Brian Walton Wins #toutdaily Battle, Loses War!

Walton_Brian_headshot_2x2Brian Walton jumped out to an early lead in last night’s Tout Daily by FanDuel contest behind Cole Hamels’ pitching. Hamels was brilliant, as our Touts expected, except for two solo homers allowed to Troy Tulowitzki. Walton had Tulo, too.

Kolten Wong had a nice night, later, and Walton had him, too. Walton’s biggest problem was that Hamels was facing Chad Bettis, who had a perfect game through six and a no-hitter into the eighth. There was no W for Hamels, but Walton held on to win the night’s contest, finishing just ahead of Al Melchior and Lenny Melnick.

Despite finishing in the Top 10 in three of Phase 2’s four weeks, Walton finished sixth overall for the Phase.

Another team that finished Top 10 in three of the weeks was Lenny Melnick’s. Lenny ended up winning the Phase, with 182.24 points, easily ahead of Lawr Michaels (173.5) and Tom Kessenich (151.91), the other contestants who won tickets to the August 28 Tout Daily championship night.

Kessenich edged Seth Trachtman, who overcame a dismal P2:W1 to scratch to within three-quarters of a point for the third ticket.

For the Phase 2 Week 4 results, click here. For the complete Leaderboard, click here. For more about Tout Daily by FanDuel, click here.

Brian Walton’s winning team.

Screenshot 2015-05-30 09.11.51

May 29 #toutdaily! Who are the Touts picking for tonight’s contest?

We asked the Touts to share their picks for best pitcher and best hitter tonight’s Tout Daily Week 8 contest. You can follow the results here tonight. For more about Tout Daily visit here.

Tonight’s contest rounds out Phase 2 of the five phase contest. The top three finishers in each phase get a ticket to the big August 28 final, with big money and the chance to be the first Tout Wars Daily champ.

The current top 10 are Lawr Michaels, Lenny Melnick, Patrick Mayo, Jake Ciely, Tom Kessenich, Chris Liss, Scott Pianowski (who already has a ticket), Steve Gardner, Seth Trachtman and David Gonos. The leaderboard is here.

Here are this week’s Tout picks. I’ll be updating this as they come in, so check back later if you get a chance.

Steve Moyer says:

Lance McCullers ($5400–Chicago White Sox at Houston Astros) – He’s at the bottom of the starting pitcher salary heap, but Inside Edge says he’s tonight’s seventh-best starter. That’s a mismatch.

Jose Iglesias ($2300–Detroit Tigers at Los Angeles Angels) – Another bargain pick (fresh off the DL, make sure he’s playing), taking these two guys will allow you to fill your lineup with all kinds of studs elsewhere, maybe even Brycie-poo.

Andrea LaMont’s picks:

Anibal Sanchez ($8,200–Detroit Tigers at Los Angeles Angels) has faced current Los Angeles Angels batters 72 times over his career, allowing 17 hits, including two home runs, while walking only two and striking out 17. Although Sanchez has been both great and horrid on the mound this season, he still maintains an impressive K/BB ratio of 3.47, and has gone at least six innings in seven of ten starts so far this season.

Torii Hunter ($3400–Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins) In 2058 total at bats against Left-Handed Pitchers, Hunter has earned a .297 average, with 93 home runs and 327 RBI. So far this season, he is hitting .300 against lefties, with three home runs and 10 RBI. Hunter has hit in each of the last seven games, and should see no problem keeping the streak alive today when he faces LHP Mark Buehrle at home. Hunter bats second in the lineup, behind Brian Dozier, and in front of Trevor Plouffe, who are also hitting the ball well right now. Hunter has earned 23.5 points over his last seven at Fan Duel, and costs $3400.

Ferdinando DiFino likes:

Mike Foltynewicz ($7300–Atlanta Braves at San Francisco Giants) With 14 strikeouts against two walks in his last two starts, Foltynewicz seems to have the early control issues handled. He gets a nice pitcher-friendly park tonight against a team that can be shut down offensively in the right circumstances.

