Tout Table: Most Influential Rules Change

Mea culpa friends. This was supposed to be posted last week, but hopefully you can still derive some useful tidbits. Oh yeah, some of you are wondering what this is all about. Several times throughout the season, the Touts will be asked a question, with their replies posted in a timely manner (from here on out).

Contributors will be tagged on Twitter if you’d like to follow up (and you’re on Twitter).

The first question of the 2023 season is

Which of the following altered your 2023 draft prep the most: More balanced schedule, shift legislation or likely increase in steals?

Alex Fast (Pitcher List, @AlexFast8): The shift legislation most impacted my 2023 draft prep as, in my opinion, that’s the least nebulous data point. There’s not a lot of concrete data behind what the more balanced schedule will do for teams; we can guess that it will benefit AL East teams or hurt NL Central teams but that’s just a guess. The increase in steals will most certainly lead to a jump in steals but I wonder if that will just balance itself out (or make steals easier to get off the wire). When it comes to the shift legislation though, I can use Baseball Savant to search which pitchers were most impacted by the shift. I can search to see which lefties had the most hits taken away by the shift.

Rick Wolf (SiriusXM, @RickWolf1): The increase in steals is what most affected our prep for the 2023 season. With more steals being spread around, it is less important to focus on that one category as we had in the past. We studied the minor league trends from the changes and then worked to understand the significant differences between minors and majors: age of players, speed of players, catcher play, experience of pitchers, etc. So, when drafting in 2023, age and speed are more important. When two players are close in value, we favor those players who have those specific attributes. In conclusion, adding Age, Speed and Shift to the SMART system gives us the acronym that we should have had all along.

Ariel Cohen (CBS Sports, @ATCNY): The steals. Because to me – it is the largest unknown. The balanced schedule is already very easily factored into projections – it is a simple matter of alterning average ‘away’ ballpark factors based upon the new schedule. The shift ban is somewhat measurable, but more importantly, it affects the fewest number of players. Steals … we aren’t quite sure what will happen, or to whom. Will 40 SB players approach 50 now? Will 10-15 SB players now steal 25? The attempt to answer that question, and how it affects relative values of scoring categories requires the most guesswork, and thus the most prep work.

Phil Hertz (Baseball HQ, @prhz50): The shift change was probably the biggest issue for me, but to be honest I decided not to make too many changes in my draft prep. I doubt anyone can be sure how the changes will affect things and which players will adapt/take advantage better.

Scott Swanay (FantasyBaseballSherpa, @fantasy_sherpa): I’ll go for the shift legislation – I have no idea how much that’s likely to impact the batting average/on-base percentage you’ll need to be competitive in a larger league, and the team scores for those categories tend to be a lot more clustered than stolen bases. With stolen bases, I have no idea whether it’s going to have more of an impact on the more infrequent base stealers, or those who were already among the league leaders. If I had to hazard a guess, I’d pick the latter group, but I wouldn’t make changes to player projections or drafting/auction strategies without knowing more than I do now.

Michael A. Stein (Fantasy Judgment, @FantasyJudgment): The biggest impact is the likely increase in stolen bases because there are so few players that produce significantly in that category. Players who tend to steal should likely attempt more, and other players who are fast are more inclined to run. It is a category that is often sacrificed once the predominant base-stealers are off the board, so this opens the door for GMs to try and be more competitive. The shift legislation will likely increase some players’ batting averages, but I don’t think the difference will be significant enough to affect draft strategy. The reliance on home runs, exit velocity and launch angles will still keep batting averages down for most pull hitters. It will take some time to see whether the pitch clock affects pitchers’ motions and routines to the point where batters gain an advantage by avoiding strikeouts and putting the ball in play more frequently.

Eric Samulski (Rotoballer, @SamskiNYC): The likely increase in steals is the factor that most impacted my draft prep for 2023. A bit reason for that is that we have tangible evidence to go off of when predicting how it will impact fantasy this year. There has been a lot writtern about the impact of the pitch clock, disengagement rules, and bigger bases in the minor leagues. People have done studies not only on how stolen bases overall were impacted but which types of players were most impacted. We can use that information when projecting which MLB players will be impatced the most, so it doesn’t have to be speculative changes. Plus, I believe that the rise of stolen bases across the league would have a drastic impact on the fantasy landscape since more stolen bases across the board (like years) would mean less value for speed-only players, etc. I’m very curious to see how it all plays out

