🖥 CYBER MONDAY - TAP TO SAVE 50% WITH CODE CYBER
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
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

Champ or Chump: Trey Mancini & Taylor Motter

Rick Lucks analyzes Trey Mancini & Taylor Motter to determine whether they will have year-long fantasy value for the 2017 MLB season.

Every year, fantasy owners scour minor league rosters in an effort to find the next breakout star that no one is talking about. We always think that anyone with the slightest chance of mattering in fantasy is on our radar. Then, April rolls around and somebody we have never heard of does something extraordinary. Left with no other option, we ask "Who is this guy?"

Two such examples from 2017 are Baltimore's Trey Mancini and Seattle's Taylor Motter. Both have five homers already this season, commanding attention they did not during draft season. Will they fade back into obscurity or prove to have lasting fantasy appeal?

As always, ownership rates provided are from FleaFlicker formats.

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

 

The Fantasy Jury is Out

Trey Mancini (OF, BAL) 14% Owned

Mancini has a .256/.289/.651 triple slash line to go with his five jacks, making him a solid contributor thus far in fantasy. He also smashed three dingers in just 15 PA last year, giving him the appearance of a reliable power option. His minor league history points to a 20 HR guy with everyday playing time, however, so this power spike is unexpected. It is also unlikely to continue.

Mancini currently boasts a FB% of 29.6 percent, well short of the 40+% generally associated with sluggers. The year is young, but Mancini has consistently displayed low FB% rates in the minors as well. Mancini is another guy who would benefit from elevating the baseball, an adjustment he has not shown any signs of making yet. His power upside is limited without more airborne baseballs.

This is problematic, as Mancini has most of the problems associated with pure sluggers. He is currently striking out at a 35.6 percent clip, a rate that makes even a .256 batting average seem fluky. His 29.8 percent chase rate is slightly plus, but his SwStr% of 17 percent is ugly. This profile probably needs to hit 40 bombs for fantasy owners to care, a number well out of Mancini's reach.

The Orioles have Mark Trumbo, Seth Smith, Adam Jones, and Hyun Soo Kim to man the positions Mancini can play, likely relegating the latter to a start or two a week now that Smith is off the DL. They also bury him in the lineup when he does play, generally seeing him hit seventh. The result is a power bat who can not hit for power in limited playing time. His current ownership level is not high, but Mancini should not be owned in anything shallower than 15-team AL-Only leagues.

Verdict: Chump

 
Taylor Motter (OF/SS, SEA) 23% Owned

Motter's line (.235/.297/.559) is not as impressive as Mancini's, but the underlying skills are much more interesting. He hit 16 homers to go with 15 steals (seven CS) in 506 PA at Double-A Montgomery in 2014 before increasing his production to 14 bombs and 26 steals (eight CS) in 558 Triple-A Durham PA in 2015. Motter's 2016 at Triple-A was limited to 387 PA, but he nearly matched the previous campaign's power production (13 HR) while dramatically increasing his efficiency on the basepaths (19 SB in 23 attempts). Motter is not young at age 27, but he has a power/speed skillset fantasy owners crave.

Will it play in the majors? Motter historically derives his power from hitting a ton of fly balls, generally posting a FB% above 40 percent in each of his minor league seasons. This makes his current FB% of 46 percent easier to trust. His current HR/FB of 21.7 percent is bound to regress considering that his minor league career high is 11 percent, but he hits enough flies to produce 20 homers anyway. He is also pulling 60.9 percent of his flies, an approach that would be expected to produce a career high HR/FB if Motter can keep it up all year. The upside here could be 30 bombs if everything breaks right.

Motter's speed will require an OBP higher than his current .297 to make an impact, which brings us to his .244 BABIP. He popped out a ton in the minors, so his current IFFB% (4.3%) is likely to go up. He also has a LD% (24 percent) that is much higher than the below average rates he posted in the minors. With two primary drivers of BABIP currently in Motter's favor, why is his BABIP so low?

Motter has proven extremely susceptible to the shift (.125 average vs. the shift, .270 without it) in his brief MLB tenure. This has produced an .067 BABIP on ground balls, which seems odd considering that Motter can run a little and does not pull too many grounders (66.7 percent). I expect that bad luck is at least partially to blame for the weak performance of his grounders, giving him some room for BABIP growth even if his LD% and IFFB% revert to Motter's minor league averages. Motter won't be a plus BABIP guy, but he should do better than .244 moving forward.

Motter also has plus plate discipline. He is patient to a fault (43.7 percent Swing%), causing him to K more often than his underlying metrics (19.9 percent chase rate, 8.5 percent SwStr%) would indicate. Still, his current 24.3 percent K% seems a shade too high for somebody with a strong knowledge of the zone. His minor league history supports this claim, as Motter consistently combined strong K-rates with plenty of walks on the farm.

Motter also has positional versatility in his favor. He primarily played OF last year, giving him eligibility there. He has 13 games at SS this year, allowing him to qualify there in most formats. He has also appeared in two games at both first and third base, potentially giving him eligibility there at some point this year. Motter would then be eligible for every offensive position save second base and catcher.