Dustin Pedroia ($3200–Boston Red Sox at Texas Rangers) $3200 for a leadoff hitter with power potential, against a pitcher who is erratic and has bouts of wildness, seems like too good of a bargain to pass up

Jeff Erickson’s picks:

James Shields, ($9,300–Pittsburgh Pirates at San Diego Padres) There are so many good options tonight, but I’ll shave a few bucks with Shields compared to Harvey/Gray/Hamels and still get a home start in Petco with a lot of strikeouts. I’m hoping that he will be less-used because the Pirates have been hot lately. I also considered A contrarian play with Strasburg against my stinky Reds.Chris Davis. ($3,300–Tampa Bay Rays at Baltimore Orioles) I am going with a handful of Twins and Orioles tonight. Davis has three homers the last two days and is still pretty cheap at $3,300.

Brian Walton selects:

Cole Hamels ($9800–Colorado Rockies at Philadelphia Phillies) at home has considerable appeal. After all, he is coming off a strong four-game stretch during which he has posted a 1.23 ERA and logged better than a strikeout per inning. Now, he is facing a Colorado lineup that struggles against left-handed pitching everywhere (.675 OPS). That creates a formula for a good night ahead for the Phillies starter – assuming he is not traded first!

Rajai Davis ($3000–Detroit Tigers at Los Angeles Angels) For my highlight hitter, I will stray off the beaten path. Though the outfielder has drawn the bad side of a platoon with red-hot Anthony Gose this season, the Tigers face their second consecutive lefty in Hector Santiago Friday evening. Given that and his .372 OBP and .898 OPS against left-handed pitching this season, Davis should again be in manager Brad Ausmus’ lineup – and yours, too.

Al Melchior likes:

Cole Hamels ($9800–Colorado Rockies at Philadephia Phillies) Matt Harvey against the Marlins is appealing and Lance McCullers is a great tournament play, but Hamels should be safe and productive for any contest, given the Rockies struggles versus lefties and on the road.

Brandon Belt ($3600 – Atlanta Braves at San Francisco Giants) Braves starter Mike Foltynewicz is allowing a .332 Avg and .239 Iso against lefties. Belt, on the other hand, ranks 12th in wOBA against righties with a .995 OPS. Belt is primed with this matchup to continue his hot streak (last 13 games: .358/.414/.830).

Lenny Melnick picks

Cole Hamels ($9800–Colorado Rockies at Philadelphia Phillies) Colo is No. 1 K team vs LP in MLB

Brian Dozier ($3900–Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins) Has been hitting LP  very well vs Buehrle

Paul Greco takes:

Matt Harvey ($10,700-Miami Marlins at New York Mets) – This is a no brainer to me for today. Harvey is one of the best strikeout pitchers in the game and is facing a lineup that does not particularly hit righties well. Harvey, who pitches better at home, posts a better K% and lower ERA.

Prince Fielder ($4,500-Boston Red Sox at Texas Rangers) – There are not many hitters hotter than Prince Fielder right. Over his last seven days all he’s done is hit five homers, drive in 15 RBI and post a .469 BA. Not to mention the fact he demolishes right-handed pitchers (.397). With Josh Hamilton now back in the Rangers lineup, it’s starting to look a little scary for opposing pitchers.

From the Godfather of Fantasy Sports, Charlie Wiegert

James Shields, ($9,300–Pittsburgh Pirates at San Diego Padres) Interesting this will be the first time “Big Game” has faced the Pirates.  After last night shellacking, the Padres need to rebound .  Shields is a veteran pitcher, so the advantage should be on his side.
Prince Fielder ($4,500-Boston Red Sox at Texas Rangers) At home vs Boston and Steven Wright.  He’s been one of the hottest hitters in the game and hopefully can solve the BoSox rookie knuckleballer, whose road ERA is 4.60, almost 2 runs more than at home.

