Archive for Dynasty

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: May 13–19

Welcome back to the Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner. Based on the Roster Resource Probables Grid, I’ve organized every starter slated to start next week into four categories: start, maybe, risky, and sit. The first and last category are pretty self-explanatory. Starters who fall into the “maybe” category are guys you could start if you need to keep up with the innings pitched pace in points leagues or need to hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues; they’re good bets to turn in a decent start, but you shouldn’t automatically insert them into your lineup. If you’ve fallen behind on the innings pitched pace or you’re really starving for starts in a head-to-head matchup, you could turn to a “risky” starter or two.

I’ve also calculated a “Matchup Score” for each series using a straight combination of opponent’s home/away wOBA, opponent wOBA over the last 14 days, and the park factor for the ballpark the teams are playing in. It’s indexed so that 100 is average and anything above that is a favorable matchup and anything below is unfavorable. That matchup rating informs some of the sit/start recommendations I’m making, though the quality of the pitcher definitely takes precedence.

May 13–19
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI CIN (179) DET (130) Jordan Montgomery (x2), Brandon Pfaadt, Zac Gallen Slade Cecconi, Ryne Nelson
ATL CHC (136) SDP (65) Reynaldo López (x2), Chris Sale, Charlie Morton, Max Fried Bryce Elder
BAL TOR (143) SEA (107) Corbin Burnes (x2), Kyle Bradish Cole Irvin, John Means, Dean Kremer
BOS TBR (92) @STL (163) Kutter Crawford (x2), Tanner Houck, Nick Pivetta (@STL) Nick Pivetta (vTBR), Cooper Criswell, Brayan Bello
CHC @ATL (103) PIT (141) Javier Assad, Justin Steele, Shota Imanaga (vPIT) Shota Imanaga (@ATL), Jameson Taillon Hayden Wesneski
CHW WSN (67) @NYY (33) Erick Fedde 페디 Chris Flexen 플렉센 (x2), Garrett Crochet, Mike Clevinger, Michael Soroka
CIN @ARI (125) @LAD (9) Hunter Greene (@ARI) Graham Ashcraft (@ARI), Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo Frankie Montas, Graham Ashcraft (@LAD), Hunter Greene (@LAD)
CLE @TEX (54) MIN (49) Tanner Bibee (x2) Ben Lively 라이블리, Carlos Carrasco, Triston McKenzie, Logan Allen
COL @SDP (103) @SFG (167) Ryan Feltner Peter Lambert (x2) Cal Quantrill, Austin Gomber, Dakota Hudson
DET MIA (159) @ARI (125) Reese Olson, Tarik Skubal, Jack Flaherty Casey Mize Kenta Maeda (x2)
HOU OAK (78) MIL (49) Framber Valdez Ronel Blanco (x2), Cristian Javier, Justin Verlander Hunter Brown (x2)
KCR @SEA (130) OAK (116) Brady Singer (x2), Michael Wacha, Cole Ragans, Seth Lugo Alec Marsh
LAA STL (121) @TEX (54) Reid Detmers José Soriano (vSTL) Griffin Canning, Tyler Anderson, Patrick Sandoval, José Soriano (@TEX)
LAD @SFG (167) CIN (134) Yoshinobu Yamamoto (x2), Tyler Glasnow, Walker Buehler Gavin Stone (x2), James Paxton
MIA @DET (132) NYM (107) Ryan Weathers, Trevor Rogers, Braxton Garrett Sixto Sánchez (x2), Jesús Luzardo (?)
MIL PIT (121) @HOU (45) Freddy Peralta Colin Rea (vPIT), Joe Ross Tobias Myers, Bryse Wilson, Colin Rea (@HOU)
MIN NYY (51) @CLE (96) Bailey Ober Pablo López, Joe Ryan, Simeon Woods Richardson Chris Paddack (x2)
NYM PHI (56) @MIA (156) Luis Severino, Sean Manaea (@MIA) Sean Manaea (vPHI), Christian Scott José Buttó, Jose Quintana
NYY @MIN (76) CHW (129) Nestor Cortes, Luis Gil, Carlos Rodón (vCHW) Carlos Rodón (@MIN), Marcus Stroman Clarke Schmidt
OAK @HOU (45) @KCR (107) Paul Blackburn JP Sears (@HOU), Alex Wood, Ross Stripling Osvaldo Bido (?)
PHI @NYM (141) WSN (74) Aaron Nola (x2), Ranger Suárez, Zack Wheeler Cristopher Sánchez (x2), Taijuan Walker
PIT @MIL (49) @CHC (91) Jared Jones Mitch Keller (x2), Paul Skenes Martín Pérez, Bailey Falter Quinn Priester
SDP COL (150) @ATL (103) Dylan Cease Michael King, Joe Musgrove Randy Vásquez (vCOL) Matt Waldron, Randy Vásquez (@ATL)
SEA KCR (118) @BAL (100) George Kirby (x2), Logan Gilbert, Bryan Woo, Bryce Miller, Luis Castillo
SFG LAD (65) COL (176) Logan Webb, Jordan Hicks (vCOL) Jordan Hicks (vLAD), Kyle Harrison Keaton Winn, Mason Black
STL @LAA (58) BOS (80) Sonny Gray Lance Lynn Kyle Gibson, Miles Mikolas
TBR @BOS (74) @TOR (103) Zach Eflin (@TOR), Aaron Civale (@TOR) Zach Eflin (@BOS), Aaron Civale (@BOS), Taj Bradley, Zack Littell Tyler Alexander
TEX CLE (98) LAA (87) Jon Gray Andrew Heaney, Nathan Eovaldi (?) Michael Lorenzen (x2)
TOR @BAL (100) TBR (76) Yusei Kikuchi, Kevin Gausman José Berríos (x2), Chris Bassitt Alek Manoah
WSN @CHW (112) @PHI (29) Trevor Williams (@CHW), Mitchell Parker, MacKenzie Gore Patrick Corbin, Jake Irvin, Trevor Williams (@PHI)

A few general schedule notes:

  • The only schedule quirk next week is a four-game, home-and-home series between the Phillies and Mets. They’ll start off with two games in New York and then two games in Philadelphia. The matchups are poor for the Mets no matter where they’re playing since the Phillies offense has been so good recently. For the Phillies, the matchup is a lot better in the pitcher friendly confines of Citi Field.
  • Teams to avoid with a pair of tough matchups include the Guardians and White Sox. Cleveland travels to Texas to face the Rangers and then hosts the red hot Twins. You’re probably not rostering any Chicago starters except for Erick Fedde and he’s the only recommendation I have from their rotation in a revenge game against his former team, the Nationals.
  • The Diamondbacks and Dodgers both have a pair of easier matchups on the docket next week. Arizona hosts the Reds and the Tigers, both of whom have struggling offenses. Los Angeles travels to San Francisco and then hosts the Reds.

