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2013 Closers (2 Viewers)

Chapman as a very real chance of being the best closer this year.
:goodposting: He's my top-ranked guy until I see Kimbrel pitch a clean inning this spring. I know spring doesn't matter but every outing he's just getting bludgeoned.As for later round guys, I love Grilli. And despite the poor peripherals last season, I think Addison Reed has the pure stuff to make the jump to the upper echelon.
 
What do you guys see for Aroldis Chapman now that he's officially the closer?

Projections? Rank? Wondering if he can be a sneaky grab in a draft tonight.
I dont know about sneaky unless guys just arent paying attention. Goes near the top of the list imo
This is more than laid back, hoping a few guys missed the news and I can grab him after half the league (4-5/10) takes a RP depending on spot. If not, any suggestions for mid-later RP's in a 5x5? VERY limited transactions during the year so may not be able to pick up guys as they step up during the year.
I liked him much more as a starter.
 
Chapman as a very real chance of being the best closer this year.
:goodposting: He's my top-ranked guy until I see Kimbrel pitch a clean inning this spring. I know spring doesn't matter but every outing he's just getting bludgeoned.As for later round guys, I love Grilli. And despite the poor peripherals last season, I think Addison Reed has the pure stuff to make the jump to the upper echelon.
2 of his last 3 innings have been clean.
 
'Eephus said:
'RnR said:
'Mr. Pickles said:
Chapman as a very real chance of being the best closer this year.
Yeah, there's Kimbrel and there's Chapman. Then a significant gap to #3.
The Motte injury increases the gap to the field. Papelbon is sort of in a second tier by himself now followed by some combination of Soriano, Rivera and Rodney.
Nathan has to be near this trio, no?
 
'shadyridr said:
'Lehigh98 said:
'shadyridr said:
'Lehigh98 said:
What do you guys see for Aroldis Chapman now that he's officially the closer?Projections? Rank? Wondering if he can be a sneaky grab in a draft tonight.
I dont know about sneaky unless guys just arent paying attention. Goes near the top of the list imo
This is more than laid back, hoping a few guys missed the news and I can grab him after half the league (4-5/10) takes a RP depending on spot. If not, any suggestions for mid-later RP's in a 5x5? VERY limited transactions during the year so may not be able to pick up guys as they step up during the year.
Grilli and janssen are both good pitchers that should thrive in the closer role.
Grilli has a career ERA of 4.34 and a WHIP of 1.413. He's 36 and has 5 career saves. Now, he's coming off two good years (had a great year last year, though that K-rate is not typical for him and his GB/FB ratio was way below career norms) and perhaps he's a late bloomer, but this guy has been garbage for the bulk of his time in the majors. I'm not seeing 'thrive' but maybe I'm wrong.
 
'Eephus said:
'RnR said:
'Mr. Pickles said:
Chapman as a very real chance of being the best closer this year.
Yeah, there's Kimbrel and there's Chapman. Then a significant gap to #3.
The Motte injury increases the gap to the field. Papelbon is sort of in a second tier by himself now followed by some combination of Soriano, Rivera and Rodney.
Nathan has to be near this trio, no?
Yes, Nathan and Rivera have almost identical NFBC ADP (#131). This dates back to before the recent news about Chapman and Motte
 
'Tiger Fan said:
is this the appropriate thread to discuss closer strategy?
As long as they aren't breaking out or breaking down, yes.
When are you guys targeting closers? It's already been mentioned that after Papelbon, there really is a large tier (assuming about 15-16 based on a cheatsheet I've seen), followed by the rest. The majority of these guys can be had b/w rounds 10-16...but given how wild this position is every year, I hate to waste early draft picks on themIs there a widely accepted strategy? i.e. locking down one "sure thing" and then drafting others late then playing the waiver wire? My league requires 4 RP and we don't get points for holds...so every closer gets taken
 
'Tiger Fan said:
is this the appropriate thread to discuss closer strategy?
As long as they aren't breaking out or breaking down, yes.
When are you guys targeting closers? It's already been mentioned that after Papelbon, there really is a large tier (assuming about 15-16 based on a cheatsheet I've seen), followed by the rest. The majority of these guys can be had b/w rounds 10-16...but given how wild this position is every year, I hate to waste early draft picks on themIs there a widely accepted strategy? i.e. locking down one "sure thing" and then drafting others late then playing the waiver wire? My league requires 4 RP and we don't get points for holds...so every closer gets taken
The bolded is what I like to do. It's really a feel thing draft to draft for me, though. There's always a point where I don't like the available hitters and SPs too much (or can't differentiate between them) and that's when I'll load up on a couple closers.
 