Jake Ciely likes:

Matt Harvey ($10,700-Miami Marlins at New York Mets) Sure, he’s the most expensive option, but it’s for good reason. The Marlins are highly susceptible to right-handed pitching: 20.4 K% and just 82 wRC+ which falls to just 66 over the last two weeks. Vegas also favors the Mets to win significantly more than any other team tonight. Find a way to squeeze him in.

Joc Pederson ($3500–Los Angeles Dodgers at St. Louis Cardinals) When you go Harvey, you have to find some cheaper bats. While Pederson isn’t that expensive, it doesn’t mean you don’t want him. The Dodgers are facing John Lackey and have the highest wRC+ against righties by far at 130 (Giants next closest at 112). In addition, Pederson has an OPS of 1.012 against righties versus just .671 against lefties and a wRC+ of 175 (just 92 for lefties). Oh, and all 12 of his homers have come off lefties!

Todd Zola rules:

 Cole Hamels ($9800–Colorado Rockies at Philadelphia Phillies) more than a bang-for-the-buck thing, I say he outscores Matt Harvey outright. The Colorado Rockies fan at a 33 percent clip on the road against lefties.
George Springer ($3900–Chicago White Sox at Houston Astros) Carlos Rodon still struggling with control and Springer (now hitting leadoff) not only has the ability to hit a mistake really far he has the patience to draw a walk and the speed to swipe second.

Scott Engel blesses:

Cole Hamels ($9800–Colorado Rockies at Philadelphia Phillies) should be a lock at home against Colorado. He has a 2.25 ERA in front of the “faithful” that still come out to see him this year. The Rockies have a .293 team OBP on the road with a 22.5 percent K rate.
Norichika Aoki ($2900 – Atlanta Braves at San Francisco Giants) will certainly get on base and do some damage if Mike Foltynewicz proves to be wild. Getting on base and not making  outs is important on Fanduel. Aoki as a 398 OBP this year.

Ray Murphy digs:

Rubby de la Rosa ($7300–Arizona Diamondback at Milwaukee Brewers) If you want an underpriced pitching option today, Rubby’s a great one. He has been shredding RHPs this year (.506 OPS allowed), so he matches up well against the RH-heavy Brewers. Adam Lind is the only lefty threat in that Brewers lineup.
Brian Dozier ($3900–Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins) faces Mark Buehrle tonight, a matchup that plays right into his platoon split (.872 OPS vL this year, .859 career). The Twins have been battering LHPs as a team, and Dozier bats leadoff against them, so this matchup also ensures max AB for Dozier.

Scott Swanay likes:

Trevor Bauer ($8600–Cleveland Indians at Seattle Mariners) Unlike last week’s contest, there are no pitchers I’d consider “locks” tonight.  I also thought about Matt Harvey (vs Miami) and Cole Hamels (vs Philadelphia), but neither of their teams’ offenses is as good as Cleveland’s, and neither of their teams’ offenses is facing Taijuan Walker tonight.  So, I’ll go with the slightly less expensive option and hope that he racks up the strikeouts against a team that’s offensively-challenged, even when the MVP-caliber hitting stats of Nelson Cruz are factored in.

Bryce Harper ($6000–Washington Nationals at Cincinnati Reds).  At the risk of being Captain Obvious, there’s no hotter hitter in baseball right now than Harper.  He has a match-up in the Great American Ballpark against Anthony DeSclafani, who started out the season looking like a breakout candidate himself, but has cooled down somewhat.  I generally don’t like allocating such a large chunk of my hitting budget to one player, but if there were ever a time and a player to do that with, Harper in the midst of his current streak is the guy.

Doug Anderson opines:

Cole Hamels ($9800–Colorado Rockies at Philadelphia Phillies) How many days this year are the Phillies going to be favored in a game? That’s what I thought. Use Cole Hamels on the rare chances you can.
Joey Votto ($3200–Washington Nationals at Cincinnati Reds) Which Stephen Strasburg will show up today? Lately it’s been the one who hangs sliders and gets knocked around. Either way, Votto is a great OBP player, and FanDuel is basically set up as an OBP league.

