Posts Tagged “Ryan Braun”
Posted by: Knox Bardeen in Draft Lists, Fantasy Baseball, tags: Alfonso Soriano, Carlos Beltran, Carlos Lee, Carlos Quentin, Grady Sizemore, Jason Bay, Josh Hamilton, Manny Ramirez, Matt Holliday, Ryan Braun
It’s time to begin the ranking of outfielders for the 2009 season. Today, let’s look at the top ten.
- Grady Sizemore | Cleveland Indians - Dude became a 30/30 guy last season after three seasons of posting 20/20 numbers. And get this, he’s only 26-years old. Triple digit runs scored and the possibility of approaching triple digit RBI make it easy to forget that Sizemore doesn’t have the best batting average.
- Ryan Braun | Milwaukee Brewers - Anyone who passed on Braun before the ‘08 season worried about a sophomore slump came away disappointed. He scored more runs, hit more home runs and increased his RBI output. Even without third base eligibilty any more, he’s still one of the picks of the litter.
- Carlos Beltran | New York Mets - At 31-years old people keep telling me that Delgado’s value should plummet soon. It hasn’t happened. He’s a 20/20 guy with triple digit RBI and run totals and nothing less should be expected in ‘09.
- Josh Hamilton | Texas Rangers - Maybe in the ‘09 All-Star game Hamilton won’t use up all his second half home runs in the derby. Just about 2/3 of his homers came in the first half in ‘08. He posted triple digit RBI and almost hit triple digits in runs scored. His nine stolen bases are gravy. More power could show up in ‘09.
- Manny Ramirez | Free Agent - What Manny did in the seconld half was sick last year. He can’t keep that pace up for an entire season, but a batting average above .300 with 25+ home runs and triple digit RBI and run totals should be the new definition of “Manny being Manny”.
- Carlos Lee | Houston Astros - Lee lost close to 200 at-bats due to a shattered pinky in ‘08. He still hit 28 home runs and drove in 100. With the pinky healed expect Lee to easily lock down a line something like .300/30/100/100/10.
- Alfonso Soriano | Chicago Cubs - Unfortunately, Soriano has been trending negatively in his playing time due to injuries. If he can solve that problem in ‘09 he could get back to his studly 30/30 like numbers.
- Jason Bay | Boston Red Sox - Bay’s 2008 performance went a long way in showing us that his poor showing in 2007 was an outlier. Give him a full season hitting in that stacked Red Sox lineup and you’ll see better things in ‘09 then you saw in ‘08.
- Matt Holliday | Oakland Athletics - The new team name on his uniform is the reason why Holliday is in the bottom half of this top ten list and not near the top. The move to Oakland isn’t going to turn him into a Louse, but his offensive output can’t match his days in Colorado, can it?
- Carlos Quentin | Chicago White Sox - A wrist injury kept Quentin from reaching 40 home runs last season. In 480 at-bats he still drove in 100 and scored 96 runs. In ‘09 watch for Quentin to finish the breakout he started in 2008.
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Posted by: Knox Bardeen in Draft Strategy, Fantasy Baseball, tags: ADP, Alex Rodriguez, Andy Pettitte, Average Draft Position, Brandon Lyon, Chien-Ming Wang, Grant Balfour, Ian Kinsler, James Shields, Jason Giambi, John Smoltz, Jorge Cantu, Justin Upton, Mark DeRosa, Matt Holliday, Matt Wieters, Melvin Mora, Mike Jacobs, Ryan Braun, Ryan Howard, Tim Lincecum, Ubaldo Jimenez
It’s time for another installment of movers and shakers on the Mock Draft Central Average Draft Position Report.
Headed Up
- Andy Pettitte | New York Yankees | +7.7% - You knew the Pettitte re-signing would begin his slow rise in ADP. This is his second consecutive week with a 7+ percentage point rise. He’s now into the 23rd round at 276.76 from 298.00.
- Ryan Braun | Milwaukee Brewers | +7.1% - Braun is firmly entrenching himself in the first round as he goes from an ADP of 10.41 to 9.72.
- Ian Kinsler | Texas Rangers | +4.1% - There has been much debate so far about which second baseman (Utley, Pedroia or Kinsler) deserves to be the highest ranked at his position. This week it was Kinsler as he went from an ADP of 11.65 to 11.19 and was the only one of the three to rise in ADP. (for what it’s worth, I disagree and rank Kinsler third out of these guys)
- Grant Balfour | Tampa Bay Rays | +3.8% - Balfour just penned a one-year contract with the Rays and had a 1.54 ERA with 82 strikeouts in 58.1 innings of work. He’s a superb set-up man and a must own if your league uses holds. He’s up to a 290.84 ADP from 301.86.
