Thursday, May 26, 2016

2016 Early Season Recap

Colin has jumped out to a fast start in 2016.  In fact, his seven straight wins out of the gate constitutes his longest winning streak ever!  Prior to this run, he ripped off a five week winning streak during weeks 13-17 of 2009.  If he wins 6-3 or better this week he will have his best ever start through 8 weeks.  Here are the all-time best records to start a season through eight weeks:


Manager
Year
Wins
Losses
Ties
%
Ben
2005
59
20
1
0.744%
Richie
2014
52
24
4
0.675%
TJ
2011
52
24
4
0.675%
Alex
2014
50
25
5
0.656%
Kurt
2010
50
26
4
0.650%


Jarrett’s 29-9-2 record over the last month has kept him within shouting distance after a slow start.  It’s his second best record over a 4 game stretch, falling short of last year’s 30-10 effort through weeks 10-13.  It seems as though Jarrett has finally figured out this fantasy baseball thing.  And I suppose that Kershaw guy helps.


From the hottest stock to the coldest, Adrian continues his sub-zero streak of futility:
Adrian’s posted back to back seasons with 23 wins through 7 weeks, an awful way to start the season.  What’s worse, he hasn’t even played Colin or Jarrett yet, his division’s top two teams.  Chris Archer, Justin Upton, and Tyson Ross (all ranked 600 or worse) have taken the wind out of his sails.  Here are the worst starts through 7 weeks in Diamond Dynasty history:

Manager
Year
Wins
Losses
Ties
%
Regular Season Finish
Kurt
2005
18
47
5
.293
3rd
Drew
2013
21
46
3
.321
10th
James
2011
22
46
2
.329
10th
Paul
2004
20
43
7
.336
12th
Adrian
2015
23
46
1
.336
10th


Kurt went on to lose week 8 of the 2005 season before ripping off the second best 14 week streak to close the season.  His 86-45-9 (.646) record through weeks 9-22 is second only to Jarrett’s 2014, 95-40-5 (.696) mark.  Jarrett’s 97-38-5 (.711) record through weeks 8-21 of that year stand as the greatest 14 week run in Diamond Dynasty history.


Moving to the better, more attractive division, Kurt’s rough start to 2016 is his third worst ever, behind his historic 2005 effort and 2014’s 25-40-5 (.393) mark.  He’s lost all three matchups to his hand-picked divisional foes and is already in panic trade mode.

The opposite is true for Ben, who boasts a perfect 3-0 divisional mark (albeit behind an unspectacular 15-12-3 record).  The division leader, Alex, is already a pathetic 14 wins behind Ben’s historic 2005 season while Richie, who gave all his picks to Alex and was ridiculed for it, sits a mere 1.5 games behind.  Suck it, haters.  

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

2016 Schedule

As explained in the commissioner note, the schedule needs to be re-done.  Here is how I'm doing it:



Step 1:  Copy last year's schedule

Step 2:  Replace teams with numbers 1-10 (ex. Richie=1, Ben=2, etc)

Step 3:  Pull names out of a hat and attach them to the numbers.  The results:

  1=Alex
  2=Colin
  3=Kurt
  4=Richie
  5=Tim
  6=Jarrett
  7=TJ
  8=Adrian
  9=James
10=Ben

Friday, March 11, 2016

2016 Story Lines

Adrian’s franchise enters 2016 in a complete tailspin.  Of the 132 teams in the 14 year history of this league, his 2015 effort stands alone as the worst by any measure.  On the whole, he missed the playoffs for the fourth consecutive year and sixth of the last seven, both records.  He did well to revamp his keeper options but they are still average (by pre-season rank), and he comes into Sunday with a below-average draft board.  2016 looks like another uphill battle for the once great franchise.

Alex saw his streak of three consecutive playoff appearances snapped last season but orchestrated possibly the finest tank job we’ve seen.  He enters 2016 with the strongest draft board, the third best core keepers, and a top prospect last pick flex.  He’s the odds on favorite to win the regular season and could challenge Ben’s 144-win record set in 2005 - Alex’s only championship season.  This season, it’s finals or bust.

Ben missed the playoffs in 2016 for the first time in six seasons, falling one season shy of tying the record shared by Kurt and TJ.  His commanding lead in career victories was cut down significantly and now leads TJ by 7 wins for most all time.  He returns this season with average projected keepers but a draft board second to only Alex thanks to his activity on the trade block last season.  He has to like his chances entering the DD’s 15th year.

Colin had a solid 2015 season, capturing his first #1 seed since 2004.  Unfortunately for Colin, the similarities stopped there.  He lost both of his matches en route to a fourth place finish and continues to search for championship #2.  The playoff appearance was his fifth straight and seventh in the last eight seasons, both impressive marks.  And judging by the peripherals he’s pointed towards another playoff run.  He enters 2016 with the strongest Core Keepers and a potential star as a flex (Schwarber, last pick).  He somehow also bolstered his draft board, posting the third highest average draft pick.  Colin has the pieces in place to challenge for a bye in 2016.

