MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 9/8 – Early Slate

In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally
NFL DFS: Week 1 Top Stacks

With week 1 here and one game in the books, I’ve gone through the Sunday main slate and found some stacks that I’m looking at using in tournaments. Some of these guys will be popular plays in most contests, however,
MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 9/7

In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally
MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 9/5

In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally
MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 9/3

In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally
MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 9/1
In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally one pitcher on FD and two on DK with a three-player stack and one to two one-off bats) that will find their way into 100% of my lineups. The idea of locking in a core is to limit, for lack of a better term, “randomness” across our lineups. By mixing and matching a few bats around our core across all lineups, we’re able to rule out some tough lineup decisions we may face while not getting completely overwhelmed with a large pool of players. Below I’ve outlined the pitchers, stacks, and one-offs that I’m considering incorporating into my core for tonight. Top Pitchers Jon Gray (COL) Gray has seen the Padres quite a bit being an NL West Division foe and has had success against them, especially in San Diego. Over six starts, spanning 35 innings pitched, Gray has 47 strikeouts and a 2.57 ERA. The Padres offense has been a disaster all year long and Gray, who went seven innings with seven strikeouts and no earned runs allowed in his last start in San Diego should bounce back after a rough outing his last time out. Dylan Bundy (BAL) Bundy has been a fucking disaster in his last four starts and quite frankly hasn’t had a good year at all. However, at 6.2K on FD and 7K on DK you’re getting great value here if none of the guys in the upper echelon of salaries excite you. The Royals offense has not been good all season, Bundy sees a positive park shift, and I’m sure he hasn’t forgotten how the Royals demolished him earlier this season (don’t look at this box score). Bundy pitches well tonight and lets you pay up for bats on FD and slides in as an SP2 option on DK. Kevin Gausman (ATL) Gausman is in play on both FD and DK against the Pirates who simply are just not hitting right now, and quite frankly I think they’ve run out of gas. Gausman, who the Braves fleeced the Orioles for at the trade deadline for as far as I’m concerned, has pitched well in three of his last four starts, one of which came against the Pirates. In that outing, he went eight innings with five strikeouts, four hits against, and no earned runs allowed. The Pirates have a team wOBA of .288 (sixth-worst in baseball) and a .101 ISO (third-worst) over the last two weeks. Core Stacks Twins Jorge Polanco, Miguel Sano, Max Kepler The Twins take on Yovani Gallardo and the Rangers in Texas again tonight where the warm weather should help put runs on the board as it did last night as these two teams combined for 17 runs. Sano, who hits righties well, should feast on Gallardo who allows a .393 wOBA to right-handed hitters. Kepler has hit 13 of his 18 home runs against righties to go along with a 39 percent hard-hit rate. Polanco will have the benefit of the platoon-split for the duration of the game being a switch hitter putting him in a good spot, especially while Gallardo is in the game with his .373 wOBA against righties. Cardinals Matt Carpenter, Yadier Molina, Paul DeJong Yes, I’m going back to the well tonight as I LOVE this spot for the Cardinals. Luis Castillo has given up five earned runs in two of his last three starts and has been throttled by left-handed hitters. Insert, Matt Carpenter. He homered last night, he homers tonight, next player. Yadi Molina. One for five last night, but he’s generally as steady as they come in the two-spot for the Cardinals right behind Carpenter. DeJong hit a home run last night against Donger Bailey (shocker) as he continues to hammer right-handed pitching. Castillo has struggled, the Reds bullpen has been trash, the Cards put up the runs against tonight. Top One-off Bats More often than not these are value/underpriced high upside bats, otherwise, they could be bats that I simply have to have in all of my lineups. At times they’ll serve as salary relief allowing you to mix and match some exposure with higher-priced bats throughout our lineups. Trey Mancini (BAL) Mancini, who hits righties well with 16 of his 20 home runs coming against the reverse-split faces Heath Fillmyer who has allowed 2.39 HR/9 and a .357 wOBA against righties. Mancini has multiple hits in four of his last six games with four doubles, a triple, and three home runs over that span. Kole Calhoun (LAA) Calhoun started off this season horribly but has started to pick up the pace a bit in the second half. On the season he has just a .305 wOBA against righties but has a .204 ISO and an 18.4 HR/FB rate to go along with a 44 percent hard-hit rate. Calhoun has multiple hits in two of his last four games and at 2.4K on FD and 3.8K on DK he stands out as a value bat to look at. GOOD LUCK!
MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 8/31