Sara Sanchez (bleedcubbieblue.com, @BCB_Sara): I adjusted my draft strategy most due to what I percieve will be a 20-30% increase in steals that is likely to come from the mid-tier SB guys (10 SB –>15 SB for example). Relatedly, I was more concerned with the power outage from the last two years due to both the changing baseball and the use of humidors at all of the ballparks that created some interesting effects, particularly early in the season. So I found myself drafting home runs in a way that was more akin to how I treated SB in the past. I found it much more difficult to predict the way that the shift rules would impact pitchers and just tended to rely on projection systems there, although I was much more likely to draft pull side power bat with lower batting average. I similarly found it was much easier to rely on projection systems for the purpose of estimating the impact of the balanced schedule, but I do plan to need to adapt there through FAAB pickups and trades as the season progresses.

Dylan White (Baseball America, @the__arrival): Studying how the steals landscape is projected to change within the player pool was for me the biggest element of the three that impacted my draft prep. Will it be a ‘rising tide lifts all boats’ scenario or would only specific ‘bins’ (whether of SB Opportunities or SB success percentages, for example) be expected to change substantively? That being said, the dynamics of every draft often throw all of this out of the window anyway. If my league mates over- or under-draft steals (whether directionally correct or not), I would (should) alter my actual drafting. So, really, the value of the research was in helping me “prepare to prepare” for a variety of different potential draft room dynamics. Prep goes out the window as soon as you’re punched in the face…I believe Mike Tyson said that when describing his 15 team mixed draft.

Doug Anderson (Fantrax, @rotodaddy): I haven’t made any huge changes to my draft preparation but the small tweaks I have made are based on the assumption that there will be more stolen bases. I’m not so sure the top stolen base guys will run all that much more, so instead I’ve bumped up those hitters who previously add 12-15 stolen bases. I think those are the guys who will share the relative benefit most. I don’t think any of us can claim to know exactly how any of these changes will play out.

Mike Gianella (Baseball Prospectus, @MikeGianella): The likely increase in steals, although I didn’t make any earth shattering adjustments. I’ve found that while these rule changes due have significant impacts league wide they frequently don’t change much for individual player valuation.

Greg Jewett (The Athletic, @gjewett9): I think steals likely increasing changed my prep the most. Targeting a stable amount of stolen bases, then adjusting in-season will be a goal, especially when streaming hitters in deeper formats. Building a balanced roster, with reserve players capable of steals may yield dividends for the upcoming season.

Erik Halterman (Rotowire, @erik_halterman): Definitely the new shift rules, though whether that’s a smart strategic adjustment or merely an opportunity for me to double down on my own biases remains to be seen. I already had a strong preference for strikeout pitchers over groundball pitchers, and this year I’m leaning even further away from starters whose most notable strength is their ability to keep the ball down, especially those who pitch in front of shaky infield defenses. I also already loved lefties with strong hit tools, so I was very willing to give them all a boost. I’m not making major adjustments for the others. The schedule changes are real but minor, and while I expect a very noticeable increase in steals, I anticipate those extra swipes will be distributed close enough to proportionately that you shouldn’t need to draft speed very differently than you did in the past.

Patrick Davitt (BaseballHQ, @patrickdavitt): It will take a year to determine the distribution of any SB increase: More for the elite speed guys? Smooth distribution across the spectrum? The balanced schedule might be really important, but again the assessment will probably take a seson to suss completely. So I’m going with the ban on the shift, which seems like it must have tangible and significant effects for GB pitchers, especially RHPs, and for pull GB hitters.

AJ Mass (ESPN, @AJMass): I think the biggest mistake one can make is to assume how much impact these changes will have on any individual player. Sure, the shift should help some LH bats, but not all the same and, quite frankly, some not at all. Sure, the likely increase in steals may devalue some “elite swipers” in relation to the league average, but perhaps not all that much — and it’s not like guys like Daniel Vogelbach are suddenly going to get the green light. Don’t try and overthink it.

Rob Leibowitz (Rotoheaven, @rob_leibowitz): Heading in I did not want to make any major adjustments to my projections or at the very least, not make any drastic popluation shifts based on educated guesses, rather I applied the shift adjustment and stolen base adjustments by hand to specific situations where a particular player’s past and current skills and talents might be most affected the changes.

