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Just a few weeks into the 1999 season, most roto teams have begun to
separate themselves into the apparent contenders and rebuilders. However,
with nearly 75% of the season left to play, it’s early enough to recast
your fate and take advantage of some small sample-size fluctuations around
the majors. Here are five players off to slow starts who are worth getting
in trade, and five players off to hot starts whom you should trade away if
you own them.


Buy


Mike Caruso


Just one stolen base so far? C’mon. He’s not hurt; he just hasn’t run much
with a hot Big Hurt behind him, and getting on base has been a problem.
He’s slowly been picking his batting average up, so SB opportunities will
increase.


Dmitri Young


I’ve already heard reports of attempts to get Young on the cheap. The
sharks in question know what they’re doing. Young is the victim of a bad
combination: a slow start, a dimwitted manager and a hard outfield wall.
This is the same Dmitri Young who hit .310 with 48 doubles last year, and
he just has to beat out Michael Tucker and wait for Jeffrey Hammonds to
bruise his pinky and hit the 60-day DL. Young should be the first target of
owners in salaried keeper leagues; he was probably a cheap keeper coming
into ’99, and by October you’ll be debating whether to go two or three
years on the long-term deal.


Travis Lee


It’s something of a downer to write an article like this and have three of
your own players head up the "Buy" list, but better that than to start
bailing water. Lee came out of 1998 as something of an enigma: his hot
start became a tepid finish when he was battling a strained groin but
played through it in the stretch run, so he looked like a good bargain to
grab for 1999. Unfortunately, a slow start has his average just above .208,
and his power output of 3 HR and a .327 SLG is inadequate for a first
baseman. On the bright side, the bonus baby isn’t in danger of losing his
job (as are other struggling talents like Derrek Lee and Jeff Abbott), and
his plate discipline has been very strong (14 BB/10 K). He’ll come around
with the bat, and could surprise with 10-15 steals once he starts getting
on base more consistently.


Orlando Hernandez


A little arbitrage for the serious investor: Hernandez’ numbers don’t quite
add up. No way a 1.200 Ratio continues to produce a 5.40 ERA, especially
since he’s not having homer problems. Add to that the strikeout-an-inning
pace for you 5x5ers and you have a brief window of opportunity to pick up
one of the AL’s top starters.


Darin Erstad


Erstad was already something of a bargain coming into this season: his 1998
numbers were held back by a hamstring problem that robbed him of his speed
and his September. He finished with rotisserie numbers similar to his 1997
totals (1997: .299/16 HR/77 RBI/23 SB; 1998: .296/19/82/20), despite
playing in six fewer games and struggling through the injury. A step
forward this year is very likely, but his .248 start with just 2 steals
might hold his trade value down. Ante up for him: his four- or even
five-category prowess is well worth it.


Sell


Ed Sprague


Amazingly, Sprague has started hot at the plate courtesy of a newfound
emphasis on controlling the strike zone–or perhaps a ripple effect from the
majors-wide increase in walk rates. Whatever the cause, Sprague is unlikely
to hit .300 or 25 homers, and he’s quite likely to frustrate the Pirates
enough with his woeful defense that they ship him off in June or July in
favor of Aramis Ramirez.


Bret Boone


In a year when everybody is walking, Boone isn’t, with just eight free
passes in 117 PA. He’s also hitting for just sporadic power; the five
homers mask the fact that 22 of his other 26 hits are singles, resulting in
a .463 slugging percentage. The homer output won’t last, and neither will
the .287 average.


Jay Bell


As if you needed me to tell you that. Find someone who thinks he’s
really going to hit 40 bombs and make yourself a nice deal.


Omar Olivares


A ratio under 1.00, a 3.24 ERA, three victories…how real are these
numbers? Olivares has just 13 Ks this year in 33 1/3 innings, so batters
are putting the wood on the ball. His ERA is climbing steadily after a good
first two outings. Add to all that the fact that he hasn’t posted an ERA
under 4.00 or a ratio under 1.50 since the current offensive surge began in
1993, and you have a good risk for a blowup.


Joe Nathan


Don’t get us wrong–Nathan’s a fine prospect and could be the best of the
current crop of position-players-turned-pitchers. However, he comes with
several warning flags: his great initial outings came against the
weak-hitting Marlins and Expos; guys just out of A ball tend not to fare
well in the majors (cf. Javier Vazquez, 1998); converted position players
rarely pan out; and his ratios (13/7 K/BB, fewer than six Ks every nine
innings) are hardly supportive of a 2.14 ERA. The time to move Nathan is
now, before he slips. If you’re in a keeper league and have him at a
typical free agent salary ($10 or higher), ask yourself how likely you are
to keep him at that price for next year if he ends up with an ERA around
4.00 or 4.50.

Thank you for reading

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