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: May 6–12

Welcome back to the Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner. Based on the Roster Resource Probables Grid, I’ve organized every starter slated to start next week into four categories: start, maybe, risky, and sit. The first and last category are pretty self-explanatory. Starters who fall into the “maybe” category are guys you could start if you need to keep up with the innings pitched pace in points leagues or need to hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues; they’re good bets to turn in a decent start, but you shouldn’t automatically insert them into your lineup. If you’ve fallen behind on the innings pitched pace or you’re really starving for starts in a head-to-head matchup, you could turn to a “risky” starter or two.

I’ve also calculated a “Matchup Score” for each series using a straight combination of opponent’s home/away wOBA, opponent wOBA over the last 14 days, and the park factor for the ballpark the teams are playing in. It’s indexed so that 100 is average and anything above that is a favorable matchup and anything below is unfavorable. That matchup rating informs some of the sit/start recommendations I’m making, though the quality of the pitcher definitely takes precedence.

May 6–12
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @CIN (74) @BAL (90) Zac Gallen(x2), Jordan Montgomery, Brandon Pfaadt Slade Cecconi, Ryne Nelson
ATL BOS (49) @NYM (137) Reynaldo López, Chris Sale, Charlie Morton, Max Fried Bryce Elder
BAL @WSN (101) ARI (99) Corbin Burnes, Kyle Bradish Cole Irvin, Dean Kremer John Means
BOS @ATL (81) WSN (85) Tanner Houck Kutter Crawford, Cooper Criswell Nick Pivetta (?) Chase Anderson
CHC SDP (94) @PIT (162) Shota Imanaga, Jameson Taillon, Javier Assad Justin Steele (?), Hayden Wesneski
CHW @TBR (155) CLE (45) Erick Fedde 페디 Mike Clevinger (?), Garrett Crochet Michael Soroka (x2), Chris Flexen 플렉센
CIN ARI (52) @SFG (162) Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo Hunter Greene Frankie Montas (?), Graham Ashcraft
CLE DET (86) @CHW (117) Tanner Bibee, Ben Lively 라이블리 Triston McKenzie (x2), Logan Allen (x2) Carlos Carrasco
COL SFG (70) TEX (56) Dakota Hudson (x2), Peter Lambert, Cal Quantrill, Austin Gomber, Ryan Feltner
DET @CLE (52) HOU (124) Tarik Skubal Jack Flaherty (x2), Reese Olson Kenta Maeda, Casey Mize
HOU @NYY (74) @DET (112) Framber Valdez Justin Verlander (x2), Ronel Blanco, Cristian Javier Hunter Brown
KCR MIL (74) @LAA (63) Cole Ragans (x2) Seth Lugo (x2), Brady Singer, Michael Wacha
LAA @PIT (162) KCR (110) Reid Detmers Tyler Anderson (x2), Patrick Sandoval (x2) José Soriano, Griffin Canning
LAD MIA (135) @SDP (117) Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow Walker Buehler (?), Gavin Stone James Paxton
MIA @LAD (16) PHI (83) Trevor Rogers Edward Cabrera, Ryan Weathers, Sixto Sánchez Braxton Garrett (?)
MIL @KCR (119) STL (131) Freddy Peralta Bryse Wilson (x2), Colin Rea (x2), Joe Ross Tobias Myers
MIN SEA (108) @TOR (103) Bailey Ober (x2), Pablo López, Joe Ryan Simeon Woods Richardson (x2), Chris Paddack
NYM @STL (160) ATL (90) Sean Manaea José Buttó, Luis Severino Jose Quintana, Christian Scott Adrian Houser
NYY HOU (85) @TBR (155) Nestor Cortes, Luis Gil (@TBR) Marcus Stroman, Clarke Schmidt Luis Gil (vHOU), Carlos Rodón
OAK TEX (117) @SEA (124) Paul Blackburn Ross Stripling, JP Sears Alex Wood (x2), Joe Boyle
PHI TOR (108) @MIA (182) Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola, Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez (@MIA) Cristopher Sánchez (vSFG), Taijuan Walker
PIT LAA (110) CHC (153) Jared Jones Mitch Keller (x2), Martín Pérez Bailey Falter Quinn Priester
SDP @CHC (90) LAD (40) Yu Darvish (@CHC), Dylan Cease Joe Musgrove, Yu Darvish (vLAD) Michael King, Matt Waldron
SEA @MIN (72) OAK (108) Luis Castillo (x2), George Kirby, Logan Gilbert, Bryce Miller Emerson Hancock, Bryan Woo (?)
SFG @COL (99) CIN (180) Logan Webb Kyle Harrison (vCIN) Jordan Hicks, Keaton Winn Kyle Harrison (@COL)
STL NYM (99) @MIL (47) Sonny Gray Lance Lynn Miles Mikolas (x2), Steven Matz (x2), Kyle Gibson
TBR CHW (164) NYY (81) Zach Eflin, Aaron Civale Zack Littell, Ryan Pepiot Tyler Alexander (x2)
TEX @OAK (155) @COL (99) Nathan Eovaldi, Andrew Heaney (@OAK), Michael Lorenzen Dane Dunning, Jon Gray, Andrew Heaney (@COL)
TOR @PHI (40) MIN (34) José Berríos, Yusei Kikuchi, Kevin Gausman Chris Bassitt
WSN BAL (43) @BOS (65) MacKenzie Gore Mitchell Parker Trevor Williams, Patrick Corbin, Jake Irvin

A few general schedule notes:

  • There are a bunch of teams with two off days next week: the Blue Jays, Braves, Nationals, Orioles, Red Sox. These teams may take the extra rest day to reset their rotation so keep an eye on their announced starters to make sure the matchups are where you want them.
  • The Rangers and A’s have a scheduled double-header on Wednesday and both teams will need to call up a spot starter. Texas will likely give Jack Leiter his second big league start and it comes against a surprisingly decent Oakland ballclub.
  • It’s possible we’ll see the activations of Walker Buehler, Justin Steele, Nick Pivetta, Frankie Montas, Bryan Woo, and Braxton Garrett next week. Those pitching staffs will be in flux as they figure out how to fit those injured pitchers back into the rotation.
  • The Blue Jays and Nationals have a tough week ahead. Toronto travels to Philadelphia for a couple of games before hosting the red hot Twins. The Nationals have a two-game Beltway series on tap and then will travel to Boston and the cozy confines of Fenway Park.

