Fantasy 101: FanDuel Hitting Data

Fantasy 101: FanDuel Hitting Data

This article is part of our Fantasy 101 series.

I have spent the last few weeks talking about team statistics and starting pitching, and now we start getting into hitting. Cracking the hitting code in daily fantasy baseball is something we all strive for because it is so variant on a nightly basis. The questions we look to answer this week are:

  • What position should I spend the most money on?
  • What salary ranges provide the best value?
  • How did the price adjustment that FanDuel made on hitters in April impact the game?
  • What teams have the highest scoring per game average (best teams to stack in tournaments)?
  • What teams have the lowest scoring per game average (best teams to target pitchers against)?
  • What hitters have the most "monster" games (at least ten points) and are ideal for tournaments?
  • What teams have the most "monster" games (at least ten points) and are ideal for tournaments (stacking)?
  • What hitters have the most "big" games (at least six points) and are ideal for both cash games and tournaments?

Hitting Data by Position

PosAvg. PPGAvg. Sal.ValueStd. Dev.
First Base 2.27 $3,195 0.71 3.21
Third Base 2.13 $2,934 0.73 3.11
Outfield 2.00 $2,951 0.68 2.97
Second Base 1.72 $2,727 0.63 2.73
Shortstop 1.60 $2,588 0.62 2.56
Catcher 1.58 $2,606 0.61 2.73

This chart is important when you are selecting your hitters and allocating your salary by position. In general, you want to spend at 1B/3B/OF and save up at 2B/SS/C. Not only are you getting more production from the corner infield and outfield spots, but you are getting better value (dividing points per game / salary * 1000).

Hitting Data by Salary Range

SalaryPPGStd. Dev.ValueCountSalaryPPGStd. Dev.ValueCount
$2,200 1.30 2.41 0.59 4,875 $4,300 2.61 3.29 0.61 174
$2,300 1.44 2.54 0.63 1,707 $4,400 3.08 4.08 0.70 135
$2,400 1.60 2.68 0.67 1,603 $4,500 3.45 4.11 0.77 114
$2,500 1.68 2.79 0.67 1,347 $4,600 2.91 3.27 0.63 87
$2,600 1.72 2.65 0.66 1,361 $4,700 3.41 3.66 0.73 92
$2,700 1.87 2.85 0.69 1,283 $4,800 3.56 4.31 0.74 88
$2,800 2.02 2.87 0.72 1,167 $4,900 3.53 3.76 0.72 69
$2,900 2.13 3.13 0.73 1,085 $5,000 3.19 3.46 0.64 61
$3,000 2.03 2.86 0.68 1,211 $5,100 3.75 3.56 0.74 63
$3,100 2.10 2.98 0.68 879 $5,200 2.98 3.35 0.57 51
$3,200 2.20 3.12 0.69 766 $5,300 3.46 3.03 0.65 37
$3,300 2.27 3.03 0.69 667 $5,400 2.54 3.90 0.47 34
$3,400 2.17 2.99 0.64 641 $5,500 3.63 3.81 0.66 12
$3,500 2.69 3.41 0.77 553 $5,600 4.29 3.74 0.77 20
$3,600 2.53 3.14 0.70 475 $5,700 3.86 4.86 0.68 9
$3,700 2.59 3.51 0.70 422 $5,800 5.38 5.25 0.93 6
$3,800 2.29 3.00 0.60 376 $5,900 4.75 2.06 0.81 6
$3,900 2.84 3.45 0.73 312 $6,000 3.19 3.68 0.53 4
$4,000 2.64 3.40 0.66 321 $6,100 4.04 4.35 0.66 6
$4,100 2.93 3.66 0.71 233 $6,200 3.00 4.60 0.48 2
$4,200 2.86 3.54 0.68 175

You would expect there to be correlation between the average points per game and the salary, but this chart is important to show where there is potential value at what price points. There looks to be a shift at $2,800-$2,900 as the average points per game jumps up and the value (points per dollar) is better. The average points per game takes a big jump at $3,500. If you allocate $10,000-$12,000 on starting pitching, that leaves about $23,000-$25,000 spread out over eight hitters (average $2,875-$3,125).

