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For the approximately three million baseball fans across the country who actively participate in fantasy and rotisserie leagues, this book's insightful strategies and statistically based predictions provide the keys to a winning season. In addition, Mann explains the complete rules to "Front Office Baseball", the popular fantasy game that he created.
An entertaining and incisive chronicle from one of the foremost authorities in fantasy baseball Ron Shandler is a self-described rotoholic. In the beginning, he hoarded newspaper box scores and pored over every number at his disposal. Then came the compulsion to create his own numbers. A monthly newsletter expanded into an annual Baseball Forecaster book, which spawned a media company, websites, tournaments, and more. Part memoir, part madcap history, Fantasy Expert is a fascinating and wide-ranging look at the modern growth and development of the game that went from cottage industry to national obsession. In chronicling his own escalating journey from rotisserie baseball hobbyist to professional authority, Shandler tells parallel tales of the rise of fantasy sports, the expanding baseball information industry, the increasingly sophisticated technology employed to gain an edge, and the fellow rotoholics who make it all possible. He also delves into the impact of fantasy baseball on the sport of baseball itself.Written with humor, honesty, and a deep passion for baseball, this is a must-read for anyone interested in the history, progression, and future of fantasy baseball.
The latest facts and figures for fantasy baseball enthusiasts. All the most current statistics and information necessary to succeed at this popular sport, compiled by a respected baseball analyst. Charts throughout.
Includes, beginning Sept. 15, 1954 (and on the 15th of each month, Sept.-May) a special section: School library journal, ISSN 0000-0035, (called Junior libraries, 1954-May 1961). Also issued separately.
A Book of Harmon's wisdom, fantasy football theory and statistics.
Major League All-Star Green shares how his baseball career has taught him to live life being fully present in every moment.
Not everyone gets to play Major League baseball. In fact, not everyone has played Little League or even pick-up games. But everyone can play fantasy baseball--and it seems as if almost everyone does, with the huge boost the game received via the Internet. Fantasy Baseball is the greatest thing to happen to baseball fans since the invention of the sport itself, according to Michael Zimmerman, author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Fantasy Baseball. You are the one with all the power--you are the owner, general manager, and manager in a league of your own. See how to draft real major league players to form your own team. Use real stats from each real season. Use your own money. And if you win, you own the right of all rights: bragging. And if you stink? You have only yourself to blame.
The Baseball America Prospect Handbook has been my one source on prospects for my fantasy baseball drafts in recent years, as they expend more diligence and effort than anyone in tracking down information on minor leaguers from people whose livelihoods depend on evaluating prospects. The reasons I wanted to write my own guide are twofold. First, evaluating prospects for real baseball and fantasy baseball are two very different things. For instance, Albert Almora rightly gets praised as a future star for the Chicago Cubs, and yet he has fairly little relevance to fantasy teams because his greatest strengths are in areas that aren't particularly relevant to our game. Meanwhile in the same system, Daniel Vogelbach's various weaknesses don't matter as much to us either. Thus, fantasy baseball really needs its own exhaustive source of evaluations. Secondly, there are some things on which the great people at Baseball America and I will never agree. They and the scouts they talk to look at talents like Archie Bradley and Kyle Crick only to see admittedly huge potential. When I look at them, I see hugely talented players who are very unlikely to ever be above-average major league starters for reasons that are explained in their profiles. And on the other side of the coin, when I look at Preston Tucker I see a consistently productive minor leaguer whose statistical profile suggests that he can handle the jump to the major leagues at some point, whereas he didn't even appear in Baseball America's Top 30 for the Astros organization. Or to use a different example, last year Mike Olt was listed as the No. 2 prospect in the Rangers' system and No. 22 overall. In the 2013 Fantasy Baseball Guide I questioned Mike Olt's future as a prospect given his worryingly low Z-Contact percentage. Sometimes Baseball America will be correct and sometimes I will, but there's value to be had in reading evaluations that use two very different sets of criteria.