👉 TAP TO SAVE 30% WITH CODE NEW
X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Draft Rankings
Draft Simulator
Enter League Settings
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

Fantasy Baseball Auction Draft Strategies and Tips by Nick Mariano (2024)

Freddy Peralta - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, Draft Sleepers, MLB Injury News

Playing in fantasy baseball auction leagues? Prepare for your 2024 fantasy baseball drafts with Nick Mariano's auction draft strategies and tips to win.

This premium article is part of our 2024 Fantasy Baseball Draft Kit and a free sample of the expert analysis loaded up in RotoBaller's Draft Kit. Enjoy this premium article for free for a limited time. All other Premium Tools can be accessed on the premium dashboard.

We salute those of you who sign up for the superior experience that is auction drafting! Welcome to our rundown with strategies and tips to help you be the sharpest drafter in the room. This is not a 101-level "how-to" guide, you'll need to know how to click "Bid" and not close the draft client in the middle of the draft.

Now it's time to discuss helpful steps to take leading up to the draft itself, as well as walk you through 10 tips to gain value and avoid landmines. Whether you've been playing this game for decades or are new on the block, we can always learn more. Get those spreadsheets open and let's dive in!

Be sure to check all of our fantasy baseball draft tools and resources:

 

Fantasy Baseball Auction Draft Strategy Guide

Step 0: Know Your League Settings and Leaguemate Tendencies as Intimately as Possible

There is a sizable edge in realizing your league counts K/BB as a stat compared to the standard 5x5 categories, or that batting average was dropped in favor of on-base percentage. Or maybe your league employs an extra UTIL slot or has no SP/RP designations and instead leans on a bunch of “P” slots. Don’t fall behind before you’ve even begun! If you can’t rattle off your league’s settings, then you aren’t ready to draft.

If possible, scrape historic auction data from your league (assuming repeat owners) to identify leaguewide or specific owner tendencies re: hitter/pitcher $ splits. If you have league history then you can also analyze your performance. Have you had more success with a certain hitter/pitcher spending split? How did your league react to the first year of more stolen bases?

 

Step 1: Use Our Staff Rankings to Create $$ Valuations

We’d love for you to trust our foundation as a starting point, but no matter whether you grab ours or make them yourself, be sure that you have a tiered ranking system that has dollar values for each player. Be aware of how these relate across different positions given the multi-position eligibility that so many players carry. Get a sense of how big a drop exists between tiers and don’t lose sight of positional scarcity.

Some have said that tiers don’t help and can obstruct one’s ability to be fluid during a draft, so you’re going to want to test out mock drafts with and without tiered rankings. I am firmly in the tiered ranks camp, but I recognize the myriad mindsets that are at work in the fantasy universe. I’d recommend denoting a general maximum and minimum value for each tier in case you need to reevaluate in a pinch.

The general rule of thumb for splitting your hard-earned cash between hitters and pitchers was 70/30 in favor of hitters for a long time, though the recent trend in fewer workhorse aces has pushed this towards 65/35 now. You can have favorite players, but please remain calm when bidding wars occur!

You'll note that it isn't necessary to pre-assign salary ceilings to particular positions ($32 for OF, $23 for 1B, etc.) I’d discourage that, as you run the risk of tying your own hands when a potentially excellent bargain comes up at the table - bidding dies out on Christian Walker at $15, whom you have down as a $20 value, but you don't have a $20 spot open. Go for it early. Value is value. Ending your $260 auction with $260 worth of value makes you an average contender.

While most thinking relates to how one gets your targets, don’t lose sight of plus value even on players you don’t necessarily like. I understand avoiding high-tier players who would still cost $25+ but that $8-12 range could yield trophies. If you believe Jazz Chisholm Jr. is destined for another injury-shortened season and have him at $18, but the entire room does as well and he’s sitting at $14 then you should strongly consider pouncing. Especially if speed has been pushed up so far.

Here are some hitter templates to go into drafts with, but I’d urge you to use the second:

2024 Auction Draft
Plan Player Purchased
50
35
25
21
19
13
10
7
4
3
2
1
1
$191 Total

 

POS Name Cost R HR RBI SB AVG
C
1B
2B
SS
3B
MI
CI
OF
OF
OF
OF
OF
UTIL
Current Total 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Target $260 1050 295 1025 180 .260

 

Step 1A: Decide if you want to pony up for Ronald Acuna Jr.

