mlb

Da-nah, dah nah, dah-nah-nah-nah-nah.

(I've been looking all over for a solid copy of the song that used to start Tigers games, in case someone reading worked for WDIV and has a copy.)

I realize I've been lax on picking games with our fantasy partner for the readers to play against each other. The $300k "Swing for the Fences" MLB contest however isn't once to miss.

Capture
Holaday is my Tiger. Also Kinsler. And Cabrera. And still Scherzer. I have many Tigers.

Details:

  • $300,000 prize pool.
  • First place wins $100,000
  • Only $3 to enter (FREE with first deposit)
  • Top 25,930 finishing positions are paid.
  • Starts Wednesday, May 20th at 7:05 PM EST
  • Salary Cap Style Drafting. $50,000 to select 10 players: 8 position players and 2 pitchers
  • Roster Format: 2 pitchers, 1 C, 1 1B, 1 2B, 1 3B, 1 SS and 3 OF

Brian mentioned in today's mailbag that any given baseball game is going to have a ton of randomness. However you get so many opportunities for data points that the stats end up pretty reflective. Even imperfect ideas like "let's divide all the hits by at-bats (and not count walks and sacrifices) and "how many runs per game does he give up?" were able to stand as a sort of consensus opinion on player values for a century.

(i.e. until Mitch Meluskey hit .300)

This helps—you know by now who's good—and hurts—a guy who's hitless in 11 games can go 4/4 with a homer. I've played just a few baseball games to get the mechanics down and found my pitcher makes or breaks me, and winners tend to pick medium-expensive guys who have a lot of power. If you've got a way to beat the system, put 'em in the comments. Or use it to win my money I guess.