Graphical Player 2010 is currently available only from Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble Booksellers, or your local bookseller.
Takes baseball stats to a new dimension! So useful that I wondered why nobody had done this before.
—BaseballThinkFactory.com
If you play fantasy baseball, Graphical Player is a must-own!
—AmazinAvenue.com
This book is pure gold.
—ThePastime.net
Somebody should call Topps and Fleer, because these are the pictures that should be on the backs of their cards!
—BallsSticksStuff.com
I highly recommend it for veteran fantasy baseball players looking for an edge to help get their game to the next level.
—Bloop Single
Congratulations to John Burnson and his team of writers,
champions of the 2008 CBS Sportsline Fantasy League of Experts.
For decades, baseball statistical analysis has been limited to long, hard-to-follow columns of numbers, leaving bewildered readers to pick out the trends. But the sixth edition of Graphical Player presents the information you need in the simplest and most natural way: visually. With its revolutionary, at-a-glance “dashboards,” the Graphical Player makes it easy to see who’s moving up, who’s moving down, and who’s moving out.
John Burnson and his crew from Heater magazine won the 2008 CBS Sportsline Fantasy League of Experts—a head-to-head points league that includes twelve of the
biggest names in baseball analysis, such as ESPN, Sporting News, and RotoWorld. Now John Burnson and the Heater team turn their expertise to giving readers the “big picture” to help them rule over their own leagues.
Graphical Player includes profiles for 900 ballplayers from both the majors and the minors, chosen expressly for their impact in 2009 and their interest to fantasy leaguers.
On Draft Day, the clock doesn’t stop while you pore over names. Keep your head in the game, not in your notes. For an informed decision in a flash, grab the Graphical Player.
| John Burnson is the publisher of Heater magazine, a weekly baseball magazine now in its fourth year. For nine years he wrote for BaseballHQ, where he invented the versions of xERA and xBA that are still used there today. |