Team Name: Crappy Brooklyn Pitching 13 28 53 82 24
Ballpark: Ebbets Field
Salary: $136,005,973 (2nd, NL East)
Draft Position: 8
Round 1 - 1953
I picked early (3rd) in the Braves draft, late (13th) in the White Sox draft and now I’m picking smack dab in the middle (8th). I will comment my thoughts of the three different draft positions, at the end of this writeup.
I would’ve taken 1941 if I picked 1st as I love Pete Reiser and Dolph Camilli. Of course, 1924 would’ve been my 2nd choice. eblankenstei took 1941 at pick 3 and thejuice6 took 1924 at pick 5. When my turn came up, I was debating between 1953, 1964 and 1918. Why 1918? Because ’18 Burleigh Grimes went 27-14, 3.59 for me in the first Franchise Draft and won the Cy Young award. Also, Group A has very few good options. 1964 seemed like the knee-jerk obvious choice here with two stud SPs (similar to 2015 which went pick #1). But here’s the problem with 1964. They fall into the same group as all those Duke Snider / Roy Campanella teams. Taking 1964 meant I would most likely end up in the bottom half of the league in offense. 1953 would be a no-brainer top 5 pick if I could take five hitters. Heck, I’m pretty sure I could take start different hitters from this team. But alas, I can only take 3. Had I known that some of the other Duke Snider led 1950’s teams would last until round 3 or later, I would have certainly taken 1918 here. With the Dodgers not having a ton of great hitting, I though those 1950’s seasons would be taken much earlier. Anyway, I ended up with Duke Snider (.336, .419, 627, B+/B+), Roy Campanella (.312, .395, .611) and Carl Furillo (.344, .393, .580) as my hitters. It was hard to leave Jackie Robinson (.329, .425, .502) off the roster, but his defense was awful at 2B and I have other reasonable options at 3B (Jackie's best fielding position). What separated 1953 from the other 1950’s seasons is they have a couple of usable (but not great) pitchers. Clem Labine (117 ip, 2.44 erc#) and Bob Milliken (124 ip, 2.69 erc#) will both end up pitching in long relief.
Round 2 - 1928
When pedrocerrano took 1918 at the end of round 1, I immediately regretted my 1953 pick. I won’t get any Koufax/Dyrsdale pitchers from the 1960’s, I missed the few good deadball pitchers and there aren’t many great pitchers from Group B. I don’t think I can survive with my only decent pitchers coming from just Groups D & E. When my turn came up, although I really wanted 2000 (for Kevin Brown and Gary Sheffield), I knew I had to take 1928 in order to secure the best available SP from Group B, Dazzy Vance (297 ip, 2.19 erc#). I also rostered Watty Clark (207 ip, 2.81 erc#), who may start or who may pitch in mop-up duty. As far as offense, Del Bissonette (.320, .396, 543) is a pretty good 1B option. Harvey Hendrick (.318, .397, .478) is a decent left-handed hitting 3B with below-average defense (D/B+). I originally had Babe Herman (.340, .390, .514, D/D+) on the roster but I ended up with too many OF/DH players so Herman was cut and Johnny Gooch (.317, .361, .366) was added as catching depth (Campanella only has 621 PA).
Round 3 – 1913
I was hoping 2000 would get back to me but Jtpsops grabbed them at pick 2.15. When my turn came, I had a very difficult decision. I had one team from each group that I really wanted and assumed I wouldn’t get whichever two I didn’t pick. 2003 was really intriguing since I could add 400 really strong innings with K.Brown, Gagne & Mota. But I also wanted 1999 (w/Kevin Brown). Although I could legally draft both 1999 and 2003, it wouldn’t make sense since only one Kevin Brown could be rostered. So, I decided to draft neither 1999 or 2003 and instead reviewed the remaining Group A seasons. Both 1901 and 1903 had some nice offensive options, but no pitching. 1908 had a decent big-inning deadball SP (Kaiser Wilhelm) but absolutely no offense. Then I came across 1913. I drafted Ed Reulbach (120 ip, 2.10 erc#) in the previous Dodgers draft and he was did a pretty good job for me. Nap Rucker (283 ip, 2.89 erc#) is a barely usable SP but with low HRs. I still needed a starting 2B. George Cutshaw (.267, .315, .385) is poor offensive player but has A+++ range. He has a 6.28 RRF and I’m trying to figure out how in his one performance review season, he had only 4 “plus” plays in 156 games. Zack Wheat (.301, .335, .430, B/A+) will start a few games in CF and come in for defense in the late innings in games he doesn’t start. Red Smith (.296, .358, .441, C/B) will platoon with Hendrick at 3B. Seriously, no way I thought that my Dodgers starting lineup would include guys like Del Bissonette, George Cutshaw and a platoon of Harvey Hendrick/Red Smith. What have I done?
Round 4 – 1982
Jtpsops grabs 2003 at the end of round 3 (I didn’t expect ’03 Gagne to make it back to me). Holding my breath for 2003. Of course, 1999 gets taken exactly one pick in front of me. Damn it, 3day! I should also note that 1954 went with the last pick of round 3. Had I known that season would’ve lasted that long, I certainly wouldn’t have taken 1953 in round 1. Snider, Hodges and Reese… nice pick mllma54! Anyway, my two choices for this pick are 1982 and 2017. Only one team behind me still needs their Group E season. I still need a ton of pitching. I figured if I lose out on 2017, I can pivot to 2006 or 2024 (I still need a SS). 1982 gives me Jerry Reuss (255 ip, 2.56 erc#) and Steve Howe. But wait, if I instead take Fernando Valenzuela (285 ip, 2.73 erc#), I can go with the all-lefty 4-man rotation (using ’28 Vance as a big-inning setup guy). A quick check at the performance review shows Fernando has performed slightly better than Howe. I know it seems insane taking a SP with a 2.73 erc# over a RP with a 2.13 erc#, but I did it. 1982 does have one starting-quality batter, Pedro Guerrero (.304, .378, .536). Bill Russell (.357 obp) will get some PA’s at SS. Steve Sax (.282, .335, .359, C+/A) may get some starts at 2B (especially if Cutshaw is awful). Now, I get to see if njbigwig snipes the Group E season that I wanted.
Round 5 – 2024
Spoiler alert... Of course njbigwig takes 2017... why wouldn’t he? But I had already mentally prepared for this scenario. 2006 would provide me great range at SS with Rafael Furcal, but that season didn’t have much pitching. I decided to boost the offense by grabbing 2024. Shohei Ohtani (.310, .390, .646) could finish in the top 5 in MVP voting. Getting a stud hitter this late to bat in the middle of my already-strong lineup should be fun. The real reason I drafted 2024 was to get a good-hitting shortstop… Mookie Betts (.289, .372, .491, C/B+). This season isn’t one of the better ones for Freddie Freeman (.282, .378, .476, A/B), but he can be a defensive replacement for Bissonette. With all the great Dodger pitching in the 2020’s, this season might be their weakest. Tyler Glasnow (134 ip, 2.03 erc#) will pitch as a long setup guy or maybe as part of a Tandem. He is quite HR-prone though. In fact, most of the pitchers from the 2024 season are HR prone. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (90 ip, 2.65 erc#) is one of the lower-HR pitchers from the 2024 Dodgers. Note that I did not roster Alex Vesia (66 ip, 1.90 erc#) due to his nearly 5 bb/9 and sub 1.0 ip/g. I don’t care what the erc# is, I refuse to acknowledge that this type of pitcher is very useful.
Overall Comment:
Picking in the middle has the advantage of not having to wait very long in between picks, so I did appreciate that nuance. But of course, you don’t get an early pick at one of the best 3-4 seasons and you also don’t get the advantage of a double pick at either end of the draft where I can select two teams that fit nicely together. As a result, the Dodgers seasons that I selected in the first few rounds had multiple options and I kept altering who was making the roster based on what my next selection was.
Bottom line... I don’t like my team. I don’t know how I can compete against teams with Koufax, Drysdate, Kershaw, Brown, Sutton, etc. while I am starting guys like Nap Rucker and Jerry Reuss. I should finish in the top 5 in runs scored, but should also finish dead last in pitching. Feels like 85-90 losses. Oh well. There’s always the next draft to look forward to.