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Perpetual Leagues
Perpetual Leagues: Making Your Keeper List
by David Luciani
Published January 25, 2002
One of the most common emails we get from subscribers to our
online ranking forms is in reference to the note at the top that reads:
"You should finish the draft with a roster that costs about 75-80% of its
value or you will finish in the middle of the pack!" In a standard
$260 Rotisserie league, a middle-of-the-pack team gets $260 worth of results.
A first place team pays between 75-80% of value and in fact, after analyzing
hundreds of leagues worth of standard Rotisserie data, we have concluded that
the optimum amount is actually somewhere around 78%. That is to say that
if you pay 78% of value, or in other words get $333 worth of players for $260,
you will win a standard 12-team Rotisserie league. The more teams that are
in your league, of course, the more value you need to get. Fortunately,
the bigger leagues, with twenty-five teams and such, often allow you to choose
from the same players as opposing teams, which means that ten guys in the league
can own Pedro Martinez or Randy Johnson. That opens up great possibilities
for getting players at much less than their value but we'll deal with those
leagues in a separate essay.
The focus of this article is to deal with the perpetual league.
The problem for most fantasy leaguers is exactly how to create a roster that
only costs 78% (or 80% if you want to keep the calculations easier at the
expense of a slightly weaker team) of its value. One of the wonderful
things about perpetual fantasy baseball is that finalizing your keeper list is
the point at which you determine how much you'll be able to spend in the draft.
If you make a bad keeper list, you WILL lose your league but if you can retain
players at much less than they are worth, you will be able to bid full price or
even "overbid" for the players in the pool.
Let's create a real keeper list in a 12-team AL 4 category
Rotisserie league and see what it enables us to do. For subscribers to our
forecast section, you can use our online ranking forms but if you're not a
subscriber, use whatever set of values you're depending on to determine what you
believe a player will be worth in 2002. I'll use ours here for the
example.
Let's say you're allowed to protect just seven players in your
Rotisserie league and you've narrowed down your potential keeper list to the
following players (with their 2002 salaries listed, if you choose to keep them):
| Player |
2002 Salary |
| Mariano Rivera |
$35 |
| Kelvim Escobar |
$8 |
| Freddy Garcia |
$13 |
| Ivan Rodriguez |
$36 |
| Bartolo Colon |
$22 |
| Carl Everett |
$35 |
| Cory Lidle |
$5 |
| Jeff Conine |
$5 |
| Jason Tyner |
$5 |
| Paul Abbott |
$10 |
| Steve Cox |
$5 |
| Robert Fick |
$5 |
Now, you know you want to find seven players from that list but
you're not sure who to keep. At first glance, the stars, such as Rivera
and Ivan Rodriguez, might be the obvious choices. So, let's go through
step two. Get the projected fantasy values from whatever source you're
using and put those numbers beside the salary it would cost you to keep each
player as follows:
| Player |
2002 Sal |
2002 Value |
| Rivera |
$35 |
$33 |
| Escobar |
$8 |
$27 |
| F. Garcia |
$13 |
$30 |
| I. Rod |
$36 |
$25 |
| Colon |
$22 |
$23 |
| Everett |
$35 |
$21 |
| Lidle |
$5 |
$20 |
| Conine |
$5 |
$19 |
| Tyner |
$5 |
$16 |
| Abbott |
$10 |
$15 |
| Cox |
$5 |
$12 |
| Fick |
$5 |
$7 |
There are really two approaches that you can take to build your
keeper list. One is what I will call the "Return on Investment"
approach and the other is the "Maximizing Value" approach. I
prefer the latter but I've won leagues with both and so I will outline them here
briefly.
The ROI approach is simply that you determine what percentage
"interest" each player gets on your investment. So, from the
example above, Bartolo Colon gets you $23 of value for your $22 which is a 4.5%
ROI. Under the ROI approach, you protect the minimum number of
players you can who get you the highest ROI. If you protect too many, you
might end up overfilling your roster with undervalued players but players who
don't accumulate the stats that will win you the league. Under the ROI
approach, restrict yourself to the minimum number you must keep.
The second approach, and the one I have found preferable in
recent years, is the Maximizing Positive Value approach. This simply means
that you subtract the amount a player will give you from what you are paying him
and you protect the minimum number of players you are allowed unless
adding any extra keepers is permitted and the extra keeper will be paid no more
than 80% of his value.
So, using the Maximizing Positive Value approach with the above
list, we create the following chart:
| Player |
02 Sal |
02 Val |
+/- |
| Rivera |
$35 |
$33 |
-$2 |
| Escobar |
$8 |
$27 |
+$19 |
| Garcia |
$13 |
$30 |
+$17 |
| I. Rod |
$35 |
$25 |
-$10 |
| Colon |
$22 |
$23 |
+$1 |
| Everett |
$35 |
$21 |
-$14 |
| Lidle |
$5 |
$20 |
+$15 |
| Conine |
$5 |
$19 |
+$14 |
| Tyner |
$5 |
$16 |
+$11 |
| Abbott |
$10 |
$15 |
+$5 |
| Cox |
$5 |
$12 |
+$7 |
| Fick |
$5 |
$7 |
+$2 |
Under the Maximizing Positive Value approach, and if we were
limited to protecting seven players, we would protect players in the following
order: Escobar, Garcia, Lidle, Conine, Tyner, Cox, Abbott. That's a total
salary of $51 in salary and a projected value of $84. In this case, if our
league allowed us to protect more than seven players, we would add Robert Fick
into the equation because he is being paid just 71% of his expected value.
In that scenario, we have an eight man protected list with $56 of salary and $91
of projected value.
Now, a few readers might ask the following: What if my list is
so weak that I have players with negative expected value? Well, it doesn't
mean you can't protect them. In fact, you might have a couple of players
with such great positive value, such as Kelvim Escobar in the above example,
that you can afford to keep them. Having said that, you are always wise to
maximize return and therefore, those are players that you should move for an
undervalued player from another team. Most other fantasy GMs will be aware
of a bargain but you can often move a superstar, such as Mariano Rivera in the
above example, for a $5 player who will be worth $10, even if the player's
not a superstar.
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