Jeff Boggis picks:

Michael Bolsinger ($6900–Los Angeles Dodgers at St. Louis Cardinals) is starting in all of my daily lineups on Friday night. His low salary allows me to leverage higher salary batters. He has averaged the most fantasy points per game for all pitchers tonight (14.3). He has won 3 games in a row and Los Angeles has a decent matchup at St. Louis vs. John Lackey. He is almost $4,000 less than Matt Harvey ($10,700) who came off his worst outing of his career and may have dead arm.
Josh Donaldson ($4,800–Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins) is my must start hitter on Friday night. I played Donaldson on Tuesday evening and he produced 21 fantasy points. He has 4 home runs in the past 3 games and until he cools off, you have to keep starting him in your daily fantasy lineups. He faces Minnesota starting pitcher Trevor May, who owns a 4.95 ERA.

Paul Sporer chimes:

Francisco Liriano ($9100–Pittsburgh Pirates at San Diego Padres) SD has fallen to 19th in wOBA v. LH (.317) overall because they are 26th in May (.131). Plus they have a 23% K rate v. LH in May (7th-highest). Liriano’s run is built on domination of righties, too, so even though guys like Upton, Norris, and Kemp have been successful v. LH throughout their careers, Liriano has the chops to shut them down. 

Ender Inciarte ($2900–Arizona Diamondback at Milwaukee Brewers) This is a budget play, but a good one for a third OF. Inciarte does his best work v. RH (.716 OPS, compared to .644 v. LH) and Jimmy Nelson has a major platoon split with lefties hitting to a .785 OPS against him with a .197 ISO. Pop isn’t a big piece of Inciarte’s game, but what he does have has a good chance to show up in this matchup. 

Pitcher (Cost–Game) Votes (FanDuel Points)

Lance McCullers ($5400–Chicago White Sox at Houston Astros) 1 (10.33)
Trevor Bauer ($8600–Cleveland Indians at Seattle Mariners) 3 (15)
Anibal Sanchez ($8,200–Detroit Tigers at Los Angeles Angels) 1 (14)
Mike Foltynewicz ($7300–Atlanta Braves at San Francisco Giants) 1 (12.66)
James Shields, ($9,300–Pittsburgh Pirates at San Diego Padres) 3 (10)
Cole Hamels ($9800–Colorado Rockies at Philadelphia Phillies) 6 (15)
Matt Harvey ($10,700-Miami Marlins at New York Mets) 4 (15)
Rubby de la Rosa ($7300–Arizona Diamondback at Milwaukee Brewers) 1 (5)
Michael Bolsinger ($6900–Los Angeles Dodgers at St. Louis Cardinals) 1 (7)
Francisco Liriano ($9100–Pittsburgh Pirates at San Diego Padres) 1 (17)

 

Hitter (Cost–Game) Votes

Jose Iglesias ($2300–Detroit Tigers at Los Angeles Angels) 1 (.5)
Adam Jones ($3,000–Tampa Bay Rays at Baltimore Orioles) 1 (-1)
Torii Hunter ($3400–Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins) 1 (3.25)
Dustin Pedroia ($3200–Boston Red Sox at Texas Rangers) 1 (.25)
Chris Davis ($3,300–Tampa Bay Rays at Baltimore Orioles) 1 (7.75)
Rajai Davis ($3000–Detroit Tigers at Los Angeles Angels) 1 (3.5)
Brandon Belt ($3600 – Atlanta Braves at San Francisco Giants) 1 (.25)
Brian Dozier ($3900–Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins) 2 (2.25)
Prince Fielder ($4,500-Boston Red Sox at Texas Rangers) 3 (1.5)
Joc Pederson ($3500–Los Angeles Dodgers at St. Louis Cardinals) 1 (.25)
George Springer ($3900–Chicago White Sox at Houston Astros) 2 (0)
Bryce Harper ($6000–Washington Nationals at Cincinnati Reds) 1 (1.25)
Brett Lawrie ($2200–New York Yankees at Oakland Athletics) 1 (6.25)
Joey Votto ($3200–Washington Nationals at Cincinnati Reds) 1 (5.25)
Josh Donaldson ($4,800–Toronto Blue Jays at Minnesota Twins) 1 (9.25)
Jose Altuve ($3800–Chicago White Sox at Houston Astros) 1 (3.5)
Ender Inciarte ($2900–Arizona Diamondback at Milwaukee Brewers) 1 (8.5)

Who is winning Tout X on May 27th?

