A common debate arises when arguing which fantasy baseball scoring format is best. One of the premier websites for fantasy baseball is ESPN.com. They offer a multitude of scoring options, including three standard scoring formats: rotisserie, season points, and head to head.
Rotisserie
In rotisserie scoring, “teams are ranked from first to last in each statistical category. Points are awarded to the order in each category, then totaled to determine an overall score and league rank” (ESPN.com). This scoring is best suited for leagues who look to avoid the flukes of head-to-head matchups. In head-to-head, you can score the second most points in a week, and lose to the team who scored the most. Rotisserie scoring creates a free for all, where all teams battle for the most total statistics in each category.
Season Points
“Standings are based on the accumulation of points covering all statistical categories and combined into one total points column” (ESPN.com). Season points leagues give point values to individual statistics. A home run may be worth four fantasy points, where a double may be worth two. The team with the most overall points at the end of the season wins.
Head-to-Head: Each Category (H2H)
Head-to-head: scoring each category individually allows the league manager “to select “X” number of statistical categories. For each scoring period, team totals are accumulated, and a win, loss, or tie is credited in each category based on the matchup results” (ESPN.com). The results of an ESPN standard H2H category matchup can look like 5-4-1, indicating that you won five categories, lost four, and tied one. This scoring system creates one on one matchups, where teams fight to cover more categories than their opponent. I believe this is the best scoring format, although the number of categories must be altered in order to be perfect.
What is the perfect scoring system?
Major league teams are split into divisions and play head-to-head matchups, so why should fantasy be any other way? I believe H2H is the best scoring format as it adds realism to fantasy leagues. Rivalries are created as teams match up against each other two to three times a season. The creation of divisions affect trades, rivalries, and the playoffs. Also, this scoring format requires more strategy than points than rotisserie leagues. It forces owners to consider a multitude of categories when drafting their team, opposed to blindly drafting the best player available.
The standard H2H scoring comprises ten categories, five hitting and five pitching. Hitting categories include runs, homeruns, runs batted in, stolen bases, and batting average. Pitching categories include strikeouts, wins, earned run average, and walk/hits per inning pitched. After researching the results of the 2016 season, I found a severe flaw in the standard five by five (5X5) format.
At first glance, you can see that Jonathan Villar and Jean Segura finished above Paul Goldschmidt and Nolan Arenado on the player rater. Although Villar and Segura impressed in 2016, Goldschmidt and Arenado finished as the eleventh and fifth respectively in the MVP voting. That was the first red flag. As I continue to scroll, the next name that jumps out is Eduardo Nunez, who finished ahead of Robinson Cano, Ryan Braun, Wil Myers, and Freddie Freeman. Nunez was an all-star for the first time in 2016, but did not have close to a better season than any of the previous names. This was strike two. Finally, I made my way to the forty-fifth overall player and sixth best shortstop, Manny Machado. Seeing a top five most valuable player candidate get disrespected like that was the last straw.
The following are the stat lines for the aforementioned batters in order from highest to lowest on the 5X5 player rater.
You be the judge on whether or not this order is correct.
4. Jonathan Villar MIL .285 92 19 63 62
5. Jean Segura ARI .319 102 20 64 33
6. Paul Goldschmidt ARI .297 106 24 95 32
8. Nolan Arenado COL .294 116 41 133 2
17. Eduardo Nunez MIN/SFG .288 73 16 67 40
18. Robinson Cano SEA .298 107 39 103 0
19. Ryan Braun MIL .305 80 30 90 16
21. Wil Myers SD .259 99 28 94 28
22. Freddie Freeman ATL .302 102 34 91 6
27. Manny Machado BAL .294 105 37 96 0
Clearly the 5X5 format is flawed, so what is the solution?
The solution is to dilute the steals category. In order to do this, the league manager will have to add more categories focused around batting statistics. Steals are the most overrated stat in fantasy baseball. In the 5X5 format, steals harshly inflate a player’s value. The ideal number of categories is eighteen, which is a nine by nine (9X9) format.
The added hitting categories include extra base hits, total bases, walks, and on base plus slugging percentage. The added hitting categories enhance value to players who get on base and hit with power. It weakens the worth of players who primarily get their value from steals.
Since hitting categories were added, pitching must be added as well. The new pitching categories include quality starts, batting average against, and strike outs per nine. The additional categories add value to pitchers who eat innings, strike out batters, and keep guys off base.
How the 9X9 format affects the Player Rater
Villar and Segura finished as top 5 overall hitters in 5X5, but in 9X9 they finished at eleven and sixteen respectively.
Eduardo Nunez moves from seventeen in the 5X5 format, to fifty-five.
The 9X9 player rater for hitters looks as follows.
6. Paul Goldschmidt ARI .297 106 24 95 32
8. Nolan Arenado COL .294 116 41 133 2
9. Freddie Freeman ATL .302 102 34 91 6
11. Jonathan Villar MIL .285 92 19 63 62
16. Jean Segura ARI .319 102 20 64 33
20. Robinson Cano SEA .298 107 39 103 0
21. Manny Machado BAL .294 105 37 96 0
24. Ryan Braun MIL .305 80 30 90 16
27. Wil Myers SD .259 99 28 94 28
55. Eduardo Nunez SFG .288 73 16 67 40
I believe the format of H2H category leagues must be 9×9 in order to have a player rater that accurately represents the best players in the game. The more categories you add, the more diluted the steals category will become. This enhances the value of MVP caliber players whose value is lessened due to lack of steals.
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