TTO talks about the Scoresheet mock draft with Nate Stephens and John R Mayne - podcast episode cover

TTO talks about the Scoresheet mock draft with Nate Stephens and John R Mayne

Mar 08, 20191 hr 2 min
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Episode description

TTO sits down with guests Nate Stephens and John R Mayne to talk about this year's Scoresheet Mock Draft, including everybody offering takes on the tough decisions at the top of the draft, the best picks throughout the draft, and other trends they noticed this year.

For more information see the mock draft league page, spreadsheet of results, and Yahoo Group (note links may not render nicely in all browsers):

http://www.scoresheet.com/htm-lib/picks.htm?dir_lgw=/archive/2018/FOR_WWW1/BL_Mockdraft;all

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1pOweTYQ8KhVuvzo_-nH83Ao-WpqJUvhPnAIK0VQ9hMg/edit#gid=0

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/Mock_Scoresheet_Draft/info

Transcript

Howdy, and welcome to the Three True Outcomes podcast, presented by Baseball Perspectus. I'm your host, Ian Leftcootz, and joining me as always are Ben Murphy and Jared Weiss. And if you think that's quicker than usual, that's because we have a lot of show to get to. We are going to be talking about the scoresheet, mock draft, and we have some guests. So I am going to turn it over to Jared now to take us through the next few minutes. Two out an hour every many minutes it takes.

Yes, I got additional duties. I get upgraded from LV gaptain. This is very exciting. Joining us from Connecticut. Please welcome Nate Stevens. Nate, how are you. I'm good. How are you? I'm doing well. Thanks, and we have more than one guests. This is super exciting. Joining us from California. Please welcome John Army, John, how are you? Hey? I'm doing dandy. Good to be here. Man. That's exciting. That's a lot of energy. Yeah, John's got too much

energy. I'm on the correct coast where it's you know, still bright and early uh not, you know, time to fall asleep. But what I like about that most is that it's a podcast. But as you know, everybody on these coast is tired all the time. That is my understanding. So you accurately guess yes, um, but sorry, so go ahead. So I guess we should introduce what is the scoresheet mock draft? Yes? Boy, um, so I'll take that one. Take great question. Ian.

The scoresheet mock draft is a annual tradition, I don't know how many years. If anyone here knows, feel free to jump in. UM led by past guest and uh uh scoresheet uh man about town Brandy Barry Jones, um, in which a number of scor sheet experts and and others and yeah yeah, but mostly expert And we had a very good year this year. I think our get together to kind of mock draft make December a little bit better and also rag on each other for the picks that they have made.

UM. Just to start off with, like how to follow along with this conversation. We'll try to make the conversation as easy as possible for you. But if you want to get the results of the mock draft, we will either probably leave them in the show notes. Yes, and if you can't find it there you can go to groups dot Yahoo dot com. It turns out you actually can't google it and type in score sheet mock draft, and

then you can get a little bit of the conversation. You can also go to the mock draft league in scoreesheet, which is bl mock draft, and then if you know the trick on how to get archive results, you can get archive transactions. It's typing backslash archive backslash twenty eighteen into the transactions field. It'll change your life, I promise. Okay, on with the show. I think on Scorcia Talk, one of the most frequently asked questions is

where to get a clean copy of the mock Jeff slash me similar. So I think let's just start off with what do you guys, how do you guys find the mock Jeff useful in terms of real leagues? So obviously it's fine, we all get together, we make jokes and we have a good Jeff. But how do you all find or not find the mock Jeff to be useful? I'll start with you Niate. Yeah, so I think it's

extremely useful from a benchmarking perspective. You know there's going to be outliers there's going to be people that disagree, but it gives you a general sense of you know, hey, there's twenty four people in the league. At least one other owner values this player in this way, right, So you know I use that a lot in trades in the offseason or early in the season. You know, hey, this person went in this round. You know this is pretty similar to this, so maybe we match up. So I'll

do a lot of that. And then the other thing is, you know, I think you you do learn a lot. You know, I'm pretty vocal in the group about picks, but I myself learned a ton. You know. Paul gold Schmith's the one I always put out there that I had not a lot of interest in him, and then Bill Sanders took him one year and made a pretty compelling case and flipped a switch when all in on Goldsmith got him in a couple of leagues. So you know, it's like

that. Every year there's at least one, if not a handful of players that you kind of get a better sense of. And oh, maybe I'm more interested now than I was before it started. And John I agree heavily with date. Obviously, the Goldsmith thing is one that the Goldschmid type players, the guys who somebody else picks, who you say, well, wait a second, that doesn't look quite right to be that high, and then you look at it you say, okay, well maybe I needed to prep

better. It. Also, it's a first chance, a first cut at kind of prepping for a d figuring out where people go. Plus it's the fun of getting to do a startup draft without committing yourself and ending up in you know, twelve leagues at a time, So it does have that advantage. My wife always points out when I tell her I'm doing a mock draft. She points out that our other drafts are also not real. So this is a fake, fake draft. But I enjoyed a great deal. I

enjoyed prepping ford I enjoy doing it. The fake fake draft is one of my wife's favorite quips about the mock draft. Also, does she say that about mock trials as well. No, because actual trials are real, our drafts are not real. Trials are real, so a mock trial makes sense. But mock draft is really a mock mock draft because obviously the fantasy leagues when we draft from my trout, he does not come to our house and play in the backyard fair American jurisprudence today. Um, So I want to

get it into the meat of the draft in a second. But first, John and they you normally don't own a team together. But in the mock draft you mocked. Did you mocked? You mocked? Yes? YEAHS co owned the mock draft team. Um, whereas normally your separate entities team DdO has found the joint experience to be rewarding, or at least that's what they tell me to my face. But how did you find uh mocking together as