'Tiger Fan said:
is this the appropriate thread to discuss closer strategy?
As long as they aren't breaking out or breaking down, yes.
When are you guys targeting closers? It's already been mentioned that after Papelbon, there really is a large tier (assuming about 15-16 based on a cheatsheet I've seen), followed by the rest. The majority of these guys can be had b/w rounds 10-16...but given how wild this position is every year, I hate to waste early draft picks on themIs there a widely accepted strategy? i.e. locking down one "sure thing" and then drafting others late then playing the waiver wire? My league requires 4 RP and we don't get points for holds...so every closer gets taken
I hate drafting closers early, but if you don't get a good one, it can be a tough season. When you play in leagues with active owners who are churning their rosters constantly, finding saves on the waiver wire can be impossible if you have a day job, kids and a life outside of fantasy nerdball. All that said, I tied by wagon to Joe Nathan in both drafts this year because the uncertainty behind him is rather large; though here I'd be a fool to believe Nathan is a lead-pipe lock to repeat his 2012 campaign. He's old and he's had TJ surgery. I'm also 'all in' on Steve Cishek for reasons I can't quite articulate other than he seemed to be around longer than most and when I saw him pitch recently, he blew me away with this stuff. Crappy teams (and the Marlins are that) are often times fertile breeding grounds for saves as their margins for victory are usually by 3 runs or less. BUT...these teams can also deal their closers away mid-season, so be sure you have a back-up plan in place.

And here's an exercise for you. Below is a random 2012 Closer Rankings list from late March of last year. Prepare yourself for some depressing comedy:

2012 Fantasy Closer Rankings:

1. Jonathan Papelbon (PHI)

2. Craig Kimbrel (ATL)

3. Mariano Rivera (NYY)

4. Jordan Walden (LAA)

5. John Axford (MIL)

6. Brian Wilson (SF)

7. Jose Valverde (DET)

8. Rafael Betancourt (COL)

9. Carlos Marmol (CHC)

10. Heath Bell (MIA)

11. Joel Hanrahan (PIT)

12. JJ Putz (ARI)

13. Drew Storen (WAS)

14. Jason Motte (STL)

15. Javy Guerra (LAD)

16. Andrew Bailey (BOS)

17. Chris Perez (CLE)

18. Matt Thornton (CWS)

19. Sergio Santos (TOR)

20. Joe Nathan (TEX)

21. Sean Marshall (CIN)

22. Matt Capps (MIN)

23. Kyle Farnsworth (TB)

24. Brandon League (SEA)

25. Huston Street (SD)

26. Jonathan Broxton (KC)

27. Brett Myers (HOU)

28. Jim Johnson (BAL)

29. Frank Francisco (NYM)

30. Grant Balfour (OAK)
I didn't go through this extensively, but guys in Red lost their jobs to injury or were replaced for another reason. Guys in blue were outright abortions, though more than a couple of them did have saves to their credit. I'm also not taking into account guys like Carlos Marmol who lost his job for a while before returning strong or guys like Broxton who got traded. And while 2012 might have been a bit extreme, it seems to me that every year at least 30-50% of the closers to the start the year do not finish the year. Were I you, I'd target two guys you can bank on and then back them up with their handcuff since you have to start 4. Or try to find potential closers who are not currently slated to close. There's a few I can think of, though it's all a gamble. Let other guys reach for saves while you keep piling on offense and SP arms. :thumbup:

 
Last edited by a moderator:
'Tiger Fan said:
is this the appropriate thread to discuss closer strategy?
As long as they aren't breaking out or breaking down, yes.
When are you guys targeting closers? It's already been mentioned that after Papelbon, there really is a large tier (assuming about 15-16 based on a cheatsheet I've seen), followed by the rest. The majority of these guys can be had b/w rounds 10-16...but given how wild this position is every year, I hate to waste early draft picks on themIs there a widely accepted strategy? i.e. locking down one "sure thing" and then drafting others late then playing the waiver wire? My league requires 4 RP and we don't get points for holds...so every closer gets taken
Every league is different. The four RP requirement changes things a bit although moreso to boost guys w/ dual eligibility like Medlen, Lynn and Iwakuma. This year, I wouldn't reach for anybody but Chapman or Kimbrel but there's always somebody who loves them more than I do. Other than that, you're probably better off being near the end of the closer run. I think K/9 and WHIP are the best predictors of closer success but it's the craziest position in baseball. SVs are always volatile. I ended up with Jim Johnson in my three leagues last year but I had zero expectations of 51 SVs.
 
