Yasiel Puig

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Waiver Wire Pick Ups: Trade Pieces or Trash?

When going through a long season of fantasy baseball you inevitably will receive bad trade offers.  Some trade offers are more offensive than others.  None more so than when someone offers you a recent waiver wire pickup as a key piece in a trade.  There are exceptions to this rule (big time prospects like Yasiel Puig and Wil Myers, or Wil Myersguys who were prematurely dropped such as Jason Heyward or Josh Hamilton), but most of the time you will be offered names like Jedd Lowrie and James Loney. (Sigh!)

I feel like sites should have built-in controls where GMs can’t offer waiver pick ups with out a two week waiting period.  Maybe a little disclaimer next to the players name that says he was picked up on this date.  Like a freshness label on a bottle of beer.  It would be like a little scarlet letter that would eventually wear off after certain amount of time.  This would relieve a lot of aggravation as well as help inexperienced GMs save a little face.

While two weeks might be a nice start, the real waiting period for seeing if a waiver pick up is truly a trade asset is right around six weeks.  The six week sample size is enough to weed out the occasional hot stretch for a veteran hitter and soft schedule for a pitcher.  For example Vernon Wells started out on fire (.300 6 HR and .910 OPS in April) and was widely picked up in 12 and 14 team leagues after week 2.  He has since gone back to his late career ways (hitting around .230 and popping out constantly) and can be seen on your local waiver wires.  While experienced fantasy baseball players knew this was just a streaking player other GMs actually tried to capitalize on his hot start and offer him in trades around their leagues.

The subsequent message board and social media ridicule after a bad trade is offered should be enough to discourage naive GMs, but some seem to be immune to these tactics.  They plug away week after week picking up the Jhoulys Chacins and Ricky Nolascos of the fantasy baseball world and think they can turn them into Cole Hamels and Doug Fisters through trades.  God bless their tiny little brains and their efforts, but something has to be done.

I try to chalk it up to naivete or ignorance, but stupidity shouldn’t be ruled out.  The topper of these bad offers was recently brought up during a Twitter conversation with @fantasytrade411, when he was venting about a GM actually offering him someone he had just dropped!  I can’t say this has ever happened to me, but if I did receive an offer for one of my cast offs a day after dropping him my eyebrows may jump clear off my forehead.

Even with prized prospects I don’t generally offer them in trades until they have played at least a few weeks in the bigs.  I don’t want to burn any bridges with other GMs if the prospect doesn’t at least stay in the bigs for an extended showing.  Plus I would rather know if I am in possession of a stud before I sell a player.  With rookies the six week waiting period would be ideal.  You need four to six weeks to see if the league makes adjustments to the player or if the player is able to make adjustments to the league. (Didi Gregorius a perfect example)  Jackie Bradley Jr. had many GMs jumping the gun when he got off to a fast start with the Red Sox in April after he surprisingly made the big club out of spring training.  If you were unlucky enough to trade for him, chalk it up to a lesson learned.

You can never sell too high for a recent call up, and Puig is a perfect example.  His value couldn’t be higher right Yasiel Puignow and selling is a must.  I recently made a trade that netted me Chris Davis, Desmond Jennings, Cole Hamels, and Chris Sale.  My side of the trade was centered around Puig, and included Kyle Seager, Patrick Corbin, the versatile Todd Frazier, and Justin Masterson.  While my haul may seem a little one sided, it is not the most I have seen traded for the Cuban phenom.  I have seen dinged up stars such as Bryce Harper, Matt Kemp, and even Roto golden boy Ryan Braun sent packing for Puig.  While all of these scenarios are slightly ludicrous and reactionary, you can see the value people see in Puig’s unique talents.

 

Veterans picked up off the waiver wire are a completely different story.  Most GMs like myself will pick up and ride a streaking player, but never think about trading him because the value just wouldn’t be there.  It takes a few months of a veteran playing well above his career numbers before he attains any trade value.  James Loney, Jedd Lowrie, and Michael Young have all had some hot stretches, but you wouldn’t see me trying to trade for any of them.  I might lose my mind completely if I get offered Matt Joyce for Jason Heyward again in my deep league.Jason Heyward

(I need at least another month of Heyward struggles before I entertain that one.)

If I offered another GM the hot hitting Adam Lind in a trade right now, what would he be worth?  He’s 29 and has hit 35 homers in a season before, but he has always been unable to consistently hit lefties.  He most likely won’t be able to touch his 2009 numbers again in his career.  Even though he is hitting .350 and will hit over 25 homers he would barely fetch me a light hitting Eric Hosmer in a trade right now.

 

The real swings in trade value come when  former top prospects seem to turn a corner.  They can go from waiver wire riders to trade untouchables in less than half a season.  Carlos Gomez and Chris Davis flipped the switch  last year, and Dominic Brown seems to have unleashed his full potential this year.  Just a few weeks into the season Brown could be seen on the waiver wire, but with his unbelievable May you would be lucky to get him in a trade for Jay Bruce.  Could you imagine those words being said on draft day?  “I’ll trade you Jay Bruce for Dominic Brown.”

I can’t wait to see what Wil Myers will command in a trade if he goes deep in his first game with the Rays.  Without even taking a swing I can already see GMs trading Rios or Cruz for him.  If he gets off to a fast start it could be Beltran or Holiday.  And if he even comes close to Puig’s start the sky is the limit.

Don’t Set It and Forget It

Fantasy baseball is not a “set it and forget it” endeavor.  You don’t draft a team and send it out into the worldSet it and forget it without having to constantly tinker with it.  You may have three different players play second base for you in any given month while also having a different frontline starter based on that particular week’s matchups.  If we listed all the closers that will inevitably be jumping in and out of our rosters we could be here all day.

 

Setting your lineup is a lot like playing the stock market.  You can only ignore the trends for so long until you miss the boat.  Whether it be buying, selling, dropping or picking up players, you have to look at all the available information in a timely manner.  Being aware of the vital statistics can make a stock or a free agent a must buy or a player on your roster an instant drop.

 

Sometimes a player is just getting extremely lucky and his statistics are heading for a correction.  I am trying to avoid stepping into these bear-traps, but it can be difficult to differentiate between luck and player turning a corner.  You may get burned by not checking his BAPIP (batting average on balls in play) or his FB/GB statistics.  Luckily, there are so many resources for today’s fantasy GM’s that weren’t available just a few years ago.  I can go to a multitude of sites to see all the vital statistics and more while even the free apps from sites like Yahoo break down the basic statistics over time periods.  I can notice a player is hot while watching a series on TV, check my phone and see he is hitting .350 this month and then go to any site to see if his power is coming as well.

 

Too many GM’s treat their lineups like they are mutual funds or pensions.  They buy in and either through laziness or ineptitude let them twist in the wind.  While they spend their nights catching up on Breaking Bad and old reruns of South Park (Editor’s Note: there is nothing wrong with watching either of these shows), their lineups go through ups and downs not seen since Enron.  You offer them a trade and they literally have to check the site to see who is on their roster.

 

I, on the other hand, tend to be overly attentive, almost to the detriment of my free time (hmmm, maybe that is why I’m only on Season 2 of Breaking Bad).  I tend to tinker constantly as I check my lineups key statistics and try and maximize every week in my head to head league.  I read every article possible on would-be call-ups so that I can try to solve some of my team’s issues without trying to trade.  If I am lagging early in the week in stolen bases I will put Starling Marte or Brett Gardner into my lineup.  If I am behind in runs scored, then Matt Carpenter will start at almost any position.  Power is tougher to find coming off the bench, but I may have just recently found a few gems.

 

The fact that my league is position specific for outfield has been a real challenge.  Right field has been considerably shallow and I have been forced to play Carpenter or Adrian Gonzalez there while I have Corey Hart stashed on the DL.  If I played Gonzalez in RF, then I suffer at first base, and vice-versa.  Then along came a Cuban defector named Yasiel Puig.  You may have heard of him.  He has exploded on the scene and solidified my line-up with his power and speed.

 

I know what you’re saying – hold your horses buddy.  It’s okay to get excited, but let’s not pretend he’s the second coming.  But what if he is the next Mike Trout or Bryce Harper?  It would be like adding a top 10 pick in the middle of the season for nothing.  How can you not get over-excited?  I know I am having trouble tempering my excitement and evaluating his current worth.

 

He could be a blip on the screen of my season or he could be guy to put me over the top.  We will all have to wait and see.  Many of my colleagues have been saying to sell high as we have all seen players do this before only to crash back down to earth, or worse, to the minors.  I even polled a few fantasy gurus to see what Puig was being traded for and names like Bryce Harper and Giancarlo Stanton were mentioned.  I would jump at the chance to acquire any of those guys, but that is not what is being offered to me at this point.   On the other hand, I am playing the wait and see game.  I am doing the old “I came with nothing and I’ll leave with nothing if God will’s it.”  I just don’t know if I can live with trading him for a marginal player if he goes on to play at even half of what he is currently showing.

 

Yasiel PuigThere is a ton of risk with what I am doing as the Dodgers looked to have a full outfield with Carl Crawford, Matt Kemp, and Andre Ethier when the year began.  Crawford and Kemp are currently on the DL, and Ethier has struggled for most of the season including getting benched before Puig was called up.  I am banking on Puig making it impossible to send him back down with his play on the field.  He was signed to a huge free agent contract so he is not one of these rookies whose service time is an issue and he has been setting records with every base hit.  He is electrifying a fan base that needed to wake up and probably hasn’t been this excited about a player since Fernandomania was running wild 30 years ago.  He also has gone from batting leadoff to batting fourth after only a week.  He has already arguably shown more potential in one week in the big leagues then Ethier has in seven years with the Dodgers.

 

Puig is not the only streaking player who has joined my team recently.  Adam Lind’s current form couldn’t be ignored as he hit over .400 over the last month and is even forcing his way into the lineup against lefties.  When the Blue Jays were forced to give up the DH in National League parks they decided to play Edwin Encarnacion at third base so that they could play Lind at first base to keep his hot bat in the lineup.  I know he probably won’t stay hot for long, but if I can get a productive month out of him then I am ahead of the game.  If there was a timeline for my lineup at first base it would read Gonzalez-Carpenter-Loney-and now Lind.  It might not be as easy as drafting Prince Fielder and trotting him out week after week, but if I end up winning the title it will be that much sweeter with all the hard work I put in.

This article originally was featured at www.FantasyJudgment.com

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