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: April 29–May 5

Welcome back to the Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner. Based on the Roster Resource Probables Grid, I’ve organized every starter slated to start next week into four categories: start, maybe, risky, and sit. The first and last category are pretty self-explanatory. Starters who fall into the “maybe” category are guys you could start if you need to keep up with the innings pitched pace in points leagues or need to hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues; they’re good bets to turn in a decent start, but you shouldn’t automatically insert them into your lineup. If you’ve fallen behind on the innings pitched pace or you’re really starving for starts in a head-to-head matchup, you could turn to a “risky” starter or two.

I’ve also calculated a “Matchup Score” for each series using a straight combination of opponent’s home/away wOBA, opponent wOBA over the last 14 days, and the park factor for the ballpark the teams are playing in. It’s indexed so that 100 is average and anything above that is a favorable matchup and anything below is unfavorable. That matchup rating informs some of the sit/start recommendations I’m making, though the quality of the pitcher definitely takes precedence. To start the season, I’ll be relying on projected team wOBA until there’s sufficient in-season data to start calculating these matchup ratings.

April 29–May 5
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI LAD (64) SDP (120) Jordan Montgomery, Zac Gallen, Brandon Pfaadt Tommy Henry (x2), Slade Cecconi
ATL @SEA (93) @LAD (20) Max Fried (@SEA), Reynaldo López, Chris Sale Max Fried (@LAD) Charlie Morton Bryce Elder
BAL NYY (96) @CIN (53) Corbin Burnes Grayson Rodriguez (x2) Dean Kremer (x2), Albert Suárez 수아레즈 Cole Irvin
BOS SFG (98) @MIN (124) Kutter Crawford, Tanner Houck Cooper Criswell (x2), Josh Winckowski Chase Anderson
CHC @NYM (82) MIL (104) Javier Assad (x2), Shota Imanaga Jameson Taillon (x2) Ben Brown (?), Jordan Wicks
CHW MIN (87) @STL (124) Garrett Crochet (x2), Erick Fedde 페디 Michael Soroka, Chris Flexen 플렉센, Jonathan Cannon
CIN @SDP (104) BAL (20) Nick Lodolo (@SDP) Nick Martinez Graham Ashcraft, Hunter Greene, Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo (vBAL)
CLE @HOU (49) LAA (84) Tanner Bibee Carlos Carrasco (x2), Triston McKenzie, Logan Allen, Ben Lively 라이블리
COL @MIA (173) @PIT (156) Ryan Feltner (x2) Dakota Hudson, Peter Lambert, Cal Quantrill, Austin Gomber
DET STL (131) @NYY (71) Tarik Skubal Jack Flaherty, Reese Olson Kenta Maeda (x2), Casey Mize
HOU CLE (104) SEA (84) Justin Verlander, Framber Valdez Ronel Blanco Hunter Brown (x2) Spencer Arrighetti
KCR @TOR (62) TEX (120) Cole Ragans Seth Lugo, Brady Singer, Michael Wacha Daniel Lynch (?)
LAA PHI (47) @CLE (109) Reid Detmers Griffin Canning (x2), Tyler Anderson, Patrick Sandoval, José Soriano
LAD @ARI (100) ATL (11) Yoshinobu Yamamoto Walker Buehler (?), Tyler Glasnow James Paxton (@ARI) Gavin Stone, James Paxton (vATL)
MIA COL (149) @OAK (184) Trevor Rogers (x2), Jesús Luzardo, Edward Cabrera, Ryan Weathers
MIL TBR (118) @CHC (96) Freddy Peralta Colin Rea, Joe Ross, Tobias Myers
MIN @CHW (133) BOS (71) Joe Ryan (x2), Bailey Ober, Pablo López Simeon Woods Richardson, Chris Paddack
NYM CHC (98) @TBR (153) Luis Severino (x2), Sean Manaea (x2) José Buttó, Jose Quintana Adrian Houser
NYY @BAL (67) DET (127) Marcus Stroman, Nestor Cortes (vDET) Nestor Cortes (@BAL), Clarke Schmidt (vDET) Clarke Schmidt (@BAL), Luis Gil, Carlos Rodón
OAK PIT (171) MIA (176) JP Sears, Paul Blackburn Joe Boyle (x2), Ross Stripling Alex Wood
PHI @LAA (67) SFG (80) Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola, Ranger Suárez Cristopher Sánchez (x2) Taijuan Walker
PIT @OAK (184) COL (136) Mitch Keller, Jared Jones Bailey Falter (x2), Martín Pérez Quinn Priester
SDP CIN (91) @ARI (100) Dylan Cease, Michael King Joe Musgrove Matt Waldron (x2)
SEA ATL (33) @HOU (49) Bryce Miller (x2), Luis Castillo, George Kirby, Logan Gilbert Emerson Hancock
SFG @BOS (58) @PHI (49) Logan Webb (x2) Jordan Hicks, Keaton Winn Kyle Harrison
STL @DET (164) CHW (182) Sonny Gray, Lance Lynn Steven Matz (x2), Kyle Gibson, Miles Mikolas
TBR @MIL (84) NYM (96) Zach Eflin, Aaron Civale Ryan Pepiot (x2), Zack Littell Tyler Alexander
TEX WSN (113) @KCR (136) Jon Gray (x2), Nathan Eovaldi Michael Lorenzen, Dane Dunning Andrew Heaney
TOR KCR (89) @WSN (102) José Berríos, Yusei Kikuchi, Kevin Gausman Chris Bassitt Yariel Rodriguez (x2)
WSN @TEX (87) TOR (64) Jake Irvin (@MIA), MacKenzie Gore (x2) Jake Irvin (vTOR) Trevor Williams, Mitchell Parker, Patrick Corbin

A few general schedule notes:

  • Simply based on the way the schedules lined up, it looks like there are a ton of teams who have a pair of easy opponents next week: the A’s, Cardinals, Marlins, Pirates and Rockies all look like they’ve got easily exploitable matchups. The problem is that those teams don’t have completely trustworthy starting rotations to begin with, which means there are still some risky plays despite the opponents.
  • I’d be comfortable starting anyone from the Marlins rotation in their series against the Rockies and A’s and they’ll also need callup fill-ins for two spot starts next week. It probably won’t be Braxton Garrett as he’s still working back from his shoulder injury, but keep an eye on his progress as Miami might activate him off the IL early to make one of those starts next week.
  • This is one of the few opportunities to go ahead and start any Rockies starters you might be rostering since they’re on the road playing two weak offenses (but let’s be honest, that’s probably not likely). I actually think Ryan Feltner is a sneaky streaming play since he has a two-start week and has been pretty decent this year.
  • On the flip side, the Giants and Mariners have two pretty tough matchups on the docket next week. San Francisco travels to Boston and Philadelphia and Logan Webb seems like the only matchup-proof starter in their rotation (and he has a double-start week too). The Mariners have the harder task of hosting the Braves and then traveling to Houston. Their cadre of aces have been absolutely dominant recently, but it’s a tall ask to face two of the best offenses in baseball.

