A look at the types of players who don’t get swapped in fantasy leagues as often as they should be.
Why our idea of the typical, power-hitting first baseman may lead us to undervalue players who don’t fit that mold.
The catcher position is seldom atop one’s list of strategic bullet points, so flexible assumptions are key.
A couple of ways to ensure that we keep improving as fantasy players.
Design thinking can help teams differentiate themselves in baseball’s post-information asymmetry world.
Forget whether they’re good or bad for teams. Why have players and teams suddenly agreed to so many of them?
Examining why our nature leads us to improperly value players who are likely to underperform, and how to fix those decision-making flaws.
Chicago signs the superutility superstar Ben Zobrist, and add swingman Adam Warren to the rotation or bullpen or both. Meanwhile, the Yankees fix second base with Starlin Castro.
The Royals reunite with their former closer as the reliever shuffle continues across baseball.
Offseason trading can put you in murkier waters than in-season talks, so Jeff offers advice to help clearythe path to a deal.
Examining the hurdles fantasy owners must clear to truly achieve an effective, dynamic strategy.
“You cannot innovate based on data because by definition data doesn’t exist yet.”
Understanding baseball executives’ end user, or: No one ever asked for an iPhone.
Design thinking can help teams differentiate themselves in baseball’s post-information asymmetry world.
There’s a reason you remember them praising the other team so much.
Looking back on and evaluating our in-season fantasy decision.