ROTISSERIE: 2019 LABR NL auction recap

This short column is about my LABR-NL auction plan, why I do it, how it works, and what went wrong.

Last season, I tried to curve away from my usual $230 on hitting and $30 on pitching plan. I spent around $200 on hitting and $60 on pitching, had injuries, and ended up without enough hitting and finished in the bottom half. The reason $230/30 works okay for LABR is that you get a whopping six(!) reserve slots, but you are restricted in their use. Only original reserve or minors players can occupy those slots. You cannot store a slumping player there. Or wait all season for a call-up from there. And in NL-only 12-team leagues, at-bats are at a premium. There is no DH, so the at-bats pool is smaller than in the AL. Catchers are terrible...

Almost!

You’re just a few clicks away from accessing this feature and hundreds more throughout the year that have a singular goal in mind: Winning your league. Subscribe to BaseballHQ.com here!

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

More From Rotisserie

Matt Shaw headlines our crop of dynasty building blocks at the hot corner.
Dec 4 2025 3:04am
We'll take a look at NL outfielders who could see big value gains over the next few seasons, as well as those that could net sharp dynasty owners huge returns as soon as 2026.
Dec 2 2025 8:00am
We kick off our Dynasty Reload series with the AL outfield. There are several interesting prospects and a couple of first-year flops (like Jac Caglianone) poised for a rebound.
FREE
Nov 28 2025 8:02am
We'll dig into the positional ADP discrepancies between rotisserie scoring and bestball formats, tips for constructing more efficient rosters, anticipating price bumps for multi-eligible players, and more
Mar 10 2025 3:02am
Our annual straight draft opus is as old as Jackson Chourio...
Mar 9 2025 3:12am

Tools