opposed to owning separate teams. I'll hit this one first. I think the we've done this now for two years, and last year it was sort of an accident, and this year we did it with malice aforethought, and I think we learned something from year one to year two because we're both we both have strong opinions. Uh, we're both uh, we both have strong personalities, and uh, you know, we're both competitive in everything including fake fake

drafts. So we ended up having good conversations about a lot of players, and I think we ended up trying to be a little more deferential in our first draft, and we were a little stronger I think in this one in finding the points where we were going to defer or not defer. And so I felt like I felt like this year's draft coming out of it, I

was pretty happy with the results. And it's fun to talk to Nate because you know, generally in NorCal obviously he's failed because he was behind me last year, and he's behind me in our ranking system, and he's behind me I think morally, intellectually and politically, and I do like to stress that just this moment, while I have the chance, I should probably let Nate talk at this point, Well, I really missed the opportunity a couple of

years ago when I won twice and three years and went to three straight World Series. Really should have rubbed that in a little bit more when I had the chance. Apparently I was up against this, but no, I mean back to the draft. I mean, I agree with John. I mean I think we definitely got better in the second year. I think the first year was more of like, oh, well I don't really want to do

that, so but you know, go ahead. Uh, And this year, um, we kind of just would like veto individual players like, hey, we don't really have a lot of consensus on this guy. Let's not let's not do that. Um, And you know, if I have a guy first and you have a guy fifth, you know, especially in like the mid or later rounds, like that's that's a lot of consensus. So, um, we did that, and I think it. I think it

worked out better. You know, last year, at the time, I didn't not like our draft, but I think in retrospect it was kind of okay. You know, this year's draft, I feel a lot more confident about coming out of it. Jared and Ian and I avoid that problem wherein Ian is the only one that knows anything about anything, so we just do

whatever Ian says. I'm not sure I agree with that logic, but yeah, no, I think there's I think there's an interesting aspect of like, as people who have done this for a very long time, Like I like working in teams, I don't. I don't know if I particularly would like to run get a team solo personally, just I like discussing and dialectic.

But I think there's an interesting thing that you were kind of hitting on of the difference between let's say, just like seating your territory and compromise and like understanding where it's like, just because somebody has a strong opinion doesn't necessarily mean that it's the right one. And it's like going into a one for you, one for me scenario might not be ideal, but you know, I think saying like, okay, we both have this person high you know,

I don't know. I wonder if you feel like consensus picks end up doing better than the ones where you feel like you're more one of you is more out on a limb. I think it's a question of expertise. I mean, one of the mistakes LI was not getting Miles Nicholas, which we could have done if I had listened to Nate. And one of the things NATA has better expertise on foreign leagues. And so it's really a question of finding the areas in which we're which we're likely to be better. And there's still

some room for deferring, but there should be a reason for that. And if so, I think we found a better a better fit this year. Yeah, And I think one thing you can say from that is that the team that drafted Miles Michelis last year really understood teamwork the best. Sorry, go ahead, so let's get into the draft a little bit maybe, And I don't want to go through all the pixel or all our picks, but I thought it might make sense to start with the first round. In our

first pixel, we were both in the top five. So first Mike trent Win does any won't have any problems with that? Who you'd be out of your mind not to pick Mike Trout. And it's a huge advantage to get the one seed. Trout is different than everyone else. He's still better than everybody else. He's gonna be better than everybody else. There's really not an

issue. I meant to ask this of the of the comments section, and for those who are missing at the comment section, one of the best reasons to subscribe, like and you can kind of go back to the Yahoo grip and look through it. Um, what year do you think is the first year that Mike Trout will not go number one in the mock draft? You had to guess. I was trying to think, how, oh does he know twenty eight? He's twenty eight? Yeah, Um, I'd give it

three years, yeah once once he's thirty one. Yeah, So I think like one of like Son and one of those guys have going instead. Yeah, I think it'll be an early twenties guy. And at that point you're looking at eight, nine, ten years of differ rents. Yeah, someone will weigh that more. I'm not saying that's right, but it's at least colorable in a couple of years. Yeah, And I think you guys may have staked a claim on which person you think might be the next one one.

We'll get their shadow, yeah in a second. But since we're here, I think John, you have a point to lead you a little bit about startup leagues and if you were, if you were starting a new one, you wouldn't have randomly assigned picks, but you'd have some other system.

And I'm going to guess that has something to do with Mike Chad. In any league, almost in any league you're in, if you do a standard back and forth snake draft, the early round pick, the earlier picks are going to have an advantage because remember one of the things Bill James taught us is that baseball talent is the far end of a bell curve. It's not a bell curve. So as you go up that I mean being ahead as you go in lower rounds, being had an round is worth less than it

is at the very top. So you'd have to have you have to have some kind of auction or some kind of distribution system if you want it to be fair. If you don't want it to be fair, if you want it to be lucked, and fine, but otherwise you have to have some kind of distribution system, an auction system for not just pick one, but I think other picks too. I think all the way down until people lose interest, in which you either give up picks or you reduce picks down to

the end of the draft. If you're not doing that, then the trout water is a huge, huge deal. I talked about that with Matt Houser, who sort of won the quick and dirty way we calculated it, and one of the advantages he had was that he had the chance to get trout. One of the other advantages he had as he outdrafted everybody else and still would have won even without that. But the h but it really is.

It's a huge thing. And so if you're if you're gonna run a league, if you're gonna start, if you're gonna do a startup league, you want to make sure you do that, especially if you have sophisticate an actor. It's like I think we all are. Yeah, yeah, oh go ahead, sorry sorry, um yeah. I think that's always the case, which John said. I think it just Mike Trout being who he is exacerbates that right now and not doing that just is a really big mistake, a

bigger mistake than usual. Not to cross sports, but it's like when LaDainian Tomlinson was scoring like twenty to thirty touchdowns every year and he was like the number one pick every single year and Fantasy football, and everyone just started throwing their hands up and it's like, this is this massive advantage. So they started doing like third round reversal and they tried to do some other things to counteract that. That's that's who Mike Trout is, the Ladamian Thomlinson of baseball.

Oh as somebody who lives the Jets territory. That's really ominous. I can't wait to reprobusted Mike Trout in a decade. No, I was just going to add that we have been subject to this rule all twice now, once in joining VP dork Coal and once this year in VP Kings. And you can hear about that experience in an earlier podcast. Um, it's really good, and it's really good for us because now we have Mike Trout.

But we were we were big fans and like we were willing to spend for the first pick um in both cases and some team other teams were not, And I think being able to make that choice was really appealing to us. Moving all the way down to the next pick um made by a tree of charming and handsome gentleman. I think we had a discussion here, Um, John Nada, I guess I'm curious to see what you guys think of our pick of Francisco Lindor as number two overall. U were you hoping that he

would follow? Did you expect that he might? Were you happy we took him? Yeah? I jn sou it was what I expected. Um. I told John before the draft that I thought Lindor and Bets would go to three in some order. Um. I don't have a huge preference between the two, but I do think they are the right picks. I think, you know, there's the exciting trio of baseball players that can't drink yet that we'll get to in a minute. But I still think Lindor and Bets are

are worth it. They're both just so good right now, they're both still very young, that they belong there. Yeah. I agree. I I wasn't just convinced that Lindoor and Bets would go to three, but Nate was right, and so it was. And there's good reason for Lindoor to be number two. I mean, he solves a problem for you for for a decade. He's really good. There's he's a completely sensible number two. And anyway you have with think because we didn't land on the door right away,

there's some back and forth there. Yeah, so it's sort of, you know, we were trying a thing, and we'll talk about our strategy a little later, but we were thinking about kind of, I think, structuring the question a little differently. So first we kind of just thoughted between Lindor Bets and let's say Alex s Bregman I think was up there, Manny Machado was up there, Jose Ramirez was up there and just deciding like essentially who the best player is. And we kind of came to that same Lindoor Bets

conclusion. We had Soto Kunia and Flat Junior, which I guess we can name them. They're not like Baltimore in a in a bucket and then you know, arrange them in a certain way and then said like, okay, now what team do we want, which is probably not exactly the way to do it, like you should probably just line up players in terms of value, But I think we were also thinking about like how much this would affect our strategy, and you know, are the extra six years worth it?

So I'm happy with Lindoor. Obviously I would like him to not have gotten hurt like two days into the draft to make us look good, but you know we're getting in for the next ten years in this theoretical league. So um yeah, I still no regrets. So Bet swin third, then Machado and then Nat and John you guys had the fifth pick and took one Sodo there. Um was there a lot of discussion there? How did you end

up on Soto? Well, uh, we had we there was some discussion as to what we would do. I think we had we ended up with our list being trout Lindor, and then because I was an agitator, h Soto at three. But I am I'm absolutely I am not confident between Soda Acuna and vlad which one of those guys is going to be the best out of those. But man Soto had an age nineteen season that was just crazy.

Throw it an eight here. Yeah, yeah, I would say, I'm like thirty four, thirty two, thirty two between the three of those. I think the real answer is just yes, Like, if you can get any of those guys in the top ten of a startup draft, you just do it and say thank you and move on. Um, you know, it'll be super fun to see which ends up the best. But I don't. I wouldn't argue with anyone that picked those three in any order.

Yeah, well, I mean, certainly we have to take into account that Vladimir Greer juniors own GM said that he was not a major league player in the moment, So you know, we'll let that wigh in. But um, well, let's let's have that discussion now since it has to happen every mock draft. So like we're talking about Soto and Kun you win a lad Win nine, We're why were prospects taken too early? Why when will his madness end? Someone please make it stop? Blad of course is uh he

Blad, It's not a normal prospect. Um, he's not a normal human. I think I think Nate as always said we're drafting prospects too high and we should stop. Isn't that what you said, Nate? That's that's pretty close. Yeah, it's our long natural nightmare. We have the argument. We have the argument each year, and uh, Nate and I are trying to I think there's the old saying, UM, build a man of fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and

he'll be warm the rest of his life. And in this case, I think we're ready to set the people on fire. Who keeps saying that the prospects aren't are taken too early, Um, it just hasn't. It's not true. Um, it's just not empirically true. Because if you hit on one of these guys, if you drafted one Soto last year, um, in anything other than the first fifteen picks, you're a huge winner for the

rest of your life. And if you look back at the old drafts, I mean, if you take too low and round sixteen or round fifty and these all these other picks. Now, sure a lot of them wash out, but the goal is to end up with you know, three, four or five baseline players wore studs, and at that point it gives you a lot of room for error else Yeah, I think that's the key when you think of it as trying to build a core and having those players have a

lot of time to develop into being part of that core. That's what makes the difference for some people. I've heard a lot of people talk about like the relative risk of the prospects also, and I think it's important to make sure everybody's mindful of the relative risk of all the major leaguers. Also. I think it's the other big counter argument that's easy to dismiss with a little bit of evidence. Yeah, And I'm fully with you, Ben, I

say that all the time. I mean, you know, the way to do it is like, Okay, show me your third through fifth round picks for the last five years and show me how you never missed. Yeah. Right, and then that quickly crumbles, right, because people's hit rates even in the third or four fifth round are not very high. They're a lot lower than you thing they are. I will say though, that I think the mock's gotten a lot better. I think this was probably the best year

we've ever had in terms of evaluations. You know, the prospects to go to early crowd was very very very small this year, which was good. And I think our quality of drafter keeps going up, so I think it's

a better benchmark and really it's ever been, which is pretty great. Can I ask a question of the group about that, because I think this came up a little bit in some of the discussion that and so I'll just say, like I'll preface this, like, my personal opinion is generally to agree with what Nate said about the quality of the average participant in the mock draft has gone up, and I think the mock draft benefits from that, and

so to all the people that are following it. But I think there was some concern that there's maybe too much agreement, or maybe there will be a point where there's too much agreement and that's not necessarily constructive at least that's like

the perspective that I heard. And I think if you wanted to carry that a little bit further, and I'm not sure that this is what the person was necessarily saying in starting the discussion, but if you want to carry that a little bit further, you could run into some issues of groupthink or a situation where the mock draft is not nearly as generally relevant and applicable to folks unless they're sort of of that same mindset as the people who are doing the

mock draft. If you if you do get into that situation, do you guys think that's a problem now going to be a problem in the future. Is it has anything to be concerned about. I'll take this one first. No. I think part of it is, you know what the role of the mock draft is, and I feel like there is like it is not your draft. It is on some level to reflect group think. If it works well, the same way that the top hundred prospects lists have probably converged

over time. You know, I think there's probably an element of group thing, but it's also consensus from which you can work in your own opinions. I also think probably whatever aspect of group think there is probably gets overwhelmed by

having more correct picks. You know, I don't think unless you are in the draft, you know, I don't think it is as relevant like who is taking who when I think just having them having the draft available as a resource later probably just benefits from having a more consistent point of view that you can then work off. Yeah, I would agree. I would say I'm

like nine anti that position. Maybe five percent worries about it a little bit, But I mean I think group thinks a good thing when it's because you have a bunch of super successful owners that are coming together and you know there's certain strategies that work better than others over time. So um, I think

that's what you get here. Now, if you have a scenario where there's a whole bunch of people that are doing really well, it's course she that aren't in the mock or people use types of valuations or strategies that they do and they're not there, then yeah, then you have a group think problem. But I don't think that's the case today. I think we have a super strong group that's very representative of the people doing well and where she and

I think the argument that argument is a little bit. Hey man, all you people are going to operate as if the Earth is a sphere and you don't. You're not gonna put anybody in here who's gonna tell us the Earth is flat? Are we gonna really deal with this? Are we gonna deal with this kind of groupthink where everybody's gonna think the same way. Everybody's forced into the same model. Um, and I think that's uh so I have

as much I agree with everybody else. Follow up a question? Sorry, go ahead, UM, so you someone mentioned the successful strategies that they're potentially leading to what some people called groups think. Um, what are some strategies that you al saw emerge in this mock? And um, you know that's that's been born out of previous mocks as well. Uh yeah, I mean I'll point out a few things. The one is draft young players. Um, you know, there were not a lot of thirty plus players draft in

the first round. I'm not even sure if there was one this year. Um, don't draft pictures in the first round. You know, there's the Clayton Kershaws Jephson, which you can use for a number of years, but other than that, you probably shouldn't be drafting a picture. No pictures went in first round this year. So I think those are two good ways to start your draft. If you can draft a twenty to twenty five year old a really good hitter, um, that's a that's a good place to be.

So you're saying take it, David Price. Third, overall, it's a bad plan. Yeah, uh, in in this year, yes, a few years ago. Also, yes, do you guys think if Kershaw had been healthy it would have been reasonable to see him middle of the first round? Yeah, I mean second half, some twenty six year old, super healthy, no worries about his arm or anything else. Kershaw, Yeah, absolutely know, he gets an exception. He's that much better than everyone

else. But that Kershaw doesn't exist anymore. Right, He's older, he's had problem staying healthy, he's hurt right now. Um so yeah, not

not anymore. Yeah. And I don't even think there's necessarily a consensus on who the number one picture is. I don't like no one immediately springs to mind for a continuing league, um, I would say, And this kind of details into what our strategy was, because there was a there was an aspect where we kind of saw the writing on the wall, and um, a lot like we tended to draft the last few years pretty heavily in the twenty two to twenty six year old range or twenty two to twenty seven.

And I think we were probably a little more dogmatic about it than the two of you, who I think tend to jump around for value. If that's and I'll let you guys respond to that, and I yeah, and I think this year, like we just saw everybody filling that space, and I don't know that we were like incredibly successful at it, but we ended up going almost a little younger than usual, which is maybe not the right direction

all told. And we can talk about how successful that was later. But you know, I think we tried to draft maybe even into the nineteen to twenty two range a little more than we usually do, which is, you know, we are not big prospect hounds in this league, just because I think there are people who take that space better than us. But um, with this kind of um, I want to say, like strong drafting, it just became almost too hard to find equality twenty five year old by mid

round. And you know, for what we're trying to do, which is probably generally it's to compete in M plus one year, we just found there was more value like outside of that kind of type window. Sorry, yep, everyone agrees, Um, well let's just move on more generically. UM, were there any picks that sort out to you all that? Um you, like Dorik I said, you didn't, like, feel free to tout your own picks as well, if there's something you want to call out.

