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David Gonos

The Fantasy Baseball secondary awards

Remember that speech the guy gave after winning the Emmy award for "Hairstyling for a Mini-Series"? Wasn't it riveting?

Ok, so maybe you didn't catch that one. Nor did most of the people in the television industry I imagine. Nevertheless, he still got an Emmy award for cutting hair, while you and I can barely comb our hair.

That brings us to this column. Last week, I handed out the 2007 Fannies Fantasy Baseball Awards. But it's time to hand out some of the lesser-known awards for Fantasy Baseball. There won't be a big Hollywood awards show. No red carpet. No speeches. And if you can please pull around back, by the dumpster, you can pick up your bronze Fanny award.

The lesser-known Fantasy awards

Carlos Pena's price tag and Fantasy value will increase dramatically this offseason. (US Presswire)  
Carlos Pena's price tag and Fantasy value will increase dramatically this offseason. (US Presswire)  
Comeback player of the year: This guy hit 47 home runs over the past two seasons. Actually, he hit 46 homers this year -- and only one in 2006. It's tough to make an argument for this award for anyone other than Tampa's Carlos Pena. He hit as many home runs this year as he did from 2004-06. His agent, Scott Boras, has already been pumping him up as an AL MVP candidate, which is sure to cost the Devil Rays a pretty penny in arbitration this offseason. We see him as a top-10 Fantasy first baseman entering 2008, just behind Derrek Lee.

Bust of the year: There certainly were plenty of candidates for this award, not to mention a few women I saw walking around South Beach. Justin Morneau hit .271 and tallied only 111 RBI a year after winning the AL MVP award in 2006, with a .321 batting average and 130 RBI. Manny Ramirez dealt with some injuries and indifference this season, but he had 24 more at-bats this year than last -- yet came through with 15 fewer homers (35 to 20). Vernon Wells' batting average dropped more than 50 points, his homers were cut in half and his season finally ended after September shoulder surgery. But this award is still going to Andruw Jones, who was drafted 21st overall on average in mixed CBSSports.com leagues. In what we all hoped would be a huge contract season, Jones hit .222, easily his worst number since he had 106 at-bats in his first year in the majors (1996). His home runs were 15 fewer than in '06, his RBI were 33 fewer, and he ended the season hitting .207 with two homers in September, killing his owners in the playoffs. Alfonso Soriano was also a huge disappointment after a career year in Washington. Travis Hafner was shoddy as well.

It's about time award: This one goes out to a player we had hoped would do something a few years ago. Pena certainly gets a nod of recognition here, but you only get one award per person. My rules. B.J. Upton was drafted in the middle rounds of mixed leagues for the past few seasons, but just when you swore you wouldn't take him again, he comes through with a poor man's Soriano-like .300-24-82-86-22 season. Unlike Soriano, though, Mr. Upton will have 2B- and OF-eligibility in 2008. Will Stephen Drew develop into a solid hitter after a lackluster 2007 in which he hit .238? Time will tell, but Fantasy owners are more forgiving when discussing middle infielders with pop, like Drew and Upton.

Bugs Bunny award: This one goes out to the best player with the most versatility. (Remember how Bugs Bunny would play every position!?!) Mark Loretta was supposed to work as a utility infielder in Houston, which he did, but to get 460 at-bats doing it at every position in the infield was impressive. I still give the hardware to the Mark DeRosa of the Cubs, however. He out-produced Loretta offensively, while having middle, corner and outfield eligibility. Although, Loretta will be one of only two players, along with Willie Bloomquist, that will have four-position eligibility next spring.

If only the season were from July to Sept. award: During the entire offseason, I was extremely excited about seeing what Kevin Kouzmanoff would do for the Padres. He started off incredibly slow, though, batting just .204 as late as June 5. But after the All-Star break? The Kouz turned it up, hitting .317 with 11 homers and 37 RBI. He ended the season with four homers, 17 RBI and a .380 batting average in September and October.

I wish I traded you at the All-Star break award: You have to look at someone like Gary Sheffield as a hot start/bad finish player. Granted, a shoulder injury played a major part in his .203-4-17-29-10 hitting line in 51 games after the break. But if you had him for his first 82 games, he hit .303 with 21 homers, 58 RBI, 78 runs scored and 12 stolen bases. He's an aging veteran whose shoulder will haunt him for the rest of his career. If he breaks out early in 2008 again -- don't hesitate to move him.

