Giants Draft Recap
The Giants have a long history of great players. There are plenty of deadball starting pitchers, so I won’t be taking a stud Christy Mathewson early. I’d love to get ’27 Hornsby but he’ll likely be gone before my turn at pick 5. Guys like Mays, Bonds and Ott have a bunch of great seasons so I won’t be using an early round pick on those players. I’d love to get Frankie Frisch and Dave Bancroft as my middle infield in rounds 3-4. So, what’s left for round 1? I’m most likely to take ’33 or ‘36 Hubbell or maybe even ’18 Fred Toney (in order to pick early in round 2). As usual, I want to get as many A+ range fielders as I can, but I refuse to reach early. It seems good switch-hitters and/or players with A+ range are now being drafted at least two rounds earlier than warranted.
Round 1, Pick 5
1933 Carl Hubbell ($12,114,190)
Stats: 329 ip, 2.01 erc#, .225 oav#, 1.01 whip#, 0.23 hr/9#
I drew pick #5. The top four picks were ’09 Mathewson, ’27 Hornsby, ’04 Bonds and ’08 Mathewson. Without the 500-inning rule, I may have jumped on ‘05 Mathewson, but I can wait and still get a very good deadball SP much later. (Plus ’05 Mathewson is getting killed for me in a different league). It’s tempting to grab a stud Bonds season, but it would kill my draft slot and I can still get a very good Bonds later. It really came down to which Hubbell season to take. 1933 was more $1.4M expensive than 1936 but I love the low HR rate from his 1933 season.
Round 2, pick 9
1918 Fred Toney ($7,383,267)
Stats: 112 ip, 1.36 erc#, .196 oav#, 0.79 whip#, 0.18 hr/9#
Njbigwig took ’36 Hubbell at pick 1.08. As it turns out, the difference in salary meant just one spot in the round 2 draft order. I was hoping to get one of the three stud deadball lower-inning pitchers (’18 Toney, ’16 Schupp, ’19 Nehf). Nehf went first to thejuice6 (pick 2.05). Schupp went to calhoop (pick 2.07). I am picking ninth. I have to wait for njbigwig. Will that one spot in the draft order cost me Toney? I texted NJ to let him know he was up. He said he was 50/50 on which player to take. I’m dying… He finally posts and takes ’03 Jason Schmidt. I quickly posted my Toney pick. Very happy with my first two picks.
Round 3, pick 8
1958 Willie Mays ($9,448,653)
Stats: 721 pa, .347, .419, .572, C+/A+
One of the things that I didn’t expect in this draft was how early guys like Frankie Frisch and Dave Bancroft went. In fact, Frisch’s top three seasons all got selected in the top 20 overall picks. And Bancroft’s best season went at the end of the first round! I mean, I love those guys as much as anybody… but that seems a bit too early. I was hoping to draft those guys in rounds 3-4. Instead, I changed strategies and decided to grab the best Mays, Bonds & Ott seasons that I can over the next few rounds. I love this Mays season, because of both the strong OBP and the fact it’s not HR-dependent (0nly 29 HRs). This is his highest batting average season and his RRFOF > 3.00.
Round 4, pick 8
1998 Barry Bonds ($7,688,517)
Stats: 697 pa, .303, .437, .595, B/C
I was very happy that ’98 Bonds made it to me in round 4. I prefer this season to a couple of seasons that got drafted earlier. This is one of his better fielding seasons and he has nearly 700 PA. Love the OBP. He will be slotted high in the batting order, in front of Mays.
Round 5, pick 9
1929 Mel Ott ($8,301,393)
Stats: 724 pa, .331, .433, .660, C/B
I probably could have made a smarter pick here. Mel Ott has a bunch of great seasons so there was really no reason that I needed to grab his *best* season in round 6, when I could have taken a slightly worse season 3-4 rounds later. But here’s the thing – even though I drafted his best season (based on ops#), I was the fourth person to take a Mel Ott season… so I couldn’t let somebody else take it. I really love how this draft is going so far. I got a stud SP, a stud bullpen piece and and three stud hitters.
Round 6, pick 10
1901 George Davis ($5,145,278)
Stats: 637 pa, .299, .361, .444, C+/B+ (ss), C+/B (3b)
I was planning on taking ’46 Johnny Mize here but chewy sniped me just one pick away! Now, I guess I will wait a while at 1B since there is not much difference at the position. With Mize gone, there really isn’t an obvious pick to make here. I’m not ready to take a deadball SP. I just can’t make myself take a modern RP this early. So, I started looking at middle infield. I like the fact that George Davis plays both SS and 3B and of course, he’s a switch-hitter. I could’ve waited and taken one of Travis Jackson A+ range seasons later, but Jackson doesn’t normalize well plus he bats right-handed. The Davis pick will give me some options later.
Round 7, pick 10
1989 Kevin Mitchell ($7,269,345)
Stats: 640 pa, .300, .396, .644, C+/C+
I’m not a fan of Kevin Mitchell nor did I ever consider him a target. But as I am looking at what’s left, I couldn’t believe a guy with a .644 SLG# was still sitting there in round 7. I already have three OFs, so I guess I’ve got my DH now. My 2-3-4-5 (Bonds, Mays, Ott, Mitchell) is going to crush it.
Round 8, pick 9
1917 Ferdie Schupp ($8,825,481)
Stats: 287 ip, 2.25 erc#, .216 oav#, 1.08 whip#, 0.38 hr/9#
When half the league understands the advantage of waiting on deadball starting pitchers, it gets tricky to figure out exactly when to pull the trigger. Sure, I could wait longer and get a SP of lesser quality, but I’ve been targeting '17 Schupp the minute I drafted Toney. Most deadball pitchers have a relatively high oav#. Schupp’s oav# is a solid .216. And more importantly, with all the Bonds, Otts, McCoveys, Mizes in this league, I wanted a lefty deadball pitcher. Ironically, the next best lefty deadball SP, ’13 Rube Marquard (307 ip, 2.41 erc#), went undrafted. Maybe I should have waited.
Round 9, pick 13
2011 Pablo Sandoval ($4,968,696)
Stats: 466 pa, .320, .362, .547, B+/A-
Unlike footballmm11, I rarely take part-time hitters (non-catchers) in the first ten rounds of the draft. I like guys that can play 162 games so I don’t have to worry about how early to draft their backup. Even though Sandoval has 466 PA, I liked him better than any of the full-time 3B and having 3B/SS George Davis rostered means that my backup for Sandoval can play 3B or SS. I now have two switch-hitters. Woo hoo!
Round 10, pick 12
1978 Ed Halicki ($6,022,859)
Stats: 199 ip, 2.41 erc#, .225 oav#, 1.08 whip#, 0.50 hr/9#
In my spreadsheet, I split the pitchers into four groups … Group 1 (180+ ips), Group 2 (100-179 ips), Group 3 (50-99 ips) and Group 4 (0-49 ips). For the last few rounds, ’78 Halicki was the highest rated non-deadball SP in group 1 and I kept talking myself into taking a hitter over Halicki. But by this round, there wasn’t a hitter I really wanted and it’s still a bit early to take RPs. If I eventually add a third lefty SP, I may go with a 3-man rotation of Hubbell, Schupp and LHSP3, and use Halicki as a long-reliever.
Round 11, pick 11
2020 Jarlin Garcia ($2097215)
Stats: 50 ip, 1.60 erc#, .189 oav#, 1.00 whip#, 0.00 hr/9#
This pitcher (who I’ve never used before) was ranked fifth in group 3 and was the highest LHP in the group. I hate modern pitchers with IP/G < 1.0. He’s got nice numbers though, especially 0.00 hr/9. What could possibly go wrong?
Round 12, pick 10
1923 Dave Bancroft ($4,329,222)
Stats: 544 pa, .292, .383, .393, C-/A+ (ss), D/A+ (2b)
1922 Dave Bancroft went in round 3. I got 1923 Bancroft in round 12. The difference is basically 240 extra PA for the 1922 version. The offense is similar (.793 vs .776 ops#) and the defense is similar (C/A+ for 1922). Sure, 1922 is slightly better, but 9 rounds better? My version can also play 2B. He has a ridiculous 6.39 RRF2B and 6.32 RRFSS. I now have 3B & SS fully covered and only need some extra 2B plate appearances. I have been targeting Ray Durham as a late round pick.
Round 13, pick 10
1927 Bill Terry ($6,628,380)
Stats: 681 pa, .315, .372, .527, B+/A+
So when I missed out on ’46 Johnny Mize, I had my eye on taking one of four first basemen, much later... ’28 Terry, '42 Mize, ’27 Terry and '48 Mize, in that order. I certainly wasn't planning on taking a 1B this round, but with three picks to go before my turn, njbigwig takes ’42 Mize and DarthDurron took ’28 Terry. So I panicked and and grabbed '27 Terry a little earlier than anticipated. ’48 Mize went in round 15, so I could have waited.
Round 14, pick 12
1968 Frank Linzy ($3,214,012)
Stats: 95 ip, 2.17 erc#, .228 oav#, 1.17 whip#, 0.11 hr/9#
For the most part, I’ve ignored pitching in this draft. I have 5 pitchers and 8 hitters. I still need catcher and a backup 2B, but that can wait. It’s time to address the pitching staff. The most boring part of the draft is taking RPs. There were better RPs available, but I wanted a guy with a decent number of innings who also had a low HR rate. There are going to be a ton of HR-hitting teams in this league. Linzy will have to give up 3 hits to get a run off him.
