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

Infield Busts Set to Bounce Back in 2018

Collectively, the fantasy community seems to harbor contempt for players that have burned us in the past. After an established, trusted player delivers a poor season it’s hard for us to trust him again.

Building a team of last year’s busts is walking a fine line. For every Justin Verlander there’s an Adam Wainwright. This article will go around the diamond and examine an infielder at each position that’s due for a rebound after a disappointing 2017.

Let's look at some bounce back candidates that could be values in late fantasy baseball drafts or buy-low candidates to start the season.

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

 

Infielders Due to Rebound in '18

Ian Desmond (1B/OF, COL)

Desmond never fully recovered from a broken hand suffered in spring training and it affected him all season. He posted a career high 62.7% ground ball rate, which is the last thing a hitter wants to do in Colorado. It led to a power outage, as Desmond hit just seven home runs and had a measly .100 ISO in 373 plate appearances. Despite what was a dreadful debut for the Rockies, they seem committed to him. They have $22 million reasons to give Desmond playing time and they are pushing down prospects left and right to keep him in the lineup. This makes him come off as a crusty, overpaid veteran blocking young talent. While some of those adjectives may be true, there are some positive takeaways with his 2017 season that suggest the potential for a rebound.

First, the gains he made in strikeout rate during his 2016 resurgence with Texas held. He struck out at 23.3% clip, which isn't great by itself, but it's a far cry from the near 30% rate he had during his final two seasons in Washington. Second, he also swiped 15 bags in his injury marred campaign and was caught just four times for a 79% success rate. Even at age 32 Desmond proved he is still a threat to steal 20 or more bases in a full season. Third, while rising launch angles and increased fly ball rates have become all the rage, a ground ball hitter like Desmond can thrive in spacious Coors Field. Groundballs in general are more likely to go for hits, and they’re even more likely to sneak through in an environment like Colorado. It would be bad for him to be anywhere near 60% like last season. If he settled back around 51.4%, his career average, then he could maintain a high BABIP while providing enough power to approach the 20 home run threshold. This power-speed skill set exists in only a few other first basemen, and as a key piece of Colorado’s lineup Desmond could be a five-category contributor in 2018.

 

Ian Kinsler (2B, LAA)

A power renaissance in 2016 made Kinsler exciting again as he eclipsed 20 home runs for the first time since 2011. The power gains held in 2017 but his batting average plummeted by over 50 points to a career low of .236. At age 35 it’s easy to assume that Kinsler fell off an age cliff, and his NFBC average draft position (ADP) of 184 shows that most drafters believe he did. However, even a cursory look at the underlying batting peripherals should make us question whether Kinsler’s really lost it. A .244 BABIP sunk any hope of a decent batting average. His 14% strikeout is still far above league average and lower than his 16.9% strikeout rate in 2016. He also upped his walk rate to 9%, his highest since 2011, and his 86.1% contact rate was far above league average.

The contact skills and plate discipline haven’t deteriorated, which is a good sign for a bounce back. If we dig a little deeper into his batted ball profile, the .244 BABIP looks like mostly bad luck. Kinsler recorded a career high 37% hard contact rate in 2017. He also had a 14.4% infield fly ball rate, which will hurt his BABIP a bit, but Kinsler’s had a similar rate in years past and didn’t experience such a low BABIP. Let’s have a look at his career BABIP (right) heatmap versus his 2017 season (left) heatmap. These charts were taken from brooksbaseball.net.

There is no way that a career .273 hitter lost the ability to hit balls in the zone, even at age 35. He got a significantly less amount of hits on batted balls between 0-10 degrees. Kinsler had a .262 xAVG and .278 xBABIP (per xStats.org) in 2017, yet his actual average and BABIP were significantly lower. He probably won’t have an average around .288 like he did in 2016, but he could realistically gain 30 or more points of batting average doing exactly what he did last season. And now he’s hitting directly in front of Mike Trout and Justin Upton.