I think there ended up being value with the age with some of the older guys. I thought, seeing Donaldson in the sixth round, Cane in the eighth round, I mean, Lorenzo Kane's really good and with the format, if you get a guy who's really good for a couple of years, uh, you know, those are championships added. UM. On the younger side, I really liked the pick up Washington's Luis Garcia, whose name is not memorable. And then uh, uh Nate was on me. Uh Nate wanted

to draft Cabrian Hayes and we didn't quite reach a consensus. Uh, and somebody drafted him then before we uh we would have. But you know, now, Cobryan Hayes is just killing spring training. And I know there's a lot of people saying spring training is meeting less. They are wrong. Um. And the even in this very very very small sample size for Cabrian Hayes, it is some useful information. So those are some of the picks I I saw and uh and I think really provided uh you know, obvious good

value. There were a lot of reasonable value picks to be had because of the focus on youth. Yeah, I had I had something of the similar, and I was hinting at that I have I think your own Uh did you take up? Were you the ones who took Joey Vado in around six? Um? Sorry I should have that up, but I had Joey Vado listed around six. I thought even Carlos Santana and Josea Breyu in round eleven. I think those are closer to what you guys tend to call tedious value

picks. But you know, I think there was just some value in older players, and it kind of um made us with you know, when once we had the once we kind of had made enough nineteen to twenty one year old picks, it was too hard for us to pivot to like, um, you know, going much older in the draft, because I don't think we would have had the base with which to support that. But you saw, almost like halfway through the draft that the talent was really dropping for teams

that were trying to compete in year one. So, if I may, I think, if I put myself in the shoes of say, somebody who is interested in the mock draft, but maybe it is I don't know, somewhat ignorant, say, how would you reconcile the difference between saying prospects aren't going too early, but also saying that there was value in the veterans later on. There was value in some of the veterans later on, some of

the veterans. I think we're not great picks, but you and you know, I talked about some of the values that I thought were there for some of the prospects later and some of the values that were clearly there. I mean, Donaldson and Kane shouldn't have dropped that far, but I don't think Louis Scarcia should have dropped that far either, And Nate, you were right, Kabrian Hayes probably shouldn't have dropped that far. Yeah, it's funny too

because most of my list is mostly young players. Still, even with the enhanced focus on younger players, I think everyone on my list is under thirty um in terms of pick that I like. You know, I like Donaldson too. I think that's a good pick. Is it one of the ten or twenty those picks in the draft? In my opinion, No, it's not um, but it's a good one. I think in round six there's a there's some value there. Well, where are some of the best picks.

Uh So Danny Jansen went in the fourth round. Um, that's gonna be surprising to a lot of people, but I think it's absolutely appropriate. Um he's the catcher two on my board. Um in all the baseball, which is kind of crazy, but um, there's a lot to like there. He's gonna get on base, He's gonna have herm some power. He's young, catcher's terrible. Um, go get yourself and Danny Janson if you

can. Um. Ramo Loriano round eight. Um, you know, he had pretty bad seventeen and was maybe the Astro's only mistake of the last few years when they let him go after that. But he rebounded pretty big last year, had the good forty some odd game debut. You know, guy that can do it all. You know, strikeouts may limit him a little bit, but looks power, speed, defense, kind of get it all

there. His arm is also kind of must watch TV. Doesn't really help you a ton of score sheet, but a super fun player to watch and root for a couple others. I hate to say our own picks, but I can lump up together, so I'm going to do it. Padre's pictures. So Chris Paddock went in round eight. Huge, huge, huge fan of him. He is looked really good in spring training, not surely in the results, just in his stuff and how he's approaching batters and some of

the silly swings he's getting looks really good. You know. An anecdote I offered in a pretty competitive league. I offered Kyle Schwarber for Chris Paddock straight up within the last week. Pattick went round eighth where we went around four of the mock and I was easily rejected. So I think that's mostly about Chris Paddock. He's really good, and I think in round eighth that's pretty incredible. Um, who's the bus name? Yep, yep. That might

have been a trade that happened. And then the other Padre pitcher is Matt Strom. He's probably my favorite pitcher picking this year. Ye we took him around twelve. Everything is pointing in the right direction. Uh. You know, he pitched last year coming off knee surgery. By his own admission, he wasn't healthy until August. He still had a really good year. He was kind of doing the opener thing late in the year and he was still pitching really good. He had a twelve K to nine in the second half.

He has four pitches that graded above average last year by results. Yes, he did that as a reliever, but still that's an incredible place to start and bodes well for going to the rotation. He added a bunch of weight and muscle this winter to help him get more durable for for being a starting pitchers. So he's he's probably my favorite UM pitcher pick this year. Yeah. I had both of them on my sheet about year best players.

I couldn't agree more. Matt Tron's looked just like outstanding this spring. Padres remain a fun watch. Yeah, for sure. That's going to be a super fun team pitching, hitting. They have a lot of young, exciting guys. It'll be interesting to see how they they come together. A few more U Chad Pinder Round fifteen doesn't have a starting gig. He's still gonna get at least four hundred plate appearances. He's gonna play all over the place.

I had a pretty good year last year. Batted ball data was really good. Um, I think you know the drafts I've looked at. He's getting out of the fifteen, sixteenth round. I think that's an incredible pick there. And so when I'd recommend Pete Alonzo speaking of good spring training performances, particularly in bls L, first base is kind of loaded right now, particularly for leagues that have been going for a while, so um, it's

a little harder to get excited there, but certainly in BL's. Um, you know, this is the classic, you know, non sexy, righty, righty first baseman that just keeps hitting and all of a sudden he's in the big leagues and he's, you know, one of the twenty or thirty best hitters in baseball, and you're like, oh, how'd that happen? He never he never got a lot of hype, so he could be the new Goldschmidt or Hoskins or you know, a whole bunch of guys that have

done that. So there's still some risk. You know, he's not the most athletic guy, to put it kindly, but um, that bat looks really good. And in round nine that was that was pretty good. And then one more out I second to Hayes Hayes recommendation, and lastly round thirteen v. Dal Brujon. At some point we're gonna stop underrating the little guys. He is not big. He could hit the gym that would help add

some physicality, but he's also not very tall. But everything else. If you like didn't know his height and weight and you looked at him as some prospects, you would think he's a top ten prospect in baseball. You know, has the hit tool, played, approach, discipline, defense, speeds, makeups off the chart, scorting to everyone that talks to him. You know, the power is not quite there, but he's young and still growing

and all that. He did have a kind of a mini late season breakout in high a small fample, so maybe nothing, but he started to add more power there. So another hitter that I think could be very good and around thirteen, I think the tables are in your favor. Cool um Need You had just mentioned about the Gloody first baseman. Did the mock jet reveal anything to you all about positional scarcity? I know, at least in my head, there was a running thread about how deep third base was this year.