Ottoneu Drip: Finding Under-rostered Pitchers: April 23, 2024

The number of pitching injuries haven’t let up yet and it feels like everyone is looking for starting pitching to help out their rosters. Here’s a trio of pitchers who are rostered in under 10% of all Ottoneu leagues who could be useful pickups if you’re looking for an option to fill in for an injured starter or two.

Under-rostered Starters
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% Stuff+ Pts/IP Roster%
Paul Blackburn OAK 25 2.73 10.3% 94 6.41 6.3%
Mitchell Parker WSN 12 1.21 27.9% 90 7.88 3.4%
Albert Suárez 수아레즈 BAL 11.1 2.41 16.3% 94 6.59 1.6%

Because he’s spent his career pitching in Oakland, Paul Blackburn’s success has gone quietly unnoticed. He’s also dealt with a myriad of injuries and has surpassed 20 starts in a season just twice in his eight-year career. Still, over the past three seasons, he’s compiled a 3.95 FIP with a decent strikeout-to-walk ratio and some excellent contact management. This year, it took him four starts to finally allow his first run of the season. He’s dramatically reduced the usage of his sinker and is now throwing all six of the pitches in his repertoire between 20% and 10% of the time. His cutter is now technically his primary pitch and the effectiveness of that pitch has increased this year thanks to slightly higher velocity and horizontal movement.

In Mitchell Parker’s debut, he held the Dodgers to just two runs in five innings. In his second start in the big leagues, he held the Astros scoreless over seven innings. Those are two of the best lineups in baseball and Parker carved through them. He only throws his fastball in the low-90s, but his over-the-top delivery creates natural carry with the pitch. And when he pairs it with his 12-to-6 curveball, it becomes a deadly pitch pair. He’s also added a splitter to his repertoire recently and his scouting report says he also throws a slider. He’s survived his first two starts with some pretty good batted ball luck and his profile that of an up-and-down back-end starter. With the new splitter and improved command, it’s possible he’s raised his ceiling a bit, but I’d be wary of paying too much to roster him at this point.

Albert Suárez’s story is a fun one. He pitched for the Giants in limited action way back in 2016 and 2017, bounced around in Japan and Korea for five years and finally signed a minor league contract with the Orioles this offseason. He had a great spring training and finally got the call up to make a spot start last Wednesday. He held the Twins scoreless over 5.2 innings in his first big league action in seven years and then held the Angels scoreless over another 5.2 innings in his second start yesterday. His calling card is a mid-90s fastball with plenty of carry that he can command at the top of the zone. Batters have swung and missed on nearly 20% of the heater’s he’s thrown in his two starts so far. That’s a ridiculous whiff rate, especially for a fastball. His repertoire is rounded out with a changeup and cutter, both of which are returning decent results so far. With the Orioles dealing with plenty of injuries in their starting rotation, it’s likely that Suárez will get a long run of starts to prove he can stick in the majors for good.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: April 22–28

Welcome back to the Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner. Based on the Roster Resource Probables Grid, I’ve organized every starter slated to start next week into four categories: start, maybe, risky, and sit. The first and last category are pretty self-explanatory. Starters who fall into the “maybe” category are guys you could start if you need to keep up with the innings pitched pace in points leagues or need to hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues; they’re good bets to turn in a decent start, but you shouldn’t automatically insert them into your lineup. If you’ve fallen behind on the innings pitched pace or you’re really starving for starts in a head-to-head matchup, you could turn to a “risky” starter or two.

I’ve also calculated a “Matchup Score” for each series using a straight combination of opponent’s home/away wOBA, opponent wOBA over the last 14 days, and the park factor for the ballpark the teams are playing in. It’s indexed so that 100 is average and anything above that is a favorable matchup and anything below is unfavorable. That matchup rating informs some of the sit/start recommendations I’m making, though the quality of the pitcher definitely takes precedence. To start the season, I’ll be relying on projected team wOBA until there’s sufficient in-season data to start calculating these matchup ratings.

