Fantasy Baseball Mock Draft: 12-Team, Salary Cap (2024)

As a grizzled veteran when it comes to salary cap leagues, I will give an example to you all on how I prepare and draft for salary cap leagues. I am very excited about this opportunity as I get to use the FantasyPros Draft Wizard which offers a “buy now” mode that makes prepping for salary cap leagues a breeze. You can practice your fantasy baseball mock drafts in minutes for free!

Admittingly most important to me, I get to draft without Zac or Brandon bidding on players just because I am bidding on them. Stop doing that. I know you both are just watching and waiting for me to bid.

Check out our latest fantasy baseball player projections 

12-Team Mock Salary Cap Draft (2024 Fantasy Baseball)

Prep Going into the Mock Draft

Allocate Funds to Each Position as Desired

The general rule of thumb for auction is 65% position players and 35% pitchers, although this can be altered based on your strategy. I lean pitcher-heavy because traditionally I have found better value with position players on the waiver wire. So, I will be going 60/40.

Find a Strategy

For this mock, I will be going for two elite OFs, a quality SS/3B, high-upside young starting pitching, punting saves and looking for value elsewhere. For a standard roster with $260 auction dollars, my prep will look something like this:

  • C- $1
  • 1B – $14
  • 2B – $7
  • 3B – $17
  • SS – $15
  • OF – $45
  • OF – $45
  • OF – $1
  • Util – $4
  • Util – $3
  • Util – $1
  • P – $27
  • P – $27
  • P – $21
  • P – $13
  • P – $7
  • P – $2
  • P – $1
  • Bench – $2
  • Bench – $2
  • Bench – $2
  • Bench – $1
  • Bench – $1
  • Bench – $1

Be sure to bid a player up to your final amount even if you think they will go for more. Knowing your limit and allocation is how value happens in salary-cap leagues. Going $1/$2/$3 over budget is okay, pull that money from other positions.

Tier Up

I have done many, many large buy-in auction leagues, and I will give you the secret to how to have a great auction draft.

The last player in a tier will always go for more than the other players in the tier.

Pat Fitzmaurice does an incredible tier breakdown for reference, but for example tier 1 in pitching –

Once the first two are off the board, whoever is the last remaining will always cost the most. It’s a rule of life, like Ryan Braun and FedEx drivers not getting along.

Other league members will see the drop-off between the final player in a tier and the next best available after and get impulsive.

Try to avoid getting into a bidding war for the last player in a tier, it will happen a lot.

Post Mock Notes

  • Went top-heavy with guys like Spencer Strider, Ronald Acuna Jr., Corbin Burnes and Julio Rodriguez. Got tremendous value on them as predicted, players were going for $50+ later in the draft as the player pool got more shallow.
  • The value I got early let me spend more on SS and snag Corey Seager at a good value.
  • Ended up heavy shortstop but I like the value I got on each.
  • I am not projected to finish first in any category. Not ideal.
  • The “Buy Now” option on FantasyPros Draft Wizard is a game changer for preparing for salary cap leagues.

Check out all of the mock draft results here

More Fantasy Baseball Mock Drafts

12-Team Leagues

10-Team Leagues


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