Average Salary by Date

DateSalary
April 5 $3,239.00
April 6 $3,088.00
April 7 $3,022.00
April 8 $3,044.00
April 9 $2,982.00
April 10 $3,007.00
April 11 $2,975.00
April 12 $2,955.00
April 13 $3,025.00
April 14 $3,011.00
April 15 $3,000.00
April 16 $2,933.00
April 17 $3,030.00
April 18 $2,999.00
April 19 $2,970.00
April 20 $3,065.00
April 21 $3,007.00
April 22 $3,014.00
April 23 $3,024.00
April 24 $2,999.00
April 25 $2,750.00

From the beginning of the season until April 24, the average hitting salary on FanDuel was $3,019. On April 25, FanDuel made a reduction on all hitters' salaries, dropping the average to $2,813. While $200 might not seem like a huge difference, multiply that times eight (the number of hitters required on FanDuel) and this allows you to spend 10-15% more on pitching or hitting.

Top 10 and Bottom 10 Hitting Teams (Average Points Per Game)

Top 10Bottom 10
TeamPointsSalaryTeamPointsSalary
Blue Jays 2.37 $3,149.00 White Sox 1.51 $2,604.00
Yankees 2.15 $2,880.00 Phillies 1.51 $2,527.00
Astros 2.14 $2,986.00 Mariners 1.58 $2,753.00
Royals 2.13 $2,814.00 Mets 1.62 $2,633.00
Rockies 2.12 $3,402.00 Brewers 1.62 $2,791.00
Reds 2.12 $2,926.00 Angels 1.66 $2,881.00
Tigers 2.07 $3,088.00 Rays 1.75 $2,621.00
Diamondbacks 2.04 $3,103.00 Marlins 1.75 $2,905.00
Nationals 2.04 $2,949.00 Padres 1.77 $2,708.00
Dodgers 2.03 $3,028.00 Pirates 1.80 $2,941.00

The one team in this list that you do not want to consider stacking in tournaments is the Royals. Their standard deviation is one of the lowest, so they have no upside. But teams like the Blue Jays, Yankees, Astros, Rockies and Reds all are stackable especially at home.

When looking at the data as a whole (April – June 26) so far this year, I was able to bucket or group hitting scores into three ranges.

Points Per Game
(-1.75 – 0): 32 percent
(0.25-2.25): 35 percent
(2.50 – 23.00): 33 percent

This will make more sense below, but I really wanted to focus on that 33 percent highest tier, specifically the two or three hitters that you need to win consistently in cash games along with your starting pitchers. I looked at which hitters and teams have the most "monster" games (at least 10 points) and "big" games (at least six points).

10+ points per game (441/22529 Top-2 Percentile) by Position

PositionPercent
First Base77
Outfield63 (188/3)
Third Base59
Second Base45
Catcher42
Shortstop29

More confirmation that we need to spend at 1B/OF/3B. This really points out the lack of ceiling talent at shortstop outside of Carlos Correa.

Top 30 Tournament Hitters (Most games with at least 10 points)

Player# of GamesPlayer# of Games
Giancarlo Stanton 9 Adam Jones 4
Bryce Harper 7 Albert Pujols 4
Jose Bautista 7 Andrew McCutchen 4
Todd Frazier 7 Anthony Rizzo 4
A.J. Pollock 6 Brett Gardner 4
Stephen Vogt 6 Charlie Blackmon 4
Buster Posey 5 Chris Davis 4
Justin Upton 5 Edwin Encarnacion 4
Luis Valbuena 5 Freddie Freeman 4
Manny Machado 5 Joc Pederson 4
Miguel Cabrera 5 Justin Turner 4
Nolan Arenado 5 Mike Trout 4
Paul Goldschmidt 5 Prince Fielder 4
Ryan Braun 5Starling Marte 4
Steven Souza 5 Yoenis Cespedes 4

When playing in tournaments, you need to have at least two or three players from this list to give yourself a shot at those 60-70 point lineups that place first.

