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Recent Second Base ADP Trends

Continuing our look at ADP trends position by position, we move over to the keystone and look at one of the thinner positions out there in the fantasy baseball world. But while a lack of major depth can be an issue for deeper leagues, another issue that should be examined is age. With there may be a few youngsters splashed in here and there, the majority of the top 15 are players who have been run through the mill more than just a few times. While diminishing skills and stats are obviously something to pay attention to, there is also the injury issue to take into consideration. That means you can either take a chance with an inexperienced youngster or risk injury and decline with the veterans. Not a very good choice, really, is it? Maybe not, but one that you'll have to make.

So let's take a look at the ADP trends for the top 50 according to the NFBC and, as we've done so far, we'll compare the numbers to the Mock Draft Central data and see what kind of outliers we may be seeing as well.

RankPlayerTeamCurrent ADP1 Week AgoTrendMDC ADP|PERCENT|Diff
1Robinson CanoNYY4.485.0412.50|PERCENT|7.51-67.63|PERCENT|
2Dustin PedroiaBos25.5926.473.44|PERCENT|41.14-60.77|PERCENT|
3Ian KinslerTex30.7433.208.00|PERCENT|39.74-29.28|PERCENT|
4Ben ZobristTB49.1249.631.04|PERCENT|67.91-38.25|PERCENT|
5Aaron HillAri56.8357.431.06|PERCENT|76.79-35.12|PERCENT|
6Jason KipnisCle60.8061.801.64|PERCENT|50.1117.58|PERCENT|
7Brandon PhillipsCin63.1764.391.93|PERCENT|79.59-25.99|PERCENT|
8Jose AltuveHou94.8192.25-2.70|PERCENT|99.05-4.47|PERCENT|
9Rickie WeeksMil108.30111.202.68|PERCENT|154.17-42.35|PERCENT|
10Chase UtleyPhi123.12127.123.25|PERCENT|196.24-59.39|PERCENT|
11Danny EspinosaWas136.33134.25-1.53|PERCENT|101.9525.22|PERCENT|
12Howie KendrickLAA148.90151.551.78|PERCENT|214.37-43.97|PERCENT|
13Dan UgglaAtl171.51172.840.78|PERCENT|202.18-17.88|PERCENT|
14Neil WalkerPit171.87171.78-0.05|PERCENT|192.78-12.17|PERCENT|
15Marco ScutaroSF196.70192.76-2.00|PERCENT|265.03-34.74|PERCENT|
16Dustin AckleySea220.94219.08-0.84|PERCENT|196.0011.29|PERCENT|
17Omar InfanteDet232.35231.75-0.26|PERCENT|272.36-17.22|PERCENT|
18Daniel MurphyNYM248.30244.57-1.50|PERCENT|269.47-8.53|PERCENT|
19Jedd GyorkoSD288.07291.471.18|PERCENT|232.6519.24|PERCENT|
20Gordon BeckhamCWS297.25293.75-1.18|PERCENT|284.094.43|PERCENT|
21Kelly JohnsonTB309.09316.142.28|PERCENT|257.3916.73|PERCENT|
22Logan ForsytheSD358.58355.29-0.92|PERCENT|327.788.59|PERCENT|
23Jemile WeeksOak379.54367.73-3.11|PERCENT|329.8513.09|PERCENT|
24Darwin BarneyChC383.55383.960.11|PERCENT|ND 
25Brian RobertsBal410.43414.450.98|PERCENT|311.2324.17|PERCENT|
26Donovan SolanoMia427.95415.49-2.91|PERCENT|ND 
27Tyler GreeneHou443.32467.965.56|PERCENT|ND 
28Mark EllisLAD445.36444.78-0.13|PERCENT|ND 
29Jamey CarrollMin462.34460.28-0.45|PERCENT|ND 
30Kolten WongStL464.22456.82-1.59|PERCENT|ND 
31Scott SizemoreOak472.16466.82-1.13|PERCENT|ND 
32Daniel DescalsoStL472.89470.18-0.57|PERCENT|ND 
33Steve LombardozziWas495.92500.160.85|PERCENT|ND 
34Johnny GiavotellaKC497.77502.410.93|PERCENT|330.8833.53|PERCENT|
35Chris GetzKC527.14535.551.60|PERCENT|ND 
36Alexi CasillaBal539.54537.94-0.30|PERCENT|ND 
37Jordany ValdespinNYM547.02561.162.58|PERCENT|ND 
38Alexi AmaristaSD552.30556.160.70|PERCENT|ND 
39DJ LeMahieuCol592.53594.630.35|PERCENT|ND 
40Ryan TheriotSF621.49617.68-0.61|PERCENT|ND 
41Jerry Hairston Jr.LAD623.22619.70-0.56|PERCENT|ND 
42Robert AndinoSea635.55637.470.30|PERCENT|ND 
43Skip SchumakerLAD638.98633.40-0.87|PERCENT|ND 
44Adam RosalesOak646.88641.14-0.89|PERCENT|ND 
45Jimmy ParedesHou651.83656.420.70|PERCENT|ND 
46Ryan FlahertyBal661.44654.78-1.01|PERCENT|ND 
47Jonathan SchoopBal674.88695.423.04|PERCENT|ND 
48Freddy GalvisPhi675.90675.38-0.08|PERCENT|ND 
49Yuniesky BetancourtPhi678.41682.900.66|PERCENT|ND 
50Ryan RaburnCle680.24682.380.31|PERCENT|ND 