Michael Govier (FTN Fantasy, @mjgovier): For me it was the balanced schedule because it reduced the opportunities not just for starting pitchers to feast on weak lineups, but for hitters to mash against weak pitching consistenlty. The Cardinals for example can no longer use the Pirates as a punching bag to pad their stats. This year they have been reduced to only 13 match-ups with the Bucs. That reduction in opportunity also means they face teams like the Blue Jays and Angels who will give them a harder time. It’s not a massive change in overall statistical output, but it’s enough for me to adjust the rankings of players who had another week’s worth of games to add to their stat lines against weaker competition.

Frank Ammirante (The GameDayHQ, @FAmmiranteTFJ): The likely increase in steals altered my 2023 draft prep the most because it’s difficult to determine which players will see the biggest uptick in stolen bases resulting from this rule change. There are several questions to consider here. Will the perennial leaders steal more? Will the mid-tier base-runners get the biggest jump? Could it just be a league-wide thing? Will some teams become more aggressive to take advantage? We won’t know the answer until we see the impact come to fruition. The way I approached it was to just project stolen bases to increase throughout the league, but it will be interesting to see how it plays out.

Carlos Marcano (Triple Play Fantasy, @camarcano): I believe that the biggest hurdle we are all having this year relates to all the new rules that affect the base running, let it be the bags sizes, the pick off limitations and even the pitch clock. These are things that, even having the minor leagues history, turns a little unpredictable at MLB level. I had a hard time trying to adapt my SBs projections but ended up with a formula in which I believe that this will not be widespread all around the league but it will help the most those already efficient players. Let’s see if I’m right!

Matt Williams (The Game Day, @MattWi77iams): The most difficult change to prepare for, in my opinion, was stolen bases. Mostly due to the rule change potentially producing the biggest “unknown.” Will teams that already run a lot steal even more? Will teams that did not like to run all of sudden run wild? Will is impact high-end base stealers or mid-level base stealers? So many unknowns.

Dave Adler (BaseballHQ, @daveadler01): As spring training has shown…there will be a lot more stolen bases. But at the end of the year, how will they be distributed? It’s likely that more hitters will steal bases…and that may actually DEVALUE the one-trick speed ponies who do nothing else well. So while the Miles Straws of the world still rack up steals, the lack of power and contact skills makes him worth less. Shift – not as big of an effect as expected, most likely. Defenses can still shift somewhat, as long as the third player is on the dirt and near 2B. And someone will try the left fielder in short right field…and it likely will work.

Mike Podhorzer (Fangraphs, @MikePodhorzer): The change in shift rules. We know which hitters have been hurt by the shift, as we have that data (mostly slow, left-handed pull hitters), so these hitters should benefit most with an increased BABIP, and resulting batting average.

Grey Albright (RazzBall, @razzball): Shift and steals are the obvious answers, so, just to be contrarian, I will say the more balanced schedule, which is also likely impossible to account for. Like the maze in The Shining, I call that a confusing hedge.

Shelly Verougstraete (NBC Sports EDGE Baseball, @ShellyV_643): The bigger bases and the limit of pickoff moves had me moving those mid-tier stolen base guys up my board ever so slightly. That being said, we don’t really know which player tier will actually benefit, so maybe I over/underestimated. Shrug. I think the key to pay attention to your league mates at the draft table. If you feel they are over/under drafting steals (or any category for that matter), take the value!

Doug Dennis (BaseballHQ, @dougdennis41): I did not value anything differently because it would just be rank speculation on my part. I read all the rationales of others and see their points, but I am always nervous about Kentucky windage type adjustments.

Kev Mahserejian (Fox Sports, @RotoSurgeon): The likely increase in steals is what influenced my draft strategy most with shift legislation a close second. My baseline thoughts are that those players who already steal will continue to at a higher (or similar) rate while those that don’t bother will remain effectively nil in that category. With that, we have no way of knowing which players specifically that steal will increase their percentage and to what degree, therefore, my focus on gaining steals earlier is lessened allowing me to take shots on players down in drafts who have even low double-digit yearly attempts.

Rick Graham (Pitcher List, @IAmRickGraham): I think the potential increase in steals has impacted my draft prep the most, as I feel it devalues those players we’d draft only for steals (the Billy Hamiltons of the world). Now I’m not expecting everyones steals to go up this season, but for those that typically steal 8-10 bags a year, I think we may see those numbers get closer to the 15-20 range this season.

