Click on the team below for updated stats, box scores, and predicted pitchers.
DBacks Padres Dodgers Giants Rockies
Cards Astros Brewers Reds Pirates Cubs
Braves Marlins Mets Expos Phils
Chisox Royals Twins Indians Tigers
Orioles Yankees DRays Blue Jays Bosox
Comparison Pages
BASIC IDEA: You want to use players that are hot. The basics of our system are that your players will have fantasy stats that are now a week old and actual stats that are accurate as of today. A player should move from his old fantasy performance to his new reality performance. Roughly speaking, a player with a .280 fantasy batting average who had a hot week and is now hitting .300 will adjust UPward; to get to .300 he has to hit BETTER than .300 for the week to get to his new real average. Conversely, a player with a .300 real average and a .280 fantasy average will adjust down. These are all approximate examples; the actual calculations are a little more technical, but the bottom line is that you want to use players who are doing BETTER in reality than they are in fantasy. (There are limits, of course: A .150 hitter who has to adjust up to .180 will still not be as good as a .335 hitter adjusting down to .325). These pages compare fantasy to real performance.
In addition, there are penalties for over-using players. The general idea is that when a guy goes over his real at-bats or IP in fantasy performance his performance keeps declining until at 150% of his real workload he performs at the league average. If a player is worse than the league average, he just keeps getting worse.
These pages show a batter's real and fantasy at-bats, the percentage of fantasy at-bats to real at-bats, the difference between the two, a players real HR% (percentage of hits that are homers), fantasy HR%, and the difference between the two. For pitchers, the pages show real and fantasy innings pitched, the percentage of fantasy to real IP, the pitcher's real and fantasy ERAs, and the difference between the two.