in each area. This is quantified via the table presented in last week's Winning Tendencies, Part Two where each draft spot is assigned expected earning based on historical data, borrowing results from conventional $260 budget per team auction pricing.

PITCHERS

If you play or follow the NFBC, it's no secret the pitching market is aggressive, probably ahead of most home leagues and certainly more so than standalone industry leagues, although the latter is catching up. The NFBC has unique rules, most notably being devoid of trading, which funnels a higher percentage of assets towards the mound.

To lay the groundwork, let's determine the percentage of draft capital teams dedicated to hitting. Keep in mind this is solely representative of the Opening Day lineups. Obviously, how a team manages their pitching shapes their success,

Welcome to the third part of Winning Tendencies, an in-depth look at the 2019 National Fantasy Baseball Championship's Main Event contest, with an eye towards observations and strategies applicable to general rotisserie formats. This installment focuses on a few specific aspects of roster construction, breaking down how teams approached pitchers, catchers and multiple eligibility players.

By means of review, the 2019 NFBC Main Event consisted of 38 individual 15-team leagues, each crowning a champion. All 570 clubs were then lumped together in the overall to determine the Overall Winner.

Much of the data will be presented an average of each standings place. In addition, the majority of the forthcoming research involves the level of draft capital invested in each area. This is quantified via the table presented in last week's Winning Tendencies, Part Two where each draft spot is assigned expected earning based on historical data, borrowing results from conventional $260 budget per team auction pricing.

PITCHERS

If you play or follow the NFBC, it's no secret the pitching market is aggressive, probably ahead of most home leagues and certainly more so than standalone industry leagues, although the latter is catching up. The NFBC has unique rules, most notably being devoid of trading, which funnels a higher percentage of assets towards the mound.

To lay the groundwork, let's determine the percentage of draft capital teams dedicated to hitting. Keep in mind this is solely representative of the Opening Day lineups. Obviously, how a team manages their pitching shapes their success, but this study avails a look at the initial foundation. Also, due to the nature of expected earnings, the delta between players is non-linear, especially in the first round. This results in the first few draft spots having a little more than $260 worth of draft capital, a figure that dips below $260 in the middle slots before returning to $260 by the end of the round.

Furthermore, earnings expectations are defined by a designated hitting to pitching split. In an auction, this is set by actual purchase prices. In a draft, it's relative to the designated split. The soon-to-be-presented split isn't important. What matters is the portion each team spends on pitching relative to the others.

With that as a backdrop, here's the percentage of draft capital, on average, each standings finish spent on pitching:

 Finish

% Pitching

$ Hitting

$ Pitching

1st

38.7%

$159

$101

2nd

38.6%

$160

$100

3rd

37.4%

$163

$97

4th

39.2%

$158

$102

5th

39.1%

$158

$102

6th

36.8%

$164

$96

7th

39.2%

$158

$102

8th

38.7%

$159

$101

9th

37.1%

$164

$96

10th

40.3%

$155

$105

11th

36.3%

$166

$94

12th

36.9%

$164

$96

13th

38.7%

$159

$101

14th

37.5%

$163

$97

15th

38.1%

$161

$99

It should be noted the earnings expectations was determined using a 69/31 hitting to pitching split, standard for most 5x5 rotisserie auctions. Ergo, what this table says is most teams spent about $100 on pitching based on 69/31 pricing. For what it's worth, this is consistent with the typical pricing in the NFBC Auction Championship where the split is conventionally 68/32.

Unfortunately, there isn't anything to be gleaned from this data. That is, the top placing teams didn't approach pitching in a distinctive matter, at least not in the overall sense. Hopefully, looking at pitching in a more granular manner will prove more fruitful.

STARTING PITCHERS

Let's divide pitching into starters and closers and research at what point in the draft teams invested. For this purpose, the 23-round draft with be divided into four parts: Rounds 1-5, 6-10, 11-15 and 16-23.

Here's the draft capital the average standings finish spent on starters:

 Finish

1st-5th

6th-10th

11th-15th

16th-23rd

Total

1st

$40

$19

$12

$9

$80

2nd

$40

$15

$13

$9

$77

3rd

$35

$15

$15

$10

$75

4th

$40

$18

$11

$9

$78

5th

$41

$17

$12

$9

$78

6th

$33

$16

$13

$10

$71

7th

$39

$16

$13

$9

$78

8th

$34

$17

$15

$9

$75

9th

$35

$15

$13

$10

$73

10th

$43

$13

$15

$8

$80

11th

$28

$17

$14

$9

$69

12th

$31

$17

$16

$9

$73

13th

$39

$14

$15

$9

$78

14th

$34

$17

$15

$9

$75

15th

$37

$13

$18

$9

$77

Average

$37

$16

$14

$9

$76

In the aggregate, league champions not only invested heavy in pitching, they started early. On average, league winners spent about three-quarters of their pitching budget by Round 10. This isn't to say they didn't draft wisely in the later rounds, but in terms of volume, the champs were aggressive. This isn't a revelation as the NFBC is a monkey-see, monkey-do contest. The main reason so many spend early on pitching is it's a winning strategy.

