Fantasy Football

2011 Fantasy Baseball Starting & Relief Pitchers Under the Radar

Picture

If you have played fantasy baseball the last 2-3 years we all know who the top 20-40 picks will be in your draft. The smart owners are the ones who can predict who is due to “break out” or come back to form after a season or two of mediocrity. Here is my list off players flying under most mock draft radar screens.

And don’t forget to buy The Fantasy Fix’s 2011 Fantasy Baseball Draft Kit.

STARTING PITCHERS:

Daniel Hudson (Arizona Diamondbacks) He isn’t even listed in the top-50 in many of the so called Experts magazines. This guy was lights out the last six weeks of the season and helped me win two leagues. ERA of 2.45, 84 K and low WHIP. Plus he is the number one starter.


Brian Matusz (Baltimore Orioles) Stud in the last part of the season for the Orioles. If that continues you can get him cheap and reap the rewards (should go in the middle rounds) I like how Showalter is pushing him. Now if the Orioles could get out of the A.L. East he would be top 10-15 potential. Matusz is a lefty with all the tools

Kyle Drabek (Toronto Blue Jays) Watched him pitch against the Binghamton Mets in the Eastern League where he won honors as the Eastern League Pitcher of the Year. Yes its a big step up from AA but the Blue Jays traded Shaun Marcum to make room for Drabek. Watch him in the spring and if he looks good take him as a late round flier.

Chris Young (New York Mets) A down right stud when healthy but there in lies the problem. Young is switching teams going from San Diego and coming to the Big Apple so Im thinking a change of scenery can’t hurt right? Young is worth a late round flier and a healthy year could win you a championship. He is definitely worth the chance.

Jake Peavy (Chicago White Sox) He will go later in drafts because of the injury bug the last few years. A healthy Peavy means top 20-25 potential and that is the definition of a sleeper. Give him a look. 

A.J. Burnett (New York Yankees) Yankee fans do not like him and most of the fantasy world thinks he is a washed up head case so here’s your chance. Great stuff and potential top 25 pitcher with that offense. He will work with a new catcher this year so this could be a subtle factor that may turn him around. Take a chance on him if he is still there in the last seven rounds of your draft.

RELIEF PITCHERS:

Brad Lidge (Philadelphia Phillies) Lidge flies under the radar because of his erratic monthly splits the last two years. To me this is a no brainer–just look at the starters on this team. The Phils will be in many close games which means huge save chances. If Lidge is 75 percent effective you will get 30+ saves..

Joe Nathan (Minnesota Twins) Nathan was once a top-five closer who missed all of last year with an injury. Out of sight, out of mind for some fantasy owners so he will slide in drafts. Watch preseason games and news to see if he is healthy. If so grab him and plug in 35 saves..

Matt Thornton (Chicago White Sox) Somebody has to close for the Chi Sox and Thornton has the numbers. 82K in 60 innings with eight wins. Target him in the late rounds.. 

J.J. Putz (Arizona Diamondbacks) Arizona needs a closer and Putz is their man. A couple injury plagued seasons have hindered his production. Arizona is likely to improve so he is definitely worth a flier in the late rounds.

Chris Perez (Cleveland Indians) Great relief pitcher no one has heard of because he plays for the Tribe (Check out our interview with “Pure Rage Perez”). I added him in several leagues early last year when Kerry Wood went down and reaped the benefits. A slight drop in his BB and some improvement by the Indians makes Perez a top-ten closer SLEEPER!!

Written exclusively for www.thefantasyfix.com by John Marino 


Picture

Tags: The Fantasy Fix, Fantasy Baseball Draft, 2011 Fantasy Baseball, Fantasy Baseball Advice, Team Previews, Fantasy Sports Blog, 2011 Fantasy Baseball Rankings, John Marino, Daniel Hudson, Brian Matusz, Kyle Drabek, Chris Young, Jake Peavy, A.J. Burnett, Brad Lidge, Joe Nathan, Matt Thornton, J.J. Putz, Chris Perez    
Previous post

2011 Fantasy Baseball Draft Kit Sneak Peek: The Closer Report

Next post

2011 Fantasy Baseball Starting & Relief Pitchers Under the Radar