Yeah, I mean the one that I got to me was just Catcher is awful. I mean, if you're not going to get one of the first two or maybe a couple of the mid tier guys like the Tryst or Grandall or something like that. After that, I mean, I might I'd rather just wait till like round twenty and draft a couple of guys and have a Franken starting catcher platoon. You're not going to be missing out on any

productivity by doing that. You know. There's not only there's not even a lot of guys with like upside where you'd be like, hey, maybe this guy's gonna be something. It's just a lot of people that you know, are not going to be very good or just kind of be mediocres. So catcher looks worse than I can remember it. Yeah, And one of the things we see on the prospect it's Danny Jansen still qualifies as a prospect, and he's like and so not even in some top one hundreds or he's eighty

seventh on place and you look at that. I mean, the guy right now is Nate said, he's he's one of the top catchers in the league, I mean right now. So when I see that on the on the prospect, was I have some concerns because, as Nate said, Danny Jansen is actually good and catching, not just for score sheet but in the major

leagues is weak. Obviously the major leagues. I think part of that is that there's more of a more of a focus on some of the defensive things that are out there, and so we end up seeing Jeff math Is still having a job. Yeah, I will just echo that. I think I saw Danny Jansen in the one hundred to one range in what I would call a prominent minor league evaluators rankings. UM, and I thought that was crazy. Um. And you know we saw only I was just counting. I

think only twenty catchers went in this draft. It's a twenty fourteen draft. About half of them are rookies or people without position or you know, or playing time one of that. It's willing test Todio. So can can I can? I? Can I add an asterisk to the statement I made? There is the Astudillo gambit, which is an exception I'm willing to allow. Um, he does not go very high, but is actually interesting. UM. I don't know how long that's gonna last, or if he's gonna ever

get playing time, but he's good. And I think the thing I said in the mock was if you never strike out and batting average on balls and play as a thing. That means you hit three hundred, right, um, and and he does that. I mean it's a trick. It was like two percent last year, three percent, So um, it doesn't take much if you do that, and you have even a little bit of power

to become a pretty valuable catcher in this day and age. So I don't know, he might make the team as like a utility guy slash third catcher. He might come up later in the year. It's gonna still to be determined as far as I know. But um, he's interesting, and I think he's someone you'd like to have and just kind of treat him as a

prospect and see when he comes home. Yeah, you know. And it's interesting because one of the actual few veteran catchers he went was Mitch Garver ahead of him, so there and neither of them are actually starting catcher who did not go. But it's just really fascinating. That's why we ended up taking

in the ninth round, we took Adlee Rushman. One of the things you should know about this league is that you can take anyone, including you or me, but please don't I'm not not I do not return sixteenth round value. But I do think Adlee Rushman, who is by and large the consensus number one, and I think has just again not that like playing like Fedom or whatever matters, but he has been looking dynamite in the early college season.

Gangrass just to jump Fan Grafts just upgraded him to a sixty future Value Prospects, which puts you solidly in the top twenty prospects of the game. So yeah, it's not too early to jump on that bandwagon. He's He's not a you know, Bryce Harper level one dot one when it comes to the draft, but he is a solid Yes, this is the best player in the draft coming. He's a lot different than everyone else in the draft.

Yeah, and I think there was some backtock at the time. I think he was severely underdrafted because I think a lot of people are working for a limited information in the college here, but there are also because there are no good cashers. Yeah. Um, so, John, I wanted to go back. You had brought up Malcolm Nuniez before. I know he had a point there, But first, Ben, who is Malcolm juniaz Um to see that author that wrote that really popular book, Yes, exactly, John,

Why should know who Malcolm Junia is. So Malcolm Junia is. It was our sixteenth round pick. He was a slight statement pick. I thought he was fifteenth round whatever, the last round is, sixteenth round the uh. I thought he's value there. Um. But obviously in a real league somebody might let him slip. Um. But basically what he did in rookie league at the age of seventeen was to crush the ball entirely. He's sort

of a third baseman. Um. And here's the thing, like nobody had heard of him, he'd had He's signed for I think four hundred grand, which is not nothing, um. But when you have this kind of performance, it's kind of massive, epic performance. It matters. Um. It's it's an overwhelming performance, even in rookie ball. It's just you just don't see people do this. Um. He had no ps of something like eleven

hundreds something ridiculous. And yeah, it's a it's the in a consummer league which they keep adding teams and they have a thousand players in might not be a thousand, but it's a lot of players, and so the quality is slow. But you also have a seventeen year old who has just with real power, and you shouldn't ignore that. And I think one of the things that we see with some frequency is performance gets kind of ignored sometimes in on some of these lists. Even now, you used to be much worse.

I think you want Malcolm Nunez. I think if you're in a league, especially with unlimited rookies, nobody else is going to draft him. You can probably draft him in the middle twenties. You're the only one listening to this podcast, whoever you are, who does listen to this, and that's fair, and you should go ahead and get get him. The performance is too

much of an outlier to ignore. And when you have things like that, both Nate and I in season look at for supplemental picks, look at outlier performances by minor league players, and you end up picking up some good players by doing that. Yeah, some of them are flukes, but there are some things you can do, like you know, home runs, if you have a bunch of home runs. Yeah, maybe a little flukey, but it's hard to hit a bunch of home runs if you don't have the ability

to hit home runs. So you really want to look at these kinds of super outlier performances, even when they're in crappy leagues, even when they're even if it's the Dominican Summer League and the guy is very young, and you're gonna have a holding cause. So I think the lesson isn't just Malcolm Junia is, but any of these things where you have some kind of you can't ignore outlier performances. Yeah, and just just a correction there. His OPS

was actually twelve seventy. It was even better than eleven hundred and so, you know, silly video game numbers, right, But I agree with John. You know, he wasn't on my radar for around sixteen. He was a guy I had heard of and who put up good numbers, but you know, it wasn't wasn't anywhere near my list at that point. But John made the case, and UM ultimately is yeah, this this makes sense. Um, it's an outlier performance and we should see how that goes. Yeah.

