Tout Wars Mixed Draft Live Chat!

The Tout Wars Mixed Draft was held the evening of March 11th. Particpants battled in a CBSsports draft room for three hours, making more than 400 picks. 

You’ll find two different versions of the draft on a spreadsheet here. One is in pick order, the other in team order.

Thanks to Ryan Carey for tracking on the spreadsheet.

There was a live chat of the event, but a software error seems to have broken that. We’re looking for a way to restore it.

Thanks to all the Touts for high spirits and hungry hearts.

READY, SET, ALMOST GO! Tout Wars Mixed Draft is almost here!

The second annual Tout Wars Mixed Draft will be held Tuesday, March 11 at 7pm ET.

There are three newcomers in this year’s roster: Welcome Adam Ronis, Ray Murphy and Paul Sporer. Plus Nick Minnix moves over from the TW Mixed Auction.

Last year’s champ, Mike Podhorzer, has moved to the TW NL Live Auction, so it’s a wide open field. Last year’s second place finisher, Tom Kessenich, has this year’s first pick.

Join us here for a LIVE CHAT during the draft, and live DRAFT TRACKING of the results.

Find a complete roster of managers here.

Hypothetically Speaking 2013: Tout Wars Mixed Auction

On draft day 2013, Paul Singman bought the best team in Tout Wars Mixed Auction. If the league played by Draft and Hold rules, Singman would have won by 18 points over David Gonos.

Paul bought 54 hitting points, third best in the league.

Screenshot 2014-02-24 15.06.14

 

And he bought the best pitching staff, trailed by just a few points by eventual champion Fred Zinkie, who bought an overwhelming number of saves.

Screenshot 2014-02-24 15.15.31

Based on the draft day rosters, Singman won going away. But that isn’t what happened.

Screenshot 2014-02-24 15.16.52By the hypothetical measures Singman had a great auction, followed by a terrible season. His moves during the year, as well as the moves of those he was playing against, hurt his team badly, to the tune of -52 points!

I asked Paul what went wrong and he wrote back:

“- I drafted Julio Teheran, and then made a bone-headed decision to drop him after about five starts when his ERA was in the 5.00s. He was pretty good after that.

– Danny Espinosa and Mike Moustakas were big disappointments, and I had them in my starting lineup for longer than other struggling players. (Ed. note: Since he drafted them this wouldn’t hurt his hypotheticals unless they performed better after he dropped them.)

– I started Justin Grimm and Erasmo Ramirez, and probably streamed a couple other pitchers that got lit up in a couple starts.

– Had part-time players like Andy Dirks and Jarrod Dyson in my lineup later in the season, which hurt counting stats some.

– Lastly, it didn’t help that Jayson Werth and AJ Burnett had tremendous finishes to the season, after I traded them.”

My hunch, without delving into this deeper, is that the Werth and Burnett trades hurt him a lot, especially since he got back Gio Gonzalez, who had a mediocre second half. Of course, dropping Teheran was a loss, too, a decision that seemed totally reasonable at the time, but hurt big in retrospect.

What also hurt his team was dealing waiver-wire pickup Yasiel Puig, but that didn’t influence his draft-day lineup. The bottom line is that when confronted with a series of decisions, many of which don’t have obvious answers, it’s possible to make a lot of good decisions (call that a hot streak) or a lot of bad ones (certainly a losing streak). Usually we make some of each and end up like most teams, not much helping or hurting our teams after the auction. (This chart shows how many points each team had on Draft Day, at Season’s End, and what the change was.)

Screenshot 2014-02-24 22.44.39He was also hurt because teams like Eric Mack’s made spectacular buys, like Koji Uehara, that transformed the saves category. Of course Eric did a lot of other things right, as well, and gained 32 points, to climb from 14th place to fifth.

The main point is that, while the auction/draft is the most important day of the year, plenty that happens afterwards affects the final standings. Thus did Fred Zinkie move from third to first, turning a surfeit of saves into winning wheels. His and Eric’s happy tales are the counter to Paul Singman’s nightmare.

Tout Wars NL: 2014 Owners Lineup

Competing in Tout Wars NL Auction in 2014

In order of reserve round pick (available FAAB in parenthesis)
* new to league this year

Tristan Cockcroft (100)
Mike Gianella (100)
Todd Zola (100)
Gene McCaffrey (100)*
Steve Gardner (100)
Seth Trachtman (100)*
Brian Walton (100)
Phil Hertz (100)
Peter Kreutzer (100)
Lenny Melnick (97)
Scott Wilderman (93)
Derek Carty (89)

Tout Wars NL Auction will be held on March 22 at 9am in NY, and broadcast on SiriusXM.

Tout Wars AL: 2014 Owners Lineup

Competing in Tout Wars AL Auction in 2014

In order of reserve round pick (available FAAB in parenthesis)
* new to league this year

Larry Schechter (100)
Mike Podhorzer (100)*
Joe Sheehan (100)
Jeff Erickson (100)
Rick Wolf/Glenn Colton (100)
Lawr Michaels (100)
Andy Behrens (97)
Jason Collette (95)
Rob Leibowitz (91)
Steve Moyer (90)
Ron Shandler (90)
Chris Liss (89)*

Tout Wars AL Auction will take place March 23rd in NYC at 10am ET.

Tout Wars Mixed Auction: The 2014 Owners Lineup

Competing in Tout Wars Mixed Auction in 2014

In order of reserve round pick (available FAAB in parenthesis)
* new to league this year

Fred Zinkie (100)
David Gonos (100)
Scott Swanay (100)
Eric Mack (100)
Tim Heaney (100)
Patrick Davitt (100)
Scott Pianowski (100)*
Ray Guilfoyle (100)*
Nando DiFino (100)
Al Melchior (99)
Zach Steinhorn (94)
Paul Singman (93)
Derek Van Riper (89)
Cory Schwartz (83)
Ray Flowers (76)

Tout Wars Mixed Auction will be held March 22 at 3pm ET in New York City, broadcast live on SiriusXM.

Tout Wars Mixed Draft: The 2014 Owners Lineup

Competing in Tout Wars Mixed Draft in 2014

In order of reserve round pick (available FAAB in parenthesis)
* new to league this year

UPDATE: Corrected order and FAAB totals 1/20 at 4pm ET.

Draft order was selected by owners in the order of last year’s finish.

Tom Kessenich (100)
Perry Van Hook (100)
Eno Sarris (100)
Greg Ambrosius (100)
Tim McLeod (100)
Paul Greco (98)
Nick Minnix (95)*
Grey Albright (82)
Scott Engel (81)
Anthony Perri (72)
Ray Murphy (100)*
Adam Ronis (100)*
Charlie Wiegert (93)
Paul Sporer (100)*
Brent Hershey (84)

The draft will be held at 7pm ET on March 11, 2014. Join the LIVE CHAT and DRAFT TRACKING here.

 

OBP versus BA: What does it mean?

Of the 633 players who had at bats last year (not counting pitchers):

Five earned $10 or more under OBP rules than Batting Average.

33 earned $5 or more under OBP rules than BA.

On the negative side, 28 lost $5 or more under OBP rules than BA.

Clearly, values are going to shift, especially for the hitters with especially high and low walk rates, but they will also much better reflect a hitter’s very real baseball skills. That is, his ability to take a walk is a reason hitters like Dan Uggla and Josh Willingham received as many at bats last year as they did. By getting on base a fair amount, they continued to have value even when they weren’t hitting very successfully. It is this aspect of the game that makes OBP a more valuable category than BA.

For the complete list in a spreadsheet visit RotomansGuide.com.