Closer strategy depends entirely on the league your in, the rules, the number of teams, etc, etc...

There is no right closer strategy. And, each draft is different.

If my league requires 4 rp, I'm figuring out what closers I definitely want to target, and which I want to avoid. I do not want a team with 2 of the top 3-4 closers (preseason rankings), but I do want one top closer for sure - and I am always targetting Kimbrel or Chapman. Their strikeout totals are 2-3x what some other closers are, their ratios are significantly better, and I would rather have a guy that can get me stats every week then having to throw out marginal sp's.

Totally agree on the over-love for quite a few closers out there. Grili is 36 ffs. Sure he had good k ratios last year and going back a few years, but those are not in highly leveraged, game ending situations. He has not shown he has the closers mentality. Sure he is given opportunity, but let someone else take a chance on him. Same with Wilhemson. Dude was getting lit up in double a just two short years ago.

Then you have the closers that walk too many people. Avoid. It's quite a bit easier to pitch and get k's and saves, when no one is on base. Nothing better than seeing John Axford come in and walk the first two batters and then see him with a 40 pitch 9th inning. Avoid.

I don't want to be on the end of a closer run either, which is why I usually jump a bit early. If there is a closer run, I'll target another area and wait for end game.

I'm not afraid of middle relievers either on my team. Sure, in shallow 10 man leagues, you usually don't want most of these guys, but when you're in deeper leagues, I'd much prefer having a few middle relievers than marginal starters on my team. Kenley Jansen is a great example, but in leagues past, I have had very good success with guys like JP Howell, Scot Shields, Johnny Venters, tons of middle relievers offer outstanding value - plus in an unsettled situation, they can grab a closer job too. You get a middle reliever with a .80 whip, sub 2.5 era, 6-8 wins, and 8-10 saves and 100 k's, he's doing some good work for your team out there. Much better work than Ubaldo Jiminez with a 4.70 ERA, 1.50 whip, 180ks and 12 wins.

I try keeping my ratios as low as possible, try squeezing as many k's per inning pitched as possible and let wins and saves work themselves out. Let other teams fight for the most wins and most saves in the league, I'll be happy to come in top 4 in each of those, and win era, whip and top 5 in k's. With this strategy, you will usually find yourself with a stronger offense too, because you're not wasting mid round picks chasing wins with marginal starters.

I dunno, too much to type and I'm sure I'm rambling - but, in short, I've almost always found that other owners severely undervalue closers and stolen base guys, and I like both of these.

 
'shadyridr said:
'Lehigh98 said:
'shadyridr said:
'Lehigh98 said:
What do you guys see for Aroldis Chapman now that he's officially the closer?Projections? Rank? Wondering if he can be a sneaky grab in a draft tonight.
I dont know about sneaky unless guys just arent paying attention. Goes near the top of the list imo
This is more than laid back, hoping a few guys missed the news and I can grab him after half the league (4-5/10) takes a RP depending on spot. If not, any suggestions for mid-later RP's in a 5x5? VERY limited transactions during the year so may not be able to pick up guys as they step up during the year.
Grilli and janssen are both good pitchers that should thrive in the closer role.
Grilli has a career ERA of 4.34 and a WHIP of 1.413. He's 36 and has 5 career saves. Now, he's coming off two good years (had a great year last year, though that K-rate is not typical for him and his GB/FB ratio was way below career norms) and perhaps he's a late bloomer, but this guy has been garbage for the bulk of his time in the majors. I'm not seeing 'thrive' but maybe I'm wrong.
he asked for two late round closers who can do well :shrug:
 
'Tiger Fan said:
is this the appropriate thread to discuss closer strategy?
Depends league to league and if you're on the elbow or in the middle. Elbow drafter's are always at risk to missing the big run. If you're in the middle, generally speaking, get one in the 10-13 round range, preferably closer to 13, then get another one when the big run starts - sometime between round 13 and 16 usually. Elbow's much trickier, have to predict what others will do. I'd plan to take two back to back in the 12-13 round range, but, again, depends how well you know your competition and what else is available.I don't fret if I leave the draft with just two because I plan to pick up saves throughout the season but I would rather leave with two quality closers and another one or two volatile/replacement closers.
 
