Debating the No. 1 Overall Fantasy Baseball Draft Pick

(When our friends over at FanDuel.com asked me if they could do quick a guest post on the upcoming fantasy baseball season, it was an opportunity I just couldn't pass up. No one knows the sport of baseball and the fantasy implications of it all, quite like they do.
Enjoy, and when you get a moment, hop over to their site, and definitely check out the good work they're doing.
Each year, there always seems to be a mild debate over who should be the No. 1 pick in a fantasy baseball draft. Most of the time it does not get too heated, because one guy tends to stand out. In 2013, there seems to be three legitimate options that are all very close: Miguel Cabrera, Ryan Braun and Mike Trout. So with the No. 1 pick, who should you end up taking?
By now, every baseball fan is well aware of Cabrera’ historic season in 2012. The American League went without a Triple Crown winner since the 1960s, but Detroit’s third baseman had a hot bat nearly the entire season. His only weakness as a baseball player does not matter in fantasy baseball, as most leagues do nothing as far as defense is concerned.

Although it seems like only yesterday, incredibly it was three long years when I made my first trip to the most underrated park in baseball, Camden Yards, to watch the Baltimore Orioles. For some of you long-time readers of this site you may even remember my
To give you a little background on the column I’m about to write, it only seems appropriate I give you a little background on how my weekend began. It was Friday afternoon, I was in Southern California and driving down to a high school basketball All-American game in Venice Beach (a game I plan on writing about much more later this week, by the way). I was listening to the radio, and it was at that time that news first started to break that Adrian Gonzalez had cleared waivers and that the Dodgers were working to acquire him. Just another day in the ever-evolving amoeba that is the LA sports scene, huh?
To quote the Dos Equis, Most Interesting Man In the World: “I don’t often write Major League Baseball Stadium reviews here at Aaron Torres Sports. But when I do… they almost always become legendary.”
So seriously, who would ever complain about having nothing to do on a Monday night? Me, that’s who.
It took all of one inning to realize what a giant mistake I’d made. Here it was, Sunday night, and after I’d spent the last week pimping Bryce Harper to my Twitter followers, telling them to watch him play any chance they got, here Harper was on national TV, and I was nowhere to be found. I was plenty busy doing other stuff, sure. But still, there are no excuses. Shame on me for not heeding my own advice.
Prior to my vacation to Miami last week, I was chatting with my buddy Matt, when he innocently asked me a simple question: “So, what do you guys have planned for the trip?”
Since I started this website three years ago, I can’t ever remember a crazier week in the world of sports than this past one. We had the Major League Baseball's winter meetings mixed with the opening of NBA training camps, which just so happened to be fused into a fun week of college hoops, and the college football coaching carousel nearly spinning off its axis. My only wish is that we could’ve had the WNBA playoffs as a cheery on top of this week’s sports sundae.
Over the course of the summer, I’ve gotten a lot of grief from a lot of friends on one particular subject: I don’t write nearly enough about baseball. Understand it’s not that I don’t want to, just that as a columnist, I refuse to discuss subjects that I’m not totally comfortable writing about, and totally comfortable defending to those who don’t agree with me. And all summer long, as I ran this website, launched
On Wednesday, two things happened which shaped the column you’re about to read. They were both conversations, and both centered around baseball, a subject which seems to consume less of my time by the day. Let alone by the year.