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MLB

Kris Bryant’s fantasy value dramatically increases with Coors Field move

Moving is a stressful time in anyone’s life. 

The good news: The stress is always short lived, and it’s only a matter of time before you begin getting comfortable and thriving in your new home. 

Of all the moves made since the end of the lockout, none was more impactful for a corner infielder from a fantasy perspective than Kris Bryant’s move to Colorado. 

Before signing with the Rockies, Bryant was outside Roto Rage’s top 10 third basemen. He wasn’t even ranked in the top 100 players overall. Now? He has an average draft position of 79.7, according to Fantasy Alarm, and he leapfrogged former Rockie Nolan Arenado (55.02), Alex Bregman (73.94) and Anthony Rendon (99.5) to make it all the way up to No. 5 in Roto Rage’s third-base rankings, largely because of the Coors Field factor. 

Does Coors Field really make that big of a difference? Three quick examples of what this home field has done for already great players: 

1. Charlie Blackmon, with the Rockies since 2011, is a .262 hitter with a .424 slugging percentage and .743 OPS on the road, but a .339 hitter with a .569 slugging percentage and .967 OPS at home. 

2. From 2013-20, Arenado hit .322 with 135 homers, 461 RBIs and a .985 OPS at Coors Field, but was far more pedestrian on the road (.263, 99 HRs, 299 RBIs, .793 OPS). 

3. Larry Walker, who joined Colorado at age 28 (Bryant is 30), was a .313 hitter with a .565 slugging percentage and .965 OPS in his Hall of Fame career, but a .381 hitter with a .710 slugging percentage and 1.172 OPS inside Coors. 

Kris Bryant is introduced as the newest member of the Rockies.
Kris Bryant is introduced as the newest member of the Rockies. AP

Bryant was a useful fantasy option last year, hitting .265 with 25 homers, 73 RBIs, 86 runs, 10 stolen bases and a .835 OPS while splitting the season between the Cubs and Giants. Not only did he have a career-best mark in zone contact rate, which is the amount of contact on pitches in the strike zone, but his exit velocity (88.2 mph) was his highest mark since 2016, his sweet-spot percentage (37.1) was his best since 2018 and his hard-hit percentage (40) was his highest since 2015. 

There may be a period of adjustment (as there was last year with C.J. Cron), but it would be shocking if Bryant didn’t see a massive statistical boost after his move to Colorado. 

New Brave Matt Olson (34.24) is coming off a season with Oakland in which he reached career marks in average (.271), homers (39), RBIs (111), runs (101), walks (88), on-base percentage (.371) and stolen bases (four). He also cut his strikeout percentage from 31.4 percent in 2020 to 16.8 while maintaining the 12th-best walk-rate in the majors (13.1 percent). 

Now, imagine him in a smaller ballpark, where his left-handed power should play nicely, while hitting at the top of a championship-caliber lineup. That’s why he’s Roto Rage’s third-ranked first baseman, and a top-30 fantasy option. 

Matt Olson takes a swing during Braves Spring Training.
Matt Olson takes a swing during Braves Spring Training. AP

Freedie Freeman (16.4) has been the model of consistency since 2011, hitting .296 while averaging 25 homers, 85 RBIs, 88 runs and a .894 OPS. It does, however, seem hard to believe that his move from Atlanta to Los Angeles will make him better than he already is. Could this imposing Dodgers lineup (seriously, they have three players who won MVP awards between 2018-20, plus Trea Turner and Max Muncy) give him a boost in RBIs and runs? Sure. Could he hit a few more homers at Dodgers Stadium? Of course. But the move really doesn’t increase his fantasy value much since you already had a top 20 player. 

Over the past two seasons, Matt Chapman (159.32) has seen elevated strikeout rates, lower contact rates and a plummeting average, despite a ton of power (possibly the results of the 28-year-old dealing with a hip injury). Now, fully healthy, he calls Toronto home, a move that not only gives him a ballpark upgrade and a major improvement in the team around him, but a significant uptick in fantasy value. 

Eugenio Suarez (179.92) has a ton of power, but has hit .199 over the past two seasons and struck out 871 times in his past 819 games. The move from a hitter-friendly park in Cincinnati to hitter-hell in Seattle doesn’t help. If he can’t approach his career .252 average, it’s difficult to justify taking him in the later rounds. 

Josh Donaldson (193.18) is 36 and likely destined to have a stint or two on the injured list, but he can still be a reliable backup option in later rounds. Joining the Bombers is actually quite appropriate, as the Yankees now have three of the top five players when it comes to exit velocity. Donaldson had a 94.1 mph exit velo in 2021, fourth-best in the majors (teammates Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton were Nos. 1 and 2). 

After the Yankees signed Anthony Rizzo (175.3), Luke Voit (241.24) became expendable. He was traded on Friday to the Padres, where he should get the chance to play every day in a solid lineup, albeit one without Fernando Tatis Jr. for a few months. He has power, as evidenced by his 2020 season, when he led the league in homers. A solid late-round pick.

Team Name of the Week

Men Behaving Adley

First Base

1. Vlad Guerrero Jr., Tor 

2. Freddie Freeman, LAD 

3. Matt Olson, Atl 

4. Pete Alonso, NYM 

5. Paul Goldschmidt, StL 

6. Max Muncy, LAD 

7. Jose Abreu, CWS 

8. Jared Walsh, LAA 

9. Josh Bell, Was 

10. C.J. Cron, Col 

11. Ryan Mountcastle, Bal 

12. Rhys Hoskins, Phi 

13. Cody Bellinger, LAD 

14. DJ LeMahieu, NYY 

15. Jake Cronenworth, SD 

16. Joey Votto, Cin 

17. Kyle Schwarber, Phi 

18. Trey Mancini, Bal 

19. J.T. Realmuto, Phi 

20. Anthony Rizzo, NYY 

21. Alex Kiriloff, Min 

22. Ty France, Sea 

23. Frank Schwindel, ChC 

24. Nathaniel Lowe, Tex 

25. Yuli Gurriel, Hou 

26. Eduardo Escobar, NYM 

27. Bobby Dalbec, Bos 

28. Andrew Vaughn, CWS 

29. Brandon Belt, SF 

30. Miguel Sano, Min 

31. Dominic Smith, NYM 

32. Luke Voit, NYY 

33. Yasmani Grandal, CWS 

34. Jesus Aguilar, Mia 

35. Jonathan Schoop, Det 

36. Eric Hosmer, SD 

37. Tyler Stephenson, Cin 

38. Spencer Torkelson, Det 

39. Patrick Wisdom, ChC 

40. LaMonte Wade Jr., SF 

Third Base 

1. Jose Ramirez, Cle 

2. Rafael Devers, Bos 

3. Manny Machado, SD 

4. Austin Riley, Atl 

5. Kris Bryant, Col 

6. Nolan Arenado, StL 

7. Alex Bregman, Hou 

8. Anthony Rendon, LAA 

9. DJ LeMahieu, NYY 

10. Ke’Bryan Hayes, Pit 

11. Adalberto Mondesi, KC 

12. Justin Turner, LAD 

13. Matt Chapman, Tor 

14. Yoan Moncada, CWS 

15. Ryan McMahon, Col 

16. Chris Taylor, LAD 

17. Josh Donaldson, NYY 

18. Luis Urias, Mil 

19. Eduardo Escobar, NYM 

20. Jeimer Candelario, Det 

21. Eugenio Suarez, Sea 

22. Gio Urshela, Min 

23. Spencer Torkelson, Det 

24. Bobby Dalbec, Bos 

25. Patrick Wisdom, ChC 

26. Mike Moustakas, Cin 

27. Evan Longoria, SF 

28. Alec Bohm, Phi 

29. Josh Rojas, Ari 

30. Luis Arraez, Min 

31. Cavan Biggio, Tor 

32. Abraham Toro, Sea 

33. Jonathan Villar, FA 

34. Yandy Diaz, TB 

35. Joey Wendle, Mia 

36. Brian Anderson, Mia 

37. Jose Miranda, Min 

38. Josh Harrison, CWS 

39. Ha-Seong Kim, SD 

40. Hunter Dozier, KC