Similarly to what we saw with first basemen, there isn't a whole lot of movement in ADP rankings within the NFBC system. We've got a few guys moving up or down by a handful of picks, but we haven't gotten too deep into position battles just yet and we probably won't see too many decisions made until much later in the month. Still, there are some guys worthy of your attention…

Jemile Weeks, OAK (-3.11|PERCENT|) – His ADP was never high to begin with (24th/25th round of a 15-team league) but he continues to drop based solely on speculation. Granted, there's pretty good reason, given the fact that both Jed Lowrie and Scott Sizemore are vying for time at second as well, but nothing has been etched in stone yet fantasy owners are giving up on Weeks already. The A's have said that they could easily use Lowrie in a super-utility position which could leave a battle between Sizemore and Weeks for the second base job. Perhaps a hot spring wins him more playing time than expected. Keep watching as positive news could easily push him back up in the ADP ranks.

Tyler Greene, MIL (+5.56|PERCENT|) – He's still pretty far down the ADP ranks as well, but Greene has been picking up steam a little lately as he continues to be listed atop the depth chart in Houston at the shortstop position. He's competing with Marwin Gonzalez andJake Elmore right now, but Greene's experience might just give him the edge. Granted, it's with the Astros who should struggle to produce runs all season, but should Greene land the full-time job, his value definitely goes up.

As I said earlier, the quality at the position is getting a little old, but it's still interesting to see aging players who remain huge injury risks rising in ADP ranks. Both Rickie Weeks and Chase Utley have seen increases, though slight ones at that, despite the fact that they probably rank as two of the most brittle players right now. That, however, is probably more of a commentary on how sad the position may be rather than an accolade for the expected performance of either player.

Given the hot start he has had this spring, Padres second baseman Jedd Gyorko should start climbing up ADP boards pretty soon. He's still pretty far down with an ADP of 288.07, but he's actually been a steady riser over the past few weeks. He'll probably continue to climb steadily, but until someone within the San Diego organization says that he has officially beaten out Logan Forsythe, there will always be a certain level of apprehension.

MDC Outliers

As you can see by the larger number of negative differentials, more people are waiting on second baseman at MDC than they are over at the NFBC. Perhaps it's the concern over position scarcity in a 15-team league, or maybe it's just a matter of more shallow drafts happening at MDC, but overall, people don't seem to be enamored with much of their options at the keystone other than Robinson Cano. And even he is suffering in the ranks, going as high as fourth at the NFBC but coming in three to four picks late in the first round at MDC.

To the contrary of what we saw with Utley and Weeks rising in the NFBC, both have huge drops in comparison over at MDC. We're talking between 50 and 70 pick differentials here. Even if you were talking about the difference between 15 and 12-team leagues, you're only talking about a 30-pick differential at most.  That alone should tell you how far a lot of these second baseman are falling.

I do like seeing what people over at MDC are doing with Washington's Danny Espinosa. While the batting average stinks, Espinosa contributes well in each of the remaining four standard roto categories, and contributes well. He has strong 20-20 capabilities and manages strong RBI totals for a middle infielder. The fact that he also picked up eligibility at shortstop makes him an even more attractive target on draft day.

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Howard Bender has been covering fantasy sports for over a decade on a variety of web sites. You can follow him on Twitter at @rotobuzzguy and for more detailed questions, thoughts or comments, you can email him at rotobuzzguy@gmail.com.