There's no denying the game-breaking talent that Acuna provides. In case you missed it, the 26-year-old hit .337 with 41 home runs and 73 steals last year. His production netted roughly $70 worth of value in standard 5x5 formats while the next players were around $45, regardless of which analyzer you utilize. Will you commit in '24 or not? Everything else flows from that.

 

Step 2: "Mock" Draft 

There’s no way to fully mimic an auction draft as there are simply so many permutations to account for, but you can test out tons of strategies and see if spending big early on studs leaves you satisfied more often, or if you like to wait and then pounce on a plethora of mid-range picks. Adjust your dollar values as you mock and read up on expert auction drafts (such as the NFBC or Tout Wars) to bounce your budget off of others.

This is all with the general aim of becoming flexible and prepared. The drafter who walks to the auction block with several plans ready to go is the victorious one. Nothing is set in stone. Juan Soto might be bid up to $60 or somehow hover around $35, and you need to be ready.

 

Step 3: You Need to Track Your Spending...and Everyone Else’s

One can feel overwhelmed by having to take care of your wallet and continuously refresh your resource allocation, but it will be necessary...for you and everyone else. This is where draft software is paramount, though paper-pen warriors can certainly pull it off at a live draft.

You need to know whether Steve’s team is still without a 1B/3B/CI and there are only two options you consider startworthy in a 12-teamer at CI left. You need to know whether Linda has six roster spots left to fill and only $6 left to do so, which leaves her at a max bid of $1 per player. Be aware of folks who started like this:

 

Step 4: Dominate! (And Use The Following 10 Tips)

Tip 1: Never Stop Re-Assessing

The player pool is constantly changing and you always need to stay abreast of how many players are left in the highest tier, or perhaps one player is hanging around at Tier 3 while Tier 4 is also being drained. Suddenly, that third-tier player is two tiers better than your next-best option, not just one. 

This starts well before draft day, as projections constantly change throughout the offseason as players sign, trades are made and playing time is won or lost, especially in the spring. Is the auction room heating up and steaming players, or have values started to sink? Know how to recognize when to strike.

 

Tip 2: League Size Informs Roster Construction

Playing in shallower leagues (fewer teams) means you should typically spend more money at the top. Those in 10-team leagues will have better options on the waiver wire to replace mid-tier players than owners in 14-teamers, so spending up on top-50 players works since your free-agent maneuverability is heightened with a more talented player pool.

If you could pick up a Eugenio Suarez-type -- a bat that plays nearly every day but is ranked around 200 by most sites -- then you can be bullish at the top and know your CI slot has flexibility should Spencer Torkelson’s season not go to plan. Whereas if you price yourself out of later bidding rounds and get stuck banking on Noelvi Marte getting consistent PT then you could have trouble. Spend appropriately.

 

Tip 3: Vary Your Bids

Don’t be a Predictable Patty in the war room! You don’t have to want each player that you nominate. Especially when you don’t want to signal your intent/love for a player just by putting them on the auction block, because then others will catch on and bid you up, knowing your desires. 

Mix it up between guys you want and others that represent pressure points for others. The latter pool of players becomes identifiable through tracking other’s teams and spending, as well as realizing that every top-25 starting pitcher is gone except for Freddy Peralta -- you can damn well bet that Peralta will command a hefty price tag.

Side note: Don’t wait until you’re on the 30-second nomination clock to select a player to put up. Nothing chaps me or the room more than someone collectively wasting over five minutes in the draft room due to being unprepared. Don’t give them more time to re-collect their thoughts.

 

Tip 4: Manually Input Your Bids

It’s so tempting to fire off that +$1 click because it’s easy, or perhaps you just don’t have time to click and type. I get it, we’ve all been there and it usually isn’t a big deal. But when this misfires, it can be catastrophic. I’ll mix in a side-tip to illustrate my point.

You’ve probably been in an auction draft where the top 25 players are initially nominated for $1. Let’s say we’ve seen Julio Rodriguez, Fernando Tatis Jr., Corbin Burnes, Gerrit Cole, etc. all go for $40-50, but then Mookie Betts is nominated for $1. In general, don’t be that person who lowballs clear high-round players. It’s a waste of time as it’ll slowly grow to true value, instead of starting at $30 and saving a minute.

