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2016 Fantasy Baseball Tiered Rankings: First Base (January)

Welcome to the second installment of our January ranking breakdowns! If you’re like us here at RotoBaller, you’ve been huddled around the stove awaiting that precious heat for a while now. While there are still some free agent dominoes yet to fall, we've seen quite the flurry of moves.

This round of rankings features seven of our experts. They are Brad Johnson, Max Petrie, Kyle Bishop, Harris Yudin, Jeff Kahntroff, Bill Dubiel, and Nick Mariano. Today we'll cover first base. Assume a standard 5x5 redraft league when reading.

Don't forget to also read the rest of our 2016 fantasy baseball rankings articles and analysis. In case you missed it, we've been churning out dynasty rankings, keeper values, and top MLB prospect rankings for the 2016 fantasy baseball season. Let's get to it.

 

2016 Fantasy Baseball Rankings Analysis: First Base

We have reached that stage of the offseason where most of the players have found their homes. While batting orders are yet to be determined, we can now see where most of the first basemen will call home and who will join them in the lineups. And with that information, we have a second set of rankings.  The tiers employed in the rankings are where I determined cutoffs to be based on our composite rankings; while I drew the tier lines, they are based on our composite rankings and thus may not line up with my own rankings.

While everyone ranked Paul Goldschmidt first, I included Miguel Cabrera in his tier. Since 2009, Cabrera has hit .324, .328, .344, .330, .348, .313, .and 338.  While Cabrera only posted 25 homers in 2014 and 18 in 119 games last year, I am predicting a bounce back to around 30.  With a rebound from a healthy Victor Martinez and Justin Upton replacing Cespedes, Cabrera should provide elite production in average, RBIs, and runs, with good HRs. Goldschmidt should give you an average over .300 and potentially over 30 HRs, but the only two reasons I ranked him ahead of Cabrera are health and the additional 15-20 steals we should expect from him.

While many would have drawn the second tier after Goldschmidt, I started it with Anthony Rizzo. Rizzo is a tier below for me due to the drop in batting average. While Goldschmidt could hit .320 and Cabrera could top that mark, Rizzo has finished at .286 and .278 the past two seasons. He has improved his strikeout rate, however, and thus could have a boost in average.  An argument could be made to move him into the top tier.  He has the power upside of Goldschmidt, should provide elite run production in a strong lineup, and can mix in some steals (17 last year, but prior career high of 6).

I do not see a separation in tiers between Rizzo, Edwin Encarnacion and Chris Davis, even though other rankers do. Encarnacion belted 39 homers with 94 runs and 111 RBIs in only 146 games, while hitting a respectable .277. Davis slugged 47 homers despite leading the league in homers robbed; moreover, after the break he hit .293 with 28 homers, 56 runs, and 65 RBI in 74 games. Those numbers are better than his 2013 numbers, and he could very well finish in the top tier as a result. That's why I ranked him higher than anyone else (fourth) and even considered putting him third.

Because Joey Votto does not have the HR potential or the lineup necessary for elite run production, I would have him in a lower tier than my fellow rankers. His ability to draw walks makes his actual value exceed his fantasy value. I would also have Jose Abreu in the next tier, but I am more confident in his upside than Votto's. I expect Chicago's hitters to rebound somewhat this year leading to better run production. Remember, the Sox added Todd Frazier, and Abreu can hit over 30 HRs.

There is a big dropoff for me to the next tier.  It includes players who I would all confidently peg below 30 HRs, and who I do not expect to hit .300, with the possible exception of Freddie Freeman. I rank Eric Hosmer lower than my peers, as I am a bit confused to his appeal.

In the next tier, there are players I rate more highly than in the above tier. I like Albert Pujols more than my peers. At the break, he had 26 homers, 52 runs and 56 RBIs. While he will be 36, his foot, which slowed him at the end of last year, may be healthier. He has 40/100/100 upside with a .260 average, and while he carries some risk, I am willing to take it.

Two players I am down on in this tier are Brandon Belt and Carlos Santana. Belt has never hit over .289 or over 18 homers. The concussion concerns me after seeing the effects on Brian Roberts and Justin Morneau, and at 28 I am not expecting him to continue improving. Carlos Santana has hit .252, .268, .231, and .231 with 18, 20, 27, and 19 homers. He has ranged from 68-75 runs and 74-85 RBIs in that span. That does not excite me; I would rather aim for a player with some upside.