Lauren Auerbach (Fantrax, @lkauerbach): It didn’t alter my draft prep a ton, but I definitely paid more attention to shift data this offseason. We don’t know how any of these rule changes will ultimately affect player valuations. But the link between players affected by the shift is more concrete than trying to determine which players will steal more bases (and to what degree) or how impactful a balanced schedule will be.

Jeff Boggis (Fantasy Football Empire, @JeffBoggis): There will be more steal attempts by those that already are know to steal bases, but I don’t see a big increase in these numbers for mid to low base stealers going forward. It would be interesting to see a study of those hitters that benefit from the shift legislation as these hitters should see an increase to their average and on base percentage, but by how much remains the question.

Chris Clegg (Pitcher List, @RotoClegg): The increase in steals is probably what affected my 2023 draft prep the most. Spending a lot of time at Minor League ballparks that have been testing out the new rules, their stands the be a large increase in stolen bases. So far this spring we are seeing an increased amount of stolen base attemps and over a five percent increase of success from last Spring Training. The high stolen bases players are still likely to end the year at the top of the leaderboard, but where we could see a difference is in those players who steal five-to-ten stolen bases. I could see that ranger of players jumping to 15-20. This completley devalues those platers who are only valuable for stolen bases.

Tout Wars FAB Report: Week of April 3

Beginning this week, the winning bids from each of the seven Tout Wars league which acquire players via FAB will be posted following the run which occurs at 8:00 PM ET every Sunday night.

Each league’s standings, rosters and moves are available via the link embedded in the league’s headers.

American League

Player Team Bid
HGaddis, Cle Andy Andres 36
GArias, Cle Doug Dennis 22
RTapia, Bos Patrick Davitt 21
LRaley, TB Doug Dennis 21
JHernandez, Tex Andy Andres 16
TLaStella, Sea Rob Leibowitz 14
KBubic, KC Patrick Davitt 9
RMcKenna, Bal Andy Andres 6
JLamb, LAA Jeff Erickson 5
CFlexen, Sea Andy Andres 3
SZavala, CWS Jason Collette 2
WPeralta, NYY Rick Wolf/Glenn Colton 2
CWong, Bos Eric Samulski 2
CThielbar, Min Jeff Erickson 1
RBlanco, Hou Mike Podhorzer 0
JMcCann, Bal Chris Blessing 0

National League

Player Team Bid
PJohnson, Col Derek Carty 111
HCastro, Col Todd Zola 37
CPache, Phi Ian Kahn 33
SGarrett, Was Grey Albright 27
CKuhl, Was Erik Halterman 11
LGarcia, SD Wilderman/Prior 8
JBarrero, Cin Phil Hertz 8
BJohnson, SF Erik Halterman 6
ABellatti, Phi Wilderman/Prior 3
GSanchez, SF Phil Hertz 2
ATrejo, Col Rick Graham 2
DDahl, SD Derek Carty 1

Mixed Salary Cap

Player Team Bid
PJohnson, Col CJ Kaltenbach 124
MClevinger, CWS Zach Steinhorn 68
TraThompson, LAD Alex Chamberlain 53
KCrawford, Bos Jeff Zimmerman 53
AChafin, Ari Jeff Zimmerman 53
JBrito, NYY Doug Anderson 53
JWiemer, Mil Scott Engel 51
DJimenez, Oak Scott Engel 48
HNeris, Hou Alex Chamberlain 43
JCueto, Mia Garion Thorne 41
BAnderson, Mil Scott Chu 41
GUrshela, LAA Scott Pianowski 39
DHensley, Hou Scott Engel 36
AChapman, KC Alex Chamberlain 23
JBae, Pit Scott Pianowski 22
OArcia, Atl Garion Thorne 18
MGrove, LAD Brent Hershey 15
GCooper, Mia Alex Chamberlain 13
TLarnach, Min Brent Hershey 12
HCastro, Col Jeff Zimmerman 6
DomSmith, Was Justin Mason 5
LCampusano, SD CJ Kaltenbach 2
MManning, Det Justin Mason 1