April 22–28
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @STL (115) @SEA (108) Brandon Pfaadt (x2), Jordan Montgomery, Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelly 켈리 Ryne Nelson
ATL MIA (151) CLE (138) Reynaldo López (x2), Max Fried, Chris Sale, Charlie Morton Darius Vines
BAL @LAA (54) OAK (169) Grayson Rodriguez (x2), Corbin Burnes Albert Suárez 수아레즈, Dean Kremer, Cole Irvin
BOS @CLE (127) CHC (88) Tanner Houck (x2) Brayan Bello, Kutter Crawford Cooper Criswell (O), Naoyuki Uwasawa (?)
CHC HOU (59) @BOS (72) Shota Imanaga, Javier Assad Jordan Wicks (x2) Jameson Taillon, Kyle Hendricks
CHW @MIN (154) TBR (97) Garrett Crochet Erick Fedde 페디 Chris Flexen 플렉센 (x2), Jonathan Cannon, Michael Soroka, Nick Nastrini
CIN PHI (66) @TEX (66) Hunter Greene (x2), Andrew Abbott (x2), Nick Lodolo Graham Ashcraft, Frankie Montas
CLE BOS (70) @ATL (41) Ben Lively 라이블리 (x2), Carlos Carrasco, Triston McKenzie, Logan Allen, Tanner Bibee
COL SDP (61) HOU (23) Austin Gomber (x2), Ryan Feltner, Dakota Hudson, Kyle Freeland, Cal Quantrill
DET @TBR (147) KCR (113) Tarik Skubal (x2), Jack Flaherty Reese Olson, Casey Mize Kenta Maeda
HOU @CHC (97) @COL (50) Justin Verlander Hunter Brown, J.P. France, Cristian Javier Ronel Blanco
KCR TOR (104) @DET (181) Brady Singer (x2), Michael Wacha (x2), Cole Ragans, Seth Lugo Alec Marsh
LAA BAL (34) MIN (120) Reid Detmers (vMIN) Reid Detmers (vBAL), Patrick Sandoval Griffin Canning, Tyler Anderson, José Soriano
LAD @WSN (129) @TOR (56) Tyler Glasnow (x2), Yoshinobu Yamamoto Walker Buehler (?) Gavin Stone, James Paxton
MIA @ATL (41) WSN (174) Edward Cabrera, Trevor Rogers (vWSN) Jesús Luzardo, Ryan Weathers Trevor Rogers (@ATL), A.J. Puk
MIL @PIT (149) NYY (32) Freddy Peralta DL Hall Joe Ross (@PIT), Wade Miley (@PIT), Colin Rea Joe Ross (vNYY), Wade Miley (vNYY)
MIN CHW (174) @LAA (54) Pablo López (x2), Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober Chris Paddack (vCHW) Louie Varland, Chris Paddack (@LAA)
NYM @SFG (163) STL (102) Luis Severino, Sean Manaea Jose Quintana (x2), José Buttó Adrian Houser
NYY OAK (145) @MIL (68) Carlos Rodón (vOAK), Marcus Stroman (vOAK), Clarke Schmidt, Nestor Cortes Luis Gil, Marcus Stroman (@MIL) Carlos Rodón (@MIL)
OAK @NYY (36) @BAL (72) JP Sears (x2), Paul Blackburn (x2) Joe Boyle, Alex Wood, Ross Stripling
PHI @CIN (61) @SDP (97) Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez, Spencer Turnbull Taijuan Walker (?)
PIT MIL (97) @SFG (163) Jared Jones (x2) Mitch Keller, Martín Pérez Bailey Falter (x2), Quinn Priester
SDP @COL (50) PHI (104) Dylan Cease (vPHI) Joe Musgrove, Michael King (vPHI) Dylan Cease (@COL) Michael King (@COL), Matt Waldron, Randy Vásquez (?)
SEA @TEX (66) ARI (90) Logan Gilbert (x2), Bryce Miller, Luis Castillo, George Kirby Emerson Hancock
SFG NYM (113) PIT (167) Logan Webb, Jordan Hicks Keaton Winn (x2), Blake Snell, Kyle Harrison
STL ARI (113) @NYM (88) Sonny Gray Lance Lynn (x2), Steven Matz Kyle Gibson, Miles Mikolas
TBR DET (174) @CHW (136) Zack Littell (x2), Ryan Pepiot, Zach Eflin, Aaron Civale Tyler Alexander
TEX SEA (104) CIN (88) Nathan Eovaldi Jon Gray (x2) Dane Dunning, Michael Lorenzen Jack Leiter
TOR @KCR (113) LAD (52) Yusei Kikuchi (@KCR), Kevin Gausman (@KCR), José Berríos Kevin Gausman (vLAD) Chris Bassitt, Yusei Kikuchi (vLAD), Yariel Rodriguez
WSN LAD (54) @MIA (174) MacKenzie Gore, Trevor Williams Patrick Corbin (x2), Jake Irvin, Mitchell Parker

A few general schedule notes:

  • The Braves and Rays look like they have pretty easy schedules next week. Tampa hosts the Tigers before traveling to face the hapless White Sox next weekend while Atlanta hosts the Marlins and Guardians. The Giants also have six games at home next week which should be a boon to their starting rotation.
  • On the other hand, the Reds and Guardians have tough slates next week. Cincinnati hosts the Phillies before heading out to face the Rangers on the road while Cleveland hosts the Red Sox and then travel to Atlanta over the weekend.
  • The Astros have a weird week with two off days and just five games including two in Colorado next weekend.
  • The Phillies might activate Taijuan Walker from the IL next week. Keep an eye on their rotation to see how they handle his activation while allowing Spencer Turnbull to continue his hot start to the season.
  • The Red Sox will need to make a roster move to find a fill in for the injured Garrett Whitlock on Sunday. Right now, Naoyuki Uwasawa is listed on the Probables Grid. In addition, Boston used Cooper Criswell as a bulk reliever behind an opener yesterday. If they continue that pattern next week, make sure he’s in the right SP or RP slot in your lineup depending on how the Sox deploy him.

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: April 15–21

Welcome back to the Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner. Based on the Roster Resource Probables Grid, I’ve organized every starter slated to start next week into four categories: start, maybe, risky, and sit. The first and last category are pretty self-explanatory. Starters who fall into the “maybe” category are guys you could start if you need to keep up with the innings pitched pace in points leagues or need to hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues; they’re good bets to turn in a decent start, but you shouldn’t automatically insert them into your lineup. If you’ve fallen behind on the innings pitched pace or you’re really starving for starts in a head-to-head matchup, you could turn to a “risky” starter or two.

I’ve also calculated a “Matchup Score” for each series using a straight combination of opponent’s home/away wOBA, opponent wOBA over the last 14 days, and the park factor for the ballpark the teams are playing in. It’s indexed so that 100 is average and anything above that is a favorable matchup and anything below is unfavorable. That matchup rating informs some of the sit/start recommendations I’m making, though the quality of the pitcher definitely takes precedence. To start the season, I’ll be relying on projected team wOBA until there’s sufficient in-season data to start calculating these matchup ratings.

