New York Post

Avoid youth overload

- Howard Bender is the VP of operations and head of content at FantasyAla­rm.com. Follow him on Twitter @rotobuzzgu­y and catch him on the award-winning “Fantasy Alarm Radio Show” on the SiriusXM fantasy sports channel weekdays from 4-6 p.m.

IT IS one thing to take a chance on one or two high-upside rookies, but when your quest has you sitting in last place with a roster loaded strictly with potential and no proven talent, you’re doing it wrong.

Meet Mason K. He is a great guy who has been playing fantasy baseball for the past five years. Despite his rigorous draft prep and extensive knowledge of the MLB player pool, he never has won a fantasy baseball championsh­ip.

When I received Mason’s email, I asked to see his roster, league settings and overall standings. There he was, mired in last place in his headto-head points league, and once I saw his roster, it was easy to understand why. Mason was a prospect junkie.

During his draft, Mason picked up some strong youth in Ronald Acuna and Rhys Hoskins. Both players had high ceilings, and it was a great move. Unfortunat­ely, Mason didn’t stop there and also added Scott Kingery and Nick Senzel, neither of whom was projected to start the season with the big club. That would have been enough for most, but the obsession continued to grow.

When the season opened and waiver claims were made, Mason found himself grabbing every young hopeful he read about. He added Juan Soto and Austin Riley to his offense while revamping his pitching with the likes of Mike Soroka, Caleb Smith and Ross Stripling. By the time he reached out to me, there was not a single player on his roster with more than three years of MLB experience.

With a few suggestion­s, Mason has since begun to right the ship. It wasn’t a matter of completely ridding him of his rookie compulsion­s, but more about getting the problem under control.

He has traded away some of his youth for more proven talent and is learning to be more selective with his waiver claims. A relapse or two is probably in his future, but understand­ing the balance needed is half the battle. There is nothing wrong with taking a chance on youth, but you simply won’t win if it is your only weapon.

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