3B - Chicago Cubs
Don't get me wrong. I love Kris Bryant as much as anyone. The kid is absolutely amazing. He's terrorizing pitchers in Arizona right now, leading all of Spring Training with 8 HRs and a monster 2.072 OPS, all of this after he lead the minors in HRs last year and all of college baseball in homers the year before. By now, we get it. He hits home runs. That's what he does. He's special. But now Yahoo has pushed him up their rankings to No. 98 -- that's dangerous territory.
Will Bryant likely be a top 100 player? Absolutely. Hell, he could even be top 25. He's that special. But taking him as a top 100 player right now with so many questions marks is a gamble.
The Cubs won't likely keep him in the minors long, so I wouldn't worry too much about missing him in your lineup the first 2-3 weeks of the season. However, don't forget this is a guy without a single MLB at-bat. Zero. How will he adjust to Major League pitching? What will his defense be like at third base? Will he chug Pabst Blue Ribbon with Wrigley's Best? Too much we have to know.
Historically, we've seen guys belt 30-plus home runs as rookies -- Frank Robinson hit 38 HRs in 1956 as a rookie -- but most of them ended up being Hall-of-Famers, or played during the PED era. For Bryant to give a great return on investment this year, he would need to hit close to 30 HRs or more. It could happen -- ZiPS has the highest projection for Byrant, listing 29 HRs and a .256 average.
But let's compare to other players with similar numbers from last year and their comparative ranking from an OPS league:
No. 96 Marlon Byrd - .264/25/85
No. 94 Chris Carter - .227/37/88
No. 92 Marcell Ozuna - .269/23/85
You can see as good as these players were last year, they were still barely cracking the top 100.
Bryant is a great player and I'm a believer; his current ranking is probably even fair. But be careful. Considering every league has a Cubs fan, someone is going to over-reach even further than he is already ranked, meaning the hype has probably gone too far.