Tout X comprises six monthly fantasy contests played at Shandler Park. The player who scores the most points in the six contests wins the title.

Today, in the middle of the final week in the second month, Jeff Boggis has a slim lead over Patrick Mayo, Bret Sayre and Michael Beller.

Boggis’s big contributors with the bat have been Bryce Harper, Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Josh Donaldson. On the pitching side he’s got Jordan Zimmermann, Sonny Gray, and Gerrit Cole.

For rosters and full standings for the second month, click here.

Tout X teams are picking new squads this weekend, for the third month’s contest.

The contest leaders at this point are Bret Sayre (108 pts), Jeff Boggis (105.5 pts) and Andrea LaMont (102 pts).

Todd Zola Wins #toutchallenge Week 2 Outright! Well, ties outright.

Rotoman was in first place when his final player finished his night, and all the #toutchallenge players on the leaderboard were similarly done, having pitched Jacob DeGrom and rostered Josh Donaldson at third base. But a scroll down the standings found a group of teams in the middle of the pack, for whom Clayton Kershaw was just getting going. Leading among them was Todd Zola. Rotoman knew that if Kershaw put up 18 points he would be passed.

Kershaw finished the night with a glittery 21 points.

So did Josh Donaldson.

Kershaw and Donaldson were on the week’s top three finishers, including papermakergetit (who tied with Zola on the night, at 70) and sigpipinto, who finished a point behind.

Other big scorers for Zola were Lucas Duda, Neil Walker and Ryan Raburn. The other big scorers for papermakergetit were Jose Abreu and Jimmy Paredes.

Todd Zola's winning team.
Todd Zola’s winning team.

Touts In The Money

Todd Zola
Peter Kreutzer
Ray Murphy
Jeff Erickson
Paul Greco
Adam Ronis
David Gonos
Steve Gardner
Lenny Melnick
Steve Moyer
Doug Anderson

See all the results here.

Play Against the Touts Tonight in the #ToutChallenge!

$2 gets you in the door at FanDuel in a game of 160, that pays $4 for each entry in the top 72. It’s a great way to try out daily fantasy baseball, with a decent chance to win a little.

Follow the link to sign up! http://fanduel.com/tout-challenge And play against Adam Ronis, Al Melchior, Gene McCaffrey, Jake Ciely, Todd Zola, Lawr Michaels and others in tonight’s challenge!

May 25 FAAB Reports!

Todd Zola and the crew at Mastersball list the bids and write about them every week, and this week, too.

Jeff Erickson surveys the leagues he plays in FAAB results, which included Tout NL.

Mike Gianella’s BP FAAB round up is now posted at http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=26451.

Lenny Melnick Takes #toutdaily Week 7 Contest!

37e634e279aa14700c98b217ff8c5a29_400x400When the dust cleared it was Lenny Melnick atop the heap in the Tout Daily by Fanduel, Phase 2 Week 3 contest, well ahead of Lawr Michaels. Michaels, however, remains the leader in Phase 2, with one week remaining. The top 3 teams in each Phase earn a ticket to the August 28 Championship week, in which $2,000 of prizes will go to the top 5 finishers.

Melnick, of course, had the week’s top pitcher, Gerrit Cole, as well as Kendrys Morales’s (owned by 2.4 percent of teams) surprisingly huge week (15.75 points). He also had Evan Longoria and AJ Pollock, which was enough to give him a nine point win.