Mixed Draft

Player Team Bid
PJohnson, Col Tim McLeod 122
TraThompson, LAD D.J. Short 75
MGarver, Tex Ray Murphy 52
AChafin, Ari AJ Mass 50
JBae, Pit Anthony Aniano 47
JWiemer, Mil Scott White 43
GUrshela, LAA Dr, Roto 33
NPivetta, Bos Seth Trachtman 25
TLarnach, Min Adam Ronis 23
RUrias, Bal Anthony Perri 21
MGrove, LAD Seth Trachtman 15
JBrito, NYY Dr, Roto 12
JCandelario, Was Ryan Bloomfield 10
SFujinami, Oak Mike Gianella 9
LRengifo, LAA Rudy Gamble 8
DJameson, Ari Rudy Gamble 7
JCueto, Mia Mike Gianella 6
AFrazier, Bal Dr, Roto 5
CBethancourt, TB Scott White 0
JOviedo, Pit Scott White 0

Head to Head

Player Team Bid
RLopez, CWS Geoff Pontes 75
YKikuchi, Tor Joe Gallina 47
KCrawford, Bos Frank Ammirante 46
DJameson, Ari Frank Ammirante 41
ZPlesac, Cle Ariel Cohen 40
RContreras, Pit Frank Stampfl 27
JDonaldson, NYY Greg Jewett 27
NPivetta, Bos Clay Link 22
JFleming, TB Ariel Cohen 20
ABurleson, StL Frank Ammirante 19
OArcia, Atl Lauren Auerbach 17
MCanha, NYM Clay Link 15
KGibson, Bal Ariel Cohen 15
MOzuna, Atl Frank Ammirante 13
AChafin, Ari Sky Dombroske 11
DomSmith, Was Greg Jewett 3
JOviedo, Pit Ryan Hallam 1

Mixed with IP & Saves+Holds

Player Team Bid
JWiemer, Mil Chris Towers 111
MKepler, Min Alex Fast 101
KHernandez, Bos Alex Fast 101
TMegill, NYM Jennifer Piacenti 101
RLopez, CWS Alex Fast 100
EMontero, Col Andy Behrens 67
TraThompson, LAD Jennifer Piacenti 48
NGorman, StL Chris Clegg 41
SMatz, StL Alex Fast 30
JBrito, NYY Jeff Boggis 27
ZGreinke, KC Chris Towers 23
JSuarez, LAA Brian Entrekin 18
JBae, Pit Chris Towers 17
CCarrasco, NYM Matt Truss 15
BTurang, Mil Dylan White 12
JFlaherty, StL Chris Clegg 8
JSiri, TB Brian Entrekin 8
GMarquez, Col Jeff Boggis 4
SMcGough, Ari Dylan White 2
MMaldonado, Hou Jeff Boggis 2
BRaley, NYM Chris Towers 1
JVotto, Cin Dylan White 0

Your Guide to Tout Wars 2023!

Here’s one-stop for the schedule of drafts and auctions, links to the draft boards, and links to How Did I Do links from the Touts:

3/19: Tout Head to Head (2:30 pm ET) Draft Board
Recap: Ariel Cohen (podcast) | Michael Govier | Greg Jewett | Frank Ammirante | Joe Gallina (podcast)

3/19: Tout NL (9 am ET) Draft Board
Recaps: Peter Kreutzer | Steve Gardner | Phil Hertz/Dave Adler | Grey Albright | Eric Halterman

3/18: Tout Mixed Auction (2:30 pm ET) Draft Board
Recaps: Scott Pianowski | Zach Steinhorn | Alex Chamberlain | Scott Swanay | Scott Engel | Scott Chu (podcast) |

3/18: Tout AL (9 am ET) Draft Board
Recaps: Mike Podhorzer | Jeff Erickson | Jason Collette | Rob Leibowitz |

3/6/23: Tout Mixed 15: Draft Board
Recaps: AJ Mass | Rudy Gamble | DJ Short and Shelly Verougstraete | Scott White | Ryan Bloomfield/Ray Murphy/Brian “Bubba” Entrekin Live Stream | Mike Gianella (need free basic subscription) |

2/28/23: Tout Mixed 12: Draft Board
Recaps: Andy Behrens | Jen Piacenti | Chris Towers | Matt Trussell | Tim McCullough | Sara Sanchez/Alex Fast |

2/21/23: Tout Draft and Hold: Draft Board
Recaps: Michael Stein | Brad Johnson (strategy piece) | Mike Alexander |

Also, follow all the March 18-19 festivities live on SiriusXM Fantasy Sports Radio!

Meet Your 2023 Touts!