Anyway, so Betts is out for $1, or $10, something too low. Someone (me) likely rolls their eyes and manually types in $40 to drive the action. You don’t really want Betts, but he was only at $10 and you’re surely in for $11! I click $40 and hit enter, and now your +$1 click goes from $11 to $41 before you can react. Now you have a player you didn’t want and a big chunk of your budget committed.

 

Tip 5: Controlled Aggression

So we just hit on how it’s best to vary your attacks, but let’s be clear: You want to be the attacker. Whether it’s in your bidding choice to begin the round or pushing the dollars, you want others reacting to you. Make them return your shots, and don’t be afraid to drive the action according to your values. Don’t go crazy and don’t bid on players you don’t want, of course, but you need to be an alpha presence.

Stay involved so you don’t miss out on any avenues to value. The first-mover advantage is a real thing. Reacting will always add a dollar in the war room. And if you nominate/bid quickly, it is simply less time on the table for folks to orient themselves and react. Preparation pays off and can separate you from the pack.

 

Tip 6: It’s Okay to Overpay, But Do It Early

Stars are far less likely to bust than those $5-10 range players. Even if your $35 Rafael Devers “only” puts up a 90-30-90-.280 line then you’re alive for others to elevate your team, but putting the bulk of your faith in $15-20 players such as Ha-Seong Kim, Josh Lowe, and Cole Ragans can leave you vulnerable to a low floor.

Remain disciplined and don’t overextend. We can’t account for big injuries, such as our highest-paid player suffering a freak slip down the dugout steps, but we can guard against performance-based liabilities.

 

Tip 7: Play Your Game

There is an entire league around you but construct the team that you want. Bid for your team, not to screw your opponent. Yeah, you may know that Jimbo over there loves him some Tyler O'Neill and might overpay for him, but that doesn’t mean you go beyond your means to squeeze him. If you get saddled with a player beyond your valuation then you’ve played yourself and Jimbo will beat you. Do you want that?

 

Tip 8: Throw a Screwball

Beyond nomination techniques, you must pay attention to general trends and lean into your opponents. This is not to go against what I just advised, where you overbid or aim to get players you don’t like, but nudging a precarious player into the bidding or trying to start a run at a scarce position such as catcher or closer can pay dividends. It bears a specific shoutout.

 

Tip 9: Don’t Be Afraid To Call Someone Out

This one is league-dependent, just as your table talk at a poker venue would depend on your familiarity. Hometowners shouldn’t be afraid to type out a subtle jab in the middle of a bid that deserves more activity. Here at RotoBaller, our own Real Talk Raph notoriously would exclaim that a player is going for “TOO CHEAP” in the draft chat. 

We all laugh and it’s good fun, but verbal price enforcement and signaling a bid check will unleash some psychological warfare. You don’t want to call attention to yourself in the process by making enemies, but if you sprinkle it in on critical players alongside your usual banter then you can make it count.

 

Tip 10: Line Up Your Final Bids Early

Yes, we’ve had a plan and ideally, it’s been executed. You came into this draft with plenty of end-draft targets and now you should hone in on a final attack plan. That’s not to say which specific players you will win, but how you’re going to use the remaining funds. Imagine this scenario:

The draft is winding down and you have $10 left with five roster spots to go. Most people are in similar straits and the bulk of nominations start at $1 as every dollar matters. But if you initially bid $2 on players you want then suddenly you’ve made it $3 for someone to swoop in on players you’re putting up. Identify your remaining targets and be ready to hit the $2 trigger if they’re nominated. Always be ready!



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy baseball app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, sleepers, prospects & more. All free!



More Fantasy Baseball Advice




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Draft Rankings
Draft Simulator
Enter League Settings
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Tanner McKee

Recent Trade Not Indicative of Tanner McKee's Market
Cristopher Sánchez

Phillies Sign Cristopher Sanchez to a Six-Year Extension
Tyler Reddick

the Clear Favorite at Darlington
Kyle Stowers

Placed on Injured List with Hamstring Strain
Kyle Larson

a High-Risk, High-Reward Driver at Darlington
Ryan Blaney

Is Getting Better at Darlington
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Not Slowing Down at Darlington
Chris Buescher