While there is a discernible difference in what winners spent in terms of draft capital, it isn't that much more than everyone else, suggesting they generated more profit from their picks. Again, not unexpected since they won.

CLOSERS

Here's the same data for closers:

Finish 

1st-5th

6th-10th

11th-15th

16th-23rd

Total

1st

$2

$12

$5

$1

$20

2nd

$5

$11

$7

$1

$23

3rd

$4

$14

$4

$1

$23

4th

$3

$16

$4

$1

$24

5th

$3

$12

$6

$2

$23

6th

$7

$10

$7

$1

$25

7th

$5

$15

$3

$1

$24

8th

$7

$12

$5

$1

$25

9th

$8

$11

$3

$1

$23

10th

$5

$13

$6

$1

$25

11th

$9

$10

$6

$1

$26

12th

$7

$10

$4

$1

$23

13th

$5

$13

$3

$2

$23

14th

$5

$12

$4

$1

$22

15th

$6

$10

$5

$1

$22

Average

$5

$12

$5

$1

$23

This is more interesting as almost universally, league winners faded closers in the first five rounds. In fact, only five of 38 champs selected a closer early, expending a late fourth or fifth rounder to secure saves. Further, winners invested the least amount of capital on closers, compared to the 14 teams below them in the standings. While this is another example of data supporting intuition, seeing the results laid out in this manner should really make you think twice when considering picking a top-ranked closer.

Earlier, it was suggested some trends are unique to the player pool and specific format. This will be put to the test this season as the landscape is different. The current conventional wisdom is to nail down one of the top saves specialists, since the opportunities to land a closer in free agency is reduced, plus many feel leashes will be shorter so grabbing a less risky arm and not worrying about the category appeals to them. It will be very intriguing to see how this plays out. Personally, while I understand that line of thinking, and the 2020 dynamics are obviously different, the data is too convincing. My lean is to still prioritize starting pitching over closers in a mixed league.

THE TOP 100 OVERALL

The aggregate data strongly suggests the best road map involves hammering starting pitchers early. Let's hone in on what the top 100 overall teams did in terms of drafting pitching. Here's a team-by-team review of the first five hurlers drafted by the top 100. The team designation is the League number followed by the finish within the league. The players include the round and pick within the round.

Finish

Team

Pitcher 1

Pitcher2

Pitcher 3

Pitcher 4

Pitcher 5

1

1045.1

Gerrit Cole R2-8Stephen Strasburg R4-8Jordan Hicks R7-8Luis Castillo R8-8Tyler Glasnow R11-8

2

931.1

Chris Sale R1-13Roberto Osuna R6-3Charlie Morton R9-13Yu Darvish R10-3Will Smith R12-3

3

862.1

Gerrit Cole R2-5Blake Treinen R5-11Chris Archer R8-5Charlie Morton R9-11David Robertson R13-11

4

862.2

Max Scherzer R1-3Walker Buehler R2-13Aroldis Chapman R6-13Josh Hader R8-13Pedro Strop R15-3

5

754.1

Aaron Nola R2-10Mike Clevinger R4-10Aroldis Chapman R7-6Kyle Hendricks R8-10Chris Archer R9-6

6

752.1

Justin Verlander R1-10Trevor Bauer R2-6Shane Bieber R8-6Ken Giles R10-6Will Smith R11-10

7

926.1

Gerrit Cole R1-12Shane Bieber R7-12Cody Allen R9-12Chris Paddack R12-4Brad Peacock R14-4

8

755.1

Jacob deGrom R1-10Kenley Jansen R5-10Rich Hill R11-10Jakob Junis R19-10Mike Fiers R20-6

9

945.1

Gerrit Cole R1-9Blake Snell R2-7Wade Davis R8-7Joe Musgrove R11-9Alex Colome R12-7

10

927.1

Stephen Strasburg R4-6Felipe Vazquez R6-6Shane Bieber R8-6Wade Davis R9-10Joey Lucchesi R11-10

11

1022.1

Aaron Nola R2-9Zack Wheeler R4-9Kirby Yates R6-9Luis Castillo R9-7Chris Paddack R11-7

12

1043.3

Trevor Bauer R2-6Stephen Strasburg R4-6Masahiro Tanaka R8-6Luis Castillo R9-10Jordan Hicks R10-6

13

754.2

Gerrit Cole R2-7Kirby Yates R7-9Robbie Ray R9-9Cole Hamels R10-7Joey Lucchesi R12-7

14

1046.1

Jacob deGrom R1-7Trevor Bauer R2-9Kirby Yates R6-9Eduardo Rodriguez R10-9Ross Stripling R13-7

15

930.1

Trevor Bauer R2-3Patrick Corbin R4-3Shane Bieber R7-13Eduardo Rodriguez R9-13Wade Davis R10-3

16

757.1

Chris Sale R1-11Clayton Kershaw R6-5Kirby Yates R8-5Josh Hader R10-5Joe Musgrove R13-11

17

946.1

Max Scherzer R1-4Carlos Carrasco R2-12Stephen Strasburg R4-12Charlie Morton R9-4Rich Hill R16-12

18

945.2

Justin Verlander R2-1Roberto Osuna R6-1Chris Archer R7-15Raisel Iglesias R9-15Luis Castillo R10-1

19

928.1

Max Scherzer R1-4Walker Buehler R3-4Edwin Diaz R4-12Kenta Maeda R13-4Brandon Woodruff R14-12

20

1022.2

Gerrit Cole R2-3Mike Clevinger R3-13Felipe Vazquez R6-3Jordan Hicks R10-3Kenta Maeda R11-13

21

1043.2

Aaron Nola R2-8Kenley Jansen R5-8Chris Paddack R9-8Ross Stripling R11-8Ross Stripling R11-8

22

751.1

Mike Clevinger R4-6Miles Mikolas R6-6Kirby Yates R7-10Rich Hill R10-6Jesus Luzardo R13-10

23

929.1

Zack Wheeler R4-14David Price R6-14Josh Hader R7-2Yu Darvish R8-14Jose Leclerc R9-2

24

1042.2

Justin Verlander R1-4German Marquez R4-12Sean Doolittle R7-4Wade Davis R8-12Hyun-Jin Ryu R11-4

25

1043.1

Jacob deGrom R1-5Jack Flaherty R3-5Shane Bieber R7-5Hunter Strickland R10-11Matt Strahm R12-11

26

1041.1

Justin Verlander R1-14Gerrit Cole R2-2Wade Davis R9-14Eduardo Rodriguez R10-2Rick Porcello R11-14

27

931.2

Noah Syndergaard R2-9Kenley Jansen R5-7Masahiro Tanaka R8-9Jose Alvarado R11-7Tyler Glasnow R12-9

28

924.1

Jacob deGrom R1-11Jose Leclerc R7-11Josh Hader R8-5Masahiro Tanaka R9-11Eduardo Rodriguez R10-5

29

1044.1

Gerrit Cole R2-2Mike Clevinger R4-2Kenley Jansen R5-14Madison Bumgarner R8-2Will Smith R11-14

30

1042.1

Walker Buehler R2-14Zack Greinke R4-14Josh Hader R7-2Luis Castillo R9-2Hunter Strickland R11-2

31

868.1

Blake Snell R2-14Shane Bieber R8-14Chris Archer R9-2Jordan Hicks R10-14Chris Paddack R12-14

32

1046.2

James Paxton R3-8German Marquez R6-8Luis Castillo R8-8Chris Paddack R11-8Mychal Givens R13-8

33

1044.2

Jack Flaherty R3-12James Paxton R4-4Sean Doolittle R7-12Yu Darvish R8-4Alex Colome R11-12

34

1046.3

Gerrit Cole R2-3Kenley Jansen R6-3Shane Bieber R8-3Nick Pivetta R12-3Collin McHugh R14-3

35

944.1

Mike Clevinger R4-3Sean Doolittle R6-3Luis Castillo R7-13Eduardo Rodriguez R9-13Alex Colome R10-3

36

1045.2

James Paxton R3-15Jack Flaherty R4-1Raisel Iglesias R8-1Charlie Morton R9-15Hunter Strickland R12-1

37

926.2

Justin Verlander R2-2Brad Hand R5-14David Price R7-14Trevor May R14-2Julio Teheran R16-2

38

1020.1

Justin Verlander R2-4Kirby Yates R6-4Masahiro Tanaka R8-4Luis Castillo R9-12Matt Barnes R11-12

39

924.2

Zack Greinke R5-10Aroldis Chapman R6-6Charlie Morton R8-6Matt Barnes R12-6Matt Strahm R14-6

40

955.1

Stephen Strasburg R4-8Felipe Vazquez R6-8David Price R8-8Yu Darvish R9-8Hunter Strickland R11-8

41

925.1

Patrick Corbin R3-12Charlie Morton R8-4Kyle Hendricks R9-12Alex Colome R10-4Matt Barnes R11-12

42

753.1

Stephen Strasburg R4-12Jose Berrios R5-4Clayton Kershaw R6-12Wade Davis R10-12Kevin Gausman R14-12

43

1167.1

Jack Flaherty R3-1Sean Doolittle R7-1Charlie Morton R8-15Nathan Eovaldi R11-1Hyun-Jin Ryu R12-15

44

925.4

Walker Buehler R3-5Clayton Kershaw R5-5Jose Leclerc R6-11Raisel Iglesias R9-5Mike Foltynewicz R14-11

45

758.2

Gerrit Cole R2-8Luis Severino R9-8David Robertson R11-8Hyun-Jin Ryu R13-8Alex Colome R14-8

46

1046.4

Stephen Strasburg R3-10Aroldis Chapman R6-6Robbie Ray R7-10Ken Giles R9-10Rick Porcello R11-10

47

1044.3

Trevor Bauer R2-9Walker Buehler R3-7Jordan Hicks R10-9Tyler Glasnow R13-7Michael Pineda R16-9

48

955.2

Aaron Nola R2-12German Marquez R6-12Jordan Hicks R10-12Joe Musgrove R14-12Matt Strahm R15-4

49

755.2

Zack Greinke R4-15Aroldis Chapman R5-1Luis Castillo R8-15Charlie Morton R10-15Yusei Kikuchi R13-1

50

985.1

Trevor Bauer R2-4James Paxton R4-4Shane Bieber R7-12Jordan Hicks R8-4Cody Allen R9-12

51

928.2

Jacob deGrom R1-8Jack Flaherty R3-8Ken Giles R9-8Will Smith R10-8Hyun-Jin Ryu R12-8

52

925.2

Justin Verlander R1-13James Paxton R4-3Zack Wheeler R5-13Ken Giles R10-3Kenta Maeda R12-3

53

1167.2

Jacob deGrom R1-4Noah Syndergaard R2-12Zack Wheeler R5-4Chris Paddack R10-12Rich Hill R15-4

54

757.2

Max Scherzer R1-8Jack Flaherty R4-8Blake Treinen R5-8Robbie Ray R10-8Yusei Kikuchi R11-8

55

931.3

Patrick Corbin R4-8David Price R6-8Luis Severino R8-8Joe Musgrove R12-8Archie Bradley R14-8

56

1041.3

Noah Syndergaard R2-15Blake Snell R3-1Aroldis Chapman R6-15Kenta Maeda R11-1Collin McHugh R12-15

57

1021.1

Carlos Carrasco R2-10Walker Buehler R3-6Kirby Yates R6-10Masahiro Tanaka R8-10Kyle Hendricks R10-10

58

1042.3

Clayton Kershaw R6-11Shane Bieber R7-5Chris Archer R9-5Jordan Hicks R10-11Tyler Glasnow R12-11

59

756.1

Noah Syndergaard R3-2Miles Mikolas R6-14Shane Bieber R8-14Josh Hader R9-2Jordan Hicks R11-2

60

868.2

Aaron Nola R2-9Stephen Strasburg R4-9Sean Doolittle R7-7Robbie Ray R8-9Joe Musgrove R11-7

61

928.3

Trevor Bauer R2-7Patrick Corbin R4-7Shane Bieber R8-7Cody Allen R9-9Alex Colome R11-9

62

758.1

Jack Flaherty R3-15James Paxton R4-1Jose Alvarado R8-1Robbie Ray R9-15Matt Strahm R11-15

63

924.3

Justin Verlander R2-4Mike Clevinger R4-4Sean Doolittle R7-12Wade Davis R8-4Hyun-Jin Ryu R11-12

64

929.2

Mike Clevinger R3-10Kirby Yates R6-6Shane Bieber R8-6Will Smith R11-10Hyun-Jin Ryu R12-6

65

927.2

Chris Sale R1-11Roberto Osuna R6-5Yu Darvish R8-5Ken Giles R10-5Cole Hamels R11-11

66

925.3

Carlos Carrasco R2-10Stephen Strasburg R4-10Wade Davis R7-6J.A. Happ R10-10Will Smith R11-6

67

752.2

Aaron Nola R2-13Zack Greinke R4-13Aroldis Chapman R6-13Nick Pivetta R10-13Kenta Maeda R12-13

68

1041.2

Mike Clevinger R3-11Zack Greinke R5-11Madison Bumgarner R8-5Raisel Iglesias R9-11Cole Hamels R11-11

69

985.2

Jacob deGrom R1-11Justin Verlander R2-5Brad Hand R5-11Wade Davis R10-5Joe Musgrove R14-5

70

986.1

Jacob deGrom R1-9Aaron Nola R2-7Sean Doolittle R7-9Shane Bieber R8-7David Robertson R11-9

71

926.3

Clayton Kershaw R5-13Raisel Iglesias R7-13Charlie Morton R8-3J.A. Happ R10-3Jon Lester R15-13

72

1021.2

James Paxton R4-7Zack Wheeler R5-9German Marquez R7-9Hunter Strickland R9-9Cole Hamels R10-7

73

996.1

Carlos Carrasco R2-15Edwin Diaz R4-15Luis Castillo R8-15Kyle Hendricks R11-1Tyler Skaggs R16-15

74

869.1

Chris Sale R1-15Gerrit Cole R2-1Kenta Maeda R11-15Yusei Kikuchi R13-15Arodys Vizcaino R14-1

75

868.3

Mike Clevinger R4-7Charlie Morton R6-7Masahiro Tanaka R8-7Kyle Freeland R10-7Will Smith R11-9

76

1021.4

Gerrit Cole R1-14Jose Berrios R4-2Felipe Vazquez R6-2Robbie Ray R8-2Jake Arrieta R14-2

77

946.2

Chris Sale R1-10Gerrit Cole R2-6Masahiro Tanaka R8-6Wade Davis R10-6Jon Gray R13-10

78

946.3

Walker Buehler R2-9Roberto Osuna R5-7Jose Alvarado R8-9Luis Castillo R9-7Matt Strahm R14-9

79

752.4

Mike Clevinger R4-9Patrick Corbin R5-7Brad Hand R6-9Kirby Yates R7-7Luis Castillo R9-7

80

929.3

Trevor Bauer R2-2James Paxton R4-2Brad Hand R5-14Hunter Strickland R9-14Luis Severino R10-2

81

1043.4

Mike Clevinger R4-3Clayton Kershaw R5-13Roberto Osuna R6-3Miles Mikolas R7-13Ken Giles R9-13

82

925.5

Jacob deGrom R1-9Zack Greinke R4-7Luis Severino R7-9Cody Allen R11-9Jose Quintana R13-9

83

751.2

Gerrit Cole R2-8Walker Buehler R3-8Blake Treinen R5-8Robbie Ray R9-8David Robertson R11-8

84

756.3

Trevor Bauer R2-3Felipe Vazquez R6-3Sean Doolittle R7-13Eduardo Rodriguez R10-3Kenta Maeda R12-3

85

1020.3

Kenley Jansen R4-9Clayton Kershaw R6-9Chris Archer R8-9Wade Davis R9-7Joe Musgrove R12-9

86

862.3

Patrick Corbin R4-1Sean Doolittle R7-15Raisel Iglesias R8-1Nathan Eovaldi R11-15Kyle Freeland R14-1

87

869.2

Kenley Jansen R5-13Cody Allen R10-3Chris Paddack R12-3Jake Arrieta R15-13Sonny Gray R17-13

88

1022.3

Carlos Carrasco R2-11Wade Davis R8-11Kyle Hendricks R9-5J.A. Happ R10-11Jon Gray R12-11

89

753.2

Aaron Nola R2-10Mike Clevinger R4-10Zack Greinke R5-6Madison Bumgarner R6-10Raisel Iglesias R8-10

90

1046.5

Justin Verlander R1-14Mike Clevinger R4-2Brad Hand R6-2Chris Archer R10-2Will Smith R12-2

91

1020.2

Chris Sale R1-9Noah Syndergaard R2-7Stephen Strasburg R4-7Yu Darvish R9-9Cody Allen R11-9

92

985.3

Blake Treinen R4-6Roberto Osuna R5-10Masahiro Tanaka R8-6Chris Archer R9-10Jon Gray R12-6

93

986.3

Max Scherzer R1-8Walker Buehler R3-8Jose Leclerc R6-8Cole Hamels R11-8Ken Giles R12-8

94

1167.4

Mike Clevinger R4-4David Price R7-12Eduardo Rodriguez R9-12J.A. Happ R10-4Alex Colome R11-12

95

945.3

Zack Wheeler R5-2Miles Mikolas R6-14Charlie Morton R7-2Chris Paddack R11-2Forrest Whitley R18-14

96

862.5

Jack Flaherty R3-7Jose Berrios R4-9Luis Severino R6-9Shane Bieber R7-7Tyler Glasnow R10-9

97

955.3

Blake Snell R2-9Jameson Taillon R5-7Kirby Yates R7-7Nick Pivetta R10-9Hyun-Jin Ryu R12-9

98

1019.1

Aaron Nola R1-15Trevor Bauer R2-1Hunter Strickland R10-1Will Smith R11-15Matt Strahm R12-1

99

756.5

Max Scherzer R1-4Craig Kimbrel R8-12Rich Hill R11-4Joey Lucchesi R12-12Ross Stripling R13-4

100

1021.3

Jacob deGrom R1-5Kenley Jansen R5-5Sean Doolittle R6-11Charlie Morton R8-11Kenta Maeda R10-11

Here's a breakdown of the different combinations:

5 SP

8

4 SP, 1 CL

55

3 SP, 2 CL

36

2 SP, 3 CL

1

In what could be the most telling piece of information in this section, the following table shows the round each team drafted their first starting pitcher:

First SP

No. Teams

Round 1

31

Round 2

36

Round 3

12

Round 4

14

Round 5

3

Round 6

2

Round 8

1

Round 12

1

Since there are 100 teams, the number of teams doubles as the percentage of teams drafting an arm in that round. Two-thirds of all teams is eye-opening. Now the data for the 38 league winners:

 No. Teams% Teams
Round 1

16

42%

Round 2

12

32%

Round 3

4

11%

Round 4

6

16%

Now, almost three-quarters of the champions rostered a starting pitcher in their first two picks, and all of them had one by the conclusion of Round 4.

On the surface, this may seem to contradict the approach I've preached the last couple of seasons, but it actually shows support. My dictum has been not to force pitching early. Please note, I'm not saying categorically avoid pitching, there's a difference. Obviously, taking at least one arm in the first two rounds is a winning strategy as 74 percent of champions did just that. However, 26 percent did not. What I'm saying is don't force a lesser pitcher into the second round just to make sure you exit with at least one arm. After all, based on ADP, 10 pitchers were taken in the first two rounds. Even if a squad or two doubled up, between seven and nine teams drafting a pitcher in the first two rounds in every league did not win. Your team, your call, but what this tells me is Plan A is selecting a pitcher in the first two rounds, so long as he warrants that draft spot. Plan B is waiting until the third or fourth and not forcing an unworthy into the second. In my mind, too many follow

Plan A: Draft a pitcher in the first two rounds

Plan B: If there isn't someone qualified available, see Plan A

OK, back to data…

Top-100 PITCHING SHARES

Below is a table displaying the number of times each pitcher was among the first five pitchers taken by a top-100 squad, along with the ADP:

Starting Pitchers

No.

ADP

 Closers

No.