Closer strategy depends entirely on the league your in, the rules, the number of teams, etc, etc...

There is no right closer strategy. And, each draft is different.

If my league requires 4 rp, I'm figuring out what closers I definitely want to target, and which I want to avoid. I do not want a team with 2 of the top 3-4 closers (preseason rankings), but I do want one top closer for sure - and I am always targetting Kimbrel or Chapman. Their strikeout totals are 2-3x what some other closers are, their ratios are significantly better, and I would rather have a guy that can get me stats every week then having to throw out marginal sp's.

Totally agree on the over-love for quite a few closers out there. Grili is 36 ffs. Sure he had good k ratios last year and going back a few years, but those are not in highly leveraged, game ending situations. He has not shown he has the closers mentality. Sure he is given opportunity, but let someone else take a chance on him. Same with Wilhemson. Dude was getting lit up in double a just two short years ago.

Then you have the closers that walk too many people. Avoid. It's quite a bit easier to pitch and get k's and saves, when no one is on base. Nothing better than seeing John Axford come in and walk the first two batters and then see him with a 40 pitch 9th inning. Avoid.

I don't want to be on the end of a closer run either, which is why I usually jump a bit early. If there is a closer run, I'll target another area and wait for end game.

I'm not afraid of middle relievers either on my team. Sure, in shallow 10 man leagues, you usually don't want most of these guys, but when you're in deeper leagues, I'd much prefer having a few middle relievers than marginal starters on my team. Kenley Jansen is a great example, but in leagues past, I have had very good success with guys like JP Howell, Scot Shields, Johnny Venters, tons of middle relievers offer outstanding value - plus in an unsettled situation, they can grab a closer job too. You get a middle reliever with a .80 whip, sub 2.5 era, 6-8 wins, and 8-10 saves and 100 k's, he's doing some good work for your team out there. Much better work than Ubaldo Jiminez with a 4.70 ERA, 1.50 whip, 180ks and 12 wins.

I try keeping my ratios as low as possible, try squeezing as many k's per inning pitched as possible and let wins and saves work themselves out. Let other teams fight for the most wins and most saves in the league, I'll be happy to come in top 4 in each of those, and win era, whip and top 5 in k's. With this strategy, you will usually find yourself with a stronger offense too, because you're not wasting mid round picks chasing wins with marginal starters.

I dunno, too much to type and I'm sure I'm rambling - but, in short, I've almost always found that other owners severely undervalue closers and stolen base guys, and I like both of these.
Teams that win Saves and SBs are not the same teams that win the league in 5x5. Stockpile power and strikeouts while others are wasting picks on closers. If you finish at (or near) the top in HRs and K's, the counting stats will follow and finishing middle-of-the-pack in Saves and SBs will be all you need. My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
 
Teams that win Saves and SBs are not the same teams that win the league in 5x5. Stockpile power and strikeouts while others are wasting picks on closers. If you finish at (or near) the top in HRs and K's, the counting stats will follow and finishing middle-of-the-pack in Saves and SBs will be all you need. My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
:goodposting:
 
Teams that win Saves and SBs are not the same teams that win the league in 5x5. Stockpile power and strikeouts while others are wasting picks on closers. If you finish at (or near) the top in HRs and K's, the counting stats will follow and finishing middle-of-the-pack in Saves and SBs will be all you need. My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
:goodposting:
SVs and SBs are the easiest cats to chase during the season.
 
Teams that win Saves and SBs are not the same teams that win the league in 5x5. Stockpile power and strikeouts while others are wasting picks on closers. If you finish at (or near) the top in HRs and K's, the counting stats will follow and finishing middle-of-the-pack in Saves and SBs will be all you need. My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
:goodposting:
SVs and SBs are the easiest cats to chase during the season.
Yep, saves + SB's then selective starting pitching. Any other offensive category is exceedingly difficult to fix after the draft unless done via trade.
 
