Andy Andres torched 52 % of his budget on Julio Rodríguez, Bobby Witt Jr. and Aaron Judge before the room even hit double-digit picks—here’s the ripple effect that hands you profit on Draft Day.
The First 10 Minutes That Broke the Bank
Phoenix temps touched 95° outside, but inside the conference room the money was on fire. When Rick Wolf & Glenn Colton opened nominations with Julio Rodríguez at $39, the fuse was lit. Boston professor Andy Andres secured the Mariners’ outfielder, then immediately escalated on Bobby Witt Jr. ($47) before dropping the gavel on reigning AL MVP Aaron Judge at $49. In eight nominations, Andres had shelled out $135 of his $260 cap—an on-platform record for fastest burn rate in LABR history RT Sports.
The cascade effect was instant. Managers holding back for “one mega-star” suddenly competed for Plan-B hitters, inflating the next tier:
- José Ramírez (Guardians): $42
- Yordan Alvarez (Astros): $26 (huge discount because of 2025 hand/ankle issues)
- Byron Buxton (Twins): $23 (another injury roll)
The Unmistakable Bargain Bin
When wallets that light, savings appear. Four-dollar starters Michael Wacha and Seth Lugo—both projection systems peg for mid-3.50 ERA and 150 K—went cheaper than most hitting middle-relievers. Kris Bubic at $7 represents KC’s projected No. 2 starter with a 2.0 BB/9 improvement logged in Cactus League play. A record 13 SP landed between $20–$27, proving that depth is the hidden asset in AL-only formats USA TODAY Sports.
Speed Is the New Black Market
The “cheap steals” myth died Sunday. Jose Caballero’s 49-swipe 2025 pushed him to $21, while Rays rookie Chandler Simpson (63 SB across MLB/AAA) hit $20. If you punt the category until the end game, you are punting it for good. Budget at least $35–$40 total for two 30-SB threats or you’ll finish behind half the league.
Three Tiers of Closers You Must Memorize
Relief spending revealed a textbook tier structure:
- Elite $20 tier: Cade Smith, Andrés Muñoz, Aroldis Chapman, David Bednar
- Mid $13-$18 tier: Carlos Estévez, Ryan Helsley, Jeff Hoffman, Griffin Jax, Josh Hader, Kenley Jansen
- Single-digit chaos tier: Seranthony Domínguez, Robert Garcia plus any committee wild-cards
Moving from Tier 2 to Tier 1 cost $5-7 but added only a handful of projected saves. Strategy takeaway: grab one Tier 2 arm early, then scoop a Tier 3 job-changer in the endgame instead of chasing a second $20 closer.
Health-Only Coupons
Injury flags served as straight coupons for drafters willing to roster IL slots:
- Carlos Rodón (Yankees): $8 — slated for May return, 3.50 xFIP when healthy
- Gerrit Cole (Yankees): $9 — elbow surgery recovery, projection 2.8 WAR in 120 IP
- Shane Bieber (Blue Jays): $8 — forearm fatigue trending upward
The caveat: stash responsibly. Gardner’s own roster lists five rehab names, a risk load that could swing him from first to worst the moment the MRI tube spits bad news.
How to Turn LABR Chaos Into League-Wins
Your home-league opponents study the same ADP lists. Expose them with these three LABR spillovers:
- Stars-and-streams still works—just nominate your sleepers immediately after the consensus top-30 are off the board while league mates lick financial wounds.
- Allocate 70/30 hitting/pitching in the first half of the auction; 13 starters in the $20-$27 band mean you can wait.
- Pick a stolen-base anchor by pick 70. The position is no longer a discount.
One scorching day in the desert reset the entire AL-only economy. If your rivals spend early, borrow from Andy Andres: make them do it on players you don’t want; then devour the bargains that float to you in the vacuum that follows.
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