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This man is the catcher for FBLG's No. 1 team. His name is Tony Wolters, and he's hitting .307. |
1. The Rookies (1991 points, 4-6, last week 1): With a rotation of Patrick Corbin, Max Fried, Zack Wheeler and Robbie Ray, the Rookies seem well-suited to maintain their early-season success. See, Rich? Three lefties for the first-place team — that's not a coincidence. We're not really sure what to expect from Greg Holland, who has been good but doesn't pitch all that much. Henry's lineup has been outstanding, with huge contributions from Nolan Arenado, Cody Bellinger and Eduardo Escobar. Can Ozzie Albies return to form? Will Tony Wolters continue to outperform his actual talent? Will Derek Dietrich lose playing time when Scooter Gennett returns to the lineup? Good thing Henry has Gennett too!
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At .331, Melky Cabrera is finally hitting his weight. |
3. Project Mayhem (1943.2, 6-4, last week 3): There isn't an obvious weakness on Bill's team, which has a deep lineup, a studly ace and a good closer. If we were to nitpick — and why wouldn't we? — we'd point to the rotation as a potential stumbling block. Yes, Walker Buehler and Kyle Hendricks have led the way, but Miles Mikolas hasn't been nearly as good as he was a year ago and Chris Archer doesn't look good at all. Anibal Sanchez hasn't pitched badly but can't get a win because the Nationals are kind of a mess. The offense might not have big names, but it sure does put up points thanks to J.T. Realmuto, Ketel Marte, David Peralta, Lorenzo Cain, Brandon Belt and Paul DeJong. We sure like watching Joc Pederson and Franmil Reyes swing for the fences, too.
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Matt has hopped on the Nick Pivetta train. Watch out for derailments! |
5. Hassey's Girl (1906, 7-3, last week 4): The commissioners' pitching staff have settled in and appears to be one of the better batches in FBLG. Hyun-Jin Ryu and Aaron Nola have combined to go 15-2, and Rich Hill is 3-1 since coming off the Injured List. How good will Jameson Taillon be when he returns? German Marquez has been either fantastic or a disaster, and the closer situation never seems settled on this team. It's Raisel Iglesias at the moment, which means the commissioners have to root for the Reds to win games. Yuck. On the hitting side, this doesn't even look like the same team from the draft; only 4 players remain (Wilson Ramos, Matt Carpenter, Christian Yelich and Gregory Polanco). HG is asking an awful lot out of its young players, specifically Nick Senzel, Raimel Tapia and Fernando Tatis Jr.
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At least the Nationals won't have to worry about resting Stephen Strasburg in the playoffs this season. |
7. Lumber Co Lumber (1832.3, 4-6, last week 7): After the draft, John's lineup made us drool but his pitching staff made us wonder how it would hold up. Shows what we know — after 10 weeks, both units rank in the middle of the pack, although the offense is the best in FBLG at walking and singling. Willson Contreras, Freddie Freeman, Bryce Harper and Rhys Hoskins have been among the best in the league at their positions. Corey Seager and Dansby Swanson have been good at shortstop, but it's hard to find room for both of them in the lineup. Robinson Cano and Wil Myers have been jettisoned, and Ryan McMahon and Jason Heyward have underwhelmed in replacing them. We (meaning Rich) might have written off Jon Lester too soon, and Steven Matz has been better than expected. Kenta Maeda has 7 wins, and Tanner Roark is striking guys out at a surprising rate. And you know what Josh Hader can do at the back end.
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Once you serve up a long homer, you lose the right to tell the hitter how you'd like him to circle the bases. |
9. Fresh Fish (1778, 5-5, last week 9): The pieces all appear to be there for Rick's team to make a big run, but it's just not happening yet. We'd all love to have a rotation with Jacob deGrom, Clayton Kershaw, Chris Paddack and Luis Castillo. Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Marcell Ozuna have been impact players on offense, but there hasn't been much else to get excited about. There's 50-year-old slowpoke Brian McCann behind the plate, error-prone Amed Rosario at short and extremely error-prone masher Austin Riley in the outfield, plus Mariners cast-off (never a good sign) Jay Bruce. For some reason, the silly Brewers sent Keston Hiura to the minors, and the less we say about Addison Russell, the better.
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Paul Goldschmidt rounds first and ... can't remember which base comes next. |
Batting leaders after Week 10
1. Christian Yelich (HG) 245.52. Cody Bellinger (R) 243
3. Josh Bell (YA) 233
4. Nolan Arenado (R) 229
5. Trevor Story (WTLB) 222
Pitching leaders after Week 10
1. Max Scherzer (YA) 194.32. Stephen Strasburg (CB) 193
3. Hyun-Jin Ryu (HG) 181
5. Luis Castillo (FF) 172.7
5. Zack Greinke (YA) 170.7
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