Should be a Top-10 Contender at Darlington
Austin Cindric

a Sleeper at Darlington
Erik Jones

Quickest in Practice at Darlington
Morgan Geekie

Records Three Assists Against Red Wings
Peyton Watson

Could Return Against Trail Blazers
Steven Stamkos

Notches Three Points in Win Over Golden Knights
Stephen Curry

to Miss Next Two Games
Cole Caufield

Records Career-High Five Points in Saturday's Win
Denny Hamlin

Qualifies Ninth for this Week's Cup Race at Darlington
Noah Clowney

to Miss Second Straight Game
Chase Briscoe

Is One of the Top DFS Options of the Week for Darlington
Nikita Kucherov

Takes Over Scoring Lead With Four-Point Effort
Nicolas Claxton

Won't Play Sunday
Tyler Tucker

Out Week-to-Week
Russell Westbrook

Out Against Brooklyn
Juuse Saros

to Remain Out Sunday
Luka Dončić

Luka Doncic Facing One-Game Suspension
William Byron

Is William Byron A Playable DFS Option for Darlington Lineups?
Kyle Kuzma

Exits Early Against Suns
Anthony Stolarz

Released From Hospital
Christopher Bell

Could Christopher Bell be Considered A Decent DFS Option for Darlington?
Chase Elliott