As we go down another tier, one player I like more than most is Byung-ho Park. While he could be a bust, given the depth at first base, I am willing to take a risk. Many point to Eric Thames' success in the KBO as a red flag for Park's power numbers. I am not buying it. Park's average home run went significantly farther than Thames', and Park had elite exit velocity. He could put up top tier HR numbers despite playing in Minnesota; the concern I have is whether he could be a Chris Carter type with all the strikeouts. But at this point, why not take the risk and hope he can break out to be a Davis type instead?

Two deep sleepers of mine are Mark Trumbo and Steve Pearce (depending on where he signs). I am not convinced that Trumbo was fully healthy the past two years, and thus I think he could rebound. While his power should have declined with age, he hit 29, 32, and 34 homers in 2011-2013 despite playing in Anaheim. He hit .254, .268, and .234. His strikeout rate is lower now, and a .270 average with 30 homers would not be crazy for him in Camden Yards. Likely hitting fifth or sixth, he should be able to produce runs.

Pearce hit .293 with 21 homers in only 102 games in 2014. While he struggled last year, it seemed to be related to BABIP and teams shifting him. He still hit 15 homers in 92 games. If he lands a starting role in a good park, he could be an excellent value pick; he has shown the power, but needs the average to recover.

 

First Base Tiered Fantasy Baseball Rankings (January)

Rank Tier Name Brad Max Kyle Nick Harris Jeff Bill
1 1 Paul Goldschmidt 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
2 1 Miguel Cabrera 2 2 2 2 4 2 3
3 2 Anthony Rizzo 3 3 3 3 2 3 2
4 2 Edwin Encarnacion 4 4 4 5 5 5 5
5 2 Joey Votto 5 5 5 6 3 7 4
6 2 Jose Abreu 7 6 6 4 7 6 7
7 2 Chris Davis 6 8 7 7 6 4 10
8 3 Freddie Freeman 8 7 8 10 8 8 6
9 3 Adrian Gonzalez 12 9 9 9 12 10 8
10 3 Eric Hosmer 10 10 11 11 9 13 9
11 3 Prince Fielder 14 11 10 8 11 9 11
12 4 Brandon Belt 9 13 12 14 10 17 15
13 4 Albert Pujols 17 12 15 12 13 11 12
14 4 Lucas Duda 11 14 13 16 14 15 16
15 4 Mark Teixeira 16 18 14 13 15 14 13
16 4 Carlos Santana 13 15 16 18 16 21 14
17 5 Kendrys Morales 15 16 18 17 19 18 17
18 5 Adam Lind 18 17 17 15 17 20 19
19 5 Ryan Zimmerman 19 21 20 22 18 19 20
20 5 Byung-ho Park 26 19 19 21 29 16 18
21 5 Mitch Moreland 24 20 21 20 26 22 25
22 6 Matt Adams 21 27 22 19 27 28 22
23 6 Justin Bour 23 24 23 25 24 29 23
24 6 Chris Carter 22 32 24 23 23 26 21
25 6 Pedro Alvarez 30 28 28 27 22 27 28
26 6 Justin Morneau 28 22 25 30 43 30 24
27 6 Chris Colabello 34 23 30 29 30 32 29
28 6 Brandon Moss 20 33 35 28 38 23 27
29 6 Gregory Bird 34 30 31 33 42 25 26
30 6 C.J. Cron 25 36 33 26 31 31 -
31 6 Mark Trumbo - 27 26 24 21 12 -
32 6 Mike Napoli 27 26 27 31 25 - -
33 7 Ryan Howard 31 34 32 - 32 - 30
34 7 Adam LaRoche 33 29 34 34 28 - -
35 7 Logan Morrison 29 35 - 35 34 - -
36 7 Ben Paulsen - 31 29 - 44 - -
37 7 A.J. Reed 32 - - 32 - -
38 7 Luis Valbuena - - - - 20 - -
39 7 Yonder Alonso - - - - 33 - -
40 7 Mark Cahna - 38 - - 35 - -
41 7 Stephen Vogt - - - - 36 - -
42 7 Jon Singleton - - - - 37 - -
43 7 Justin Smoak - - - - 39 - -
44 7 Steve Pearce - - - - 40 24 -
45 7 Joe Mauer - - - - 41 - -
46 7 Mark Reynolds - 37 - - 45 - -

 

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