In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally
MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 8/29

We have a short three-game slate on both sites this afternoon which obviously limits our options, specifically when building multiple lineups. In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally one pitcher on FD and two on DK with a three-player stack and one to two one-off bats) that will find their way into 100% of my lineups. The idea of locking in a core is to limit, for lack of a better term, “randomness” across our lineups. By mixing and matching a few bats around our core across all lineups, we’re able to rule out some tough lineup decisions we may face while not getting completely overwhelmed with a large pool of players. Below I’ve outlined the pitchers, stacks, and one-offs that I’m considering incorporating into my core for tonight. Top Pitchers Michael Fulmer (DET) Fulmer is priced at 7.2K on both sites this afternoon and is the guy that I’m locking in on both FD and DK. Simply put, I don’t trust Danny Duffy against a Tigers team that hit lefties well and I don’t feel the need to pay up for Dallas Keuchel, a guy who in my mind has limited upside, specifically against a dangerous A’s team. Those reasons mainly are what make me lean on Fulmer. The righty was limited to 77 pitches in his last start, his first start in over a month after a DL stint but should be a full go in this outing tonight. At his salary, he will help you pay up for some appealing bats while being productive against a Royals team that he’s had success against. Alec Mills (CHC) Mills is the SP2 play I’m locking in on DK. He’s priced at 5.8K and is coming off of a good outing against the Reds in which he went 5.2 innings, allowed three hits, one earned run, and struck out eight. The wind will play a bit of a factor here blowing in from left at 10-plus miles-per-hour. The Mets have scored 24 runs in their last 9 games and in two of those they scored six and five respectively. The offense is atrocious on a day to day basis. Mills will pitch well and should go five-plus again and earn a win at a great salary. Core Stack Cubs Javy Baez, Anthony Rizzo, David Bote Jason Vargas is a disaster and has been just that of late other than a good start against the Nationals who have pretty much quit as a team, outside of beating the fuck out of the Mets bullpen this past weekend and beating the Phillies bullpen last night. Vargas has been killed by the Orioles and Phillies with a 6.49 and 4.47 FIP respectively. Righties have a .393 wOBA against Vargas and he’s allowed 2.02 HR/9 along with a 17.5 HR/FB rate. Baez has a .397 wOBA, .288 ISO, 31.8 percent HR/FB rate, and a 39 percent hard-hit rate against lefties. Bote, who’s burst onto the scene, has a .428 wOBA, .273 ISO, 48 percent hard-hit rate, and a 25 percent hard-hit rate against southpaws. Rizzo slides in here hitting the ball well over his last 13 games with a 41 percent hard-hit rate and a 37 percent fly-ball rate. Over this stretch, Rizzo has six doubles, five home runs, and seven multi-hit games. God knows what the lineup Joe Maddon throws out here, but ideally, these three bats will be in the top five of the order this afternoon and be productive. Top One-off Bat More often than not these are value/underpriced high upside bats, otherwise, they could be bats that I simply have to have in all of my lineups. At times they’ll serve as salary relief allowing you to mix and match some exposure with higher-priced bats throughout our lineups. Nick Castellanos (DET) Castellanos has been a lefty killer all season and faces one whom he’s had some moderate success against in the past. While he’s 10-36 against Duffy (.278 average for the people that still care about batting average) four of those hits have gone for extra bases (two doubles, one triple, and one home run). Against lefties, this season Castellanos has posted a .460 wOBA, .225 ISO, 51 percent hard-hit rate, and a 23 percent HR/FB rate. Castellanos will be the first outfielder I lock in today. GOOD LUCK!
NFL Week 1 RB DFS Breakdown

Shawn Childs previews the Week 1 Running Back landscape
MLB DFS: Rob Geriak’s Building Blocks – 8/27

In this article, I’m going to lay out the groundwork to build off in three to five entry max contests. When playing these types of contests, I find that I have the most success when I have a core, (generally