Is Chase Elliott Worth Rostering At Darlington This Week For DFS?
Joey Logano

May Not Have the Speed to Warrant A Darlington DFS Lineup Spot
Ross Chastain

Should DFS Players Trust Ross Chastain at Darlington?
Kyle Busch

Could Kyle Busch Be A Worthy DFS Option for Darlington?
Brad Keselowski

May be A Contriarian DFS Tournament Option At Darlington
Daniel Suarez

has Little Upside for Darlington DFS Lineups
Bryce Young

a Potential Trade Target in Dynasty Leagues?
Devaughn Vele

Worth Buying Low on in Dynasty Leagues?
Darnell Washington

Climbs Up the Depth Chart
Adonai Mitchell

Trending Up After Quarterback Change?
Saquon Barkley

to Benefit From New-Look Offense in 2026?
Michael Wilson

On Track to be Cardinals' Top Fantasy Receiver?
Victor Wembanyama

Good to Go Versus Pacers
Seiya Suzuki

Won't be Ready for Opening Day
Kawhi Leonard

Ready to Face Dallas Saturday
Draymond Green

Available Saturday Against Atlanta
De'Anthony Melton

Cleared to Play Saturday
Jalen Johnson

Sidelined Saturday
Alperen Sengün

Alperen Sengun Will Play Against Heat
Kristaps Porzingis

Out Saturday Against Hawks
Jaylon Tyson

Ruled Out Versus Pelicans
Donovan Mitchell

Available Saturday Against New Orleans
Dylan Larkin

Remains Out Saturday
Austin Reaves

Cleared to Play Saturday
Jake Sanderson

Could Return in 7-10 Days
Morgan Rielly

Unavailable Saturday
Urho Vaakanainen

Considered Week-to-Week
Noah Laba

Out Week-to-Week
Tyler Toffoli

Questionable for Road Trip
Victor Hedman

Won't Play Against Oilers
Gleyber Torres

Clear to Return on Monday
Konnor Griffin

Assigned to Minor-League Camp
Jake Ferguson

Tails Off Late in 2025
Shedeur Sanders

Set to Face Competition Ahead of 2026
Tyreek Hill

Remains a Free Agent
Brock Bowers

Set for a Major Quarterback Upgrade?
Mack Hollins

Still Trending Up in New England?
Malik Washington

a Breakout Candidate Going into Year 3?
Mike Gesicki

a Bounce-Back Candidate in Third Year in Cincy
Xavier Legette

the Panthers' WR3 Heading into 2026?
Rashod Bateman

Dynasty Stock is on Life Support
Gleyber Torres

Scratched From Lineup on Saturday With Lower-Back Tightness
DJ Giddens

an Intriguing Handcuff Despite Minimal Standalone Value
Hunter Henry

Set to Collect Some Vacated Targets?
AJ Barner

Firmly Positioned Atop Depth Chart
Cedric Tillman

Dynasty Managers Losing Patience?
Josh Jacobs

Remains a Strong RB1 Option
Aaron Nesmith

Could Miss Saturday's Game
Andrew Nembhard

Could Miss Fourth Straight Game
Brice Sensabaugh

Remains Out Saturday
Grayson Allen

Could Miss Third Straight Game
Jake Allen

has Excellent Performance in Defeat
Logan Thompson

Nearly Perfect In Victory
Tanner Bibee

to Take the Ball on Opening Day
Logan Webb

to Start on Opening Day for Giants
Cristopher Sánchez

Cristopher Sanchez to Start on Opening Day for Phillies
Chris Sale

Braves Name Chris Sale as Their Opening Day Starter
Kyle Stowers

Leaves Friday's Game With Hamstring Tightness
Jasson Domínguez

Jasson Dominguez Optioned to Triple-A
Tyler Toffoli

Won't Play Saturday
Joel Armia

Ready to Return From Back Injury
Joel Eriksson Ek

Kirill Kaprizov, Joel Eriksson Ek to Remain Out Saturday
Ross Colton

Still Out Friday
Yan Kuznetsov

Remains Sidelined Friday
Jacob Misiorowski

Named Opening Day Starter
Mike Trout

X-Rays Come Back Negative on Mike Trout's Hand
Dylan Crews

Optioned to Triple-A Rochester
Lerone Murphy

Set For UFC London Main Event
Movsar Evloev

Looks To Remain Unbeaten
Michael Aswell

Jr. An Underdog At UFC London
Luke Riley

Set For UFC London Co-Main Event
Joe Ryan

Named Opening Day Starter for Twins
Sam Patterson

Looks To Extend His Win Streak
Michael Page

Set For Welterweight Bout
Austen Lane

In Dire Need Of Victory
Iwo Baraniewski

A Favorite At UFC London
Francisco Alvarez

Pulled Early Thursday With Back Tightness
Luis Severino

to Start for A's on Opening Day
Logan Gilbert

Named Mariners Opening Day Starter
José Ramírez

Jose Ramirez Back in Cactus League Lineup on Thursday
Hayden Birdsong

to Have Tommy John Surgery, Miss Entire 2026 Season
Akshay Bhatia

Withdraws From Valspar Championship
CFB

Alberto Mendoza Drawing Positive Reviews at Georgia Tech
CFB

Anthony Colandrea Impressing in Nebraska's Spring Practices
J.J. Spaun

Offers Upside Despite Poor Course History at Innisbrook
Aaron Rai

Looks to Bounce Back at Valspar Championship
Johnny Keefer

Brings Ball-Striking Upside to Valspar Championship
Billy Horschel

a Volatile Play at Valspar Championship
Ben Griffin

Looks to Rebound at the Valspar Championship
Corey Conners

Brings Elite Ball-Striking to Valspar Championship
Xander Schauffele

Trending In The Right Direction For Valspar Championship
Sahith Theegala

Has Shot to Challenge at Valspar Championship
Mackenzie Hughes

Looking to Bounce Back at Valspar Championship
Nicolai Hojgaard

Finding Rhythm For Valspar Championship
Matt Fitzpatrick

Continues Hot Start to 2026 Heading to Valspar Championship
Pierceson Coody

Heads to Valspar Championship Following Two Missed Cuts
Wyndham Clark

Searching for Momentum at Valspar Championship
Justin Thomas

Is Justin Thomas Back Ahead of This Week's Valspar Championship?
Jordan Spieth

to Bounce Back at Favored Valspar Championship?
Brooks Koepka

is Starting to Find His Groove Again Ahead of Valspar Championship
Viktor Hovland

is One of The Best DFS Plays at Innesbrook
Rasmus Hojgaard

to Get Back on Track at Valspar Championship
Tony Finau

is Again a Scary Option at Valspar Championship
Blades Brown

Continues PGA Tour Run at Valspar Championship
Josh Emmett

Suffers First-Round TKO Loss
Kevin Vallejos

Scores First-Round TKO
Amanda Lemos

Drops Back-To-Back Fights
Gillian Robertson

Extends Her Win Streak
Andre Fili

Drops Decision on Saturday
Denny Hamlin

Dominates and Gets His Third Career Las Vegas Win
Chase Elliott

Earns Runner-Up Finish at Las Vegas
William Byron

Wins A Stage and Finishes Third at Las Vegas
Christopher Bell

Finishes Fourth at Las Vegas After Strong Run
Andre Fili

Jose Delgado Edges Andre Fili in Split-Decision Win
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF