Collette Calls: NL LABR Review

Collette Calls: NL LABR Review

This article is part of our Collette Calls series.

This should be the final column on NL LABR by the RotoWire staff this week. Derek VanRiper wrote his own recapping his team and how he put it together, and Todd Zola interviewed himself about the NL LABR auction. If you have not yet read either, do so before reading this one.

Since last week's AL LABR recap was so popular, I'm going to go ahead and break down the NL one in a similar fashion with a few extra wrinkles. The draft dynamics part of last week's piece still applies here, but it is a little more extreme in the NL for a couple of reasons. First off – there is the Doug Dennis factor. I don't believe Dennis has ever spent double digits on any pitcher in the history of this draft, and a 230/30 split is the norm there so that impacts how hitters will go. Derek Carty is essentially assured of owning Clayton Kershaw, and the entire room knows it. It comes down to a game of chicken and on one of the recent DVR/Zola podcasts, DVR talked about pushing Kershaw to $44 to make Carty pay $45. DVR did push Kershaw up from the initial bid of $40, but stopped at $43 and Carty said he went as high as he would have gone at $44. True to form, Dennis spent the fewest percentage of his dollars on pitching while Carty's acquisition of Kershaw essentially assured him of being on the high end of

This should be the final column on NL LABR by the RotoWire staff this week. Derek VanRiper wrote his own recapping his team and how he put it together, and Todd Zola interviewed himself about the NL LABR auction. If you have not yet read either, do so before reading this one.

Since last week's AL LABR recap was so popular, I'm going to go ahead and break down the NL one in a similar fashion with a few extra wrinkles. The draft dynamics part of last week's piece still applies here, but it is a little more extreme in the NL for a couple of reasons. First off – there is the Doug Dennis factor. I don't believe Dennis has ever spent double digits on any pitcher in the history of this draft, and a 230/30 split is the norm there so that impacts how hitters will go. Derek Carty is essentially assured of owning Clayton Kershaw, and the entire room knows it. It comes down to a game of chicken and on one of the recent DVR/Zola podcasts, DVR talked about pushing Kershaw to $44 to make Carty pay $45. DVR did push Kershaw up from the initial bid of $40, but stopped at $43 and Carty said he went as high as he would have gone at $44. True to form, Dennis spent the fewest percentage of his dollars on pitching while Carty's acquisition of Kershaw essentially assured him of being on the high end of the group:

TEAMPITCHINGPERCENT
Dennis 30 12
Karabell 60 23
Colton/Wolf 63 24
Melnick 67 26
Radomski 72 28
Gardner 77 30
DVR 77 30
Walton 78 30
Del Don 83 32
Ambrosius/Childs 85 33
Moyer 95 37
Carty 98 38
Overall 88528

When you factor in Dennis's heavy hitting approach as well as Karabell and Colton/Wolf going heavy on hitting, more dollars are going to hitting. The AL LABR auction had an overall split of 69/31 with six teams outside of the traditional 70/30 split (with a+/- 3 fudge factor). In this NL auction, we end up with the same number of six, but with $91 fewer dollars spent on pitching. Now, where did those dollars go?

We looked at the speed market in the AL last week and discussed how much deeper that is in the senior circuit. Our Rotowire projections show 21 players with at least 20 steals this season in the National League and 20 in the American League. That one steal is nothing, but in the American League, only five players are projected for more than 30 steals and only one, Jarrod Dyson, is projected for 40. Our projections show six players for at least 40 steals so there is more top-end speed there. Here is how the speed went in the LABR draft compared to the aforementioned CBS auction a month earlier:

PLAYERSTEALSLABRCBS
Billy Hamilton 63 25 27
Dee Gordon 54 24 29
Jonathan Villar 48 29 27
Trea Turner 45 34 36
Starling Marte 40 29 27
Jose Peraza 40 22 18
Travis Jankowski 34 13 10
A.J. Pollock 29 27 26
Keon Broxton 28 17 17
Charlie Blackmon 27 30 31
Manuel Margot 24 15 18
Eduardo Nunez 24 20 20
Paul Goldschmidt 23 38 39
Hernan Perez 23 10 13
Gregory Polanco 23 28 27
Orlando Arcia 22 13 12
Wil Myers 22 27 25
Odubel Herrera 21 20 22
Chris Owings 21 10 9
Jose Reyes 21 14 10
Ender Inciarte 20 18 15

The LABR folks spent five fewer dollars on the same player pool, but the overall prices were mostly in line with one another outside of a few outliers. What is noticeable is that, unlike the American League, single-digit 20-steal guys were not there. The fact there is more speed in the National League did not necessarily discount anyone because the group of speed is more spread out there with several high-end steals totals.

The power department played out in much the same way. Here, both LABR and CBS spent $599 on the hitters we project to hit at least 25 home runs and only Braun's price was over a $3 difference:

PLAYERHRLABRCBS
Nolan Arenado 42 38 41
Kris Bryant 37 37 37
Giancarlo Stanton 34 27 27
Anthony Rizzo 33 33 35
Trevor Story 33 26 25
Bryce Harper 32 35 35
Yoenis Cespedes 31 27 26
Adam Duvall 30 15 17
Carlos Gonzalez 30 27 26
Matt Kemp 30 25 22
Freddie Freeman 29 29 28
Jay Bruce 28 16 16
Joc Pederson 28 19 19
Joey Votto 28 29 31
Ryan Braun 27 31 27
Paul Goldschmidt 27 38 39
Curtis Granderson 27 13 13
Kyle Schwarber 26 21 22
Matt Carpenter 25 25 23
Jedd Gyorko 25 13 15
Andrew McCutchen 25 25 25
Corey Seager 25 30 31
Yasmany Tomas 25 20 19

There was the shiny new toy factor in the NL LABR auction as well. The new toys on the offensive side were names such as: Eric Thames, Manny Margot, Lewis Brinson, Cody Bellinger, J.P. Crawford, Jesse Winker, Roman Quinn and Tom Murphy. Much like the American League exercise, let's take a look at what was spent on these guys and who was taken shortly before or any time thereafter:

PLAYER$OTHER1$OTHER2$OTHER3$
Eric Thames 22 Brandon Belt 22 Maikel Franco 22 Justin Turner 22
Manny Margot 15 Brandon Drury 14 Jason Heyward 12 Dexter Fowler 17
Lewis Brinson 3 Franklin Gutierrez 1 Desmond Jennings 1 Angel Pagan 1
Jesse Winker 2 Franklin Gutierrez 1 Desmond Jennings 1 Tommy Pham 1
Roman Quinn 4 Trayce Thompson 2 Desmond Jennings 1 Angel Pagan 1
Tom Murphy 10 Francisco Cervelli 8 Cameron Rupp 9 Travis d'Arnaud 8

Bellinger and Crawford were the last players taken at their respective positions and were taken extremely late, so they were left off the chart. Thames is the big one as his projections for power and speed earned him a very high $22 and on par with three known quantities at the corner in Belt, Franco and Turner. That trio all went after the money was spent on Thames, who was the 37th player posted for nomination and there was clearly not any positional scarcity involved. If you are paying for that price, you are firmly invested into the highest probability of his outcomes rather than the safe zone in the middle.

Manny Margot was the 102nd player put up for bid and one of the last true leadoff guys with speed and runs potential. If the "P" word scares you, track records were available later and I included Fowler because his strong track record for leading off, scoring runs and stealing some bases only cost an extra two dollars. Tom Murphy had the Colorado Catcher Inflation (CCI – trademarking) factor in play when some experience and more power and/or dead cat bounce was in play. As it were, Murphy is not even yet assured much of the playing time in Colorado.

The pitching side of the ledger is where things got interesting. We knew fewer dollars would be spent there because of Doug Dennis, but that unstable closer market came very cheaply. Whereas the American League saw several dollars go to closers, the same could not be said for the National League.

