The Z Files: Building an Aceless Staff

The Z Files: Building an Aceless Staff

This article is part of our The Z Files series.

For the last couple of weeks, I've explored what a team might look like without elite pitching. In short, the idea is to crush hitting while competing in pitching via shrewd in-season roster management. However, in order to be in position to manage pitching, the pitchers can't be drafted willy-nilly. There's method to the madness. Today's focus will be on the construction of a pitching staff designed to make up for the paucity of ace anchors.

What follows are 100 starting pitchers, sorted into specific groups. Please note, these aren't tiers, though the pitchers are listed in order of preference within each group. Each group carries a trait necessary for a competitive staff. A mix of all these traits is needed. Please keep in mind the intent of this plan is for use in draft and hold leagues, though it can be adapted to standard leagues – you just don't have as deep a set of reserves available to make it work.

At least one arm from the first two groups is obligatory. A mix from the next pair is also necessary, though it doesn't matter which group is selected first, so let draft flow dictate the order. Ideally, you'll leave with at least five, hopefully six pitchers from the first four groups. After that, it doesn't matter which group is targeted, so long as someone from each is on the staff.

Included in the table is the National Fantasy Baseball Championship Average Draft Position (NFBC ADP) for all 15-team

For the last couple of weeks, I've explored what a team might look like without elite pitching. In short, the idea is to crush hitting while competing in pitching via shrewd in-season roster management. However, in order to be in position to manage pitching, the pitchers can't be drafted willy-nilly. There's method to the madness. Today's focus will be on the construction of a pitching staff designed to make up for the paucity of ace anchors.

What follows are 100 starting pitchers, sorted into specific groups. Please note, these aren't tiers, though the pitchers are listed in order of preference within each group. Each group carries a trait necessary for a competitive staff. A mix of all these traits is needed. Please keep in mind the intent of this plan is for use in draft and hold leagues, though it can be adapted to standard leagues – you just don't have as deep a set of reserves available to make it work.

At least one arm from the first two groups is obligatory. A mix from the next pair is also necessary, though it doesn't matter which group is selected first, so let draft flow dictate the order. Ideally, you'll leave with at least five, hopefully six pitchers from the first four groups. After that, it doesn't matter which group is targeted, so long as someone from each is on the staff.

Included in the table is the National Fantasy Baseball Championship Average Draft Position (NFBC ADP) for all 15-team leagues completed after January 15, along with the minimum and maximum pick in that span followed by a pithy comment.

Group 1: Cross Your Fingers

The ADP for this group is after the fourth round. If you're choosing from the back end of Round 5, there's a good chance they're off the board. When this occurs, my play has been to draft another hitter and wait for the next group to start taking pitching, since it won't be long before I'm up in Round 6.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Jameson Taillon615280Rising fast, very likely mid-Round 4 ADP by March
Zack Greinke645380Deserves benefit of the doubt for one more year
Stephen Strasburg614784Often earlier but upside worth gambling on at a discount
Madison Bumgarner7446101ADP falling, will be interesting to see the trend once he pitches in the spring

Group 2: Cross Your Fingers and Toes for your De Facto Ace

There's risk involved building a staff in this manner. However, if I land on one of this trio as my first arm, I'm confident it can be done. Thus far, it's worked out, and in some cases I've bagged two of the following troika.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Mike Foltynewicz805997Regression likely, but still has enticing combo of whiffs, potential wins and volume
Jose Berrios756386On the rise, could be priced out by March
Zack Wheeler8875102Love the skills, sweating the health

Group 3: Ace Potential

This is the group where everyone has displayed ace skills, but is either an injury risk or inconsistent. If everything goes right, you've drafted an ace in a later round. Try to get at least one of this quartet.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
David Price9379130Still a health risk, else would be ranked (and picked) in ace territory
Luis Castillo10582129"Once you own a skill…" Problem is the opposite is also true and he owns both good and bad.
Masahiro Tanaka130108148Elite skills, needs to keep the ball in the yard
Cole Hamels141106165I trust the success after the league and team switch will carry over

Group 4: The Backbone

This group could be the key. The intent is to build up strikeouts and hopefully wins via volume, as each option pitches for a good team and is a reasonable bet to work into the sixth inning. Their skills aren't elite, but they're generally better than average. Their ratios are driven by some of the luck-oriented metrics, such as batting average on balls in play, home runs per fly ball and left on base percent. If Lady Luck is on your side, you won't miss an ace. If she's playing hard to get, you'll be regretting not grabbing an elite arm. I've been selecting at least two from this group.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Rick Porcello160134174Ratios a risk, but checks the other boxes
Miles Mikolas8867108Requires adding strikeouts, but ratios should help stabilize stats
Kyle Hendricks119100137Same boat as Mikolas
Dallas Keuchel184170218Expecting he signs with a contender
Jon Lester195149229Outpitched peripherals but still can be an asset
Jose Quintana189164219No longer so underrated he's overrated; he's rated just right.
Jake Arrieta223193255Just a feeling Arrieta will step it up as Phillies make a run for the division crown
Chris Archer126105146Cost has dropped enough to take the chance
Nathan Eovaldi172143186Injury risk, but otherwise meets the criteria

