Fantasy Baseball Draft Cheat Sheet

Here is my fantasy baseball draft cheat sheet to help you prepare for draft day. You will find players I’m targeting, avoiding, and also fantasy baseball draft strategy as you navigate each and every pick.

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Welsh’s Fantasy Baseball Draft Day Cheat Sheet

My Favorite Targets By Position

Catcher: Adley Rutschman, Yainer Diaz, Gabriel Moreno, Mitch Garver, Logan O’Hoppe

First Base: Matt Olson, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Triston Casas, Spencer Torkelson, Josh Naylor

Second Base: Mookie Betts, Gleyber Torres, Ketel Marte, Andres Gimenez, Nolan Gorman

Third Base: Rafael Devers, Manny Machado, Nolan Arenado, Max Muncy, Junior Caminero

Shortstop: Bobby Witt Jr. Oneil Cruz, Xander Bogaerts, Jackson Holliday, Zach Neto

Outfield: Julio Rodriguez, Corbin Carroll, Juan Soto, Michael Harris, Bryan Reynolds, Wyatt Langford, Jordan Walker, Riley Greene, Jackson Chourio, Teoscar Hernandez, Jarren Duran, Jarred Kelenic

Utility: Marcell Ozuna, Byron Buxton, Eloy Jimenez

Starting Pitcher: Spencer Strider, George Kirby, Pablo Lopez, Logan Webb, Cole Ragans, Bobby Miller, Joe Musgrove, Justin Steele, Michael King, Carlos Rodon, Bailey Ober, Brandon Pfaadt, Shota Imanaga, Yu Darvish, Brayan Bello

Reliever: Josh Hader, Camilo Doval, Evan Phillips, Pete Fairbanks, Craig Kimbrel

Targets By Round (12-Team League)

1st: Corbin Carroll, Shohei Ohtani, Juan Soto

2nd: Jose Ramirez, Matt Olson, Bryce Harper

3rd: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Elly De La Cruz, Michael Harris

4th: George Kirby, Pablo Lopez, Randy Arozarena

5th: Oneil Cruz, Mike Trout, Manny Machado

6th: Royce Lewis, Matt McLain, Paul Goldschmidt

7th: Cole Ragans, Bobby Miller, Jazz Chisholm

8th: Bryan Reynolds, Triston Casas, Joe Ryan

9th: Xander Bogaerts, Justin Steele, Jordan Walker

10th: Wyatt Langford, Riley Greene, Teoscar Hernandez

11th-15th: Evan Phillips, Jackson Chourio, Andres Gimenez, Jackson Holliday, Josh Naylor, Anthony Volpe, Pete Fairbanks, Merrill Kelly, Michael King, Shane Bieber, Marcell Ozuna, Bailey Ober, Carlos Rodon, Gabriel Moreno, Yu Darvish

16th-20th: Rhys Hoskins, Willy Adames, Shota Imanaga, Brandon Pfaadt, Jarren Duran, Jarred Kelenic, Lars Nootbaar, Junior Caminero, Byron Buxton, Mitch Garver

21st-25th: Maikel Garcia, Colt Keith, Henry Davis, Taj Bradley, Michael Wacha

Post-300 ADP: Yuki Matsui, Masyn Winn, Ty France, Jordan Lawlar, Chris Paddack

Players To Avoid Near ADP

Strategy/Advice

Similar to 2023, a hitting-heavy approach will dominate the early rounds of your draft. The biggest year-over-year change might be the stolen base approach. You still want to attack stolen bases in fistfuls, but power might be the thing in shorter supply. Don’t be afraid to stack some early-round power like Judge and Olson. If you do so, you can build up your stolen bases as you move along the draft. Most of the infield positions are top-heavy, though you can get away with a little more at shortstop and second base. Outfield is the position that can get away from you quickly. Three outfielder leagues have less to worry about but keep a mindful eye in five outfielder leagues. There are some great later round gets as I have noted in my targets, but try to build a core-two before you get to the double-digit rounds. Where my focus early may skew to power on my infield, it’s important to note there are quite a few great outfielders for stolen bases to target. Catchers will always come later for me. Even if it’s a two-catcher league, I think the position is as deep player-to-player as any, and I’d rather get later values than reach.

Pitching lives in a tier-based system similar to 2023. The top-tier versus the available hitters are usually not in my price range. There is a tier in the third round that has my favorites like George Kirby, Pablo Lopez, and Zac Gallen. I usually start my pitching run between the third and the fourth. If I can snag two, I will and then wait a few rounds to fill out more hitting. The sixth-eighth round has many high-upside arms. Snagging a Bobby Miller, Eury Perez, or Grayson Rodriguez is worth the risk. I have a safer pitching approach overall, but the time to take the risk is inside the top 100. The reason behind this is the innings-eating safe arms you can use to fill in the middle gaps of your rotation, like Merrill Kelly and Shane Bieber. Once you’ve gotten outside the top 150 with hopefully at least four arms, you can start taking some risks. These risks can be in the form of hopeful starters or aged vets hoping to return to form like Yu Darvish.

My closer strategy is about the same as it has always been. If I can get a deal on an upper-tier closer, I will bite. Most likely I will live in the closer 8-12 range. Something like Paul Sewald, Evan Phillips, or Pete Fairbanks. It’s never a bad bet to snag a closer on a great team. Even if they aren’t a lockdown arm, the team itself may push them into 30+ saves. If you can back that closer up with another shortly after, like Craig Kimbrel or Alex Langer, you’ll probably thank yourself later. If you can’t, there are a handful of closers people don’t know if they can count on that come at massive discounts, like Jose Leclerc and Carlos Estevez.

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Expert Fantasy Baseball Draft Advice