Josh Kay
Fantasy Baseball Chat with Josh Kay
Starting at 8:00 eastern tonight (June 11), Josh Kay will be here to answer all your fantasy baseball questions. Start submitting your questions to the queue now!
2013 Fantasy Baseball: Taking a Close Look at Derek Holland
Derek Holland has long been a pitcher that has caught the attention of the fantasy community as a potential breakout candidate. And the 26-year-old lefty has gotten off to quite the hot start this year. In 60 innings so far, Holland has posted a 3.30 xFIP accompanied by a 22%
Jake Arrieta and the “Case of the Empty Bottle of Baltimore Magic Dust”
A sharp eye will reveal a possible sleeper heading into the 2013 MLB Season: Baltimore’s Jake Arrieta. Looking at his peripherals, (8.0 K/9, 3.5 BB/9, 1.1 HR/9, 15% HR/FB, .330 BABIP, and 58% strand rate) it’s easy to cast off Arrieta as another Ricky Nolasco. If someone wanted to make
2013 Fantasy Baseball: You Should Be Concerned About Josh Johnson
When fantasy owners hear the name Josh Johnson, many of them correctly understand the inherent risk/reward potential that he brings. The question heading into the 2013 MLB season is whether fantasy owners have assessed Johnson’s risk factors accurately enough. Personally, I don’t believe we have. In 2008, Josh Johnson pitched
2013 Fantasy Baseball: Joel Hanrahan – Walk This Way
Joel Hanrahan really improved his stock heading into 2012 by putting together a really fine season in 2011. In 2011 he focused on ground balls as he raised his ground ball rate by 10.4% over his 2010 mark of 42%. He sacrificed strikeouts in 2011 for those gains, but he
2013 Fantasy Baseball: Trevor Cahill and the Cutter
A pitcher’s arsenal consists of pitches, and when month to month variance or year to year variance occurs the most natural thing to do is look at individual pitch usage and pitch success or failure instead of analyzing the baseline sabermetric stats. The best tool for this is brooksbaseball.net, which I
The Joe Saunders Signing and What it Means for Fantasy Owners
The Seattle Mariners were in the news twice this past week with two large figure signings of starting pitchers. Felix Hernandez: Signed a seven year- $175 million dollar contract (still pending) which would make him the highest paid pitcher in baseball. This would obviously put an abrupt end to all