- Matt Wieters | Baltimore Orioles | +3.2% - Wieters climbed last week from a mid-11th-round 127.36 to an early 11th round 123.45. All without seeing a Major League pitch.
- Tim Lincecum | San Francisco Giants | +3.0% - Lincecum has almost climbed into the second round as he’s sitting at 26.05 from an ADP of 26.82. Santana is still the highest ranked pitcher on the board at 18.58, but I’m not sure that I wouldn’t take Lincecum before him.
Other noteables: James Shields (+2.0%) and Brandon Lyon (+2.7%)
Headed Down
- Melvin Mora | Baltimore Orioles | -6.1% - Is it Mora’s age (36) or the Orioles addition of Wiggington that had fantasy GM’s selecting Mora later in mock drafts? His ADP dropped from a 17th round 204.14 to a 19th round 217.34.
- Matt Holliday | Oakland A’s | -6.0% - Holliday moved last week from an ADP of 13.37 to 14.23. It looks as if he’s completely out of contention for a first round selection, which is probably as it should be since he’s no longer hitting in Coors Field.
- Mike Jacobs | Kansas City Royals | -5.6% - A crowded Royals first base depth chart and his inability to het lefties migt have spawned his drop to an ADP in the 22nd round of 263.05 from the 21st round 248.37 he was at last week.
- Ubaldo Jimenez | Colorado Rockies | -4.2% - Jimenez just rose 5.6% last week after signing a new deal and now drops out of the 23rd round to 282.36 from 270.55 this week. WTF???
- Chien-Ming Wang | New York Yankees | -3.2% - He’s not a strikeout threat or a very good base runner, but Wang, if healthy, should perform better than his ADP of 215.35 (19th round) predicts. Last week he fell from 208.37 (18th round).
- John Smoltz | Boston Red Sox | -3.0 - Smoltz fell from an ADP of 260.48 to 268.64 last week. Are February mock drafters finally realizing that Smoltz is in no hurry to hit the mound in Fenway? The Red Sox are going to make 125% sure that Smoltz is healthy and only care about him helping out in the stretch run and the playoffs.
Other noteables: Ryan Howard (-5.1%), Jason Giambi (-4.4%), Mark DeRosa (-4.0%), Alex Rodriguez (-3.8%), Jorge Cantu (-3.1%) and Justin Upton (-3.0).
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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 Howard
The 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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Posted by: Knox Bardeen in Draft Strategy, tags: Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez, Chase Utley, David Wright, Grady Sizemore, Hanley Ramirez, Jose Reyes, Josh Hamilton, Mark Teixeira, Miguel Cabrera, mock draft, Ryan Braun, Ryan Howard
I had a brilliant idea the other day, which happens quite a bit. But unlike most of my mad scientist theories brilliant ideas, this one actually sounded good after I thought about it for a while; so I set it into motion.
With the popularity of mock drafts growing and growing, I wanted to put one together. My reasons for this were not only to practice for a real draft, but to get the participants thoughts and strategies as they went. My theory was that if each fantasy GM wrote down what they were thinking and what kind of strategy they were employing after each pick, so many people could benefit from that knowledge; for a number of reasons.
- You can see how a draft unfolds; which players go where.
- You can see if more fantasy GM’s are grabbing power or speed and in what rounds.
- You can see how many of these guys use draft strategies, and when they go about putting them into play.
- Right or wrong, you get to hear what people think about these players and what drives a fantasy GM to draft them
There are actually tons of reasons why this is a great learning tool. So, to set this up I grabbed a bunch of tweeps (friends on twitter) and asked them to participate. It was easy to find 11 other guys and the cool thing about the mix of mock draft participants is that they come from all walks of fantasy baseball life. We’ve got experts mixed in with advanced fantasy GM’s. So, you’ll get to hear ideas from a myriad of different types of fantasy baseballers.
Without further ado, let’s talk about the first round that was just completed. The team name is also the twitter moniker for each participant. If you’re on twitter, go say hello. The commentary after the pick is from each manager. They were asked to talk about the pick and any particular strategy; if using one.
- Round 1 : Pick 1 - @crookedpitch - Hanley Ramirez - What? I have to wait 23 more picks until I get to go again??? Ouch, I had better make this pick count. Ramirez is a 30/30 stud who will also score 100+ runs easy. I can’t think of a better way to start my team off then by grabbing this power/speed combo guy who will also hit .300. At this point I’m going to wait and see how the rest of the first round and the second round play out before etching a draft strategy in stone.
