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2016 Fantasy Baseball Tiered Rankings: Relief Pitchers (March)

By Keith Allison on Flickr (Originally posted to Flickr as "Kenley Jansen") [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

It's only fitting that we close out the March rankings with the closers. Because these "firemen" are often on the hot seat, the value of a closer can change more quickly than any other position. While it is beyond the scope of this article, it is important to monitor the closer handcuffs as the season progresses and you can use Rotoballer's tools to do so. There are two strategies with closers: draft the top closers and avoid the headache of constantly monitoring their situation and replacement, or pick up cheap saves with an eye on the waiver wire. The strategy you employ may depend on the depth of your league (i.e. how easy it will be to pick potential closer replacements off the waiver wire) and how closely you will monitor the closer situations. You should also note that having questionable closers can often cause you to clog your roster with handcuffs, removing valuable roster space for useful streaming starters or platoon bats. All that strategy being discussed, time to move onto the pitchers themselves.

Editor's note: Be sure to check out our 2016 fantasy baseball rankings dashboard. It's already loaded up with tons of great rankings articles and draft analysis. Aside from our tiered staff rankings for every position, we also go deep on MLB prospect rankings, impact rookies for 2016, and dynasty/keeper rankings as well. Bookmark the page, and win your drafts.

 

2016 Fantasy Baseball Rankings Analysis: Relief Pitcher

There were a lot of notable changes in the circumstances of the first tier of closers (as defined by our composite rankings), which consists of Wade Davis, Craig Kimbrel, Aroldis Chapman and Kenley Jansen. Chapman is facing a 30 game suspension and a new league; Kimbrel is facing a new league; Davis has the closer role full time; and Jansen is not dealing with a spring injury this year. I dinged Chapman quite a bit for the 30 game suspension, which not only limits his stats but also occupies a roster spot for a good chunk of the season. Combine those issues with his high walk rate, his change of league, and a possible effect on his routine to prepare for the season, and I knocked him all the way to sixth despite his outstanding strikeout rate. I knocked Kimbrel due to a rising ERA and WHIP the last few years, combined with the league change. Nonetheless, he, Davis and Jansen constitute my first tier.

In my second tier, I'd have Zach Britton, Ken Giles, Chapman, Jeurys Familia, David Robertson and Cody Allen in that order. Britton posted a 1.9 ERA with a 0.99 WHIP, to go with 10.83 Ks/9 and a ridiculous 79.1% groundball rate. That should play well in front of Baltimore's incredible infield defense. Giles has a 1.56 ERA with a 1.04 WHIP and 11.7k/9 the past two years; his numbers trended in the wrong direction last year but he is only 25. Chapman has an absurd 15.4k/9 career rate, but his WHIP is slightly over 1 due to issues with walks. Familia had a 1.85 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, and 9.9k/9 last year, but isn't higher due to his shorter track record combined with outperforming his FIP. Robertson has a 2.44 ERA, 1.06WHIP and 12.3k/9 over the last four years; even though his ERA has risen over the years, his WHIP has declined and his K-rate has remained similar. Allen has a 2.44 ERA with a 1.16 WHIP and 12.0k/9 the past three years, with his K-rate increasing each year.

Outside my top two tiers, there are five players who I rated significantly differently than my peers.

 

Overrated

Trevor Rosenthal

Rosenthal has WHIPs of 1.41 and 1.27 the past two years. He has ERAs of 3.2 and 2.1. Despite an 11.00 K/9 rate, those other numbers are too concerning to have him ranked so highly. He has been the beneficiary of a lot of save opportunities, but his other numbers are not top 10 material.

 

Brad Boxberger

Boxberger is getting too much credit in the rankings for his 2014. Among his four seasons, his 2014 sticks out like a sore thumb: he has posted WHIPs of 1.45, 1.46, 0.85, 1.37, K-rates of 10.7, 9.8, 14.5, and 10.6, FIPs of 4.29, 4.41, 2.84, and 4.26. Based on these numbers, 2014 appears to be the exception rather than the rule and he is a risky pick, despite the upside.

 

Underrated

A.J. Ramos

With the Carter Capps injury, Ramos has the closer job all to himself. Over the past two years, he has posted a 2.11 ERA, 1.23 WHIP and 10.3k/9, followed up by a 2.3 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, and 11.1k/9. The biggest issue is that he has outperformed his FIP, but nonetheless, he has posted a low 2s ERA with a great strikeout rate and good WHIP, and has his hand on the job. He is thus being ranked too low by my peers.

 

Francisco Rodriguez

K-Rod has played 14 seasons, and despite a shaky 2012, he has been consistently very good. He has a career 2.69 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, and 10.8 K/9. The past two years, he has a 2.66 ERA, 0.93 WHIP, 82 saves and 9.7 K/9. Despite changing leagues this season, there is reason to believe that at 36 he still has enough left in the tank to post another very good season.

