Usually we tend to say postseason heroes are overrated and overpriced items on Draft Day, but that is a real tough sell with the world champions. They boast some of the best talent in Fantasy Baseball, especially when you consider the potent contender that plays in one of the game's best hitter's parks.

Go ahead and try to avoid Chase Utley, Ryan Howard, Jimmy Rollins, Cole Hamels or Brad Lidge. The truth is, those guys might actually be a bit undervalued where they will get picked this spring.

Utley has the injury risk coming off hip surgery, perhaps even the perception he will miss the season's first month. We think he will be just fine for opening day, though. He is that kind of competitor.

Howard has that low batting average and strikeouts stigma weighing him down in the first round. But, he is slugging for a long-term contract and might actually go .280-50-140-110 as a late first-round pick. His bust factor is really low at that point.

Rollins is coming off a relatively disappointing year after his MVP campaign of 2007, so many might not touch him until Round 2. But, with another full year of health in that lineup and home hitter's park, he still can be a good value in the middle of Round 1 -- especially in Rotisserie formats.

Hamels should have plenty of hype after last October, but how many leagues do you actually see him picked in the area of Johan Santana, CC Sabathia and Tim Lincecum? Very, very few. But he has that kind of ability now that he has proven capable beyond the 200-inning threshhold.

It is a testament to the talent of those players that we can call them such certain things after the longest year of their professional careers.

Sleeper: Ronny Paulino, C

Hey, have you heard about how much your's truly likes a player in his prime? Paulino is coming off a lost season, but we think he will be a big surprise in spring training and rise up for a career year with the Phillies, who acquired him at the Winter Meetings in an under-the-radar deal. The best part about his burgeoning career year is Paulino is going into spring training having to compete just to make the roster, much less start. It is not like Carlos Ruiz or the aging Chris Coste will knock anyone's socks off. Drafting catchers is a mostly fruitless proposition, but picking Paulino in the last round could actually give you something to be proud of. He has .280-15-70-60 potential, which would make him a top 10 Fantasy backstop -- one you picked up after 25 other catchers are off the board on Draft Day.

Bust: Jamie Moyer, SP

We have to repeat: We see a lot of stable values with the Phillies Fantasy options this season. That is why we resort to the obvious to say a 46-year-old is a Fantasy bust this season. In order to be a bust, someone must value you and we are pretty sure Moyer will generate some interest after his 16-win season last year. He is, after all, expected to get a lot of run support from the NL's best offense, if not wins potential from baseball's defending champions. But, our view is you should avoid Moyer in all mixed leagues and leave him as a fall-back option for NL-only formats. It is just not a good policy to buy into a pitcher that old, even if he has proven he can get by on guile.

Breakout: Jayson Werth, OF

Werth had a career year last season, hitting 24 homers and stealing 20 bases in a mere 418 at-bats. Imagine if he produces at that rate for his first full season? Werth, who has finally put wrist issues behind him, will get plenty of at-bats this year as one of the lone right-handers in the Phillies' lefty-leaning lineup. We don't have the guts to project a .280-25-100-100-25 season for him, but there has to be little you saw from last year to think he isn't otherwise capable of those numbers. Years of injury risk and the fact he has never had more than 418 at-bats in a season might even make Werth a sleeper for you in the latter rounds on Draft Day. That supporting cast and bandbox hitter's park certainly work in his favor nicely.

Philadelphia Phillies Outlook
Projected lineup
Pos.
Projected Rotation
1 Jimmy Rollins SS 1 Cole Hamels LH
2 Shane Victorino CF 2 Brett Myers RH
3 Chase Utley 2B 3 Joe Blanton RH
4 Ryan Howard 1B 4 Jamie Moyer LH
5 Raul Ibanez LF 5 Kyle Kendrick RH
6 Jayson Werth RF Alt J.A. Happ LH
7 Pedro Feliz 3B Top bullpen arms
8 Ronny Paulino C CL Brad Lidge RH
Top bench options SU Ryan Madson RH
R Greg Dobbs 3B RP Chan Ho Park RH
R Geoff Jenkins OF RP Chad Durbin RH
R Carlos Ruiz/ Chris Coste C RP Adam Eaton RH
Rookies/Prospects Age Pos. 2008 high Destination
1 Carlos Carrasco 22 RH SP Triple-A Triple-A
There is a chance he earns the No. 5 spot in the rotation out of spring training, so if he does, look out.
2 Joe Savery 23 LH SP High Class A Double-A
Compared to Mark Mulder, Savery could be a real big factor for Fantasy owners in the second half.
3 J.A. Happ 26 LH SP Majors Triple-A
If not for Kendrick's experience, Happ would be our pick to open the year in the rotation; he can help in '09.
4 Michael Taylor 23 OF High Class A Double-A
Breakthrough year makes him a potential star and perhaps even an impact player before the end of the year.
5 Kyle Drabek 24 RH SP Double-A Triple-A
Son for former Pirates ace Doug, Kyle has overcome Tommy John surgery and could be a factor in 2010.
Best of the rest: OF Dominic Brown, C Lou Marson, SS Jason Donald, C Travis D'Arnaud, OF Zach Collier, SP Antonio Bastardo, SP Jason Knapp, OF John Mayberry, 2B Brad Harman, SP Scott Mathieson, SP Drew Carpenter, 3B Anthony Hewitt, SP Julian Sampson, SP Drew Naylor, OF Anthony Gose, SP Vance Worley, SP Mike Stutes, SS Freddy Galvis, SP Edgar Garcia, 3B Travis Mattair, OF Quintin Berry, RP Pat Overholt, RP Sergio Escalona, SP Trevor May and SP Mike Cisco.

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