 

Matt Carpenter (1B/2B/3B, STL)

Many players soared to new heights in 2017 by raising their launch angle. Matt Carpenter was not one of them. His career high 50.8% flyball rate was third highest among qualified hitters, behind just Joey Gallo and Kyle Seager. All it got Carpenter was the lowest batting average of his career (.241) by 30 points and his lowest ISO (.209) in three years. Carpenter doesn’t have the raw power of someone like Gallo to benefit from such an extreme approach. Increasing his launch angle led to the 2015 power explosion, but he took it to the point of detriment last season. Carpenter himself has vowed to fix his swing and return to the contact-first approach that made him a late 20’s breakout. An easy way to visualize Carpenter’s changes is by comparing his launch angle charts against right-handed pitching between 2017 (right) and his breakout 2015 season (left). These charts were taken from baseballsavant.mlb.com:

2015 vs. 2017

Carpenter's launch angle spiked way up in 2017 and inhibited his ability to get hits. Balls hit at a launch angle greater than 25 degrees are essentially either home runs or outs, there is little chance outside of good luck or poor fielding that one would drop for a hit. Carpenter his .253 against righties in 2017 after hitting .292 against them in 2015. The good news is that Carpenter can still pulverize the ball. He had a 42.2% hard contact rate last season, eight among qualified hitters. Even if a potential swing change affects his exit velocity, he’s been above 33% every season of his career. A change in approach should help Carpenter’s .274 BABIP normalize to his career .321 mark. This is a player that can be expected to make a large recovery in batting average. Carpenter’s plate discipline hasn’t waned either. He had a career high 17.5% walk rate in 2017, and his selectivity at the plate (33.9% swing rate, 18.2% O-Swing rate) means his OBP will remain healthy. The power might dip, but it will be worth it for Carpenter to regain past successes with the bat.

 

Marcus Semien (SS, OAK)

Though he didn’t deliver after a big 2016, Semien wasn’t so much a bust as he was a victim of injury last season. Fantasy owners are treating him as a bust this draft season, he is being criminally under-drafted (225th Overall per NFBC ADP as of 03/24).  The three months he missed with a wrist injury put him far out of owners minds. Even in just 85 games Semien had 10 home runs and 12 steals. If we paced those numbers out to 150 games he would have had approximately 18 home runs and 21 steals. Not bad for an 18/19th rounder in a standard 12 team league. Pacing is, of course, an imperfect measure, but it offers perspective to Semien’s contributions.

Semien’s price shouldn’t be dinged this hard due to the wrist injury. It was the first time he’d ever been on the disabled list during his major league career after back to back seasons of over 600 plate appearances. The injury also only cost him the first half, meaning he showed us in 85 games that it didn’t affect his production. He also posted a career best 30.3% hard contact rate after returning to the diamond. Semien’s flyball heavy profile means he won’t hit much higher than .250, but he’s going to the be Athletics leadoff hitter in 2018 and produce in every standard category except batting average. This is the late shortstop to target if you pass on earlier players, and a great middle infield option.

 

More 2018 MLB Sleepers and Undervalued Players




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

Bryce Harper

Phillies Aren't Planning to Trade Bryce Harper
Josh Hart

Available Versus the Celtics
Karl-Anthony Towns

Cleared to Face the Celtics
De'Andre Hunter

Sidelined on Friday Night
Kristaps Porzingis

Won't Play on Friday
Nick Leddy

to Sit Out at Least Two Games
Nico Collins

Texans Rule Out Nico Collins for Week 8
Cody Glass

Set to Miss Time
Jason Zucker

Expected to Play Friday
Pierre-Luc Dubois

Misses Fifth Straight Game Friday
Brandon Aiyuk

Could Return to Practice Next Week
Morgan Rielly

Out on Friday
Lukas Reichel

Canucks Acquire Lukas Reichel
Brock Purdy

Officially Ruled Out for Week 8
VEG

Carter Hart Signs Two-Year Deal With Golden Knights
Vince Williams Jr.