James stormed back at the end of last season but it was too little too late.  He ended up missing the playoffs despite posting a .500 record, the fifth-best record for a non-playoff team in league history.  James’s first eight seasons yielded five playoff births, a 9-3 post-season record, and two championships; his last five seasons, just two playoff births and a 1-3 post-season record.  He enters 2016 with the worst ranked Core Keepers and a below average draft board, but he has the most attractive flex (Carlos Correa) and the best possible price (last pick).  James projects to be in the 5-6-7-8 clusterfuck for the playoff push.

Jarrett used 2014’s momentum to catapult him to a 2015 title, the first in franchise history.  Since week 9, 2014 - a 36 week stretch - Jarrett has a .618 winning percentage.  That would stand as the third best winning percentage ever, and he’s done it for nearly two full seasons.  Jarrett was the only team not to make a trade so his draft board is perfectly average.  His keepers, on the other hand, are anything but.  Kershaw and Goldschmidt headline the league’s second best set of Core Keepers, and some guy named Jose Fernandez as his flex which pushes his average keeper rank to #1.  The new bully on the block is the only person to earn byes in back to back seasons and shoots for his third straight in 2016.

Kurt returned to the playoffs last year after a one year absence and made serious noise, making it all the way to the finals.  He enters 2016 with a strong set of Core Keepers and a solid flex option.  
His draft board is on the weaker side, but so was Jarrett’s last season and we all saw how that turned out.  The only franchise to never tank, Kurt will very likely be in the mix in 2016.

Richie made it to the playoffs in back to back years for the first time since 03-04, but lost on a tiebreaker in the first round.  His keepers are slightly below average and he is dead last with a #174 average draft pick (which is actually better than the #181 average draft pick he had last year).  All in all, Richie will need good health and bit of luck to make franchise history with his third consecutive playoff appearance.

TJ returned to the post-season in 2015 after snapping a seven-season streak and came away with third place.  His 119 wins was tied for his third best regular season record ever and he now stands just 7 wins behind Ben for most wins in DD history.  Entering with average keepers but the second worst draft board, TJ will need to draft well to field a playoff-worthy team in 2016.

Tim set the record for most wins by an expansion manager in their first year, and became just the second expansion manager to lead a team to the playoffs in his first year at the helm.  But the kid gloves come off this time around.  With below average keepers and a slightly above average draft board (and no bonus first round picks “just because”), Tim needs to take all he’s learned in his rookie season to avoid a sophomore slump.  He’ll need a strong showing on draft day.

Monday, March 7, 2016

Opening Post 2016

Welcome back!  I will not be writing to a schedule this year, just randomly popping in.  As always, I encourage others to jump in as it will make the league more enjoyable.  And as always, I foresee little enthusiasm for this request.

Here's how 2016 is shaping up:

Name

Adrian
Alex
Ben
Colin
James
Jarrett
Kurt
Richie
Tim
TJ

Adrian edges out Alex in the name department with a "tie-breaker" of sorts, as we had to actually go to the second letter to determine who was first place.  Nice job Adrian.  Conversely, TJ sits in the basement thanks to his nickname.  If he just would have dropped the Jr, he could have at least tied for last.  Questionable managerial decisions there.

Core 4 projections (based on Yahoo Preseason rank)

Core 4
Colin11
Jarrett12
Alex18
Kurt24
TJ25
Ben26
Richie27
Adrian32
Tim34
James53
Colin edges out Jarrett in average Core 4 preseason ranks, highlighted by the usual suspects.  Jarrett and Alex join him in the top tier, and everyone except James basically falls into tier #2.  

Core 4 projections with Flex (based on Yahoo Preseason rank)

Core 4w Flx
Jarrett1216
Colin1118
Kurt2430
TJ2532
Tim3434
Alex1835
Richie2741
James5344
Ben2647
Adrian3251

When adding the flex picks, Jarrett's average preseason rank jumps to #1 thanks to Jose Fernandez.  Colin stays close behind with Cubs sensation Kyle Schwarber, and the rest of the league is pretty evenly spread out from there.  Interestingly enough, James is the only team to experience an increase in average preseason rank with the addition of his flex keeper, an effect of having both the lowest average core keeper rank and flexing stud-to-be Carlos Correa, who has the highest preseason rank for all flex-eligible players.  

Flex pick

Core 4w FlxFlx Pk
TJ253288
Jarrett121690
Tim3434100
Kurt2430129
Richie2741255
Colin1118LAST
Alex1835LAST
Ben2647LAST
Adrian3251LAST
James5344LAST

Half of the league maxed out the Flex keeper option with 5 managers sacrificing a last round pick, and Richie was nearly there.  TJ's flex was the most expensive, giving up his 9th round pick (88th overall) for Carlos Carrasco.  He only owed his 10th round pick but no longer owns it.  