Group 5: Breakout Potential

Here we're looking for this season's Patrick Corbin. Well, that may be a bit over the top, but last year Corbin's ADP was low 200s, and half this group is after that. Most of this set is one skill away, with health considered a skill. If this were a ranking tier, they have at least one, perhaps two or three tier upside. Hitting on someone from this tier doesn't replace an ace, but it facilitates streaming. Unless, of course, you get lucky and unearth this year's Corbin.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Carlos Martinez122101158A strong spring vaults Martinez to Group 3
Eduardo Rodriguez153139174Knee surgery hopefully alleviates DL visits
Andrew Heaney157130176Quietest 180 IP season in the league last year
Nick Pivetta154132170Everyone's favorite breakout candidate
Tyler Glasnow171153198Working on improving tunneling. If he succeeds, look out
Shane Bieber155142174Close second to Pivetta
Kevin Gausman200175238The Senior Circuit agrees with the former Orioles righty
Reynaldo Lopez257202321Second-half surge a good sign, Guaranteed Rate Park is a latent pitcher's venue
Joe Musgrove220194253Skills are there, with good health could take the next step
Tyler Skaggs238213266At minimum a streamer, could break out with health and stealth strikeout upside
Joey Lucchesi202178247Needs a third pitch as deception can keep batters off a 90 mph fastball for only so long
Zach Eflin340300375Pivetta gets the attention but there's some underlying upside with Eflin as well
Trevor Richards393326464Hot take: In a battle of the Trevors, Richards tops Williams
Michael Wacha289247333Just. Stay. Healthy.
Dylan Bundy285255335Obvious risk, but ceiling still higher than most.

Group 6: Part-Time Aces

This could be my favorite group since so much ground can be made up. The notion here is all these hurlers are penalized for a lack of innings. Some are injury-prone, some are coming off injuries, and others are just young. However, on a per-appearance basis, they all project to be ranked much higher, even as aces. This is one of the reasons I don't pay attention to post-draft standings since they don't capture the pitchers in your lineup when this group isn't active.

The caveat with this group is they're much more palatable in a deep-roster, draft-and-hold league as opposed to one with a short reserve list, unless you can stash them on a DL or farm roster, and even then some won't be eligible. Still, in the NFBC Draft Championship, these arms are gold, especially since they're markedly discounted as most don't want to "waste" a roster spot on a part-time pitcher in the format.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Ross Stripling221183253If he had a definite job, Stripling would be Group 2
Rich Hill175125237Skills slipping, but still near elite on a per inning basis
Collin McHugh253186450Could have innings monitored after working as a reliever
Charlie Morton12294140Easily could be Group 4, but hedging injury risk
Jesus Luzardo236186309When does he get inserted into Oakland's rotation?
Forrest Whitley244177313When does he get inserted into Houston's rotation?
Kenta Maeda217171253Continues to excel in strikeouts
Hyun-Jin Ryu182146212Pitches well between DL stints
Yusei Kikuchi192165300Unsure how many innings Seattle will give Kikuchi
Josh James186156211Expecting no workload limitation, but could happen
Brad Peacock367291507Good chance he returns to the bullpen, but if/when he starts, Peacock is useful
Justus Sheffield403352506Expecting Mariners to show off their new arm at some point
Mike Soroka290269330Braves will go easy on their prized youngster, especially after last season's injury scare.
Touki Toussaint341280416Just. Throw. Strikes.

Group 7: Streamers

The previous group are skilled enough to be active regardless of matchup, except perhaps in Coors Field or on the road facing the Astros, Yankees or Red Sox. This group needs to be managed, but when deployed in favorable scenarios, expectations for that game/week exceed season-long projections. In most cases, that scenario is a favorable home venue, but some play for better teams so their win potential is high, or they have strikeout upside which can be embellished when facing an offense that fans at an accelerated clip.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Yonny Chirinos401276446Skills to start, could be second man out to temper workload
Ryan Yarbrough381295468I hope he continues to be the follower, picking up wins and working fewer than five innings
Derek Holland353286392Great home park, high strikeout potential
Trevor Cahill391342537Potential to be Holland-light if he can avoid injury
Marco Gonzales273230311Great home venue, offense should score some runs
Freddy Peralta318233382Miller Park isn't a great home venue but checks the other boxes
Matt Boyd319277393Ample games against lesser AL Central clubs to be an asset
Chase Anderson373306443Poor home venue, but supported by good offense and great bullpen
Dereck Rodriguez336226415Last season wasn't all luck, but certainly played a part
Jose Urena371192430Wins and strikeout potential tempered, but good stuff in great park
Jaime Barria433342504Pedestrian punchouts but good park and supporting defense
Jakob Junis309270337Keeps teasing strikeout upside
Mike Fiers337297359Great park, good run support
Corbin Burnes294252321Could be deserving of breakout group
Brandon Woodruff333266380Looking to build off playoff success
Trevor Williams293222345Afraid what will be seen in the mirror when the smoke clears
Matt Harvey344285430The price is worth the chance Harvey recaptures some of old glory in a good venue