Grizzlies Injury Woes Continue, Without Vince Williams Jr. Friday
A.J. Brown

Ruled Out For Week 8
Bo Bichette

Starting at Second, Batting Cleanup in Game 1 of World Series
Lamar Jackson

Officially Listed as Questionable to Play in Week 8
D'Andre Swift

Officially Questionable to Play in Week 8 Due to Groin Injury
Jae'Sean Tate

Questionable to Return Friday
Danny Wolf

Will Miss Friday's Matchup with Ankle Injury
Michael Penix Jr.

Questionable to Play in Week 8 Due to Knee Injury
Drake Powell

Rookie Drake Powell Ruled Out for Matchup with Cavs
Calvin Ridley

to Miss Another Game
Bo Bichette

Makes World Series Roster
Tyreek Hill

Considering Retirement?
Darren Waller

Expected to Return This Year
Bryce Young

Listed as Doubtful to Face the Bills
Ciryl Gane

Scheduled For A Title Fight
Tom Aspinall

Set for First Official Title Defense
Breece Hall

Questionable for Week 8
Mackenzie Dern

Can Become The New Strawweight Champion
Virna Jandiroba

Set For UFC 321 Co-Main Event
Mario Bautista

Aims To Extend His Win Streak
MMA

Umar Numagomedov A Favorite At UFC 321
Garrett Wilson

Ruled Out for Week 8
Jailton Almeida

Hopes To Get A Title Shot With A Win
Caris LeVert

Probable for Friday's Game
Alexander Volkov

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Luka Garza

Unavailable Friday
Moritz Wagner

Remains Out Friday
Azamat Murzakanov

Looks To Remain Undefeated
Ja'Kobe Walter

Iffy for Friday Night
Aleksandar Rakic

In Dire Need Of Victory
Daniel Gafford

Listed as Questionable for Friday
Jeremy Sochan

Sits Out Friday's Game
De'Aaron Fox

Won't Play on Friday
Ja Morant

Questionable for Friday's Action
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope

Draws Questionable Tag on Friday
Kel'el Ware

Available on Friday Against Grizzlies
Darius Garland

Remains Sidelined on Friday
OG Anunoby

Listed as Probable on Friday
Giannis Antetokounmpo

Likely to Play Friday Against Raptors
Rasmus Sandin

Won't Play on Friday
Matt Rempe

Hurt During Fight
Nick Leddy

Exits With Injury Thursday
Radko Gudas

Injured in Thursday's Win
William Carrier

to Miss Time
Eric Robinson

to Be Out for Extended Period
CFB

Texas Tech QB Will Hammond Will Start vs. Oklahoma State Saturday
CFB

Kansas State RB Dylan Edwards Out For Sunflower Showdown
CFB

Arizona State WR Jordyn Tyson Will Not Play In Week 9
Brock Purdy

Not Expected to Play in Week 8
J.J. McCarthy

Vikings to Start J.J. McCarthy in Week 9 if Healthy
Omarion Hampton

Still Wearing a Walking Boot After Week 8
Kimani Vidal

Scores Touchdown and Demonstrates High Efficiency in Week 8 Win
Zack Wheeler

Could be Ready for Opening Day in 2026
William Contreras

Could Need Finger Surgery
Aaron Jones Sr.

