Athletics Draft Recap
There are a number of decent deadball SPs, so I don't plan on taking one early. Like the Braves draft, I want to get a balanced team while also keeping my draft position high in the early rounds. The #1 pick in this league is probably the most valuable #1 pick of any of the 16 franchises. Chewy drawing #1 in this league and #2 in the Braves draft is the absolute nuts.
Round 1, Pick 4
1913 Frank Baker ($6,697,127)
Unbelievable. I get to pick as high as 4th and I still don’t get to draft 1912 Frank Baker. Bigsteve12 snipes me in round 1 in both drafts (taking ’08 Chipper in the Braves draft). This also happened in the 1907-1919 draft when ’12 Baker went one pick in front of me. 1912 and 1913 are pretty close statistically with ’12 Baker (.345/.402/.559, C+/A+) slightly better than ’13 Baker (.341/.415/.518, D+/A+) in both offense and defense. The $2.7 million salary difference might end up benefiting me in the long run. My other choices with this early pick include ’35 Foxx, ’71 Blue and ’03 Hudson.
Round 2, pick 3
2003 Tim Hudson ($7,899,543)
Taking Baker moves me up to pick #3. There are a number of good deadball pitchers still available so my plan is to wait until everybody else has enough deadball innings where I can wait until very late. Tim Hudson (240 ip, 2.29 erc#, 1.06 whip#, 0.41 hr/9#) was a no-brainer pick for me as he always seems to pitch well for me. I never really considered anybody else, although maybe I should have considered ’31 Grove, who went one pick after I took Hudson. Grove has 68 more innings than Hudson and has a better erc#.
Round 3, pick 4
1931 Al Simmons
Still picking in the top 5. This selection was a key decision point as it would dictate which direction my team would end up going. I made the assumption that all the players I would pass on here would not make it back to me in round 4. The top two SPs I considered were ’81 McCatty (who crushed it in League 8) and ’02 Waddell (easily the best deadball SP left, also has 330 ips). As far as hitters, ’29 Simmons was a better fielder with 79 more PA than ’31 Simmons (but a slightly worse hitter but with more HRs). I really planned on getting a stud Eddie Collins (wanted ‘09) but there are still a bunch of Collins seasons available. And ’34 Foxx has A+ range and is the best available 1B left. This choice was agonizing. I finally decided on ’31 Simmons (.380, .436, .635) due his value not being tied to hitting HRs. Because of this pick, I have decided to play my home games in Municipal Stadium (-4 for HRs).
Round 4, pick 4
1933 Mickey Cochrane ($6,311,496)
All the players I considered last round were taken. McCatty and Waddell went immediately after I took Simmons. ’29, ’27 and ’26 Al Simmons all went (so ’31 Simmons wasn’t making it back to me). ‘09 Collins and ‘11 Collins went at the end of round 3. And ’34 Foxx went at pick 4.01. So, my next choice for a stud Collins season was 1913, although 1910 is enticing due to his A+ range. 1912 Collins is also still available. Then I looked at the wasteland at the catching position. Somehow, ’33 Cochrane (.316/.452/.511) is still available. Missing out on a top catcher meant I’d be playing a guy like Terry Steinbach. No thanks. If I miss out on Eddie Collins, I can live with Max Bishop or Ray Durham late.
Round 5, pick 2
1951 Eddie Joost ($7,523,757)
Sure enough, all the remaining Eddie Collins seasons got picked. Damn. I strongly considered taking ’81 Rickey Henderson for his A+++ range. I have him in League 8 and although his offense is just ok (.259/.340/.363), he has 37 + plays in CF. But ’80 Henderson is nearly as good and is also available. I can wait one more round for my CF. There are basically two SS left worth anything and both are named Eddie Joost. Which version do I take? The 1949 version (.263/.416//455, B/A) has a slightly better OPS# than the 1951 version (.289/.402/.462, A-/A) but I’d rather have the higher AVG and the better fielder. This pick cost me Rickey Henderson as '80 and '81 both went later this round.
Round 6, pick 5
1909 Jack Coombs ($6,077,035)
This was a key pick for me. Unlike the Braves draft, there are a bunch of usable deadball SPs for this franchise. I was going to wait until everybody had their allotted deadball IPs, then grab a mediocre big-inning deadball pitcher in round 20, but then I did some analysis of the top deadball pitchers left, their inning totals and which deadball pitchers others could still legally draft. I determined that the most valuable deadball pitcher available was ’09 Jack Coombs because his 218 innings could be selected by 9 different people (including me). But if I took him, I could then pair him with one of ’09 Plank, ’13 Bender, ’13 Plank and get to early 500 deadball innings. Only the 4 people who haven't drafted a deadball SP yet could take one of these guys. Coombs (2.71 erc#, .225 oav#, 0.08 hr/9#) isn’t a perfect fit for Municipal Stadium but he should do ok vs HR hitters like Foxx, Giambi and McGwire).
Round 7, pick 7
1909 Eddie Plank ($8,573,911)
As I mentioned, there are still 4 teams that haven’t drafted a deadball SP yet. ’09 Plank (281 ip, 2.54 erc#, 1.14 whip#, 0.06 hr/9#) is the highest SP on the board and I wanted to get him before one of those four teams decided he was too good to pass up. And most importantly, he gives my team 499 deadball innings! In retrospect, I probably could have waited a few rounds.
Round 8, pick 11
1941 Sam Chapman ($6,225,072)
I missed out on the good Rickey Henderson seasons, and I needed a CF with A+ range. I don’t think I’ve ever used Sam Chapman before and I was a bit surprised at how good his real-life numbers are (.320/.371/.540, C-/A+). I have no idea if others were looking at him, but he was ranked pretty high among available OFs, so I jumped on him without much thought. At some point, I need to start grabbing some RPs.
Round 9, pick 11
1952 Ferris Fain ($5,392,773)
One of the benefits of playing in a negative HR park is that I can wait on a player like Fain (.333/.437/.438, D+/B). While others are drafting various seasons of Jason Giambi, Jimmie Foxx and Mark McGwire, I can get a lefty bat with an great AVG and OBP in round 9. I would have preferred ’51 Ferris Fain (.344/.444/.471, C+/B) but 3dayrotation drafted him in round 8. So I decided not to risk it and took him. I think ronthegenius was considering taking '52 Fain.
Round 10, pick 11
2002 Ray Durham ($4,993,186)
The A’s franchise has very few draftable switch-hitters. Durham was only the 3rd switch hitter taken at this point in the draft. I was happy to get one of them here. Once I missed out on Eddie Collins, I had my sights set on Durham (.288/.371/.429, C-/A). I thought Durham was a better option than Max Bishop although I could be wrong. Maybe I reached a little early for Durham as ’28 Bishop (.306/.427/.425, B/D+) was still available here (and didn’t get taken until round 17).
Round 11, pick 11
2001 Mark Mulder ($6,327,875)
I usually don’t lock up my fourth SP this early, but I felt that ’01 Mulder was head and shoulders above any of the other post-deadball SP options. Mulder (230 ip, 2.74 erc#, 1.14 whip#, 0.46 hr/9#) gives me two lefty SPs. I feel good about my four starting pitchers. But I still don’t have a reliever yet.
Round 12, pick 12
2010 Andew Bailey ($1,742,903)
Drafting RPs is so boring. I missed out on all the good ones, so we’ll piece together a rag tag bullpen. Bailey (49 ip, 1.77 erc#, 0.97 whip#, 0.43 hr/9#) is maybe the 50th best RP from this franchise… Sadly, he is my RP1 for me.
Round 13, pick 11
1987 Dennis Eckerlsey ($3,787,035)
Another advantage of playing in a park like Municipal Stadium is that some very good RPs with higher HR rates are often available late. ’87 Eckersley (116 ips, 2.21 erc#, 0.98 whip#, 0.61 hr/9#) is the eighth best RP (based on erc#) with innings totals between 100-180.
Round 14, pick 11
2017 Sean Doolittle ($2,086,525)
Doolittle (51 ip, 1.53 erc#, .188 oav#, 0.87 hr/9#, 0.58 hr/.9#) gives me my first lefty out of the pen and is another cheap player to move me up in the draft order.
Round 15, pick 8
2005 Justin Duchscherer ($2,988,798)
Since I took Eddie Plank in round 7, my draft slot has been pick 11+ every round. After taking three straight RPs, I’m now up to pick 8 and my next two picks should move me up even more as we head into the double-pick rounds. Duchscherer (86 ip, 2.11 erc#, .213 oav#, 1.00 whip#, 0.55 hr/9#) is another guy who lasted a bit longer due to a higher HR total. Yes, I know I do have to play road games and I’m sure all these HR-prone RPs will get lit up.
Round 16, pick 7
2012 Brett Anderson ($1,093,084)
Anderson (35 ip, 2.11 erc#, .229 oav#, 1.06 whip#, 0.18 hr/9#) is my second lefty reliever and is one of the only RPs on my roster that doesn’t have a high HR frequency. Never used him before.
Round 17, pick 6
1980 Dwayne Murphy ($6,673,459)
1982 Mike Davis ($1,077,755)
Let me explain what happened with my illegal pick of 1916 Amos Strunk. My starting lineup was nearly complete with Cochrane (C), Fain (1B), Durham (2B), Baker (3B), Joost (SS), Simmons (LF), Chapman (CF). All I need is one more OF and a DH. I’ve had ’16 Strunk, ’47 B.McCosky and ’80 Dw.Murphy in my team center since round 9. I figure I would get one of these guys, so I wasn’t in any hurry to draft one (although I preferred McCosky or Strunk, as Murphy was a bit of a downgrade offensively). Once I saw that McCosky went in round 16, I figured it was finally time to draft Strunk. Although he was marked down in my spreadsheet as taken, I didn’t even look at that. I have a pretty good memory during drafts and I hadn’t even realized that Strunk was taken all the way back in round 6 (he wasn’t on my radar yet, so it didn't register in my memory). Since I got notified of the illegal pick while I was officiating, I quickly pivoted to Dwayne Murphy (.271, .382, .372, A-/A+). He’s not close offensively to Strunk or McCosky, but his 3.40 RRF will be perfect for CF, moving Chapman to LF and giving me two defensive studs in the OF that should create at least 50 + plays. Had I realized Strunk was taken in round 6, I almost certainly would have drafted McCosky a round or two earlier. Mike Davis is a nice .400 lefty hitter (77 PAs) with A+ range that will give ‘31 Simmons (601 PA) a rest now and then.
Round 18, pick 6
1904 Harry Davis ($3,525,033)
1972 Rollie Fingers ($3,318,108)
Harry Davis (.320/.367/.523) is one of these deadball hitters that normalizes very well, with 42 extra base hits in 400 ABs. He will be the right-handed portion of my DH. Ronthegenius tells me that he was considering taking him. There were a bunch of decent Rollie Fingers seasons in this draft, all with 100+ innings with decent IP/G numbers. I knew I could wait since nobody would be in a hurry to grab a Fingers with a high HR rate. I actually penciled in his 1972 season (117 ip, 2.54 erc#, 1.11 whip#, 0.66 hr/9#) awhile ago and was just waiting for the right time to take him.
Round 19, pick 6
2004 Erubiel Durazo ($4,070,261)
1941 Elmer Valo ($972,461)
I had pegged Durazo as my left-handed DH almost from the start of the draft. I’m a bit surprised he lasted this long. His numbers (.317/.391/.496) are solid and not dependent on HRs. Somehow, I now have two .400 hitters to go along with Al Simmons' .390 season. Valo only has 57 PAs but it will be fun when I play a guy with a .417/.456/.577 slash.
Round 20, pick 4
1953 Joe Astroth ($2,892,024)
2024 Tyler Ferguson ($1,568,091)
1937 Bill Cissell ($817,960)
I really didn't much at this point of the draft. With Mickey Cochrane having 582 PA, I didn’t feel the urgency to grab a backup catcher early. Astroth (.296/.363/.403, A+ arm) is another guy I’ve never used, but I can start him against teams that like to steal bases. He's not terrible offensively. I’ve never even heard of Tyler Ferguson before, but I needed a few more innings. Ferguson (51 ip, 2.40 erc#, .189 oav#, 1.14 whip#, 0.50 hr/9#) walks too many (4.3) so will probably pitch in a mop-up role. I was all set to take ’26 Bill Wambsganss here but got delayed in posting my pick. That delay gave bheid408 time to get his pick in (he was skipped due to 2-hour rule) and he took Wambganss. I really didn’t need anything specific here, so I grabbed a backup 2B who is a better fielder than Durham. Bill Cissell (.265/.358/.350, C/A+) is another guy I’ve never used before.
Ballpark:
A mentioned above, I will be playing home games at Municipal Stadium. I do have some HRs on my team, but most of my guys are in the teens with 25 being the most. But my lineup has a very good overall batting average (.320, .406, .491). I also have a very good defense with three A+++ range guys (Chapman, Murphy, Baker), plus Joost is A-/A at SS. My worst fielder is Fain at 1B (D+/B). My starting pitching feels like it's fairly strong, but maybe that’s because I am comparing them to my Braves pitching. 1475 innings, .222 oav, 1.06 whip, 0.45 hr/9. I feel way better about this team than I do my Braves team. Also, both my A’s team and my Braves team get to play in the AL West, so that can only help, right?