Motter has 30/20 upside in an ideal world, with 20/20 and a .250 average being more realistic. His positional versatility makes him an ideal bench option, especially if your league allows daily lineup changes. He can fill in for almost anyone on your roster, allowing you to carry extra pitchers or category specialists with minimal regard to position. That is valuable enough to be owned in a lot more than 23 percent of leagues.

Verdict: Champ

 

More Player Outlooks




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Egor Demin

Available Against Hornets
Justin Herbert

Planning to Play Through Broken Bone in Left Hand in Week 14
Terance Mann

in Danger of Missing Monday's Game
Sauce Gardner

Likely to Miss a "Couple of Weeks" With Calf Strain
Noah Clowney

Considered Probable for Monday
Michael Porter Jr.

Listed as Probable for Monday's Matchup
Caris LeVert

Expected Back Monday
Duncan Robinson

Questionable to Face Hawks
Jalen Duren

Likely to Return Against Hawks Monday
Brock Bowers

Records Two Touchdown Grabs in Week 13
Alexandre Sarr

Iffy for Monday
Mark Williams

Available Against Lakers Monday
Ryan Dunn

on Track to Return Monday
Jaime Jaquez Jr.

Uncertain for Monday
Coby White

Returning to Bulls Lineup Monday
Paolo Banchero

Unavailable Monday
Larry Nance Jr.

to Miss 3-4 Weeks
Jarrett Allen

to Miss a Week of Action
Nikola Jokić

Nikola Jokic Listed as Probable for Monday
Anthony Davis

Likely to Play Against Nuggets Monday
Giannis Antetokounmpo

Considered Probable for Monday
Justin Herbert

Suffers Fractured Hand in Week 13, Will Have Surgery
Dennis Schröder

Dennis Schroder Won't Play Sunday
Kimani Vidal

has Season-High in Rushing Yards in Win Over Raiders
De'Von Achane

Looks Unstoppable on the Ground in Week 13
Davante Adams

has Another Two-Touchdown Game
Aaron Jones Sr.

is Questionable to Return With Shoulder Injury
Adonai Mitchell

has Career Day With 102 Yards, Touchdown in Win
Andre Drummond

Available Versus Atlanta
VJ Edgecombe

Cleared to Suit Up on Sunday
Bijan Robinson

Compiles 191 Total Yards, Touchdown in Loss to Jets
Shedeur Sanders

Will Start Again in Week 14 Against Titans
Mike Evans

Could Return in Week 14
Keon Coleman

Active for Week 13
Dalton Kincaid

Officially Inactive for Week 13
Kyren Williams

Returns in Week 13 After Injury Scare
Kyren Williams

Suffers Apparent Leg Injury in Week 13, Status Unclear
Woody Marks

Returns in Week 13 After Injury Scare
Sauce Gardner

Colts Rule Out Sauce Gardner With Knee Injury
Woody Marks

Questionable to Return With Foot Injury
Kyler Murray

Not Fully Healthy Yet
Keon Coleman

Expected to Play Against Steelers
CFB

Lane Kiffin to be Introduced as LSU's Next Head Coach on Monday
CFB

Florida Poised to Land Jon Sumrall as Next Head Coach
CFB

Alex Golesh Taking Over Auburn Head-Coaching Job
CFB

Arkansas Expected to Hire Ryan Silverfield as Next Head Coach
Joel Hofer

Shuts Out Mammoth
Owen Tippett

Amasses Three Points in Saturday's Win
Stuart Skinner

Bounces Back With Shutout
Brock Nelson

Notches Four Points in Big Win
Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Sustains Upper-Body Injury
Logan Cooley

Hurt in Saturday's Loss
Warren Foegele

Not Ready to Return Saturday
Simon Benoit

Won't Play Saturday
Henri Jokiharju

Lands on Injured Reserve
Zack Wheeler

Likely to Return in May
Pavel Zacha

a Game-Time Call Saturday
Ryan Helsley

Agrees to Two-Year Deal With Orioles
David Pastrnak

Out for Second Consecutive Game
William Nylander

Available Saturday
Kyle Palmieri

Out for 6-8 Months With Torn ACL
Jake Walman

Sidelined for Third Consecutive Game
Jack Roslovic

to Miss Two Weeks
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins

to Return Saturday
Mattias Samuelsson

in Concussion Protocol
Kyle Palmieri

Sustains Lower-Body Injury
Lukas Dostal

Ruled Out for 2-3 Weeks
Kirill Marchenko

Misses Third Straight Game
Jaden Schwartz

to Miss Six Weeks
Dylan Cease

Agrees With Blue Jays on Seven-Year, $210 Million Deal
Anthony Rendon

Angels Could Buy Out Final Year of Anthony Rendon's Contract
Josh Hader

Says his Shoulder is "Back to Normal"
Ketel Marte

Diamondbacks "Actively Listening" on Ketel Marte
J.T. Realmuto

Red Sox Showing Interest in J.T. Realmuto
Sonny Gray

Red Sox Acquire Sonny Gray From the Cardinals
CFB

Jeremiah Smith, Makai Lemon, Skyler Bell Named Biletnikoff Award Finalists

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP