The Z Files: Prepping For the Stretch Run, Part Three

The Z Files: Prepping For the Stretch Run, Part Three

This article is part of our The Z Files series.

The third installment of a four-part series designed to help you with the stretch drive will focus on the little things, some behind the scenes factors to consider when planning for the last five weeks of the season. Part One discussed what to expect from hitters over the final quarter of the season, while Part Two dealt with how to improve pitching ratios. Next week's will be a team-by-team review, identifying players not currently on the 25-man rosters with an opportunity to be a fantasy contributor.

This week, we'll look at the following items:
1. Breakdown of remaining schedules
2. Position eligibility
3. Affiliate teams headed for minor-league playoffs

Breakdown of remaining schedules

The first table displays the total number of games each team plays followed by the home/away split. Then comes the number each has via a weekly basis, starting with the partial week beginning Friday, Aug 24.

Team Total Home Away 8/24 8/27 9/3 9/10 9/17 9/24
ARI351817376766
ATL341816357676
BAL352015466667
BOS331716366666
CHC351916367667
CIN341123367675
CLE351817367667
COL352015366767
CWS35161937666
The third installment of a four-part series designed to help you with the stretch drive will focus on the little things, some behind the scenes factors to consider when planning for the last five weeks of the season. Part One discussed what to expect from hitters over the final quarter of the season, while Part Two dealt with how to improve pitching ratios. Next week's will be a team-by-team review, identifying players not currently on the 25-man rosters with an opportunity to be a fantasy contributor.

This week, we'll look at the following items:
1. Breakdown of remaining schedules
2. Position eligibility
3. Affiliate teams headed for minor-league playoffs

Breakdown of remaining schedules

The first table displays the total number of games each team plays followed by the home/away split. Then comes the number each has via a weekly basis, starting with the partial week beginning Friday, Aug 24.

Team Total Home Away 8/24 8/27 9/3 9/10 9/17 9/24
ARI351817376766
ATL341816357676
BAL352015466667
BOS331716366666
CHC351916367667
CIN341123367675
CLE351817367667
COL352015366767
CWS351619376667
DET341618366676
HOU351916376667
KC341915356776
LAA341816366766
LAD341618366766
MIA331518356766
MIL331815366666
MIN351619366767
NYM351619366776
NYY361620476667
OAK341618376666
PHI351817366677
PIT341222366667
SD321913366566
SEA341519366667
SF332112366666
STL341915366766
TB341915356677
TEX331419356667
TOR351718367676
WAS341717367666

The Yankees have the most games left with 36, while the Padres will take the field just 32 more times. Note the Yankees will catch up on one of the games with a doubleheader this weekend.

The Giants play a whopping 21 of their remaining 33 games in AT&T Park. For fantasy purposes, this isn't much of a benefit. However, the Orioles and Rockies each play 20 or their final 35 contests in their hitter-friendly home venues. Neither offense is as prolific as it's been in recent seasons, but there are plenty of solid fantasy contributors on both squads to make a different down the stretch.

On the flip side, the Reds are on the road for 23 of their last 34 games, so expect a drop in production from their top hitters. While this may seem like a chance to use Reds pitching, note their ERA in hitter friendly Great American Balllpark is 4.58 compared to 4.84 when traveling.

Next up is a look at the series each squad has lined up.

Team 8/24 8/27 8/31 9/3 9/7 9/10 9/14 9/17 9/21 9/24 9/28
ARISEA 3@SF 3@LAD 4SD 2ATL 4@COL 4@HOU 3CHC 3COL 3LAD 3@SD 3
ATL@MIA 3TB 2CHC 1/PIT 3BOS 3@ARI 4@SF 3WAS 3STL 3PHI 4@NYM 3@PHI 3
BALNYY 4TOR 3@KC 3@SEA 3@TB 3OAK 3CWS 3TOR 3@NYY 3@BOS 3HOU 4
BOS@TB 3MIA 2@CWS 4@ATL 3HOU 3TOR 3NYM 3@NYY 3@CLE 3BAL 3NYY 3
CHCCIN 3NYM 3@ATL 1/@PHI 3@MIL 3@WAS 4MIL 3CIN 3@ARI 3@CWS 3PIT 4STL 3
CIN@CHC 3MIL3@STL 3@PIT 3@SD 4LAD 3@CHC 3@MIL 3@MIA 4KC 2PIT 3
CLE@KC 3MIN 3TB 3KC 3@TOR 4@TB 3DET 3CWS 3BOS 3@CWS 3@KC 4
COLSTL 3@LAA 2@SD 4SF 3LAD 3ARI 4@SF 3@LAD 3@ARI 3PHI 4WAS 3
CWS@DET 3@NYY 3BOS 4DET 3LAA 3@KC 3@BAL 3@CLE 3CHC 3CLE 3@MIN 4
DETCWS 3@KC 2@NYY 4@CWS 3STL 3HOU 3@CLE 3MIN 3KC 4@MIN 3@MIL 3
HOU@LAA 3OAK 3LAA 4MIN 3@BOS 3@DET 3ARI 3SEA 3LAA 3@TOR 3@BAL 4
KCCLE 3DET 2BAL 3@CLE 3@MIN 3CWS 3MIN 4@PIT 3@DET 4@CIN 2CLE 4
LAAHOU 3COL 2@HOU 4@TEX 3@CWS 3TEX 3SEA 4@OAK 3@HOU 3TEX 3OAK 3
LADSD 3@TEX 2ARI 4NYM 3@COL 3@CIN 3@STL 4COL 3SD 3@ARI 3@SF 3
MIAATL 3@BOS 2TOR 3PHI 3@PIT 3@NYM 4@PHI 3WAS 2CIN 4@WAS 3@NYM 3
MILPIT 3@CIN 3@WAS 3CHC 3SF 3@CHC 3PIT 3CIN 3@PIT 3@STL 3DET 3
MINOAK 3@CLE 3@TEX 3@HOU 3KC 3NYY 3@KC 4@DET 3@OAK 3DET 3CWS 4
NYMWAS 3@CHC 3@SF 3@LAD 3PHI 3MIA 4@BOS 3@PHI 3@WAS 4ATL 3MIA 3
NYY@BAL 4CWS 3DET 4@OAK 3@SEA 3@MIN 3TOR 3BOS 3BAL 3@TB 4@BOS 3
OAK@MIN3@HOU 3SEA 4NYY 3TEX 3@BAL 3@TB 3LAA 3MIN 3@SEA 3@LAA 3
PHI@TOR 3WAS 3CHC 3@MIA 3@NYM 3WAS 3MIA 3NYM 3@ATL 4@COL 4ATL 3
PIT@MIL 3@STL 3@ATL 3CIN 3MIA 3@STL 3@MIL 3KC 3MIL 3@CHC 4@CIN 3
SD@LAD 3SEA 2COL 4@ARI 2CIN 4@SEA 2TEX 3SF 3@LAD 3@SF 3ARI 3
SEA@ARI 3@SD 2@OAK 4BAL 3NYY 3SD 2@LAA 4@HOU 3@TEX 3OAK 3TEX 4
SFTEX 3ARI 3NYM 3@COL 3@MIL 3ATL 3COL 3@SD 3@STL 3SD 3LAD 3
STL@COL 3PIT 3CIN 3@WAS 3@DET 3PIT 3LAD 4@ATL 3SF 3MIL 3@CHC 3
TBBOS 3@ATL 2@CLE 3@TOR 3BAL 3CLE 3OAK 3@TEX 3@TOR 4NYY 4TOR 3
TEX@SF 3LAD 2MIN 3LAA 3@OAK 3@LAA 3@SD 3TB 3SEA 3@LAA 3@SEA 4
TORPHI 3@BAL 3@MIA 3TB 3CLE 4@BOS 3@NYY 3@BAL 3TB 4HOU 3@TB 3
WAS@NYM 3@PHI 3MIL 3STL 3CHC 4@PHI 3@COL 3@MIA 2NYM 4MIA 3@COL 3

While pinpointing exact pitching matchups is obviously impossible, in many cases you can at least determine which opponents a starting pitcher will face. This in turn can facilitate FAAB or waiver pickups, especially by being proactive and grabbing arms in advance of a possible two-start week.

I considered doing a strength of schedule analysis but encountered the conundrum I've been dealing with for years. That is, what sample best reflects the current expectation? Is it season to date? Most recent performance? A weighted average of the two? Admittedly, I make assumptions in this regard when assembling the pitching rankings, but it continues to bother me that I, and others, are working off intuition and not research. For what it's worth, this study is high on my Toddy-do list.

Position eligibility

It's a long season. Sometimes we miss when a player has added another position to his arsenal. To be honest, I'll probably miss a couple in the ensuing review. If you're not aware, not only do we have games played by position on each player's personal page, but the entire league is available here.

There are different games requirements for in-season eligibility. The official rule book is five. Some leagues need only one. The National Fantasy Baseball Championship requires 10. Here's a position-by-position breakdown with some of my observations.

Catcher

Isiah Kiner-Falefa: With 21 games behind the plate, should enter the 2019 campaign with catcher eligibility, making him a potentially cheap freeze in some keeper formats.

Blake Swihart: Needs four more games at receiver to insure 2019 eligibility.

First base

Niko Goodrum: Recently added first base to his 2019 ledger. In five-game, in-season leagues, is now eligible everywhere but catcher.

Edwin Encarnacion: Needs three games to gain 2019 eligibility and not be legal only at utility.

Matt Davidson: With Jose Abreu out, should easily play four more games at first, else will be utility only next season.

Kendrys Morales: With 15 games at first, can be used here or at corner, freeing from utility only.

Whit Merrifield: Likely occupying second or outfield, but nice to have five games at first in a pinch.

Second base

Travis Shaw: With 15 games at the keystone, should get five more to add to third base heading into 2019.

Yuli Gurriel: Picked up 11 games while Jose Altuve is out, yielding second base eligibility in most formats for this season.

Jurickson Profar: Has nine games so OK in five-game leagues but still needs one more in the NFBC.

Rosell Herrera: Eligible in five-game leagues.

Third base

Yuli Gurriel: Three games shy of 20-game threshold needed for eligibility in most leagues next season.

Javier Baez: Four games short of 20, remains to be seen how Daniel Murphy affects chase to get there.

Hunter Dozier: Also needs four more appearances for 20. Not as important in Mixed formats but could help in 2019 AL-only.

Manny Machado: Sitting at 14, needs six more for dual 3B/SS eligibility next season.

Jesus Aguilar: Five games at the hot corner, enough for in-season eligibility in most formats.

Shortstop

Alex Bregman: With 21 games, retains 3B/SS for next year.

Jonathan Schoop: Has eight games, likely to reach 10, maybe 15, but not 20.

Gleyber Torres: Has five games, could double that with Didi Gregorius out, though 20 is a long shot.

Outfield

Jake Bauers: Has 15, shot at 20 to enter 2019 at 1B/OF.

Renato Nunez: Needs one more for five, could be relevant when considering the number of home games still left.

Something to keep in mind when looking at position eligibility is that scarcity is only a factor when formulating a draft plan. Once you're in season, stats are stats. For example, Taylor Ward isn't necessarily more valuable at catcher than third base. What matters is who he upgrades. Chances are, he'll render a higher upgrade at catcher, but it's not a foregone conclusion.

That said, a player with multiple eligibility facilitates roster management by offering different combinations of active players, enabling you to put the strongest lineup out each week. His stats are worth the same, he essentially makes the lineup around him better.

Affiliate teams headed for minor-league playoffs

Rosters expand in a little over a week. Many teams will flood the transaction wire on September 1. Other will let their would-be callups gain playoff experience, as even going through it at the minor-league level can be beneficial. Here's a rundown of the chase for playoff berths in Triple-A and Double-A. If you're looking at a callup from one of these organizations, don't be surprised if management opts to wait until after their playoff run is over.

International League (AAA)

The Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs (PHI) and Durham Bulls (TB) look to be locks to win their divisions. The Columbus Clippers (CLE) currently hold a one-game lead over the Indianapolis Indians (PIT) and 3.5 game lead over the Toledo Mud Hens (DET).

The Indians have a two-game edge in the wild card over the Norwalk Tides (BAL) and the Scranton/Wilkes Barre RailRiders (NYY). The Mud Hens, Gwinnett Stripers (ATL), Pawtucket Red Sox (BOS) and Buffalo Bisons (TOR) are all long shots.

Pacific Coast League (AAA)
The Memphis Redbirds (STL), Fresno Grizzlies (HOU) and El Paso Chihuahuas (SD) are all comfortably ahead in their divisions. The Oklahoma City Dodgers (LAA) and Colorado Sky Sox (MIL) are tied for the last playoff berth.

Eastern League (AA)

The top two teams in each of the two divisions make the playoffs. It appears the teams are set with only the division champions to be decided. The four playoff-bound clubs are the New Hampshire Fisher Cats (TOR), Trenton Thunder (NYY), Akron RubberDucks (CLE) and Altoona Curve (PIT). The Harrisburg Senators (WAS) have a small chance to unseat one of the latter duo.

Southern League (AA)

The Jackson Generals (ARI) and Biloxi Shuckers (MIL) are in the playoffs by virtue of being the first-half division champions. The Montgomery Biscuits (TB) are in the driver's season for one of the second half berths, holding a five-game lead over the Generals and Tennessee Smokies (CHC). The Shuckers, Pensacola Blue Wahoos (CIN) and Mississippi Braves (ATL) are tied for the other spot.

Texas League (AA)

Here, first half/second half standings are also used with the Arkansas Travelers (SEA) and Corpus Christi Hooks (HOU) already in. The Tulsa Drillers (LAD) currently enjoy a 2.5 game lead over the Travelers and a 4.5 game gap over the Northwest Arkansas Nationals (KC). The Hooks are 3.5 point ahead of the Frisco RoughRiders (TEX) in quest of the second half crown.

There you have it, some minutia that other may overlook when plotting strategy down the stretch. As always, I'll monitor the comments section for any specific questions to help you ship your league(s).

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Todd Zola
Todd has been writing about fantasy baseball since 1997. He won NL Tout Wars and Mixed LABR in 2016 as well as a multi-time league winner in the National Fantasy Baseball Championship. Todd is now setting his sights even higher: The Rotowire Staff League. Lord Zola, as he's known in the industry, won the 2013 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Article of the Year award and was named the 2017 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year. Todd is a five-time FSWA awards finalist.
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