I feel actually pretty similarly. I think it less more scouting, less performance. But about your fifteenth round pick Nolan Jones, Um like getting the players who just dominate league, like on some level, you know, it's right, it's something to work from, like right, you're you know, I think there's this like that, don't scout the stat line line That just

infuriates me because it's used wrong all the time by everyone. Um, but you know, if you know how to, if you know how to just outlines and what matters, you know, it's information, and to throw out information just to feel superior is seems silly to me. I think that's an excellent point. I think that goes for yea, that goes for spring training stats, which have demonstrable use. If we throw that out and say, oh, they don't matter, it does matter. All these things matter.

The question is how much do they matter? Quantifying how much they matter and then using that to make good decisions. Yeah, or drafting Lewis Brinson in the first round because he get five home runs? Can we can we talk about Nolan Jones for a second, because he's super interesting. He's a weird prospect um if you haven't looked at him, you know he's made a few

top one hundreds towards the back. But you know, you don't find many prospects that you know, add an appropriate level in you know, single A or high A. You know, walk sixteen percent of the time, strike out twenty five percent of the time and have a whole bunch of power that

rarely happens, particularly the walks. Um. So you know, there's I think some concerns that you know, maybe the batspeet isn't there and uh, you know he's gonna strike out a whole bunch and he's being too passive and uh, he's got Jeremy Hermida disease back in the day where it's like you need to swing the bat sometimes, So he may be that a little bit, um, but you know, the raw indicators there are super good and you know, at someone that's not going to cost you very much, is

it's pretty interesting also, um, because it's not going to come up again in the world. I'm a Jeremy hermid The truth there and everyone needs to know this. He had a nineps one year where he just like dominated in the Major league and everyone forgets this and he's like just a massive bust. No, he was like legitimately like haid Off for a year and just um, Jared, I think you can agree with me on this because I think

you were at this game. We saw him once in spring training like the single Like, I don't mean to turn this into a Bills in his pot, but like the single lowest motor I have ever seen on the baseball time. And maybe he was sick that day. I don't know. That was like in retrospect, I was like, oh, that's a warning sign. Now I understand. But he's not a prospectus, he's a major league bust. They're different. How long is that eating away at you? Ian?

Oh? All the time? Just you know, it doesn't come up in regular conversations of Um, well, I want to be respectful of everyone's time as of us on the East Coast. Do have to go to sleep because we're on these coasts? Um? Do you have any final thoughts about the mock that um you wanted to make sure to get out there. John will start with you. I think the thing that we haven't talked about a lot

is it's really fun. I have a great time doing it. I had a great time to doing it alone, but I also had a really great time doing it with Date. You know, we had the back and forth. It's something in the off season you get to you also have really high quality commentary from a variety of people. I do think we're at a just an incredible group of drafts at this point. I mean really good drafters, really sharp people, people with takes, and we've really, I've just had

a terrific time. It's a fun thing to do. If you're if you're interested in doing it next year, you should. And if you're if you like scoresheet enough to be here a listener to a podcast on it, then heck, uh, this is a really fun thing to do. I recommend everyone do it. Yeah, And I think the other benefit is that, you know, though it's a mock draft and we don't play it out, the truth eventually emerges, right, so uh, you know there's some good

natured ripping that happens. You know, if someone doesn't like a pick or something like that, that that we'll get said, we're not all just polite and everything's roses and sunshine, and you know, we've had people come back and you know a couple of years later you do know, hey, this pick up hand and it worked out and that's the fun part, right, So you know, hey, if you go against the grain and something works out, and you should come back and crow about it a little bit.

So I find it super fun. It's someone that's obnoxiously competitive, i'd probably get a little bit too into it, But um, I really enjoy it, and I think we got a great group of owners. Yeah, I will echo what they say. Um, and you know again, I actually think that is a really good point. Like, um, you know, this year, I think, um, I was noticing a lot of beloved, beloved former baseball Perspectus writer Joe Shehan and Jay Young Claus have a team

together. I was noticing a lot of their picks. Uh, kinde got gagged up on a little bit. Um, But um, you know, I do think there's an aspect where they ended up taking a lot of brewers and padres, and the brewers and padres looked pretty terrific and the early going, Um, you know, I think there's a place where they could come back in three years and say, well, we were actually just right about everybody. So take that. Um. But yeah, you know, I

think you also, I would say it's extremely fun to draft. But if you you know, not everyone can do that. If you just want to be in there on the conversation, just join the Yahoo group again. Groups that Yahoo dot com and Google, you know, Google, Yeah, that's exactly what you should do with it. Look for a mock draft in the search bar and you can just sign up for the league and then just start

receiving the emails. And you know, even if you can't participate, we get comments from people who aren't participating that are you know, rigorous and well thought out and probably probably as signed that they should have our position. But you know, I think the participants, the people who participate without drafting, are just as valuable as those who are in the league itself. Yeah. I was gonna mention that too, Ian, So I'm glad you said something.