Group 8: Discounted Outliers

The common thread in this group is they can't be characterized in one of the other groups, but I'll gladly draft them at a discount. Often, I won't end up with someone from this group, but I don't want to ignore them either. Some were borderline for inclusion in other groups. There's a good chance you disagree with my grouping and shuffle them elsewhere.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Robbie Ray10981126If the offense were better, Ray would be a streamer
J.A. Happ139122162In the minority, but see a homer-driven slide
Sonny Gray275246313Optimistic Gray rebounds, but afraid of elevated homers
Alex Wood212174254Not a fan of the park downgrade
Jhoulys Chacin252210300Probably should be in Group 7, but I've passed on Chacin a couple times, so just being honest
Jimmy Nelson254198291A good spring changes things
Zack Godley238160275Maybe still stinging from being burned last season but control woes look real
Mike Minor314271396If Minor is traded out of Arlington, things could change
Julio Teheran265214330Still can't get lefties out
Tanner Roark395316478When told he was traded to Reds, Roark asked if they could move the fences back
Sean Newcomb218166297Too many other options if Newcomb struggles
Anibal Sanchez293248345Team context worth a reserve spot
Gio Gonzalez412376497Welcome to the reserve-only section of the group
CC Sabathia392345430Big guy keeps getting it done. Worth a reserve pick for wins
Danny Duffy417320478Weak division so there will chances to stream
Jake Odorizzi376304438Ditto
Michael Pineda361322401Like most, waiting until we see Pineda in the spring
Jeff Samardzija392331460Only in draft and hold formats
Vince Velasquez356322383Willing to chance injury risk or control issues, not both
Joe Ross435353534Another wait-and-see guy

Group 9: The Price Isn't Right

The Million Dollar Man Ted DiBiase insisted everyone had a price. He's right, but I've been playing this game for a long time and simply know I won't be drafting any of the final group at their current market price. The reasons are varied, but the bottom line is by the time I'd consider this group, someone else will have drafted them. Your team, your call.

Player ADP Min Max COMMENT
Yu Darvish163131191Wasn't a fan pre-injury, not expecting much now
German Marquez764998Everyone wants Marquez to succeed and is backing it with analysis. Until someone consistently defeats Coors, I'm skeptical
Michael Fulmer320274389Low strikeouts plus low wins equals no thanks
Carlos Rodon299254385Had strong stretch to open the second half, then crashed
Anthony DeSclafani367328432Could be a low-end breakout candidate but home park hurts
Steven Matz253205297Curious, if not cautiously optimistic, but not at this price
Jon Gray207190232Again, Coors Field is undefeated
Kyle Freeland169123208I at least understand the Marquez argument, Freeland isn't Marquez. Plus… Coors
Kyle Gibson300274356Arghh. Probably should put in Group 8 but don't feel like redoing the tables
Marcus Stroman346299418Worst division for streaming
Tyler Anderson417307486How many times do I have to say it?
Brent Honeywell427311506Could change if it is apparent Honeywell will start.
Luke Weaver328300359Even if Weaver rebounds, win and whiff potential too low for the price
Aaron Sanchez365331424Hmm, I think I got a blister from typing 100 comments

I reiterate: these groups are designed for a draft-and-hold league with extended reserves, I'll aim for at least one from the first two groups and a minimum of five by Group 4. Then, in some order, at least a pair from Groups 5, 6 and 7. That's 11 starters out of the Top-120 or so, keeping in mind closers are also needed. In a draft and hold, the normal number of relievers is five or six, meaning around six more starters need to be drafted. At this point, it's throwing darts at anyone with a pulse.

In a league with seven reserves, drafting 11 starters leaves three spots for other reserves, which is a workable setup. As such, the method can be deployed in something like the NFBC Main Event, but realize it won't be long before injuries set in and your seven-man reserve is reduced to three or four active players, inhibiting the ability to manage pitching.

Next week we'll switch gears and I'll discuss my toughest hitters to project for the upcoming season.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Todd Zola
Todd has been writing about fantasy baseball since 1997. He won NL Tout Wars and Mixed LABR in 2016 as well as a multi-time league winner in the National Fantasy Baseball Championship. Todd is now setting his sights even higher: The Rotowire Staff League. Lord Zola, as he's known in the industry, won the 2013 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Article of the Year award and was named the 2017 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year. Todd is a five-time FSWA awards finalist.
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