Officially Active Versus Chargers
Morgan Rielly

Questionable for Friday
NYI

Max Shabanov Out Against Red Wings
Morgan Barron

Available Thursday
Mason Marchment

a Game-Time Decision Thursday
Jonathan Marchessault

Won't Play Against Canucks
Matt Duchene

Sits Out Second Consecutive Game
Kirby Dach

Returns to Canadiens Lineup
Hampus Lindholm

a Game-Time Call Thursday
CFB

Utah QB Devon Dampier Listed as Questionable on Big 12 Injury Report
San Francisco Giants

Tony Vitello Named New Manager of the Giants
Jaylen Waddle

Dolphins Don't Have Plans to Trade Jaylen Waddle
Francisco Lindor

has Elbow Surgery, Expected to be Ready for Spring Training
PGA

Alex Noren is a Smash Play at Bank of Utah Championship
Mike Evans

Could be Back in Under Eight Weeks
Bucky Irving

Will Not Play in Week 8
Maverick McNealy

Look Out For Maverick McNealy This Week in Utah
Justin Lower

Unlikely to Flip The Script at Bank of Utah Championship
Stephan Jaeger

Looking for Repeat Performance in Utah
CFB

Behren Morton Will be Listed as Questionable on Wednesday
Max McGreevy

a Longer Shot to Contend in Utah
Jackson Suber

on the Bubble for the PGA in 2026
Greyson Sigg

Improving at the Right Time This Fall
Seamus Power

Hopes to Make More Birdies This Week
Patton Kizzire

May Struggle Once Again in Utah
Beau Hossler

Up and Down Heading to Bank of Utah Championship
Adam Hadwin

Looking to Find the Weekend in Utah
Christiaan Bezuidenhout

Enjoying the Fall Golf Season
Tom Hoge

Sputtering into Bank of Utah Championship
Sahith Theegala

On the Upswing Heading into Utah
Andrew Putnam

Looks to Find Form in Utah
Matt McCarty

Looks to Defend Title in Utah
Ben Kohles

a Strong Value Play at Bank of Utah Championship
Max Homa

Trending Up Entering the Bank of Utah Championship
Nick Dunlap

Searching for Spark at Bank of Utah Championship
Quade Cummins

Struggling to Find Form Ahead of Bank of Utah Championship
Jason Day

Making a Spot Start at Bank of Utah Championship
Los Angeles Angels

Kurt Suzuki to be the Angels' Next Manager
Bo Bichette

Plans to be Ready for World Series
Brandon Woodruff

Expects to Be Ready for Opening Day
Reinier de Ridder

Reinier De Ridder Suffers His First UFC Loss
Brendan Allen

Wins Back-To-Back Fights
Kevin Holland

Drops Decision
Mike Malott

Wins Third Fight In A Row
Marlon Vera

Loses Third Consecutive Fight
Aiemann Zahabi

Gets A Razor-Thin Split Decision Win
Jasmine Jasudavicius

Suffers First-Round TKO Loss
Manon Fiorot

Gets Back In The Win Column
Davey Grant

Suffers Submission Loss
Charles Jourdain

Gets First-Round Submission Win
Matt Frevola

Gets Dominated At UFC Vancouver
George Springer

Returns to Lineup for Game 6 of ALCS
CFB

Colorado State Fires Head Coach Jay Norvell After Four Seasons
CFB

Florida Fires Head Coach Billy Napier After Four Years
Chase Elliott

Can Chase Elliott Deliver Another Clutch Win to Make Championship 4?
William Byron

Seeks First Win at Talladega to Overcome Las Vegas Crash
Chase Briscoe

Likely to Finish Worse Than he Starts
Kyle Larson

Despite No Wins on Drafting Tracks, Kyle Larson is Improving
Tyler Reddick

Despite Winning at Talladega, Tyler Reddick's Drafting Record Is Not So Hot
Ross Chastain

Poor Qualifying Makes him a Strong DFS Option at Talladega
Chris Buescher

Excellent Crash Avoidance Could Reap Dividends at Talladega
Ty Gibbs

If Ty Gibbs' Team Executes a Better Strategy, he Could Win at Talladega
Daniel Suarez

Hopes for Clutch Talladega Win to Remain in the NASCAR Cup Series
Josh Berry

Might Contend at Talladega
Austin Dillon

Doesn't Lead Enough at Talladega to Contend for Wins

RANKINGS

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