TEAMCLOSER$SETUP$
ARI Rodney 5 ND 0
ATL Johnson 9 Vizcaino 1
CHC Davis 15 Rondon 2
CIN Iglesias 10 Lorenzen 3
COL Ottavino 7 Holland 2
LAD Jansen 22 ND 0
MIA Ramos 11 Barraclough 5
MIL Feliz 8 Knebel 2
NYM Familia 11 Reed 4
PHI Neris 4 Gomez 2
PIT Watson 11 Nicasio 2
SD Maurer 7 Hand 2
SF Melancon 17 Strickland 1
STL Oh 16 Rosenthal 1
WSH Kelley 10 Treinen 2

It is somewhat humorous that nobody wanted to spend money to roster Rodney while they also were not even willing to spend one dollar speculating on his backup as he was the only Arizona reliever rostered. Jansen was deservedly the only closer to break the $20 barrier, but Oh and Melancon were the only other two to eclipse the $15 barrier. Johnson came rather cheaply given the lack of depth at closer and Familia's pending suspension also brought his costs down. The room just did not spend on saves nor did they really go in on the setup men outside of Kyle Barraclough's insane strikeout rate.

The starting pitchers were mostly balanced, but there were 11 pitchers that cost at least $20 in the auction. When you are spending that total on a pitcher in a single-league format, that is a SP1 or a high SP2 for some teams. Nine teams purchased at least one of these guys while one, Derek Carty, rostered two of them. Doug Dennis predictably stayed out of this as did Brian Walton. Carty spent $64 to get Kershaw and Rich Hill as he continues to go after Dodger pitchers who get to throw to one of the best framers in the game, Yasmani Grandal.

PICKPLAYER$OWNER
1.1 Clayton Kershaw 44 Derek Carty
3.1 Noah Syndergaard 31 Wolf/Colton
3.9 Madison Bumgarner 30 Ambrosius/Childs
1.10 Max Scherzer 28 Steve Gardner
4.2 Jon Lester 24 Bob Radomski
4.12 Carlos Martinez 24 Lenny Melnick
4.4 Jake Arrieta 23 Steve Moyer
5.8 Stephen Strasburg 23 Dalton Del Don
4.9 Johnny Cueto 22 Derek Van Riper
5.1 Rich Hill 20 Derek Carty
6.9 Jacob deGrom 20 Eric Karabell

The room bought the three aces and Gardner could have a bargain in Scherzer if the finger issue clears up here in short order. A healthy Scherzer goes $35 so a 20 percent discount for the tenth overall player in the auction is a nice deal. In all, 27 starting pitchers went for at least $10 while another 42 went for single digits. Some of the more intriguing single-digit buys include: Robbie Ray ($9), Ivan Nova ($9), Taijuan Walker ($9), Vince Velasquez ($8), Tyler Anderson ($3) and Brandon Finnegan ($3).

The depth in the National League pool was also visible in the reserve rounds as several players that I thought would be end-game material in the auction fell to the reserves. Such names include Derek Dietrich in a utility role in Miami, Jake Barrett to speculate on saves in Arizona, Eddie Butler being rebuilt by Chris Bosio in Chicago, Brett Cecil in a high-leverage relief role in St. Louis, Felipe Rivero's nastiness in Pittsburgh pen or Nick Kingham in the Pittsburgh rotation.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jason Collette
Jason has been helping fantasy owners since 1999, and here at Rotowire since 2011. You can hear Jason weekly on many of the Sirius/XM Fantasy channel offerings throughout the season as well as on the Sleeper and the Bust podcast every Sunday. A ten-time FSWA finalist, Jason won the FSWA's Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year award in 2013 and the Baseball Series of the Year award in 2018 for Collette Calls,and was the 2023 AL LABR champion. Jason manages his social media presence at https://linktr.ee/jasoncollette
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