'shadyridr said:
'Lehigh98 said:
'shadyridr said:
'Lehigh98 said:
What do you guys see for Aroldis Chapman now that he's officially the closer?Projections? Rank? Wondering if he can be a sneaky grab in a draft tonight.
I dont know about sneaky unless guys just arent paying attention. Goes near the top of the list imo
This is more than laid back, hoping a few guys missed the news and I can grab him after half the league (4-5/10) takes a RP depending on spot. If not, any suggestions for mid-later RP's in a 5x5? VERY limited transactions during the year so may not be able to pick up guys as they step up during the year.
Grilli and janssen are both good pitchers that should thrive in the closer role.
Grilli has a career ERA of 4.34 and a WHIP of 1.413. He's 36 and has 5 career saves. Now, he's coming off two good years (had a great year last year, though that K-rate is not typical for him and his GB/FB ratio was way below career norms) and perhaps he's a late bloomer, but this guy has been garbage for the bulk of his time in the majors. I'm not seeing 'thrive' but maybe I'm wrong.
he asked for two late round closers who can do well :shrug:
Are we not allowed to disagree? :shrug:
 
My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
Yea, I mostly look for 3 late guys, then pick up one or two guys with a chance to close or guys that are hurt.This year I went Janssen, Marmol, Veras, then took Pestano and Madson with my last two picks. :shrug:
 
Teams that win Saves and SBs are not the same teams that win the league in 5x5. Stockpile power and strikeouts while others are wasting picks on closers. If you finish at (or near) the top in HRs and K's, the counting stats will follow and finishing middle-of-the-pack in Saves and SBs will be all you need. My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
I realize my post starting rambling, but I never stated to stockpile sb's and saves.I simply posted that almost invariably, are stolen bases and saves undervalued. I posted in another thread that there were significantly less sb's in a year than hr's and received replies that people weren't aware of that. I believe that mentality is very rampant in baseball leagues.I've never been in a league where owners didn't draft or spend on homers and high k pitchers, early and often. You will not find many values there. I believe you will find values in other areas.The reason I wouldn't draft the last 4 closer off the board, are more times than not, you are drafting guys that a) will not have a job within a month or two or b) offer horrific ratios, k totals, which offset any value that their saves get you. You may be better off blowing off saves completely in this event.Does drafting closers a bit earlier offer risk? Of course it does - closers get hurt. Closers throw 500 foot moon shots to Albert Pujols and never recover. But, all positions offer some degree of risk, and honestly a guy pitching 50-60 innings per year, probably has less chance of blowing his arm out than guy throwing 220+ innings per year.We can save the SB discussion for another thread - but I've always felt I've found better bargains in this area, getting guys that get me good obp, great steals, great runs, and a few homers and rbi's, other than a big home run hitter, who gets zero steals, mediocre obp, mediocre runs but goes 3, 4, 7 rounds earlier or goes for $20-$25 more in auction. Most people that see the teams I draft would think I have the most boring, less chance of winning leagues ever....but I've tended to do just fine over the years. :shrug:
 
If the Tigers dont make a move for a closer how do you think the saves will be allocated?

I keep hearing Benoit and Coke as the real options, but Benoit wasn't good in fill in duty last year and Coke being a lefty..... Isn't Dotel the better option?
This isn't true, Benoit got very few opportunities and not enough to make a true determination. Benoit is best fitted for the 8th however and he seems to be more comfortable in that role. Al Al is too wild IMO, so I think Coke will get the most looks early on with Villarreal being the real sleeper to get some chances and have success.
is this still your thinking on the Tigers situation? needing to take a flyer on someone, with all "real" closers taken already.
 
Which non-closer will you guys be targeting in hopes of falling into the closers role either via injury or demotion of the closer?

:banned:
Kenley Jansen has to be #1
I've got Romo and Street for my 2 closers, but I drafted Jansen as well. Is it worth it to hold on to him in hopes of him becoming the starter? Or do I drop him and grab League since no one drafted him?
I like Jansen for his Ks and WHIP. I think Romo and Street are two of the high reward/high risk closers. Street could be pitching anywhere in August, possibly in a non-closer role. He's also always an injury risk.