Hank Blalock award -- most improved sophomore of the year: Blalock popped only three homers in nearly 150 at-bats in his '02 rookie season, then he hit 29 a year later with 90 RBI. So, with that in mind, I wanted to reward a player that stumbled through his rookie year, but exploded in '07. With 50 homers in his second full season, Prince Fielder gets the nod here. He had a solid freshman year with 28 home runs and 81 RBI, but his 50-119 season was more than impressive. Something tells me we'll be calling this the Prince Fielder award next year. Russell Martin takes second-place after improving in every category in '07, making him one of the top two catchers to be drafted in most leagues next year, along with Victor Martinez.

Pat Listach award -- worst sophomore of the year: Listach won the AL Rookie of the Year award in 1992 for Milwaukee, but then fell off the next year considerably. Kouzmanoff had a nice rookie season for San Diego, but the player traded to Cleveland for him last offseason, Josh Barfield, wasn't quite as lucky. The second baseman had only three homers and 14 steals this year, batting just .243, before finally losing his starting job to Asdrubal Cabrera. The Indians will be reluctant to give up on him too quickly, when you consider that former Indians 2B Brandon Phillips was a 30-30 man for cross-state Cincinnati and even Ronnie Belliard played well for Washington. Conor Jackson was expected to produce better this season, but he also disappointed in his second year.

CBSSports.com rep for World Series of Fantasy Baseball: Tim McFarlin and Brad Seidel were the two users chosen to stand in for us for MLB.com's postseason Fantasy tournament. McFarlin bowed out in Round 1, but Seidel has moved on to Round 2 of the contest that runs throughout the baseball postseason, aiming to crown the best of the best. Congrats, boys!

Biggest villain of the year: April 18 was a dark day for me in the Tout Wars, when Phillies' manager Charlie Manuel announced that Brett Myers was moved from the rotation into the bullpen (not even closer at that point, mind you). So after just three starts, the player I spent $12 on to be the second ace on my mixed-league staff was now working the middle innings. Even though he eventually came in to notch 21 saves, that surely didn't offset the wins and strikeouts I had hoped to rack up with him in my rotation. Charlie Manuel, I'll never forgive you.

Most painful injury of the year: The only thing that made me not run in front of a bus after Myers went to the bullpen was knowing that my friend J.P. Kastner of Creative Sports bid $25 on Chris Carpenter. The 2005 NL Cy Young award winner (third in '06) threw a total of six innings in 2007. He endured his second Tommy John surgery on his right elbow this summer. Well, he threw two more innings than B.J. Ryan did. Ryan also needed Tommy John surgery and his year ended in mid-April. Injuries to Erik Bedard and Chase Utley also cost their owners immensely, but at least they were able to post great numbers before going down.

I told you so award: Before the season started, I mentioned Jake Peavy would win the NL Cy Young, and that Alfonso Soriano would be one of the most expensive busts of the season. By midseason, I started warning you to sell high on Chris Young, who posted a second-half 1-5 record with an ERA (4.80) more than twice as high as the first half (2.00). Chuck James and Brad Penny were also pegged to disappoint in the second half, while I named Bronson Arroyo and Andy Pettitte as two second-half climbers.

I can admit I made a mistake award: Scott Kazmir, Ervin Santana and Javier Vazquez were players I was very off on, specifically in the second half. I'm sure I'll be hearing from you on the other hundreds of players I missed on, and I welcome it. Please put in the subject line, "Attn: Deleted Items."

Thank you for finally staying healthy award: Khalil Greene had never tallied more than 500 at-bats in any of his four seasons. But this year he was injury-free and he broke his own Padres' record for homers by a shortstop with 16 (on July 15th!) He finished the year with 27 home runs and 97 RBI and we have him as a top-10 Fantasy shortstop entering '08, despite his .254 batting average.

I can't believe you stayed healthy award: J.D. Drew. How did Boston end up fourth in the majors in scoring with Manny in left and Drew in right this season? Drew finally broke out in September (.342, four homers and 18 RBI), but before that, it got to the point where Red Sox fans were just rooting for him to not hit into a double-play. (Actually, he only hit into 12 double-plays, but it sure makes for funny reading.)

Best Fantasy readers in the world: No surprise here. The CBSSports.com readers win this award for the unprecedented 11th year in a row.

Biggest kiss-up to his readers: David Gonos.

Feel free to send me a question or a comment. Here are a few that you can just clip and paste. "Are you insane?" ... "What are you thinking?" ... "You're an idiot -- but can you tell me if I should make this trade?" ... "I have a beautiful sister that likes Fantasy dorks, want her number?" ... Send your comments, hate mail, credit card numbers and beautiful sister's phone numbers to me by clicking on my Columnist page and sending a note through the feedback form.

