The day has finally arrived. Pitchers and catchers have begun to report. In other words, the Super Bowl is done and the fantasy baseball season can officially begin its ramp=up toward Opening Day!
With that in mind and with many a fantasy baseball manager beginning the process of figuring out which players to target in their drafts, we posed a seemingly simple question to the intrepid duo of Tristan H. Cockcroft and Eric Karabell. Read on to find out what they had to say about it.
Who is the No. 1 hitter for fantasy baseball in 2023?

In points leagues, my No. 1 hitter is still Juan Soto. I know we don’t project him for the most points — that honor goes to Jose Ramirez — but Soto’s immensely high floor stands out relative to the other candidates. He’s the only player who can claim at least a 490-point projection from every major projection system out there. Plus, even in what was a terribly unlucky season, he managed a 14th-best (among hitters) 437 fantasy points. He’s in a much better situation in which to succeed and should be a shoo-in for 490-plus in 2023.

I considered Ramirez, who finished sixth on the Rater in 2022, but Turner hits for a higher batting average, steals more bases, didn’t have offseason thumb surgery, and relocated to a more hitter-friendly home ballpark this winter. Turner gets the nod, although it’s hard not to notice his absence from your first round in points formats. Perhaps you could explain why things are so different depending on the scoring format.

Julio Rodriguez and Bobby Witt Jr., two of your first-rounders, similarly fit this description for points-based scoring. I love the players, but only “like” the skills fit for points. Top-shelf value in points leagues is so much about walks, contact, elite power and/or run production as well as the good fortune to stay completely healthy.
Which brings me to my struggle when considering the “best pick.” What about Freeman? He’s a top-10 pick for me (albeit eighth), but he’s outside your top 10. Still, he has delivered strong returns on investment annually and his contact-quality metrics are as good as almost anyone’s in baseball.

Anyway, I think he’s perfect in tandem with Betts or Witt as first/second-round picks. It’s all offense for me in the first two rounds and I admit I do focus on SB potential, if it’s applicable and not too much of a reach. I’m guessing you don’t pay much attention to stolen bases in your preferred format.

Ultimately, a stolen base is worth a single point using our standard ESPN scoring. A run scored is worth one, a walk is worth one, and a double is worth two, and those categories are all far more plentiful. Last year, a mere 24 players stole 20-plus bags, or generated 20-plus points from that category. Guess how many had at least 10 doubles, also worth 20-plus points? It was 320! It’s not that steals don’t have any weight, it’s just that if the player can’t hold muster in those other three underrated categories, he’s just not worth the draft investment (see: Berti, Jon).