This year’s lineups for the seven Tout Wars leagues have been set.

Find out who’s playing where on the Touts 23 page.

Newcomers include Eric Samulski and Andy Andres (AL), Eric Halterman and Rick Graham (NL), Scott Chu, Garion Thome, and Kev Mahserejian (Mixed Auction), Lauren Auerbach, Frank Ammirante, Michael Govier, and Sky Dombroskie (H2H), and Chris Marcano and John Laghezza (Mix Draft 12).

Some Writers Write and Some Podcasters Talk About Their Seasons

Here’s where to find them (and if you wrote one tell me where to find it):

Mixed Auction: Zach Steinhorn | Jeff Zimmerman | Justin Mason |

Mixed Draft 15: Mike Gianella |

Mixed Draft 12: Chris Clegg | Matt Truss |

AL: Mike Podhorzer |

NL: Ian Kahn (podcast w Ariel Cohen) |

H2H: Ariel Cohen (podcast w Ian Kahn) |

Tout Table: Off Season Plans

Welcome to the final Tout Table of the 2022 season. On behalf of all the Touts, thanks for your patronage. Don’t worry, with a regular off season ahead, we’ll be back with content before you know it. In the meantime, we asked:

Aside from work responsibilities, what do you have planned for 2023 draft prep?

Brad Johnson (Patreon/BaseballATeam, @BaseballATeam): Not a thing! My strength as a player/drafter is contrarianism. I see what you all are doing, and then I develop a plan to counter the most popular approaches. Sometime around January, I’ll reengage with draft planning. I’ll mostly write fiction between now and then. It’s actually important that I don’t do anything more than basic player analysis early in the offseason or else I’m apt to get anchored to inefficient plans.

Eric Cross (Fantrax, @EricCross04): I’m going to be doing a lot of reflecting over the next month or two, seeing where my strengths and weaknesses were in 2022 and how I can improve areas of weakness for next season. Also going to be doing more player analysis to try a form a comprehensive plan on deeper sleepers for Best Balls, Draft & Holds, etc.

Ray Murphy (BaseballHQ, @RayHQ): With all the rules changes/strategy implications, I’m going to actively be looking for some places where I can stake out a contrarian opinion. There are a ton of smart people in this industry, but I do feel like there is a bit of a crowd-herding element in play, where a direction gets set and a lot of people follow said direction. As the game continues to change, I’m going to seek some places where I think the crowd is maybe not following the right path, and look to take advantage. (And I wrote this before reading Brad’s response above!)

Ian Kahn (The Athletic, @IanKahn4): In so many ways, the preparation for the draft is my favorite part of playing the game. My plan is to take a week off after the last game of the regular season, and then start to dive in on the players. First look will be at the guys who underperformed. Is it a Josh Donaldson end of the road, or a Garrett Whitlock… get back on that horse. Either way, preparation is everything.

Todd Zola (Mastersball, @toddzola): I’m not at all happy with my finishes over the past few seasons. so I am going to (publicly) dissect my drafts and in-season management as well as the teams winning the leagues in which I didn’t, hopefully narrowing down what I am doing most wrong.

Chris Blessing (Baseball HQ, @C_Blessing): I’m back to the drawing board already. My last two seasons of drafts have featured my worst finishes, outside 1 big keeper finish. My rosters have seemingly been at a disadvantage moving into the first month of the season. My success has been the identification of sleepers outside the Top 250. My weakness has been filling my rosters from the 3rd to 10th round with subpar performers. My goal is to concentrate, sometime in December once my off-season writing work is done, on correcting my drafting failures.

Ariel Cohen (CBS Sports, @ATCNY): The goal in every draft is to find the places/stats/positions etc. that are undervalued. Brad and Ray (may have) called it “contrarian” opinions/approaches above, but simply – it is finding where the value lies. If your entire league pushes up elite closers, you may find 2nd tier closers the more accretive investment, etc. The trick is to study the current market well, do your best predict where the market will be, and then compare that to where you personally value players to seek out pockets of value (I sometimes refer to them as “hotspots”). The first thing I will do is to review what worked in 2022, why, and whether it will continue in 2023. Second, I plan to work on the 2023 ATC Projections which provides the projected future value base. Lastly, is to overlay the projected players values on top of the market view to find the optimal 2023 strategy.