Round 15, pick 10
1973 Don McMahon ($1,153,742)
Stats: 31 ip, 1.52 erc#, .193 oav#, 0.94 whip#, 0.26 hr/9#
He’s probably going to be my closer. Boring pick, but I move up in the draft order.
Round 16, pick 8
1913 Hooks Wiltse ($1,782,293)
Stats: 62 ip, 2.40 erc#, .237 oav#, 1.09 whip#, 0.23 hr/9#
With Schupp and Toney, I have 399 deadball innings, so I could afford another short-inning SP to pitch long relief. I had Wiltse in my team center for 3-4 rounds, before I finally decided to pull the trigger on him. This is my fourth lefty pitcher (2 starters, 2 bullpen guys). There have been very few left-handed deadball pitchers selected in this draft. I expect most to perform well.
Round 17, pick 5
1922 Frank Snyder ($3,792,162)
Stats: 373 pa, .326, .377, .476, C+/D/A
1945 Ernie Lombardi ($3,925,231)
Stats: 445 pa, .306, .385, .501, C+/C+/B-
I moved all the way up to pick #5 as we start the double-pick round. Although I still needed 400+ PAs at 2B, I decided I could wait on that position and instead wanted to lock up the catching position. I preferred ’08 Bresnahan, but 3dayrotation sniped me at pick 17.02. Although they both bat right-handed, these were two of the best hitting catchers available.
Round 18, pick 5
1960 Mike McCormick ($7,460,855)
Stats: 179 ip, 3.04 erc#, .243 oav#, 1.20 whip#, 0.39 hr/9#
2003 Matt Herges ($1,162,629)
Stats: 179 ip, 3.04 erc#, .243 oav#, 1.20 whip#, 0.39 hr/9#
Keeping track of everybody else’s roster is time consuming but it does have its advantages. I can see who still needs what at each position and make decisions based on when I think a player is likely to get drafted. Of course, it doesn’t always work out. I didn’t think anybody needed a 2B, so I waited on ’06 Durham, then DarthDurron took him at pick 17.10. I forgot that Morgan doesn’t have enough PAs to be a full-time player, so it made sense for DD to take Durham. That’s ok, I have another 2B in mind to take this round… ‘98 Kent. Surely, he will make it to me.
Nope. Pedrocerrano sniped him from me ONE spot before my turn! Ouch.
So, time to pivot. I decided to get my third LH SP this round. As I mentioned in the draft thread, McCormick has decent performance review stats and there are teams who still need starting pitching so I didn’t think he’d last another round. Herges was one of the best pitchers left in Group 4.
Round 19, pick 10
2003 Ray Durham ($3,784,412)
Stats: 472 pa, .286, .364, .424, A/C+
1906 Cy Seymour ($2,947,596)
Stats: 314 pa, .330, .470, .420, C+/A
I guess I should have just taken ‘06 Durham with one of my two round 17 picks instead of two catchers. Oh well. This version of Durham isn’t terrible. Seymour gives me a fourth OF who can play defense and isn’t dependent on hitting HRs.
Round 20, pick 9
1908 Mike Donlin ($5,803,354)
Stats: 688 pa, .348, .380, .493, B/D+
1924 George Kelly ($6,927,329)
Stats: 664 pa, .313, .367, .526, B/A
1942 Ace Adams ($2,891,115)
Stats: 94 ip, 2.45 erc#, .230 oav#, 1.16 whip#, 0.13 hr/9#
It would’ve been easy to just draft three <$300K players and play in the AL West, but I wanted to add more flexibility. When Kevin Mitchell (very likely) slumps vs all the right-handed deadball pitchers in negative HR parks, Donlin is the perfect replacement at DH. George Kelly’s stats are very similar to Bill Terry and makes me realize that I didn’t have to draft Terry in round 13 to get a solid hitter at 1B. I may platoon Terry (lefty) and Kelly (righty). I didn’t feel comfortable with only 1468 innings, so Adams gets that total up to 1562.
Ballpark:
Although there are five different ballparks to choose from, all but one have negative HR factors. Since I drafted seven players with 20+ HRs, I chose the only park with zeros for HRs... Candlestick Park. I also drafted pitchers who have extremely low HR rates. I do feel that my team will be one of the top teams in HR differential between my offense and opponent’s offense. Although this isn’t one of my best defensive teams, it’s above average. I have five stud hitters (1B, OFx3, DH) plus an all-switch-hitting infield (2B, 3B, SS). I kind of like this team despite not getting one of my favorites, Frankie Frisch. An all-lefty 3-man rotation with Fred Toney to shut things down in the late innings gives me a lot of optimism.