Best and Worst Teams to Stack in Tournaments (Most games with at least 10 points)

BestWorst
Team# of GamesTeam# of Games
Astros 22 White Sox 3
Dodgers 22 Phillies 6
Blue Jays 22 Cardinals 7
Diamondbacks 21 Twins 8
Reds 20 Braves 10
Rockies 20 Royals 11
Orioles 19 Red Sox 12
Brewers 19 Pirates 12
Athletics 19 Marlines 12
Marlins 18 Giants 12
Rays 12

If any of the teams on the left are facing bad pitching, you want to take hitters 1-4 or 2-5. If you are worried about the ownership percentages being high, you can always stack this group with four hitters from a lesser owned team or starting pitcher.

The teams on the right offer very little upside in tournaments. It is hard to even take them against the worst starting pitchers even when considering ownership percentages.

Top Hitters (10th Percentile/Number of games with at least six points)

Player# of Games
Paul Goldschmidt 27
Giancarlo Stanton 25
Todd Frazier 23
Bryce Harper 22
Nolan Arenado 20
Josh Donaldson 19
Mike Trout 19
Albert Pujols 18
Jose Bautista 18
A.J. Pollock 17
Anthony Rizzo 17
Brian Dozier 17
Nelson Cruz 17
Alex Rodriguez 16
Andrew McCutchen 16
Jason Kipnis 16
Jay Bruce 16
Brett Gardner 15
Buster Posey 15
Charlie Blackmon 15
Chris Davis 15
Joc Pederson 15
Kris Bryant 15
Adrian Gonzalez 14
J.D. Martinez 14
Justin Upton 14
Ryan Braun 14
Starling Marte 14
Stephen Vogt 14

I made this list as more of a "top hitters" in cash games list, meaning we know in cash games you spend up on pitching, and less on hitting. But you still need to have at least two or three heavy hitters in your lineup to have a chance at winning. This list would be a nice cheat sheet for that. If you have a target score of 40, your starting pitcher needs a minimum of 12, leaving 28 for your hitters. Out of the 28, if you can get three of them with at least six points, then you have just 10 points left to get from your remaining five hitters.

40 – 12 (starting pitching target goal) = 28
28/8 = 3.5 points per hitter
3 top hitters x 6 points = 18 points
28 – 18 = 10 points left to hit target / 5 hitters = 2.0 points per hitter target

In the next article, I will get back into looking at who are the best hitters for cash games and tournaments based on standard deviation.

The author(s) of this article may play in daily fantasy contests including – but not limited to – games that they have provided recommendations or advice on in this article. In the course of playing in these games using their personal accounts, it's possible that they will use players in their lineups or other strategies that differ from the recommendations they have provided above. The recommendations in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of RotoWire. Michael Rathburn plays in daily fantasy contests using the following accounts: FanDuel: burnnotice, DraftKings: burnnotice, Yahoo: burnnotice, Fantasy Aces: burnnotice, FantasyDraft: burnnotice.
RotoWire Community
Join Our Subscriber-Only MLB Chat
Chat with our writers and other RotoWire MLB fans for all the pre-game info and in-game banter.
Join The Discussion
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Michael Rathburn
Known as “Rath” in the Daily Fantasy Sports (DFS) community, he has helped run operations for two prominent daily fantasy sports startups. Michael has taken his insider knowledge and expertise in daily fantasy sports to the content side. Rath won the 2016 FSWA "Baseball Article of the Year, Online" award and was a finalist for the FSWA Best Baseball Series in 2011.
Lineup Lowdown: National League
Lineup Lowdown: National League
Los Angeles Dodgers-Washington Nationals & more MLB Bets & Props for Tuesday, April 23
Los Angeles Dodgers-Washington Nationals & more MLB Bets & Props for Tuesday, April 23
Orioles-Angels, Dodgers-Nationals & more MLB Bets and Expert Picks for Tuesday, April 23
Orioles-Angels, Dodgers-Nationals & more MLB Bets and Expert Picks for Tuesday, April 23
DraftKings MLB: Tuesday Breakdown
DraftKings MLB: Tuesday Breakdown
MLB DFS Picks: FanDuel Plays and Strategy for Tuesday, April 23
MLB DFS Picks: FanDuel Plays and Strategy for Tuesday, April 23
Week 4 FAAB Results - Some Hitters Emerge
Week 4 FAAB Results - Some Hitters Emerge