Nick Pollack (Pitcher List, @PitcherList): Reviewing each team’s options and possibly fill-ins for their fifth rotation spots through the year – being aware of all options can make for some sneaky picks late in drafts. On top of that, reviewing video on lesser-known arms and assessing ceiling/floor well – is this guy destined to be a 4.50 ERA arm or was that sub 4.00 ERA real?

Rudy Gamble (Razzball, @RudyGamble): I typically take a 3 month sabbatical / mental break from baseball and start anew in January. I am considering starting earlier to try and take advantage of market inequity in Draft & Hold leagues in November/December. When 2023 hits, I will do my standard draft prep (building projections, determining draft paths) and spend more time trying to identifying the landmines that can sink a draft (looking at you Jose Berrios!)

Seth Trachtman (NBC Sports Edge, @sethroto): I’ve developed a successful schedule of assessing all 30 farm systems, rating every player who made an MLB appearance the previous season, and preparing my projections for 2023 by Christmas. Then it’s time for some NFBC Draft Champions slow drafts to test and adjust my projections and rankings until spring training.

Doug Dennis (BaseballHQ, @dougdennis41): I typically do a post-mortem of my teams and decision making (both draft and every FAAB period) before going to the First Pitch (Arizona Fall League) and try to get some takeaways and thoughts about next season strategy (zig where others zag–when possible, but not too much–I KNOW!) and also try to identify players that I think should have better results the following season for “reasons.” Then I wait for projection systems to do their thing and I compare the umpteen lists from Oct/Nov to those projection systems and make further lists. Then I create some draft paths, do some mocks (both drafts and auctions) and try to adjust as FAs sign and injuries occur and other “things” become known.

Patrick Davitt (BaseballHQ, @patrickdavitt): I write myself a letter about what worked in the season and didn’t, then I put it away with a Google calendar alert to open it up on January, to use when I start figuring out how I want to go in 2023. One thing for sure is going to be digging into minor-league guys this year. It looks like their value is going to go up because of CBA changes and the resulting willingness of teams to promote top performers earlier than they might have in previous seasons.

Greg Jewett (Fantasy Alarm, @gjewett9): Get back into my process, not buying into the mob mentality. My strength lies in in-season moves, so maximizing drafts will help accomplish my goals for next season. As many alluded to already, determining which players in the minors will receive pathways towards playing time, not platoon roles, along with discerning how stolen bases may tick up next season will be necessary. One week off, then back to the grind. Be well everyone.

Ryan Bloomfield (BaseballHQ, @RyanBHQ): It’s sooo tempting to dive right into 2023 prep that we (or judging from the other responses, maybe just I?) forget to look back on what went right/wrong in 2022. I’m guilty of skipping ahead—and perhaps contributing to the Baseball Forecaster every October is a symptom of this—so I’m writing down 5-10 things that I did wrong *with my process* in 2022 before allowing myself to do kind of 2023 player projections. I emphasize process because I’m not sure how valuable it is to dive into each draft picks or FAAB pick-up; it can lead to some unnecessary overreactions. Just focus on the general process and improve that as much as possible.

Justin Mason (Friends with Fantasy Benefits, Fangraphs, Fantasy Alarm, @JustinMasonFWFB): I have already begun my 2023 prep with ranks and working on my draft guide! I also have a new project in the works that I’m not ready to announce quite yet. The Sleeper and the Bust and FWFB will continue to record all year as well! No rest for the wicked!

Derek VanRiper (The Athletic, @DerekVanRiper): I’ve got nothing new on the schedule at the moment, but I have found that I am better prepared for everything later by going through a few more Draft and Hold leagues in November, December and January, so the plan is to add 2-3 more early leagues to continue down that path.

Jeff Zimmerman (Fangraphs, The Process, @jeffwzimmerman): Writing at FanGraphs and updating The Process is more than full-time work.

Lenny Melnick (LennyMelnickFantasySports, @LennyMelnick): Doing DAILY BASEBALL Podcast EVERY Day Until Opening Day!

Scott Engel (Rotoballer, @scotteTheKing): Reading as many player profiles and projections from people I respect, many of them from Tout Wars. Once January hits, it is major prep time for me. I also talk to people inside MLB to see what they may be seeing and hearing

Shelly Verougstraete (Dynasty Guru, @ShellyV_643): I always say that I will take time away but I know my curiosity will get the best of me and I will find some FanGraphs blackhole to fall into. I also like to watch previous season games. I’ll take a starter or two and pick a few starts to watch to get a feel of their game.