 
 
 
Player News
Mike Napoli
Napoli's ankle still an issue
Mike Napoli, C, TEX
12:48 PM
News: ESPN.com reports Rangers catcher Mike Napoli said his injured left ankle is progressing, but he is still not 100 percent. Napoli turned his ankle in the World Series against the Cardinals last year. "I think I’m close," Napoli said. "I’m not really going to know until I get into the wear and tear of spring training and catching all the time. But I've been feeling good and getting better day by day." Napoli said he has been running on the ankle, and he is also hitting and throwing without pain. However, he is still concerned about how it will hold up with the constant squatting and baseball activity. "But I'm trying not to do that all the time so I'm not depending on that," Napoli said. "I'm working on getting my little muscles stronger."
Analysis: The Dallas Morning News reports GM Jon Daniels said exams by team physician Keith Meister said Napoli's ankle shows no structural damage, but Napoli is still experiencing soreness. "The fact he's still feeling it a few months later speaks to what he went through to play the rest of Game 6 and go back out for Game 7," Daniels said. "It was about as bad as it looked to the rest of us." You have to wonder if Napoli can't shake this injury if it will play into how much time he gets behind the plate. Nonetheless, if Napoli catches less that just means he will likely see more PT at DH and first base. The Rangers aren't going to take his bat out of the lineup. Napoli remains a top 5 Fantasy catcher on Draft Day.

Daisuke Matsuzaka
Dice-K throwing off mound
Daisuke Matsuzaka, SP, BOS
11:52 AM
News: The Boston Globe reports while Red Sox pitchers and catchers don't officially have to report until Sunday, some players have arrived early, including SP Daisuke Matsuzaka. The paper noted that Matsuzaka, who is recovering from Tommy John surgery in June, was throwing off a mound with manager Bobby Valentine watching.
Analysis: Clearly, the fact Dice-K is already throwing off a mound is good news. However, we still have to temper expectations. It usually takes pitchers 12-18 months to recover from Tommy John surgery, so we aren't expecting to see Dice-K in a major-league game until mid-summer. We will continue to update his progress as the news warrants, but Dice-K is merely a draft-and-stash option in the deepest of Fantasy formats on Draft Day.

David Ortiz
Ortiz settles before hearing
David Ortiz, DH, BOS
11:11 AM
News: DH David Ortiz and the Red Sox came to terms on a one-year contract hours before the two sides were set to go to an arbitration hearing. Ortiz signed a one-year, $14.575 million contract.
Analysis: Now that Ortiz has this business out of the way he can get down to focusing on the baseball aspect of things. Ortiz hit .309 with 29 homers and 96 RBI in 2011. He is DH-eligible only in Fantasy, which hurts his appeal a bit. But Ortiz remains a viable early-to-mid-round Fantasy pick on Draft Day.

Chris Snyder
Snyder fully recovered from surgery
Chris Snyder, C, HOU
12:27 PM
News: The Houston Chronicle reports Astros catcher Chris Snyder said he is fully recovered from the back surgery he had in June.
Analysis: A lot of folks feel Snyder will make the Astros roster out of camp, but he still needs to prove he is past his back problem, which robbed him of most of the 2011 season with Pittsburgh. Manager Brad Mills has already said Jason Castro is the team's starting catcher, but he is recovering from foot surgery and isn't expected to be ready for spring games until the second week of the exhibition schedule. In the meantime, Snyder will be battling Humberto Quintero for the backup role. Snyder has decent pop for a catcher, but his strength is defense. Snyder is more of an NL-only Fantasy option.

Ian Desmond
Nats convinced Desmond will re-emerge
Ian Desmond, SS, WAS
11:41 AM
News: CSN Washington reports the Nationals are convinced shortstop Ian Desmond is in for a bounce-back season in 2012 because of two trends they spotted in 2011. The first is that Desmond made significant strides at the plate in the second half of last season. After hitting .223 with a .264 OBP and .308 slugging percentage before the All-Star break, Desmond hit .289 with a .338 OBP and .417 slugging percentage down the stretch. He really thrived when manager Davey Johnson made him the leadoff hitter, which is a position he is expected to keep heading into the spring. The second trend is that Desmond's defense improved as the season progressed. He committed seven errors in his first 20 games and just 16 over his final 134.
Analysis: A lot of folks were excited about Desmond's 2011 outlook after he played well in his first two MLB stints in 2009 and 2010. Unfortunately, Desmond took a step back last year and will plummet down Fantasy draft boards because of it. Clearly, there is potential with Desmond. But don't reach for him on Draft Day. Let him fall to the late rounds in mixed leagues and hope that you grab a bounce-back candidate.