Michaels also had Longoria, as well as the week’s second most favorited pitcher, Max Scherzer, and solid contributions from Logan Morrison and Steve Souza, plus across the board goodness. Only Brad Miller failed to contribute to his team.

Here’s the contest leaderboard, sorted by the Phase 2 leaders.

Here’s the winning squad:

Screenshot 2015-05-23 07.19.52

Friday’s #toutdaily. Who are the touts picking for tonight’s contest?

We asked the Touts to share their picks for best pitcher and best hitter tonight’s Tout Daily Week 7 contest. You can follow the results here tonight. For more about Tout Daily visit here.

Todd Zola says:

Pitcher: Gerrit Cole ($9,400–New York Mets at Pittsburgh Pirates) – Love Scherzer today but the Phils don’t strike out that much so in a tourney, I’ll save the bucks and take a guy at home, in an extreme pitcher’s park facing a team that fans at an above average rate.

Hitter: Anthony Rizzo ($4,400–Chicago Cubs at Arizona Diamondbacks) – Batting 3rd on the road should give Rizzo five cracks in a park that boosts lefty power by 16 percent with at least a couple chances against Josh Collmenter who’s surrendered six homers over his last three starts.

Scott Swanay’s suggestions:

Pitcher: Max Scherzer ($11,700–Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals).  It’s tempting to go with a cheaper alternative, such as Noah Syndergaard at $7,700, but in this case the opposing pitcher was the tiebreaker for me (Scherzer vs. Sean O’Sullivan; Syndergaard vs. Gerrit Cole).  In a tournament-style game like this, where only the top 25% or so finishers win money, it’s imperative to have your pitcher get a Win.  Other alternatives considered were Ubaldo Jimenez ($7,200) @ Mia, Rick Porcello ($7,900) vs. LAA, and Alex Wood ($7,700) vs. Mil.  In all cases I was looking for opponents w/ low team batting averages who don’t score many runs or hit many home runs.

Hitter: Nolan Arenado ($3,900–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies).  He has 7 homers in 137 at-bats, he’s playing at home at Coors Field, and he’s facing an opposing pitcher (Ryan Vogelsong) who’s given up 9 home runs in just 39 innings.  I’m in.

Rotoman’s Picks:

Pitcher: Ubaldo Jimenez ($7,200–Baltimore Orioles at Miami Marlins) Scherzer is tempting, but the price difference makes Jimenez irresistible. Riskier, too, but a full Anthony Rizzo cheaper despite pitching in a good ball park against a weak hitting team featuring a pitcher who is still working out the kinks.

Hitter: Mike Trout ($5,200–Los Angeles Angels at Boston Red Sox) The wind is blowing out in Boston, and Rick Porcello doesn’t have the stuff to contain Trout.

Jeff Erickson’s Picks:

Pitcher:Gerrit Cole ($9,400–New York Mets at Pittsburgh Pirates) – If you don’t want to pay the price on Max Scherzer (and it may be a good idea to do so, given the home matchup against the Phillies, with Sean O’Sullivan as the opposing pitcher, and with the Phillies coming directly from Coors Field), look at Cole. The Mets have all sorts of troubles against RH starters, and you might get the benefit of Cole being lesser-owned, given how many other good SPs are going Friday, including Cole’s opposite-number Noah Syndergaard.

Batter: Jimmy Paredes ($3,300–Baltimore Orioles at Miami Marlins) – I’m going back to the well on Paredes. Did you know that only five batters are averaging more fantasy points per game on FanDuel than Paredes (Harper, Goldschmidt, Cruz, Adrian Gonzalez and Rizzo)? At $3,300 against Henderson Alvarez, it’s worth going with him again Friday.

Honorable mention to the San Francisco Brandon’s, who get Kyle Kendrick in Coors Field. Only the weather worries me.

Doug Anderson’s Recommendations:

Pitcher: Max Scherzer ($11,700–Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals)- I hate using up so much salary on one player, but this is about as good a matchup as you could imagine. He pitches at home against baseball’s worst offense and is opposed by a mediocre minor league pitcher. I’ll see what kind of lineup I can put around him, but Scherzer is in line for a great day. Sometimes the obvious answer is the right answer.