ADP

Gerrit Cole

14

18.3

 Wade Davis

12

124.6

Mike Clevinger

14

48.4

 Kirby Yates

10

89.4

Shane Bieber

14

109.8

 Sean Doolittle

10

99.2

Luis Castillo

12

116.6

 Jordan Hicks

9

141.5

Charlie Morton

12

116.0

 Will Smith

9

168.6

Justin Verlander

10

16.2

 Kenley Jansen

8

68.4

Stephen Strasburg

10

50.6

 Aroldis Chapman

7

79.7

Jacob deGrom

10

7.7

 Alex Colome

7

173.0

Trevor Bauer

10

21.8

 Ken Giles

7

134.1

Walker Buehler

9

33.9

 Raisel Iglesias

7

113.6

Aaron Nola

9

22.4

 Hunter Strickland

7

162.9

James Paxton

8

48.6

 Josh Hader

6

97.5

Masahiro Tanaka

8

118.3

 Roberto Osuna

6

76.0

Chris Archer

8

120.0

 Cody Allen

6

148.0

Jack Flaherty

8

42.3

 Felipe Vazquez

5

79.0

Kenta Maeda

8

163.7

 Brad Hand

5

73.2

Chris Paddack

8

165.5

 David Robertson

4

153.7

Robbie Ray

7

112.4

 Jose Leclerc

4

98.8

Joe Musgrove

7

177.6

 Blake Treinen

4

65.9

Zack Greinke

7

60.7

 Jose Alvarado

3

143.2

Clayton Kershaw

7

73.1

 Matt Barnes

3

189.5

Eduardo Rodriguez

7

137.2

 Edwin Diaz

2

56.9

Hyun-Jin Ryu

7

170.8

 Trevor May

1

207.1

Hunter Strickland

7

162.9

 Pedro Strop

1

211.8

Chris Sale

6

10.1

 Mychal Givens

1

229.8

Yu Darvish

6

124.9

 Archie Bradley

1

241.9

Patrick Corbin

6

47.6

 Arodys Vizcaino

1

201.8

Zack Wheeler

6

64.4

 Craig Kimbrel

1

112.0

Matt Strahm

6

197.1

    
Max Scherzer

6

4.3

    
Noah Syndergaard

5

28.9

    
Carlos Carrasco

5

29.0

    
Kyle Hendricks

5

125.5

    
Cole Hamels

5

150.7

    
David Price

5

95.2

    
Rich Hill

5

199.5

    
Tyler Glasnow

5

158.0

    
Luis Severino

5

117.2

    
German Marquez

4

73.0

    
J.A. Happ

4

145.3

    
Blake Snell

4

27.3

    
Ross Stripling

4

184.0

    
Miles Mikolas

4

91.3

    
Yusei Kikuchi

3

191.4

    
Madison Bumgarner

3

104.5

    
Jon Gray

3

183.7

    
Nick Pivetta

3

136.6

    
Jose Berrios

3

54.9

    
Joey Lucchesi

3

171.5

    
Rick Porcello

2

164.0

    
Collin McHugh

2

202.2

    
Nathan Eovaldi

2

173.4

    
Kyle Freeland

2

188.9

    
Jake Arrieta

2

202.5

    
Jakob Junis

1

296.9

    
Brad Peacock

1

207.6

    
Mike Fiers

1

392.2

    
Brandon Woodruff

1

221.6

    
Jesus Luzardo

1

369.6

    
Julio Teheran

1

271.8

    
Kevin Gausman

1

260.3

    
Mike Foltynewicz

1

181.9

    
Michael Pineda

1

262.7

    
Jon Lester

1

242.6

    
Tyler Skaggs

1

228.6

    
Jose Quintana

1

188.4

    
Sonny Gray

1

247.7

    
Forrest Whitley

1

281.5

    
Jameson Taillon

1

51.7

    

Looking at the starters, it's interesting to note while most teams struck early, three of the most universally drafted hurlers were picked in the eighth round or later, suggesting there's more to building a winning staff than securing an elite arm.

As interesting as that is, the takeaways on the closer side is eye-popping. Keep in mind, much of the discussion herein revolves around draft strategy and not how the players performed. However, check out the most-represented closers. Davis was an unmitigated disaster, while Hicks was effective, but for only half a season. Hence, not only did competitive teams often wait on closers, they recovered from under-performing selections, further driving home the credo to wait on saves.

CATCHERS

It's time to turn our attention to the other side of the battery. Positional scarcity, relative to the number of draft-worthy players available, doesn't exist in today's environment except behind the plate. The quality and quantity of the catching inventory is miserable. As such, scheming an approach is necessary. What follows is how the average team at each standings finish broached that conundrum in terms of draft capital, based on the $260 allotment discussed previously. The data is segregated into early rounds (1st to 8th), middle (9th to 16th) and late (17th on).

 Finish 

1st-8th

9th-16th

17th+

Total

1st

$4.03

$4.50

$2.58

$11.11

2nd

$2.71

$2.45

$3.58

$8.74

3rd

$5.34

$3.97

$2.39

$11.71

4th

$3.26

$4.39

$2.97

$10.63

5th

$4.42

$5.32

$2.39

$12.13

6th

$4.66

$4.05

$2.97

$11.68

7th

$5.87

$4.16

$2.68

$12.71

8th

$1.74

$5.03

$2.79

$9.55

9th

$2.71

$6.00

$2.63

$11.34

10th

$1.71

$4.61

$3.16

$9.47

11th

$3.00

$6.39

$2.97

$12.37

12th

$2.05

$4.18

$2.87

$9.11

13th

$3.63

$5.53

$2.74

$11.89

14th

$3.63

$5.24

$2.66

$11.53

15th

$1.45

$5.45

$2.84

$9.74

Average

$3.35

$4.75

$2.82

$10.91

Now the number of receivers chosen in each portion of the draft:

 Finish

1st-8th

9th-16th

17th+

1st

8

18

50

2nd

5

11

60

3rd

11

16

49

4th

7

17

52

5th

8

21

47

6th

9

15

52

7th

11

17

48

8th

4

20

52

9th

6

25

45

10th

3

18

55

11th

6

26

44

12th

4

17

55

13th

7

22

47

14th

7

21

48

15th

3

23

50

Total

99

287

754

While it may appear there's nothing to be gleaned from this table as there isn't a definitive trend, that in itself is a lesson. There isn't a better or worse way to approach the position. Success was found drafting early, middle and late.

Curiously, the bottom dwellers invested more assets in the middle rounds than those at the top of the standings. This is likely due to so many catchers excelling from late picks. Some examples are Omar Narvaez (ADP 298), Mitch Garver (404), Carson Kelly (421), Christian Vazquez (478) and Roberto Perez, who went undrafted.