I think participating comes in many forms, and certainly the folks that are watching and thinking critically or even just shouting random insult set terrible picks definitely add to the entertainment value. I have to tell myself that, because otherwise there's no point for me. Nice thanks to sure um with that. If no one has any further thoughts on the mac on the mock, John, what was the best thing you saw this week? Oh? Man, I did

on the spot? I know, Man, I am uh is how I feel every week, John, I don't let's see, I want to go with I think. Oh, the best thing I saw this week was the Jeopardy Tournament of Champions, The big team tournament. It was great. I was rooting for Ken Jennings over Brad Rutter and I've got another half hour on this old Jeopardy tournament. But it was great. Of course, the saddest thing this week because Alex Trebeck's pancreatic cancer. But the but it was great

to watch the Jeopardy at its finest. They did a brilliantly run tournament and it was a lot of fun to watch. Yeah, real a real validictory for Alex Travac too, you know if this is if he's facing a battle, like just a testament to thirty years of a great show. Yes, yeah, what was so good about it, John, Not that I'm I'm just so they what they did is they got all a bunch of former contestants.

They did had it in a tournament format. They had six teams of three each, and they had a little bit of a complicated play into the finals, and they got very entertaining people, uh you know, and and these uh, these people who are really good at the game uh playing And then they switched off from single Deputy to Double Jeopardy to Final Jeopardy, and they showed you some of the thoughts and what their betting strategies were uh going into it and so h and also, you know a lot of these people

are just you know, genuinely charming. Uh and so watching all this was a good time. I think Buzzy Cohen, who got knocked out before the finals, he started off saying, well, you know, we're gonna win in a kind of cocky way, and then one of the other guys said, well, you know, I'm just hoping to do well. I'm the uh, I'm probably the worst player here except for Buzzy. And you know, just the back and forth, the little throwdowns were a lot of fun.

Uh. And you know, you could see everybody was respectful of game, respectful of each other, willing to throw lines out there. But uh, you know, it's like the best of fantasy baseball. Um. You know, I I insult Nate just because he's a bad person, but uh, you know for the rest of you, obviously, I I insult you probably for some other reasons that I'll be able to justify later. So it was it was a good thing to watch. It was a lot of fun. Cool. Um, well, Nate fammed for a while. Now hopefully

you've been able to come with something what was it. I don't know if I can beat the Tribec Nod but um, and I don't know if this is best, but certainly the most memorable. Uh. I was out in Bozeman, Montana last week and they got three feet of snow and like three days. It's just like snowed. It never stopped for three whole days. And uh, if you've never been to Bozeman in the winter, um plows you would think would be a thing that exists in vast quantities, but they're

not. And um. They also don't like put sand or salt down on the roads or anything. Occasionally they'll do some gravel, but that's pretty rare apparently from what I saw. And even when they do plow the roads, then you don't do a very good job and don't do it very often. Coming from the northeast, it was kind of startling. So we had this drive to the airport at like four in the morning on our way back after you know, the three plus days snowing, and there's snow everywhere, and

it looked like the day after Tomorrow. I mean it really did. There were cars abandoned all over the place on the side of the road in the middle of the highway. There was a couple cars on the road that were like sliding through stoplights in front of us, and uh, it really felt odd. I've never seen anything quite like that and also terrifying to even drive fifteen minutes on back roads was was kind of crazy. Um So, yeah, Bozeman as the Day after Tomorrow, I love The Day after Tomorrow.

If it's on TV, I have to watch it to its conclusion. It's a word they watch for sure. Um I think we can just reserve that best thing for our guests. And let's spinnery and there's anything you wanted to get off your chests. Oh um, well, I'll just go with one quick anecdote because I think it'll wrappen. And it's actually about baseball, because I've been watching a lot of baseball this week. Um so, as as I mentioned, been watching the Poddres a ton in the last couple of days.

Many Machado looks good. Hey, did you know Mani Machado was a good player? Tared you should have watched it for a few years. Maybe if you watched it more regularly, you would have been able to know that. Um he was fine. But my favorite thing was. Um, there was a game where Eric Hosmer came up to bat and uh, you know,

just for a moment, the sound dropped out. They were talking and um, you know you can hear sounds from the stands pretty well in uh when watching spring training broadcasts and in the distance you hear a fango let's see that launch angle. And it just reminded me that hecklers are now smarter than like I've ever been, and like I had to study now to be able to heckle these players. So it's just a real huge, humbling experience. And that's why that's the best thing I saw this week. That's awesome,

that's pretty good. I don't know how it took us this long to get through a mock draft podcast before making fun of the Orioles. I'm stunned that we lasted this song. Oh, I forgot to say. The best thing I saw during the mock draft is that none of you knew this, but we had a sided bet going about whether an Oriole would be drafted in like a baby pool about when the first Oriole would be taken. Yeah, well we posted about it after it had Well, that's true, that's true.

We because you know we couldn't get everybody in, but I did want everybody in on the pool. Um and the I think what the first Orel was taking with pick number was a two hundred fifty two. All I remembers that I won. That's all I needed to know. How did you remember that? Yes? It was Ryan Mountcastle pick two fifty two. By the way,

Ryan Mountcastle severe overdraft should not have been taken. Um, but um, yeah, yes, I think we also drafted how many Orioles would be taken, and I think Ben won that as well by taking the under. Um. And what I love most about that and why was the best thing I saw is that Jared who was an oriole man for your entire life, when like, here's the most pessimistic thing I can come up with, and then Ben just took the under twice and one. So let that be a

lesson to y'all. Okay, okay, all right, nice, I'll be honest. I don't know how to wrap this up. You can you always do it. Um, Nick John, thanks for coming on. We really appreciate it, and we hope you'll be back at some point if you're willing to, because sometimes our listeners want actual content and smart people actual smart people helps too. Thanks for having us. It's always fun and happy to do it again sometime we had a great time cool. Thanks so on behalf of

everyone else. Thanks for listening. And I don't know what the lex mine is. I have a great Jack, have a great deal. Jarreny listens every time. How do you do all right?

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