Hitter: Brandon Belt ($3,900–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies and Kyle Kendrick (RHP) – Belt has not gotten the power going, but everything else is pointing up. Belt is hitting .358 in May and .347 with all of his homers against right-handed hitters. Add in Kyle Kendrick and Coors Field and you have the makings of a big day.

Jeff Boggis’s Picks (for Fantasy Baseball Empire)

Pitcher: Max Scherzer ($11,700–Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals) I’m always trying to come up with optimal lineups through various daily strategies. Over the previous weeks, the days when I finished in the money was when I had my pitcher have an outstanding outing, regardless of the points generated from my hitters. So I don’t want to skimp today on starting pitching, regardless of salary. For my team, I’m going with Scherzer tonight at $11,700 against Philadelphia. I like to use 2 weeks of pitching stats to analyze pitchers and to avoid a 7 day analysis due to 2 starts for some pitchers. Over the past 2 weeks, Scherzer has 14 innings pitched, 2 wins, 17 strikeouts, an ERA of 0.64 and a WHIP of 0.86. He is at home tonight and faces a Phillies team that ranks last in slugging percentage (.355) and home runs (24) on the season. Scherzer has averaged 17.5 fantasy points over his past 4 starts and has 2 outings this season with 20+ fantasy points. If you want to save a few dollars, I’d also recommend Tampa Bay’s Chris Archer at $9,100. He faces the Oakland A’s at home, but has a tough matchup as he faces Oakland’s Scott Kazmir. Archer has not been able to put it all together for a single outing for fantasy owners this season. He’s pitched well in his last 2 starts, but his run support and strikeouts have been inconsistent. I’d like to see Archer go at least 7 innings tonight as he has pitched 7 innings in 4 out of his 9 outings this season.

Hitter: Hunter Pence ($3,300–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies). When a quality hitter can be rostered at a bargain price, I have to add this team to my starting lineup. Hunter Pence is being priced as he returns from the DL.  I am getting a quality hitter at a DL price. Pence has multiple hit games in 3 of the 5 games since his return from the DL. He has a favorable matchup tonight against Kyle Kendrick and is playing tonight in the hitter’s park of Colorado.

David Gonos:

Hitter: Danny Espinosa ($2,900–Baltimore Orioles at Miami Marlins) Thirteen second basemen are priced higher than Espinosa tonight, and the switch-hitter’s power comes against RHP. He faces Philly’s RHP Sean O’Sullivan (9.64 ERA vs. LH hitters, with 3 HRA in just 4.2 IP).

From the Godfather of Fantasy Sports, Charlie Wiegert

Pitcher: Zack Greinke ($9,900–San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers).  It’s all about the strike outs and innings pitched, and when Greinke pitches against San Diego, there is a good chance you’ll get lots of both, and perhaps a win.  Zack is 5-0 with a 1.58 ERA in 9 starts against the Padres, and only given up 1 run is 13 innings against them this year.  And in that San Diego has the 4th most strike outs in MLB, it makes it worth the price to make him a good play tonight.

Hitter: Nolan Arenado ($3,900–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies).  This game should be a slug fest with Vogelsong or Kendrick having a combined ERA over 12.  Nolan has two dingers vs Vogelsong and comes in with a day of rest yesterday.  He’s been in a rut lately with only 1 hit in his last 15 AB’s, which has caused his salary to drop.  Vogelsong should be just what he needs to break out of the mini-slump!

Brian Walton Touts Hitting:

Hitters: Brandon Belt ($3,900–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) and Charlie Blackmon ($3,800–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) For Friday night offense, Coors is the place to be, especially with Kyle Kendrick opposing Ryan Vogelsong. On the Giants’ side, I will go with a player I own in NL Tout Wars, first baseman Brandon Belt, at $3900. Kendrick has been bad everywhere this season, but worse at home and worse against left-handed hitters. Enter Belt, who has a 1.018 OPS in 24 career games at Coors.