Sara Sanchez (bleedcubbieblue.com, @BCB_Sara): Like most people above, I’m going to do a pretty systemic review of my drafts and preseason rankings compared to actual outcomes to see where I hit and missed this season. Sometimes that is luck, or a fluke with injuries, but often times I find useful information I can apply to next season’s draft/prep. The most unpredictable variable for next season that I’m looking at are the rules changes coming down the pike and I’ll be playing around with different ways to take the data we have from the minors there and apply it to MLB. I’m also just really looking forward to attending First Pitch Arizona for the first time and getting my eyes on some of the top prospects in the Arizona Fall League while finally meeting so many of the Touts and other fantasy friends in person.

Bret Sayre (Baseball Prospectus, @BretSayreBP): My plan is usually the same each year. In October, enjoy the postseason and watch baseball completely free of worry (except when I’m watching the Mets, of course). From November to January, I focus on my dynasty leagues and prepping for those offseason drafts, since they generally happen earlier in the cycle. Then, in February, I take that dynasty research and start applying it towards the redraft leagues I’m in. I find that when I work backwards from the long-term to the short-term, I pick up on some smaller things that I might not otherwise.

Howard Bender (Fantasy Alarm, @RotobuzzGuy): Nothing new on the MLB draft prep horizon. What I plan to do is find more coverage for football at Fantasy Alarm so I can actually dedicate more of my time to in-season MLB management. Yeesh!

Rob Leibowitz (Rotoheaven, @rob_leibowitz): Get in the spreadsheet weeds the sooner the better. The closer I am to the play pool, the more confidently I draft. This year embraced higher risk/reward a bit more than usual and I had my successes and failures, so analyze which of those worked out and why and which did not.

Jason Collette (Rotowire, @jasoncollette): Doing Win/Lesson reports across my leagues I have some leagues where I did extremely well offensively and others where I resembled the 1899 Cleveland Spiders despite a budgeted emphasis on hitting in every league this year. The new curveballs of the running game and its impact on both steals as well as pitchers who are notoriously slow to the plate and the overall impact to ratios needs extra attention this winter in working on projections and rankings.

Alan Harrison (The Fantasy Fix, @TheFantasyFix): Enjoying the postseason along with some college football is typically my first course of action. Once the World Series is over, I’ll typically start diving into the pitching data since that’s where I usually like spending the most time. Then I’ll follow by sorting through each category one at a time to learn as much as possible. Rinse and repeat for the hitters and that’s how my ’23 draft prep will start.

Ron Shandler (RonShandler.com, @RonShandler): Wait… what?? Draft prep is different from work responsibilities? You mean, I could have been having FUN? After 37 years, why didn’t anyone tell me that?

Tim Heaney (TheGameDay.com, @TeamHeaney): After being jealous of all my industry friends who’ll be at First Pitch Arizona and grinding through NFL and other work things, I’d like to return to creating my own player projections. Many fine minds in this roundtable are some of the best in the game at that endeavor, and I miss the firsthand knowledge that’s gained by applying formulas and assessing data output. It’s not an activity that one can just jump into, but establishing a process of statistical and game-theory analysis helps drafters set a rational baseline and approach to at least players that stump us.

Zach Steinhorn (CreativeSports2, @zachsteinhorn): I like to take some time off from the daily grind so aside from participating in a couple of mock drafts, I usually don’t start my prep until January. I’ll then begin to read as many articles and listen to as many podcasts as possible to get a general sense of how my industry mates value various players before fully developing my own opinions about those players. The contrarian approach that Brad mentioned can be very effective and I often follow it as well. There’s nothing wrong with agreeing with the consensus opinion but identifying the players who you consider to be undervalued should be your top priority.

Chris Clegg (Fantrax, @RotoClegg): Over the next few weeks I will be breaking down every league I was in and identifying what went right and what went wrong. Looking at the biggest weaknesses and strengths for each team and looking at where I can improve. My Tout Wars showing was far from impressive and I have already identified why the season was a disappointment. After really digging into each team, it will be time to look ahead to 2023 and begin working on player projections and rankings.

Anthony Aniano (Rotoballer, @AAnianoFantasy): One of my focuses will be to try and identify the next in line guy for franchises. Who will be the undrafted player who is called up in May and has an immediate impact on both his team and the fantasy season.