- Round 1 : Pick 2 - @Angels2717 - Albert Pujols - I decided to stick with the consistency of Albert. The only off year was the one where he was injured. His all around power is appealing to me and his ability to get on base a lot and to do just about everything. This pick was hard based on the fact that there was a lot to choose from after Hanley: A-Rod, Reyes, Wright. After a little time of thinking, I decided I liked Pujols’ consistency more than anything the other possibilities had.
- Round 1 : Pick 3 - @TheRoundtable - Alex Rodriguez - Rodriguez is automatic. Pencil him in for .300/40/110 without breaking a sweat. He’ll even steal 15-20. He’s the marquee player in a new ballpark, and has new found protection in Mark Teixeira.
- Round 1 : Pick 4 - @fakebaseball - Jose Reyes - I was pleased to see that Jose Reyes was available with the 4th pick. He’s proven to be a relatively reliable player at a premium position, and assuming continued good health, he’ll give me a nice leg up on the oft-frustrating stolen base category. I’ll be happy if I can get .290/15 HR/55 SB from my shortstop, because there should be plenty of power bats available in the following rounds. I know there’s been some blogosphere hand-wringing over the Mets’ new stadium, but even if the portents of team-power doom are true, it shouldn’t have a significant impact on Reyes’ value.
- Round 1 : Pick 5 - @jefeboy - David Wright - Couldn’t see taking an OF this early, and Wright seems like a good solid choice who will contribute in every category. One site lists his ADP as 4.8, so getting him 5th makes me happy.
- Round 1 : Pick 6 - @xxldaddyo - Grady Sizemore - I have to go with Grady Sizemore. He became a 30-30 guy last year and I think has the potential to be a 40-40 guy. Those guys don’t grow on trees (especially if they arent on steroids). Entering prime Age 26 season.
- Round 1 : Pick 7 - @tommystv - Chase Utley - I’m a sucker for building a solid Middle Infield early. 1st Base and OF I tend to pass on until the right player slips because those positions are so much deeper. If I would have gone 1B it would have been Teixera and OF would have been Ryan Braun, I really think both of those guys are gonna have nice seasons. The biggest money league I play in allows position eligibility if the player plays one game at the position…yes, Albert Puljos was 2nd base eligible last year. If that were the case here I would have given serious consideration to Miguel Cabrera for possible dual 1st/3rd and Ryan Braun for possibly getting an odd game at 3rd.
- Round 1 : Pick 8 - @sporer - Miguel Cabrera - Considering I nearly ranked Miguel Cabrera ahead of Albert Pujols in my 1B rankings, he was a no-brainer for me when he fell to 8th. I had him 7th in my top 10 immediately after the season and his placement drew the most comments, but with mock season in full gear he has been a consistent first rounder. He showed so much in the second half of last season and the 40-home run season that has eluded him thus far may very well be on the horizon. He is a four category stud that belongs in the top half of the first round. As such, I was happy to steal him at eight.
- Round 1 : Pick 9 - @therotofeed - Ryan Howard - With Miguel Cabrera off the board, I had to go with Ryan Howard at the ninth position. Not that I’m hanging my head too low - I never really feel bad about rostering a guy who consistently cranks out 45+ HR seasons, and I gotta think that this year he hits at least 15-20 BA pts higher than last season. But I still wanted Miggy.
- Round 1 : Pick 10 - @dowdyism - Josh Hamilton - I normally look for a strong infield pick in the first round, but since most of my targets are gone at the 10 spot, I grabbed Josh Hamilton. I’m missing out on some steals by not going with Matt Holliday or Ryan Braun, but as loaded as the top of the Texas order is, I am banking on big numbers across the board with Hamilton.
- Round 1 : Pick 11 - @jasoncollette - Ryan Braun - Pretty happy to have Braun to me at the 11th pick. I was not expecting it but you have to take a 5 category player in the first round.
- Round 1 : Pick 12 - @seniorcircuit - Mark Teixeira -Got a reliable, power first baseman who will have plenty of RBI chances in the Yankees batting order. He seems happy (and his wife too) to be playing for a contending team in a brand new ballpark. I see him putting up 100/30+/110/.300 season.
With that, round one is complete. Let’s hear your commens and/or questions.
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Posted by: Knox Bardeen in Fantasy Baseball, tags: Carlos Beltran, Carlos Quentin, Grady Sizemore, Jason Bay, Josh Hamilton, Lance Berkman, Manny Ramirez, Matt Holliday, Ryan Braun, Ryan Ludwick
Here are the fantasy baseball rankings for the top ten outfielders for the 2008 season. I will also list the predictions from the pre-season at the bottom of this post for comparison.