April 15–21
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI CHC (93) @SFG (165) Merrill Kelly 켈리 (x2), Zac Gallen Brandon Pfaadt, Jordan Montgomery (?) Tommy Henry, Ryne Nelson
ATL @HOU (45) TEX (54) Max Fried, Chris Sale, Charlie Morton Reynaldo López (x2) Darius Vines
BAL MIN (156) @KCR (118) Grayson Rodriguez, Corbin Burnes Tyler Wells Cole Irvin (x2), Dean Kremer
BOS CLE (102) @PIT (104) Kutter Crawford (x2), Garrett Whitlock (x2), Tanner Houck Brayan Bello Cooper Criswell (?)
CHC @ARI (90) MIA (160) Shota Imanaga Javier Assad, Ben Brown (vMIA) Ben Brown (@ARI), Kyle Hendricks, Jordan Wicks, Jameson Taillon (?)
CHW KCR (61) @PHI (81) Garrett Crochet Erick Fedde 페디 (x2) Jared Shuster, Chris Flexen 플렉센, Michael Soroka
CIN @SEA (149) LAA (52) Frankie Montas (@SEA), Hunter Greene, Nick Martinez Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo, Frankie Montas (vLAA)
CLE @BOS (77) OAK (145) Logan Allen, Tanner Bibee (vOAK) Tanner Bibee (@BOS), Carlos Carrasco, Triston McKenzie Ben Lively 라이블리 (?)
COL @PHI (81) SEA (120) Ryan Feltner Cal Quantrill (x2), Austin Gomber, Dakota Hudson, Kyle Freeland
DET TEX (77) @MIN (151) Tarik Skubal, Jack Flaherty Reese Olson (@MIN), Casey Mize (@MIN) Reese Olson (vTEX), Casey Mize (vTEX), Kenta Maeda
HOU ATL (23) @WSN (118) Ronel Blanco, Cristian Javier Spencer Arrighetti (x2), Hunter Brown, J.P. France
KCR @CHW (129) BAL (122) Seth Lugo (@CHW), Brady Singer, Michael Wacha, Cole Ragans Seth Lugo (vBAL) Alec Marsh
LAA @TBR (136) @CIN (41) Reid Detmers Patrick Sandoval (@TBR) Griffin Canning, Tyler Anderson, Patrick Sandoval (@CIN) José Soriano (x2)
LAD WSN (111) NYM (97) Tyler Glasnow, Yoshinobu Yamamoto Bobby Miller, Walker Buehler (?), Gavin Stone, James Paxton
MIA SFG (160) @CHC (77) Trevor Rogers, Jesús Luzardo A.J. Puk (x2), Edward Cabrera (?), Braxton Garrett (?)
MIL SDP (77) @STL (127) Freddy Peralta DL Hall Joe Ross (x2), Wade Miley, Colin Rea
MIN @BAL (109) DET (161) Pablo López, Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober Chris Paddack Louie Varland (x2)
NYM PIT (97) @LAD (14) Jose Quintana, Luis Severino Sean Manaea Adrian Houser (x2), José Buttó
NYY @TOR (90) TBR (104) Carlos Rodón (x2), Marcus Stroman, Luis Gil, Nestor Cortes Clarke Schmidt
OAK STL (136) @CLE (100) JP Sears Paul Blackburn Ross Stripling (x2), Joe Boyle, Alex Wood
PHI COL (75) CHW (136) Aaron Nola (x2), Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez, Spencer Turnbull, Zack Wheeler
PIT @NYM (129) BOS (95) Jared Jones Mitch Keller Martín Pérez (x2), Bailey Falter Marco Gonzales
SDP @MIL (72) TOR (115) Joe Musgrove (x2), Dylan Cease, Yu Darvish Michael King Matt Waldron
SEA CIN (72) @COL (65) Logan Gilbert George Kirby (vCIN), Bryce Miller Luis Castillo, George Kirby (@COL) Emerson Hancock
SFG @MIA (183) ARI (102) Kyle Harrison (x2), Jordan Hicks (x2), Keaton Winn, Logan Webb, Blake Snell
STL @OAK (181) MIL (109) Sonny Gray (x2), Steven Matz Lance Lynn Kyle Gibson, Miles Mikolas
TBR LAA (106) @NYY (47) Aaron Civale (vLAA), Ryan Pepiot Zack Littell (vLAA), Zach Eflin Aaron Civale (@NYY), Zack Littell (@NYY) Tyler Alexander
TEX @DET (179) @ATL (38) Cody Bradford (@DET), Jon Gray (@DET), Dane Dunning Michael Lorenzen (?) Cody Bradford (@ATL), Nathan Eovaldi Jon Gray (@ATL)
TOR NYY (38) @SDP (97) José Berríos Kevin Gausman, Chris Bassitt (@SDP) Chris Bassitt (vNYY), Yusei Kikuchi Bowden Francis
WSN @LAD (14) HOU (38) MacKenzie Gore Patrick Corbin (x2), Jackson Rutledge (?), Jake Irvin, Trevor Williams

A few general schedule notes:

  • It looks like the Phillies have a pretty easy schedule this week; they’ll host the Rockies and White Sox. Citizens Bank Park is fairly hitter friendly, but both Colorado (outside of Coors) and Chicago have been punchless to start the season. Aaron Nola is the lucky recipient of a two-start week against these weak opponents.
  • I’m also recommending you start everyone in the Giants rotation; they’ll start the week in Miami and then return home to face the Diamondbacks next weekend. Arizona could pose some problems, but the cavernous ballpark in San Francisco should prevent things from getting too out of hand.
  • After their easy week this week, the Braves face both Texas teams next week. That will present some tough matchups, and after Max Fried’s blow up last weekend, it’s hard to trust anyone from Atlanta’s rotation next week.
  • It’s possible we’ll see the season debuts of Walker Buehler, Jordan Montgomery, Edward Cabrera, Braxton Garrett, Michael Lorenzen, and Jameson Taillon next week. If you roster any of those guys, you’re probably already monitoring their rehab starts. Buehler and Montgomery both have pretty easy matchups if they stick to their schedule — those would be the only two I’d recommend starting so quickly off the Injured List.

Ottoneu Drip: Finding Under-rostered Pitchers: April 9, 2024

This column went through a journey last year. It started as a bi-weekly effort to try and find streaming targets for Ottoneu leagues. Due to the large roster sizes and difficulties lining up auctions with the right start dates, streaming wasn’t really a viable strategy for Ottoneu. After a few months, I pivoted to trying to find under-rostered pitchers who were performing well enough to get a second look. I’ll be following that model for this season except this piece will run once a month and it will cover both starters and relievers together.

With so few games played so far, it’s hard to get a gauge on who has actually made tangible improvements and who has simply started off hot. With so many injuries plaguing some of the best pitchers in baseball, at this point, you might just be looking for a warm body to fill some innings. Hopefully the pitchers highlighted below can be more than just filler. Let’s dive in.

Under-rostered Starters
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% Pts/IP Roster%
Alec Marsh KCR 11.2 2.32 12.8% 5.97 14.7%
Spencer Turnbull PHI 11 1.36 29.3% 8.04 13.1%
Cody Bradford TEX 12.2 2.87 20.5% 6.72 12.7%

The entire Royals starting rotation has been extremely impressive to start the season but lost amid the hype surrounding Cole Ragans and the post-hype surrounding Brady Singer were two solid starts from Alec Marsh. Marsh made his major league debut last year, bouncing between the bullpen and the starting rotation throughout the year. He was undone by a 11.4% walk rate and an 18.4% home run rate, both of which drove his ERA and FIP up close to six. Command was always an issue for him during his minor league career so to take a step forward in the big leagues, he’d have to figure out that problem. Through his first two starts of the season, he’s only walked two batters, his Zone% has increased by more than 10 points up to 57.8%, and his Location+ has improved from 94 to 101. His strikeout rate has dipped a bit as he’s filled the zone which bears monitoring, but if he’s managed to address his biggest weakness, he could be in store for a big breakout season.

Back in 2021, it looked like Spencer Turnbull was in the midst of a breakout until a UCL injury derailed his forward momentum and caused him to miss the entire following season. He returned last year and made seven forgettable starts for the Tigers. He managed to win a spot in the Phillies rotation out of spring training and has turned in two brilliant starts already. He’s allowed a single unearned run in 11 innings while striking out 13 and walking just a single batter. The biggest difference for him is a new sweeper that has become one of his primary pitches. His four-seamer also looks a bit different — I’m pretty sure it’s a classification error and the pitch is now more of a hard cutter — but it’s been an effective piece to play off the horizontal movement of his breaking ball.