 

Jake McGee

Since 2012, McGee has a 2.56 ERA, 0.96 WHIP, and 11.4 Ks/9. In those years, he has posted ERAs of 1.95, 4.02, 1.89, and 2.41, K-rates of 11.9, 10.8, 11.4, and 11.6, and WHIPs of 0.80, 1.18, 0.90, and 0.94. Thus, in three of the last four years he has been elite, while he was somewhat serviceable in the other. The obvious issue is that he is moving to Coors Field, and everyone knows that it is an extreme hitters' park. Nonetheless, McGee's fastball should play well there, and even with the effects of Coors, he should post good numbers with significant upside.

 

Relief Pitcher Tiered Fantasy Baseball Rankings (March)

Ranking Tier Name Brad Max Kyle Nick Harris Jeff Bill
1 1 Wade Davis 4 1 1 2 2 1 1
2 1 Kenley Jansen 1 3 2 3 3 2 3
3 1 Craig Kimbrel 3 2 4 1 1 3 4
4 1 Aroldis Chapman 2 4 3 4 4 6 2
5 2 Zach Britton 5 5 9 6 6 4 6
6 2 Ken Giles 7 7 5 7 8 5 8
7 2 Jeurys Familia 10 6 6 5 7 7 7
8 2 Trevor Rosenthal 8 8 8 9 5 13 5
9 2 Cody Allen 6 9 10 10 9 9 10
10 2 David Robertson 11 11 7 8 11 8 9
11 2 Mark Melancon 9 10 11 11 10 12 12
12 3 Glen Perkins 12 14 13 16 16 14 11
13 3 Huston Street 16 16 12 14 13 18 14
14 3 Brad Boxberger 15 13 19 13 15 19 13
15 3 Hector Rondon 13 12 16 17 14 15 16
16 3 A.J. Ramos 18 18 14 18 18 10 17
17 3 Andrew Miller 23 24 15 20 12 20 15
18 3 Francisco Rodriguez 19 15 22 15 20 11 20
19 3 Jonathan Papelbon 20 17 17 19 21 17 22
20 4 Roberto Osuna - 20 21 22 19 22 19
21 4 Dellin Betances 24 30 18 21 17 21 18
22 4 Shawn Tolleson 32 19 24 23 22 29 24
23 4 Santiago Casilla 26 21 28 24 23 26 21
24 4 Jake McGee 22 27 23 25 25 16 27
25 4 Drew Storen 21 25 25 28 28 33 30
26 5 Sean Doolittle 33 22 29 27 24 30 -
27 5 Will Smith 14 29 20 45 29 25 -
28 5 Brad Ziegler 28 28 27 33 26 27 29
29 5 Steve Cishek 29 32 35 26 27 28 -
30 5 Jason Grilli 25 23 33 32 33 23 -
31 5 Arodys Vizcaino 27 35 26 30 32 34 23
32 5 David Hernandez 35 34 31 34 30 24 -
33 5 Fernando Rodney - 31 - 29 34 - -
34 5 J.J. Hoover 34 33 - 39 31 32 -
35 6 Darren O'Day 30 36 30 36 35 38 32
36 6 Joaquin Benoit 36 38 34 - 39 37 -
37 6 Carson Smith - 42 - 43 36 39 25
38 6 Hunter Strickland 37 40 32 40 38 36 -
39 6 Luke Gregerson - 39 - 47 37 40 28
40 6 Joakim Soria 31 44 - 50 43 42 31
41 6 Tony Watson 39 48 36 37 42 41 -
42 7 Tyler Clippard 46 50 - 31 45 - -
43 7 Jason Motte - 47 - 38 59 31 -
44 7 Ryan Madson 38 52 - - 53 35 -
45 7 Sergio Romo - 41 - 35 58 44 -
46 7 Jumbo Diaz 41 54 - - 40 45 -
47 7 Kevin Siegrist 48 46 - 46 44 - -
48 7 Kelvin Herrera - 37 - 52 51 - -
49 7 Koji Uehara - 46 - 48 46 - -
50 7 Kevin Jepsen 47 49 - 51 47 -
51 7 Seung-Hwan Oh - 53 - 44 50 47 -
52 7 Drew Pomeranz - 45 - - 55 46 -
53 7 Tom Wilhelmsen - 51 - 49 56 48 -
54 7 Brandon Maurer - 55 - - 60 43 -
55 8 Kevin Quackenbush 43 41
56 8 Sam Dyson 40 54
57 8 Jeremy Jeffress 41 49
58 8 Tony Zych 42 49
59 8 Corey Knebel 42
60 8 Nate Jones 43
61 8 Mychal Givens 44
62 8 Keone Kela 45 50
63 8 Justin Grimm 48
64 8 Pedro Strop 52
65 8 Chad Qualls 56
66 8 Joe Smith 59

 

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