Phil Hughes
Hughes appears ready to compete
Phil Hughes, SP, NYY
11:26 AM
News: Newsday reports Yankees SP Phil Hughes, who looks noticeably slimmer and more muscular, said he weighs about 240 pounds. He added that in the offseason he changed his "body composition."
Analysis: The early word from Yankees camp is that Hughes is in shape and ready to compete for a spot in the rotation. Although, he is on the outside looking in if the Yankees don't trade A.J. Burnett. Though, if Hughes proves to be more valuable in the rotation than the bullpen, then the Yankees might have to reconsider his role in 2012. Let's see how Hughes does this spring training before making a final evaluation about his 2012 outlook, but clearly him being in shape is a good start. Hughes could be a viable Fantasy option again if he returns to the 18-8 pitcher he was in 2010.

Jon Garland
Garland gets shot with Indians
Jon Garland, SP, LAD
10:37 AM
News: The Indians signed SP Jon Garland to a minor-league deal on Monday. Garland, who last pitched for the Dodgers, was limited to only nine starts last season before having arthroscopic surgery on his shoulder in June.
Analysis: Garland will most likely compete with Kevin Slowey for the final spot in the Indians rotation, but he's a hittable pitcher who now may be working with less than his best stuff coming off shoulder surgery. Even if he's able to win a rotation spot, he won't be worth drafting outside of deeper AL-only leagues.

A.J. Burnett
Yanks, Pirates still talking Burnett
A.J. Burnett, SP, NYY
2/12/2012
News: The New York Daily News reports the Yankees and Pirates continued to talk Sunday about completing a trade for A.J. Burnett, but a baseball source said the sides are still "a good ways away" from agreeing on the final terms. The source added the Pirates are willing to pay $10 million of the remaining $33 million Burnett is owed over the next two seasons, but Pittsburgh has offered "two borderline prospects" in return. The Yankees could be willing to pay more of Burnett's remaining contract if they receive a top-tier prospect from Pittsburgh. A person familiar with the Yankees' thinking believes there is enough common ground that a deal could be completed in the coming days. However, ESPN.com reports their source said the Yankees aren't desperate to make a trade and the team would go to spring training with Burnett if a deal isn't completed.
Analysis: Leaving the Yankees usually has a negative impact on a player's Fantasy value, but in Burnett's case it might be the opposite, especially if he moves to the NL. He has struggled to handle the pressure of pitching in New York and a fresh start could be what he needs. Burnett had some of his best years in the majors pitching in the NL. Still, Burnett would be nothing more than a risky late-round Fantasy pick in mixed leagues.

Josh Johnson
JJ continues to feel no discomfort
Josh Johnson, SP, MIA
2/12/2012
News: The Sports Xchange reports Marlins SP Josh Johnson arrived to the team's spring training complex in Jupiter, Fla., on Feb. 9, more than a week ahead of the Marlins reporting date for pitchers and catchers. Johnson, who has been throwing off a mound near his home in Las Vegas, threw his first bullpen session of the year in Florida on Feb. 10. He felt no discomfort and expects to be ready for the first workouts on Feb. 22. He made only nine starts last year because of shoulder issues.
Analysis: Any encouraging news regarding JJ is welcomed. But Fantasy owners do have to be aware of the risk of drafting him. Of course his potential makes it worth it, but JJ has made it past 30 starts just once in his career. Look to Johnson as more of a No. 2 Fantasy SP on Draft Day, but clearly he has the potential to be your ace if he can stay healthy.

Hunter Pence
Pence likely to hit cleanup
Hunter Pence, RF, PHI
2/12/2012
News: The Philadelphia Inquirer reports Phillies manager Charlie Manuel has to find a cleanup hitter with Ryan Howard expected to miss the beginning of the season recovering from an Achilles injury, and he said his choice going into spring training is Hunter Pence.
Analysis: Pence either hit right in front of or right behind Howard after his acquisition from Houston last season and thrived in the Phillies lineup. He will miss Howard's lineup protection, but might only have to play a month without Howard. In the meantime, Pence should get plenty of RBI chances batting cleanup, and he will still have plenty of lineup protection without Howard. Look to Pence in the early rounds of Fantasy drafts.

 
 
 
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