- Manny Ramirez, Los Angeles Dodgers - Manny did it all in 2008. He alienated teammates and Red Sox Nation. But, once he decided to get serious, he hit better than anyone else in baseball. 102 runs | 37 HR | 121 RBI | 3 SB | .332
- Matt Holliday, Colorado Rockies - Is it possible for your home run total to go down at Coors Field? I’m nit picking here since he still hit 25 homers and was one of the most versatile hitters in fantasy baseball. 107 runs | 25 HR | 88 RBI | 28 SB | .321
- Josh Hamilton, Texas Rangers - Had a much more powerful first half than second. But both halves of the season were pretty phenomenal. 98 runs | 32 HR | 130 RBI | 9 SB | .304
- Lance Berkman, Houston Astros - This is most likely the last seaosn you’ll see Berkman with outfield eligibility. Now he can dominate the first basemen for the rest of his career. 114 runs | 29 HR | 106 RBI | 18 SB | .312
- Ryan Ludwick, St. Louis Cardinals - A lot of St. Louis fans wondered out loud what Ludwick could do with a full season of at-bats. He tore the cover off of the ball. 104 runs | 37 HR | 113 RBI | 4 SB | .299
- Carlos Beltran, New York Mets - His power is dipping which is understandable as you age. But, his stolen bases are on the rise (aren’t you supposed to slow down as you get older?). With all of these question marks, the only thig that is a certainty is that Beltran is an all around fantasy stud. 116 runs | 27 HR | 112 RBI | 25 SB | .284
- Ryan Braun, Milwaukee Brewers - No sophomore slump for Braun. He actually bested his home run total and RBI total from 2007. 92 runs | 37 HR | 106 RBI | 14 SB | .285
- Jason Bay, Boston Red Sox - Another solid season for Bay who may end up really liking it in Boston. It’s starting to look like 2007 was an anomaly. 111 runs | 31 HR | 101 RBI | 10 SB | .286
- Grady Sizemore, Cleveland Indians - This guy does everything extremely well. if his batting average would have been 10-15 points higher he would have been in the top three on this list. 101 runs | 33 HR | 90 RBI | 38 SB | .268
- Carlos Quentin, Chicago White Sox - 36 dingers and 100 RBI in only 480 at-bats. Imagine what it could have been like if he’d gotten 550+ at-bats… 96 runs | 36 HR | 100 RBI | 7 SB | .287
Below are the pre-season rankings.
2008 American League Fantasy Baseball Outfielder Rankings
- Carl Crawford | Tampa Bay Rays
- Grady Sizemore | Cleveland Indians
- Ichiro Suzuki | Seattle Mariners
- Vladimir Guerrero | Los Angeles Angels
- B.J. Upton | Tampa Bay Rays
- Alex Rios | Toronto Blue Jays
- Curtis Granderson | Detroit Tigers
- Magglio Ordonez | Detroit Tigers
- Manny Ramirez | Boston Red Sox
- Bobby Abreu | New York Yankees
- Nick Markakis | Baltimore Orioles
- Torii Hunter | Los Angeles Angels
- Vernon Wells | Toronto Blue Jays
- Hideki Matsui | New York Yankees
- Nick Swisher | Chicago White Sox
- Jermaine Dye | Chicago White Sox
- Delmon Young | Minnesota Twins
- Johnny Damon | New York Yankees
- Jacoby Ellsbury | Boston Red Sox
- Raul Ibanez | Seattle Mariners
- Jose Guillen | Kansas City Royals
- Melky Cabrera | New York Yankees
- Gary Matthews Jr. | Los Angeles Angels
2008 National League Fantasy Baseball Outfielder Rankings
- Matt Holliday | Colorado Rockies
- Alfonso Soriano| Chicago Cubs
- Carlos Beltran | New York Mets
- Carlos Lee | Houston Astros
- Adam Dunn | Cincinnati Reds
- Eric Byrnes | Arizona Diamondbacks
- Chris Young | Arizona Diamondbacks
- Hunter Pence | Houston Astros
- Cory Hart | Milwaukee Brewers
- Brad Hawpe | Colorado Rockies
- Andruw Jones | Los Angeles Dodgers
- Jason Bay | Pittsburgh Pirates
- Shane Victorino | Philadelphia Phillies
- Juan Pierre | Los Angeles Dodgers
- Jeff Francoeur | Atlanta Braves
- Ken Griffey Jr. | Cincinnati Reds
- Matt Kemp | Los Angeles Dodgers
- Pat Burrell | Philadelphia Phillies
- Aaron Rowand| San Francisco Giants
- Jeremy Hermida | Florida Marlins
- Austin Kearns | Washington Nationals
- Moises Alou | New York Mets
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Posted by: Knox Bardeen in Fantasy Baseball, tags: Alex Rodriguez, Aramis Ramirez, Aubrey Huff, Chipper Jones, David Wright, Jorge Cantu, Kevin Youkilis, Melvin Mora, Miguel Cabrera, Ryan Braun
Here are the fantasy baseball rankings for the top ten third basemen for the 2008 season. I will also list the predictions from the pre-season at the bottom of this post for comparison.