Cody Bradford is one of the pitchers tasked with filling in until the Rangers get Max Scherzer, Jacob deGrom, and Tyler Mahle back after the All-Star break. So far, he’s turned in two excellent starts, allowing just three runs in 12.2 innings. He doesn’t have overpowering stuff with a fastball that sits in the low 90s. He makes up for the lack of raw velocity with elite extension and tons of carry on his heater. He’s also added a slow, looping curveball to his arsenal this year, giving him a consistent breaking ball that he didn’t possess last year. With Michael Lorenzen’s ramp up time coming to a close soon, it’s possible Bradford will be bumped from the rotation within the next couple of weeks. That could pose a risk if you’re looking for a long-term solution for your pitching staff, but he looks good enough to add as long as he has a job in the near future.

Under-rostered Relievers
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% gmLI Pts/IP Roster%
Fernando Cruz CIN 5.1 1.12 33.3% 1.47 11.23 25.0%
Justin Slaten BOS 5.2 1.06 33.3% 2.19 10.94 9.1%
Hunter Gaddis CLE 5.1 1.68 28.6% 1.74 9.20 0.9%

With starters, you’re looking for longevity and real changes in talent. With relievers, sometimes riding the hot hand is enough.

Fernando Cruz is currently listed fourth on the Reds bullpen pecking order behind Alexis Díaz, Emilio Pagán, and Lucas Sims. Still, he’s earned three holds on the season and has struck out nearly half the batters he’s faced so far. His calling card is an unhittable splitter; that pitch is running a ridiculous 70% whiff rate and has been put in play just once thus far. Even though batters can’t hit his splitter, he has trouble locating it consistently and doesn’t have great command of his other pitches either. That’s led to a pretty high walk rate which could be his downfall. I’m betting he’ll be the number one setup guy behind Díaz in a month or two.

Justin Slaten is a rule-5 pick who is making a name for himself in the Red Sox bullpen. He’s already earned a save and a hold and has the highest average leverage index among the relievers listed above. He struggled with command while a prospect in the Rangers organization, though that hasn’t been a problem for him so far in his brief big league career; he’s struck out six and walked no one so far. Like so many relievers these days, he has a good, hard fastball and a sweeping slider that earns plenty of whiffs. If he’s actually figured out his command issues, it wouldn’t be surprising to see him creep up the pecking order in Boston’s bullpen.

Here’s my deep cut for this article. Hunter Gaddis was an up-and-down spot starter for the Guardians last year, struggling through seven starts and four relief appearances. He struck out just 13.2% of the batters he faced and relied heavily on producing weak contact for his limited success. Fast forward a year and he’s reinvented himself as a hard-throwing reliever. His fastball velocity is up nearly three ticks this year and he’s throwing his slider more than ever. The results speak for themselves: seven strikeouts and one walk in 5.1 innings with three holds. The Guardians are missing a handful of their established high-leverage relievers and Gaddis certainly looks like he’s stepped up to fill the gap.


The Top 30 Projected Hitting Prospects Entering 2024

Kim Klement Neitzel-USA TODAY Sports

This article ranks the game’s top projected hitting prospects by peak wRC+ heading into 2024 (it does not incorporate any 2024 data). It is a counterpart to this February piece on baseball’s top projected pitching prospects. I only just got done with my offseason methodological updates for hitters–please forgive me for publishing this one week into the season!

Read the rest of this entry »


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: April 8–14

Welcome back to the Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner. Based on the Roster Resource Probables Grid, I’ve organized every starter slated to start next week into four categories: start, maybe, risky, and sit. The first and last category are pretty self-explanatory. Starters who fall into the “maybe” category are guys you could start if you need to keep up with the innings pitched pace in points leagues or need to hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues; they’re good bets to turn in a decent start, but you shouldn’t automatically insert them into your lineup. If you’ve fallen behind on the innings pitched pace or you’re really starving for starts in a head-to-head matchup, you could turn to a “risky” starter or two.

I’ve also calculated a “Matchup Score” for each series using a straight combination of opponent’s home/away wOBA, opponent wOBA over the last 14 days, and the park factor for the ballpark the teams are playing in. It’s indexed so that 100 is average and anything above that is a favorable matchup and anything below is unfavorable. That matchup rating informs some of the sit/start recommendations I’m making, though the quality of the pitcher definitely takes precedence. To start the season, I’ll be relying on projected team wOBA until there’s sufficient in-season data to start calculating these matchup ratings.

