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On Thursday, reader “jimcal” asked me in the comments section of my article to give my thoughts on platooning players in fantasy baseball. While platooning is a bit of a complicated subject, I’ll do my best to tackle it all in one article today. When considering platooning, there are two main concepts that the discussion can be distilled down to: sample size and opportunity cost.

What most people don’t realize is that very few players truly need to be platooned. We tend to look at a player’s performance versus same-handed pitching either for the current year or even over a three-year period when making such decisions, but this isn’t nearly enough data to make a reasonable guess as to whether the player is best used in a platoon (absent scouting data that supports his performance, which makes this a more complicated decision).

In The Book: Playing the Percentages in Baseball, Tom Tango, Mitchel Lichtman, and Andy Dolphin found that “a righty who has 2,200 plate appearances against left-handed pitchers will be regressed exactly halfway toward the league average… For a lefty, the number is about 1,000.” This number is the same as the “stabilization point” that many tend to associate with the usual array of stats that we use to analyze players (i.e. strikeouts “stabilize” more quickly than BABIP). (I do need to note that I think the term “stabilization” is misleading, but it’s the word most often associated with the concept. I’ve written in length on the subject here and here, and Russell Carleton tackled it again today.)

What these numbers tell us is that, if we were trying to estimate a righty’s platoon skill, it would take roughly 10 seasons just to account for half of the variation in the skill. To put that in perspective, I found that a pitcher’s BABIP—a stat that most would never take at face value, realizing that it is riddled with “luck”—takes roughly eight seasons to reach the same level of “stabilization.” Yes, you read that correctly: a righty’s platoon skill is more unstable than a pitcher’s BABIP! In other words, we would be better off trusting a pitcher’s single-year BABIP than we would a hitter’s single-year platoon data.

A great example of this is Curtis Granderson, whom many fantasy owners feared would struggle going into the 2011 season if he was overexposed to lefties. From 2005 to 2010, Granderson posted a terrible .621 OPS against lefties in 858 plate appearances. Now that he’s posted rates of .944 and .856 in 2011 and 2012, respectively, the media and fantasy players alike are clamoring to declare that he’s solved his “issues.” The problem with this analysis is that Granderson may not have truly had any issues to begin with. With fewer than 900 plate appearances against lefties in his career prior to 2010, we hadn’t even reached the point at which we his past performance was a stronger indicator of future performance than mere league average. Yes, he did work on his swing with Yankees hitting coach Kevin Long, which has been credited with much of his success over the past year and a half (not just versus lefties but overall), but the point still stands: don’t read too much into platoon splits absent a good reason.

Once this issue is behind us, we deal with one that’s more specific to the fantasy game: opportunity cost. Once we find players who are worthy of being platooned, either because of our own analysis or because the player’s manager plays him only against certain pitchers, we need to consider the implications of using up a bench spot to milk some extra value out of one active spot. Opportunity cost, in this case, boils down to asking ourselves the question, “If I don’t use this bench spot on the second half of this platoon, what will I use it on?” This is a question I can’t really answer for you; it’s going to depend heavily on a large number of league- and team-specific factors. How many bench spots do you have? How valuable are those bench spots? How deep is the league? What options are available on waivers that could fill the spot instead? How deep into the season is it? Would you be better served stashing a top prospect who might be recalled in a few weeks? Would you be better off stashing hot-hitting Player X and gambling that his breakout is for real? How much more valuable does my active roster spot become by using this specific platoon arrangement?

If you’re considering platooning a player, these are the primary issues that you need to consider before making a decision. First, make sure that you’re dealing with players that should be platooned in the first place, and if you find this to be the case, make sure you’re not trying to be too cute and forgoing a superior option just for the sake of implementing the platoon.

Thank you for reading

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aquavator44
7/16
When you talk about "platoon skill," are you looking at the difference in performance against opposite-handed and same-handed pitching? The opportunity cost part I understand, but it seems like you are suggesting that a left-handed hitter could eventually hit lefties just as well as righties, and we just don't know because of the same size.

This season, I've found myself with four roughly equal lefty OFs (Choo, Heyward, Bruce, Kubel) for three spots and tend to rotate them depending on pitching matchups. I might miss some stats here and there, but feel like I'm getting more of their quality PAs if they're primarily used against RHP.
salvomania
7/16
You can also platoon guys based on home/road: I play Kyle Seager only on the road, where he has something like a .900 OPS and an RBI per game, and then slide Trevor Plouffe over to 3b from SS when Seager's at home (OPS in the .500s).
jimcal
7/16
Thanks Derek, and I found myself enjoy your article in another level of joy today :)

One thing I'd like to share, echo to Derek's point on opportunity cost, is that players who worth platooning are usually have a big swing between shallow league and deep league in terms of value. Yes, if you can find the split data like Joe Girardi believing in his binder, you have a chance to utilize some players that are not valuable in standard league but extremely useful in deep league.

My favorite example is David Murphy. Technically a fourth outfielder in reality or standard league, this year he is sporting a split as following:

AVG OBP SLG OPS
v.s. Left .355 .412 .387 .799
v.s. Right .266 .367 .478 .845

You may use Derek's stabilization against my view. The fact is, Murphy has only 31 at bat against righty this year. While this year's OPS only in favor less than 50 points, his career split shows a bigger gap (180 points in OPS), and Ron Washington definitely buy in to that.

My point being, in a deep league (my is 35*20 with 4 spots for minor league players, yeah, no Kevin Goldstein-advertised prospects will be left in FA.), knowing how player could be platoon or even how skippers write their lineup is huge for managing roster in a daily league. Not to mention I am willing to take my chance and hoping the split statistically help my team in a greater sample size. The players who are platooning lose their value, however, if you can find the pearl in sands by discovering split pages, you may or may not just find a new value system even PFM can't tell you.

My example is extreme in a way that not many readers play in such deep keeper league. Yet I found discovering such hidden jewel much accomplished than composing an all-star team in a public league. I hope you will like this too.

Greatly appreciate Derek's article and all of you spend time reading this long a** comment.