- David Wright, New York Mets - Wright is just a man among boys at the third base position. He does it all! 115 runs | 33 HR | 124 RBI | 15 SB | .302
- Alex Rodriguez, New York Yankees - It’s just nasty to consider 2008 an off year fantasy speaking for A-Rod. He’s still got first round talent. 104 runs | 35 HR | 103 RBI | 18 SB | .302
- Ryan Braun, Milwaukee Brewers - The elite fantasy third basemen used to only be A-Rod and Wright. Now, you can add Braun’s name to that list, if only he were going to play 3B anymore. 92 runs | 37 HR | 106 RBI | 14 SB | .285
- Aubrey Huff, Baltimore Orioles - Huff might be too old to keep these numbers up going forward. But, 2008 was one heck of a ride. 96 runs | 32 HR | 108 RBI | 4 SB | .304
- Miguel Cabrera, Detroit Tigers - Fourteen games was just enough to qualify at third base. His numbers are so good he’d be on any top ten list, no matter what position. 85 runs | 37 HR | 127 RBI | 1 SB | .292
- Kevin Youkilis, Boston Red Sox - Youkilis really boosted his power output in 2008. “The Greek God of Walks” is now the total package. 91 runs | 29 HR | 115 RBI | 3 SB | .312
- Chipper Jones, Atlanta Braves - His flirtation with .400 didn’t last as long as he’d hoped. But, he proved, once again, that he’s one of the best pure hitters in the game. 82 runs | 22 HR | 75 RBI | 4 SB | .364
- Aramis Ramirez, Chicago Cubs - Ramirez might not be hitting as many home runs as in years past, but his run production is still among the best. 97 runs | 27 HR | 111 RBI | 2 SB | .289
- Jorge Cantu, Florida Marlins - Cantu had a breakout year in 2008, and could get better. 92 runs | 29 HR | 95 RBI | 6 SB | .277
- Melvin Mora, Baltimore Orioles - Had a fantastic second half, but late season injuries and his age could hurt his draft status next season. 77 runs | 23 HR | 104 RBI | 3 SB | .285
Below is the pre-season ranking list, for comparison.
2008 American League Fantasy Baseball Third Base Rankings
- Alex Rodriguez | New York Yankees
- Miguel Cabrera | Detroit Tigers
- Mike Lowell | Boston Red Sox
- Chone Figgins | Los Angeles Angels
- Adrian Beltre | Seattle Mariners
- Troy Glaus | Toronto Blue Jays
- Josh Fields | Chicago White Sox
- Alex Gordon | Kansas City Royals
- Hank Blalock | Texas Rangers
- Evan Longoria | Tampa Bay Rays
- Eric Chavez | Oakland Athletics
- Melvin Mora | Baltimore Orioles
- Casey Blake | Cleveland Indians
- Mike Lamb | Minnesota Twins
- Akinora Iwamura | Tampa Bay Rays
- Brandon Inge | Detroit Tigers
- Joe Crede | Chicago White Sox
- Brandon Wood | Los Angeles Angels
2008 National League Fantasy Baseball Third Base Rankings
- David Wright | New York Mets
- Ryan Braun | Milwaukee Brewers
- Aramis Ramirez | Chicago Cubs
- Garrett Atkins | Colorado Rockies
- Chipper Jones | Atlanta Braves
- Ryan Zimmerman | Washington Nationals
- Kevin Kouzmanoff | San Diego Padres
- Edwin Encarnacion | Cincinnati Reds
- Troy Glaus | St. Louis Cardinals
- Ty Wigginton | Houston Astros
- Mark Reynolds | Arizona Diamondbacks
- Pedro Feliz | Philadelphia Phillies
- Andy LaRoche | Los Angeles Dodgers
- Jose Bautista | Pittsburgh Pirates
- Jose Castillo | Florida Marlins
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