The composition of the 2020 catcher inventory is perceived to be different than last season, so the drafting approach could be adjusted. Specifically, many view J.T. Realmuto as having a bigger gap between himself the next highest-ranked backstop than can be found further down the rankings. The advantage of this drop-off varies by format, but the consensus is if you want to pay up for a receiver, it's Realmuto or no one else.

Last season, an average of 2.6 catchers were drafted in the first eight rounds. The March ADP for catchers in 15-team leagues (most of the Draft Championship variety) shows three backstops with an ADP in the first eight rounds: Realmuto (53), Gary Sanchez (96) and Yasmani Grandal (111). Garver and Willson Contreras land in the ninth round. Given the above, the best approach may be to try and snag Grandal, Garver or Contreras in Round 9.

MULTIPLE ELIGIBLITY PLAYERS

Conventional wisdom suggests MEPs (multiple eligibility players) are integral to a championship lineup, as they provide roster flexibility so the best reserve or free agent can replace an injured or under-performing player. What follows is the draft capital each standings finish directed to MEPs along with the number of MEPs drafted, divided into early, middle and late.

Finish

1st-8th

9th-16th

17th+

Total

1st

$13.84

$5.79

$1.71

$21.34

2nd

$19.26

$3.00

$1.84

$24.11

3rd

$14.71

$6.11

$2.11

$22.92

4th

$8.74

$7.74

$1.68

$18.16

5th

$18.68

$6.34

$1.95

$26.97

6th

$10.32

$5.13

$2.11

$17.55

7th

$14.79

$5.89

$2.13

$22.82

8th

$16.50

$7.00

$2.26

$25.76

9th

$11.29

$4.71

$1.42

$17.42

10th

$10.74

$5.82

$1.76

$18.32

11th

$19.50

$6.34

$2.13

$27.97

12th

$15.32

$6.63

$2.50

$24.45

13th

$15.71

$5.71

$2.37

$23.79

14th

$14.84

$5.74

$2.61

$23.18

15th

$14.92

$5.71

$2.82

$23.45

Finish

1st-8th

9th-16th

17th+

Total

1st

0.7

0.8

0.6

2.1

2nd

0.9

0.4

0.6

1.9

3rd

0.7

0.7

0.7

2.2

4th

0.4

0.9

0.5

1.9

5th

0.9

0.7

0.6

2.2

6th

0.6

0.7

0.6

1.8

7th

0.7

0.7

0.6

2.1

8th

0.8

0.8

0.6

2.2

9th

0.6

0.6

0.4

1.6

10th

0.6

0.7

0.5

1.8

11th

1.0

0.7

0.7

2.4

12th

0.8

0.8

0.7

2.3

13th

0.8

0.6

0.7

2.2

14th

0.8

0.7

0.8

2.3

15th

0.8

0.6

0.7

2.1

Here's a fine example of why it's best to run the numbers and not rely on intuition. The top teams failed to chase MEPs while the lower squads made a point of populating their rosters with flexibility. Perhaps this should have been obvious, but now it makes sense. The utility of a MEP is format dependent. I'll stick to my gut and contend they're crucial in the Draft and Hold format. However, the Main Event has a seven-man reserve with no injured list. As such, each competitor must house hurt players, prospects, speculative closers and spot starters to be deployed in favorable matchups, leaving precious few spots to fortify a lineup with a bat. That reduces the optimization effect of MEPs. To put it another way, you don't make up the stats left on the table when jumping a MEP over a better player. Sure, break a tie with Alex Bregman or Cody Bellinger, but don't leapfrog Kris Bryant over a more productive hitter just to gain his dual position eligibility. Maybe later, when the opportunity cost is lessened, it could be profitable to target Eduardo Escobar or Tommy Edman, but don't prioritize loading up on MEPs, at least not in formats with limited or restricted reserves. In draft and hold, or leagues with daily moves, they remain integral.

SUMMARY

  • Drafting starting pitching early in the NFBC remains a strong play, though there are alternate pathways to success so while suggested, it isn't obligatory. The approach in your home leagues may differ, especially when trading is allowed.
  • This season's impending quirky schedule notwithstanding, successful squads didn't worry about saves.
  • While there isn't a best approach for catchers, don't be reticent to pay up if the opportunity is there.
  • While multiple eligibility players are useful, the extent they help add stats to your roster depends on the composition and depth of your reserve list.

Next up: Winning Players

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Todd Zola
Todd has been writing about fantasy baseball since 1997. He won NL Tout Wars and Mixed LABR in 2016 as well as a multi-time league winner in the National Fantasy Baseball Championship. Todd is now setting his sights even higher: The Rotowire Staff League. Lord Zola, as he's known in the industry, won the 2013 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Article of the Year award and was named the 2017 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year. Todd is a five-time FSWA awards finalist.
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