Anatomy Of The First Round
Posted by: Knox Bardeen in Draft Strategy, tags: Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez, Chase Utley, David Wright, Grady Sizemore, Hanley Ramirez, Ian Kinsler, Jimmy Rollins, Johan Santana, Jose Reyes, Josh Hamilton, Mark Teixeira, Matt Hoilliday, Miguel Cabrera, Ryan Braun, Ryan HowardThe age old argument of which players belong in the first round of a fantasy baseball draft is as vicious and friendly as a Lucy versus Ricky fight. All of us fantasy GM’s love each other, but we can never agree, 100%, on anything.
For upcoming 2009 fantasy drafts we’ll continue to argue the merits of the 12 players selected in round one all the way up until Opening Day. In an effort to truly understand the first round (something that we’ll never accomplish) we need to break it down.
My first thought was that the first round needs to be broken down into three tiers. Each of these tiers will contain players who are interchangeable within the tier, but don’t really fit into the other tiers. Upon further review, I feel four tiers are needed for the 2009 first round.
Tier One: Hanley Ramirez, Alex Rodriguez, Albert Pujols, and David Wright.
These four players are the sole members of tier one because they are the only four players who have been selected with the first pick in the draft over at Mock Draft Central over the past two weeks. As you’ll see by their average draft positions and their highest and lowest spot taken statistics, it’s often agreed that these four belong at the top of the draft. Not many agree on where they should go. It depends a lot on personal preference (either for a player or for a particular stat category) and a little on risk.
- Ramirez - 1.35 ADP | Earliest - 1st | Latest - 4th
- Rodriguez - 2.11 ADP | Earliest - 1st | Latest - 5th
- Pujols - 3.01 ADP | Earliest - 1st | Latest - 7th
- Wright - 4.42 ADP | Earliest - 1st | Latest - 7th
Tier Two: Jose Reyes
I had originally thought that Reyes would be the fifth member of tier one. But, since he has not been taken first, and he’s the only remaining player who is always taken in the first round, I felt that he warranted a tier of his own.
- Reyes - 4.62 ADP | Earliest - 2nd | Latest - 10th
Tier Three: Grady Sizemore, Miguel Cabrera and Jimmy Rollins
These three are generally the next three that are considered to go off of the board. You could almost argue that Sizemore belongs in the tier with Reyes, but he’s been taken outside of the first round periodically, so he’s banished to tier three. Rollins almost was knocked down to tier four as he’s been selected pretty late at times. But, he just snuck into tier three because his ADP is under 10. That’s the cutoff from tier three to tier four; you must have an ADP under 10 to be in tier three.
- Sizemore - 6.63 ADP | Earliest - 3rd | Latest - 14th
- Cabrera - 7.22 ADP | Earliest - 4th | Latest - 16th
- Rollins - 9.46 ADP | Earliest - 6th | Latest - 18th
Tier Four: Josh Hamilton, Ryan Braun, Ian Kinsler and Ryan Howard
Here are the four players who make up the end of round one. The variances among them are huge. Sometimes you see them taken in the third slot, sometimes as late as 20th. These four are also the players that are most argued out of the first round and replaced by players like Chase Utley, Johan Santana, Mark Teixeira and Matt Hoilliday. What seperates the members of tier four from those just outside of it is their ADP. Each member of tier four has an ADP under twelve. They are the only remaining players who have that destinction.
- Hamilton - 10.51 ADP | Earliest - 4th | Latest - 19th
- Braun - 10.76 ADP | Earliest - 4th | Latest - 19th
- Kinsler - 11.10 ADP | Earliest - 6th | Latest - 20th
- Howard - 11.52 ADP | Earliest - 3rd | Latest - 20th


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