In an equal-opportunity view, I am backing Charlie Blackmon against Vogelsong. This season, the Giants’ starter’s splits between left- and right-handed hitters (1.143 vs. .649 OPS) are about as extreme as one could have. The lefty-swinging Blackmon has performed well against right-handed pitchers in 2015 (.317/.375/.505/.880).

Steve Moyer’s Inside Edge:

Pitcher:

Carlos Carrasco ($8,700–Cincinnati Reds at Cleveland Indians) Only Scherzer and Felix rate a higher IE matchup score and Carrasco is way cheaper.
Hitter: Justin Maxwell ($3,000–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies)  Gotta make sure he’s in the lineup and it doesn’t rain, but he’s a top Inside Edge matchup score at a bargain-basement price.

Lenny Melnick’s Picks:

Pitcher: Gerrit Cole ($9,400–New York Mets at Pittsburgh Pirates) My Pitcher tonite.  Ks and wins are the name of the game at Fanduel  Mets can be beaten away from Home and with erratic bats, the Ks will come as well. No need to spend the extra bucks on bigger names.

Hitter: Hunter Pence ($3,300–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) Has made a nice return from injury and will light it up at Coors. Good Value.

Paul Sporer’s Selections:

Pitcher: Gerrit Cole ($9,400–New York Mets at Pittsburgh Pirates) Cole’s making his ace transformation before our eyes. He hasn’t allowed more than 3 ER in a single outing, he’s fanned 6+ in seven of eight starts, and the NYM offense has regressed from their early “decent” start w/a .615 OPS v. righties this month (second-worst in MLB).

Hitter: Bryce Harper ($6,000–Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals) Versus Scott O’Sullivan: Lefties have owned SOS forever and Harper is owning everyone right now. It’s a bit of an easy pick, but easy doesn’t make it wrong! 

The Pickboard

Pitcher (Cost–Game) Votes (FanDuel Points)

Gerrit Cole ($9,400–New York Mets at Pittsburgh Pirates) 7 (22.33)
Max Scherzer ($11,700–Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals) 6 (17)
Zack Greinke ($9,900–San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers) 3 (11.66)
Ubaldo Jimenez ($7,200–Baltimore Orioles at Miami Marlins) 2 (5)
Carlos Carrasco ($8,700–Cincinnati Reds at Cleveland Indians) 1 (15)

Hitter (Cost–Game) Votes

Brandon Belt ($3,900–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies and Kyle Kendrick (RHP) 3 (10.5)
Nolan Arenado ($3,900–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) 2 (-1)
Hunter Pence ($3,300–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) 2 (4.25)
Nick Hundley ($3,000–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) 1 (2.25)
Carlos Gonzalez ($3,300–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) 1 (2.25)
Charlie Blackmon ($3,800–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) 1 (2.25)
Justin Maxwell ($3,000–San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies) 1 (dnp)
Anthony Rizzo ($4,400–Chicago Cubs at Arizona Diamondbacks) 1 (.75)
A.J. Pollock ($4,000–Chicago Cubs at Arizona Diamondbacks) 1 (10.5)
Bryce Harper ($6,000–Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals) 1 (6.75)
Ryan Zimmerman ($3,300–Philadelphia Phillies at Washington Nationals) 1 (.5)
Mike Trout ($5,200–Los Angeles Angels at Boston Red Sox) 1 (6.25)
Jimmy Paredes ($3,300–Baltimore Orioles at Miami Marlins) 1 (3.5)
Danny Espinosa ($2,900–Baltimore Orioles at Miami Marlins) 1 (-.75)
Kyle Seager ($2.900–Seattle Mariners at Toronto Blue Jays) 2 (2.5)
Evan Longoria ($3,200–Oakland Athletics at Tampa Bay Rays) 1 (11.75)

The Only Problem With Colorado Tonight

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