Average Draft Pick

Core 4w FlxFlx PkAvg Pk
Alex1835LAST114
Ben2647LAST121
Colin1118LAST145
Tim3434100150
Jarrett121690151
Adrian3251LAST159
James5344LAST162
Kurt2430129163
TJ253288168
Richie2741255174

And finally, Alex leads the pack with draft picks.  Ben is the only one who comes close, with two picks in the first round and picks #96, #99, #102, and #104.  On the other end of the spectrum, Richie will not make a pick until 34 picks are off the board - the longest stretch of anyone this year.

But it's not all doom and gloom - far from it.  Here's what last year looked like:

1. Ben - 16 points
2. Colin - 15 points
3. Tim - 14 points
4. James - 11 points
4. Kurt - 11 points
4. TJ - 11 points
7, Jarrett - 10 points
8. Alex - 8 points
9. Richie - 7 points
10. Adrian - 5 points
Statistically, Ben looked to have the most promising mix of average draft position and keepers but missed the playoffs entirely.  Last year's champion projected to miss the playoffs.  And Adrian....well we all knew he was going to be bad (sorry Adrian).

This season, Alex has a top-tier core four, a last round flex, and the best draft board.  I think we can all agree that anything less than breaking Ben's 144-win record is a failure for Alex.  Oh by the way, remember last year when we all thought TJ was a lock to make the playoffs?  

TJ
41 Jacoby Elsbury
42Yu Darwish 

Stay frosty big guy.








Wednesday, October 7, 2015

2015 Season Recap

Well boys, another season in the books.  For the second year in a row, and 11th in the last 15th, we crown a first-time champion.  

Remember when…

...I put out the fake bovada odds at the beginning of the season?  

...we moved the draft to the last weekend in February so we could all make it except TJ couldn’t?

...we bumped up surveymonkey’s traffic for a couple weeks with all those surveys?

...TJ beat Tim 5-4 in week 1, which put him in 4th place, which was the only time all season he was lower than 3rd place?

...Tim beat Alex for his first ever Diamond Dynasty victory?

...Ben got engaged?

...Adrian was in third place after week 3 and never made it back into the top 6?

...James posted the following on the blog:

So I'm not just doing these weekly matchups coincidentally the week I happen to be in first place for the first time since 2012, thanks to Richie's commish note, but simply because I just did one in my other league and I was bored at work and realized we needed some more blog fun

and then never posted another weekly matchup preview for the rest of the season?

...Tim failed to meet the IP minimum in week 4?

...Kurt gave us our career matchups?

...Kurt gave us our shutout standings?

...Alex, TJ, and Kurt cracked the 1,300 win club, which every manager except for Adrian is now a part of?

...we held the first ever DD golf outing?


...Colin shutout James in week 6, tapping the shutout pool incentive and sending James spiraling on an out-of-control 5 week losing streak where he went 10-39-1 and fell from 1st place to 9th place?

...Colin got engaged?

...I came up with a method to calculate our luck that’s probably highly inaccurate?

...Jarrett was the first to 1,300 career losses, which every manager except Ben and Kurt are now a part of?

...Kurt tried to jinx Richie with a faux-complimentary blog post, only to lose to him 7-3?

...Colin won the HR Derby challenge?

...Richie won his first WWE belt in mid-sesaon?

...the Neighborhood rumble kicked off with Kurt vs Adrian and James vs Ben for the play-ins?

...Jarrett didn’t start a catcher for 4 weeks?

...Tim passed Paul French for 14th on the all-time wins list?

...Richie shutout Adrian?

...the league saw 14 trade-deadline deals, doubling last year’s mark which was a record of it’s own?

...quantity beat quality?

...we finally got to Fenway?

...Kurt won the first ever Neighborhood Rumble?

...James was 14 games behind the #6 seed with 5 weeks to go, posted a 33-12-5 record over the last 5 weeks of the season, and missed the playoffs by just 2 games?

...Aroldis Chapman’s stat correction reverted Richie’s 10-0 shutout over Jarrett to an 8-0 shutout, which gave bumped Richie down to the #5 seed and Jarrett up to the #2 seed, which gave Jarrett and Kurt playoff tie-breakers that they both needed in their first rounds to advance?

...Jarrett became the first team ever to earn playoff bye weeks in consecutive seasons?

...Kurt won the WWE belt?

...Tim popped his postseason cherry?

...The #5 seed continued to be the worst seed in the playoffs with a first round exit, dropping that seed’s record to 4-9 in the first round?

...The #1 seed didn’t win the title for the first time since 2011?

...Jarrett won his first ever Diamond Dynasy Chalice?