Activity Matters

By Robby Wellington – Staff Writer

Take a look at which teams in your league have made the most transactions and which have made the least. Now compare that to your current standings. Notice a correlation? If you don’t yet, wait until the end of the season when the teams with the most transactions rise to the top, while the teams of complacent owners settle near the bottom. Of course, there are going to be aberrations; considering that somewhere between 50 percent to 80 percent of the final standings is determined by the draft (depending on trading and transaction activity of the given league), it’s not far-fetched that someone can draft a dominant team and coast to a league title. However, it’s far more likely that your league champ will relentlessly buy and sell players, either via trade or the waiver wire, on the road to a title.

While trading is the most drastic way to improve your team, you can only hoodwink lesser owners in your league so many times. The waiver wire, on the other hand, is a constantly shifting landscape. Odds are there are at least a few guys out there who can help your team immediately. I have always advocated having at least one spot on your roster to serve as a revolving door, giving your team flexibility to add a spot starter or an extra bat on a day with less than a full slate of games. Let’s look at the three types of players that you should be looking to pluck off the waiver wire.

1. Spot Starters – I’ve already discussed this group. You should be able to milk a couple of quality starts out of free agent pitchers with favorable matchups.

2. Hot Bats – There are usually a couple of free agents who are hitting the cover off the ball. If one of your usual starters is ice cold, sort hitters by last week’s stats and see if there is anyone worthy of riding until they cool off (like I did with Pedro Feliz last week).

3. Middle Relievers – Can’t find a worthy spot starter and don’t need an extra bat? Go ahead and add a good middle reliever, and hopefully you can steal a win or a save here and there. At least they should help with your ratios.

There is no reason that you should have someone languishing on your bench who isn’t going to contribute to your team’s success. Cut bait and add someone who can help, even if it’s only for a day. The more active you are and the more you take advantage of your league’s waiver wire, the better chance you’ll have of coming out on top in October.


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9 responses to “Activity Matters”

  1. T. Avatar
    T.

    I agree with what your saying. In one of my leagues it’s high stakes but weekly transactions and I can’t stand that compared to daily moves.

  2. Tom Avatar
    Tom

    I am the worst at “spot starting.” So bad I’ve given up on it. I had Feliz going this last week also. NL co-player of the week was nice.

  3. Eddie Avatar
    Eddie

    I’ve been guilty of complacency with my team, but I’ve seriously considered plugging in a revolving door spot. Would you drop Shelton at this point for this spot? I also have Wilkerson, but he’s the streaky, flexible bench guy I want to keep, whereas Shelton is rotting away waiting for Sexson to return to form.

  4. Robby Avatar
    Robby

    Wilkerson has been hot recently, and should be a good start at home from here on out. Its hard to say whether to drop Shelton without knowing your league size. However, he hasn’t been as cold as you might think, raising his average up to 317 after it dipped below 300 a few times in mid-May. I would say that, as a rule, you don’t want to drop someone who others in your league will be salivating to add, and Shelton is someone who I would probably still add in both my leagues. The best way to free up that spot is by offering people 2-1 trades. Target a player who you like a bit more than who you are trading away and then offer Shelton or Wilkerson as your throw in. Hopefully Sexson can turn it around and still mash 30 HRs this year. You’ve got to hang on to him.

  5. Robby Avatar
    Robby

    As far as giving up on spot starting is concerned, I don’t think people should give up on it just because they pick the wrong guy a few times. Remember, the Vegas lines are your friends.

  6. MaddenDude Avatar

    I agree with everything, especially the revolving door player strategy which I do, lol, EXCEPT picking up middle relief pitchers. They can helf ERA and WHIP, but at the same time, they can destroy it. They only pitch 2 innings. Even if they give up 1 run or a few hits, the ERA shoots up. 2 runs allowed and its a disaster.

    And about useless guys on the bench, I think sometimes you have to make exceptions to improve your team for the long-run. The guys I’m talking about are the guys who get hurt, and when your DL is filled. Like Griffey, Cantu, Sheets, etc. Because after all, its a long season, and all you need to do is make the playoffs. And this long-term help can be the X-factor in the playoffs.

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