I :wub: Romo but he's a little guy with a high-stress breaking pitch. I wouldn't be surprised to see Bochy give occasional SV opportunities to Casilla and Affeldt in order to keep Romo fresh.

 
Guy really wants Jesus Montero. Offering up either Cishek or Frieri. Yea? Which one? Have Sal Perez so don't need Jesus

 
I think I like JMontero better than Perez, but that's a different convo... Frieri for me as well. Better arm, better team. Don't hate Cishek either though as a cheap closer option.

 
Which non-closer will you guys be targeting in hopes of falling into the closers role either via injury or demotion of the closer?

:banned:
Kenley Jansen has to be #1
Is his ticker ok? I thought League was brought in for a reason?
:goodposting: they gave League a lot of cheese too.
And? It's the Dodgers, they give everyone a lot of cash. League has diminishing skills and his control was an issue last year. If he starts blowing saves he's gone, period.
 
I'm looking for another RP. My league counts NSVH and not Saves. I already have Grilli, Balfour, Peralta, Cook and Gregerson. Available: League, Fujikawa, Rondon, Bailey, Madson.

 
Which non-closer will you guys be targeting in hopes of falling into the closers role either via injury or demotion of the closer?

:banned:
Kenley Jansen has to be #1
Is his ticker ok? I thought League was brought in for a reason?
:goodposting: they gave League a lot of cheese too.
And? It's the Dodgers, they give everyone a lot of cash. League has diminishing skills and his control was an issue last year. If he starts blowing saves he's gone, period.
Yeah good point, but maybe there's more to the heart issue for Jansen
 
Teams that win Saves and SBs are not the same teams that win the league in 5x5. Stockpile power and strikeouts while others are wasting picks on closers. If you finish at (or near) the top in HRs and K's, the counting stats will follow and finishing middle-of-the-pack in Saves and SBs will be all you need. My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
I've never been in a league where owners didn't draft or spend on homers and high k pitchers, early and often. You will not find many values there.
Disagree completely. There is tremendous value in stockpiling the most predictable stats like HRs and Ks while everyone else is chasing saves (one of the most unpredictable cats in roto). Also, you never want to punt a whole catagory. You can easily finish middle-pack / lower third in saves by grabbing the garbage closers. Everyone has their own philosophies though, and ultimately it all comes down to a certain degree of luck anyway. That's what makes it fun. :thumbup:
 
I'm looking for another RP. My league counts NSVH and not Saves. I already have Grilli, Balfour, Peralta, Cook and Gregerson. Available: League, Fujikawa, Rondon, Bailey, Madson.
Why are League and Rondon available? They're the assumed closers at this point. Id go with this order.Rondon - upside League - getting closer moneyFujikawa - just a matter of timeBailey - probably needs an injuryMadson - hasnt been healthy in almost 2 years
 
Teams that win Saves and SBs are not the same teams that win the league in 5x5. Stockpile power and strikeouts while others are wasting picks on closers. If you finish at (or near) the top in HRs and K's, the counting stats will follow and finishing middle-of-the-pack in Saves and SBs will be all you need. My dream-draft is always to take the last 4 closers off the board.
I've never been in a league where owners didn't draft or spend on homers and high k pitchers, early and often. You will not find many values there.
Disagree completely. There is tremendous value in stockpiling the most predictable stats like HRs and Ks while everyone else is chasing saves (one of the most unpredictable cats in roto). Also, you never want to punt a whole catagory. You can easily finish middle-pack / lower third in saves by grabbing the garbage closers. Everyone has their own philosophies though, and ultimately it all comes down to a certain degree of luck anyway. That's what makes it fun. :thumbup:
For me, it depends entirely on inning max. If there isn't one, or it's absurdly high, I ignore K's entirely and just try to get them by having more innings than everyone. If it's tight, high K pitchers are a premium.
 
'cheese said:
I think I like JMontero better than Perez, but that's a different convo... Frieri for me as well. Better arm, better team. Don't hate Cishek either though as a cheap closer option.
Yea? Why Montero over Perez?I do have Madson so I am tempted to grab Frieri to lock up Angels saves. Although I did just try to get both Cishek and Frieri from the guy for Montero, Veras, and Marte. :shrug:
 

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