April 8–14
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @COL (93) STL (124) Brandon Pfaadt, Zac Gallen (vSTL) Zac Gallen (@COL), Merrill Kelly 켈리, Ryne Nelson Tommy Henry
ATL NYM (135) @MIA (176) Charlie Morton (x2), Reynaldo López (x2), Spencer Strider, Max Fried, Chris Sale
BAL @BOS (81) MIL (115) Corbin Burnes, Grayson Rodriguez Tyler Wells Cole Irvin (x2), Dean Kremer
BOS BAL (92) LAA (77) Nick Pivetta Brayan Bello (x2), Kutter Crawford, Garrett Whitlock, Tanner Houck
CHC @SDP (106) @SEA (142) Shota Imanaga Jordan Wicks Javier Assad (x2), Kyle Hendricks
CHW @CLE (102) CIN (36) Erick Fedde 페디, Garrett Crochet Michael Soroka Chris Flexen 플렉센
CIN MIL (68) @CHW (124) Nick Martinez, Frankie Montas (@CHW) Frankie Montas (vMIL), Hunter Greene, Graham Ashcraft (@CHW) Graham Ashcraft (vMIL), Nick Lodolo (?)
CLE CHW (147) NYY (68) Shane Bieber (x2), Logan Allen, Tanner Bibee Carlos Carrasco, Triston McKenzie
COL ARI (34) @TOR (95) Dakota Hudson Kyle Freeland (x2), Cal Quantrill, Austin Gomber, Ryan Feltner
DET @PIT (106) MIN (142) Tarik Skubal, Jack Flaherty Reese Olson (x2), Casey Mize, Kenta Maeda
HOU @KCR (135) TEX (50) Cristian Javier (@KCR), Hunter Brown Framber Valdez (x2), Cristian Javier (vTEX) J.P. France, Ronel Blanco
KCR HOU (70) @NYM (138) Cole Ragans (x2) Michael Wacha Seth Lugo, Brady Singer, Alec Marsh
LAA TBR (81) @BOS (81) Reid Detmers Tyler Anderson (x2), Patrick Sandoval, Griffin Canning Chase Silseth
LAD @MIN (124) SDP (77) Tyler Glasnow, Bobby Miller, Yoshinobu Yamamoto James Paxton (x2), Gavin Stone
MIA @NYY (63) ATL (61) Jesús Luzardo (x2) A.J. Puk, Trevor Rogers, Max Meyer Ryan Weathers
MIL @CIN (32) @BAL (111) Freddy Peralta, DL Hall Jakob Junis (x2), Colin Rea Joe Ross
MIN LAD (47) @DET (167) Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober Pablo López, Chris Paddack (@DET) Louie Varland (@DET) Louie Varland (vLAD), Chris Paddack (vLAD)
NYM @ATL (38) KCR (115) Sean Manaea Jose Quintana, Luis Severino Julio Teheran (x2), Adrian Houser (x2)
NYY MIA (138) @CLE (102) Nestor Cortes (x2), Marcus Stroman Carlos Rodón, Clarke Schmidt, Luis Gil
OAK @TEX (54) WSN (149) Paul Blackburn, Alex Wood (vWSN) JP Sears, Joe Boyle Alex Wood (@TEX), Ross Stripling
PHI @STL (124) PIT (70) Zack Wheeler (x2), Aaron Nola Spencer Turnbull (@STL), Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez Spencer Turnbull (vPIT)
PIT DET (154) @PHI (77) Mitch Keller (vDET), Jared Jones Martín Pérez, Mitch Keller (@PHI) Bailey Falter, Marco Gonzales
SDP CHC (79) @LAD (13) Yu Darvish (vCHC), Joe Musgrove, Dylan Cease Yu Darvish (@LAD) Michael King Matt Waldron
SEA @TOR (95) CHC (72) Luis Castillo (x2), George Kirby, Logan Gilbert Bryce Miller Emerson Hancock
SFG WSN (151) @TBR (126) Blake Snell (x2), Kyle Harrison, Jordan Hicks, Logan Webb Keaton Winn
STL PHI (120) @ARI (86) Miles Mikolas (x2), Zack Thompson, Lance Lynn, Steven Matz, Kyle Gibson
TBR @LAA (56) SFG (138) Zach Eflin (x2), Ryan Pepiot Aaron Civale, Zack Littell Tyler Alexander
TEX OAK (149) @HOU (32) Nathan Eovaldi (vOAK), Jon Gray Michael Lorenzen (?) Nathan Eovaldi (@HOU), Dane Dunning Andrew Heaney (x2)
TOR SEA (124) COL (104) José Berrios (x2), Chris Bassitt, Kevin Gausman Yusei Kikuchi, Bowden Francis
WSN @SFG (149) @OAK (185) MacKenzie Gore Jake Irvin Trevor Williams (x2), Josiah Gray, Patrick Corbin

A few general schedule notes:

  • It’s a great week to roster any of the Braves starters; they host the punchless Mets and then travel to Miami. Charlie Morton and Reynaldo López are the lucky starters to pull a double shift next week.
  • If I had any confidence in their starters, this would also be a great week for the Nationals; they’re on a West Coast swing through the Bay Area next week and play six games in those cavernous stadiums. As it is, I can only recommend MacKenzie Gore wholeheartedly with the rest falling somewhere between “maybe” and “risky.” That’s a shame.
  • The Astros and Rangers have a wrap around four-game series that ends on Monday before meeting up again over the weekend. That means Framber Valdez lines up to face the Rangers twice in one week. After a rough first start to the season he looked much better against the Blue Jays on Tuesday. Still, I don’t really have much interest in seeing if he can tempt fate twice against the Rangers high-powered offense.
  • It’s a rough week to roster any of the Marlins starters; they travel to New York to face the Yankees and then host the Braves.
  • There are a handful of starters who are slated to come off the injured list next week including Blake Snell, Nick Lodolo, and possibly Michael Lorenzen. Normally I wouldn’t recommend starting a pitcher coming off a stint on the IL but Snell and Lorenzen have pretty juicy matchups against the Nationals and A’s, respectively.

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: March 28–April 7

Welcome back to the Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner. Based on the Roster Resource Probables Grid, I’ve organized every starter slated to start next week into four categories: start, maybe, risky, and sit. The first and last category are pretty self-explanatory. Starters who fall into the “maybe” category are guys you could start if you need to keep up with the innings pitched pace in points leagues or need to hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues; they’re good bets to turn in a decent start, but you shouldn’t automatically insert them into your lineup. If you’ve fallen behind on the innings pitched pace or you’re really starving for starts in a head-to-head matchup, you could turn to a “risky” starter or two.

I’ve also calculated a “Matchup Score” for each series using a straight combination of opponent’s home/away wOBA, opponent wOBA over the last 14 days, and the park factor for the ballpark the teams are playing in. It’s indexed so that 100 is average and anything above that is a favorable matchup and anything below is unfavorable. That matchup rating informs some of the sit/start recommendations I’m making, though the quality of the pitcher definitely takes precedence. To start the season, I’ll be relying on projected team wOBA until there’s sufficient in-season data to start calculating these matchup ratings.

March 28–April 7
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Series 3 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI COL (133) NYY (67) @ATL (0) Zac Gallen (x2), Merrill Kelly 켈리 (x2), Brandon Pfaadt (vCOL) Tommy Henry (vCOL) Brandon Pfaadt (@ATL) Tommy Henry (@ATL), Ryne Nelson (x2)
ATL @PHI (60) @CHW (124) ARI (87) Spencer Strider (x2), Max Fried (x2), Chris Sale (x2), Charlie Morton (x2) Reynaldo López
BAL LAA (82) KCR (127) @PIT (140) Corbin Burnes (x2), Grayson Rodriguez (x2) Dean Kremer (x2) Tyler Wells (x2), Cole Irvin
BOS @SEA (124) @OAK (191) @LAA (44) Brayan Bello (x2), Nick Pivetta (x2) Kutter Crawford (x2), Garrett Whitlock (x2), Tanner Houck (x2)
CHC @TEX (49) COL (118) LAD (42) Shota Imanaga (vCOL), Justin Steele (vCOL) Justin Steele (@TEX) Shota Imanaga (vLAD), Javier Assad Kyle Hendricks (x2), Jordan Wicks (x2)
CHW DET (120) ATL (4) @KCR (140) Garrett Crochet (x2), Erick Fedde 페디 (x2) Michael Soroka (x2), Chris Flexen 플렉센 (x2), Nick Nastini (x2)
CIN WSN (124) @PHI (60) NYM (62) Hunter Greene (x2) Frankie Montas (x2), Nick Martinez (x2) Andrew Abbott (x2), Graham Ashcraft
CLE @OAK (191) @SEA (124) @MIN (113) Shane Bieber (x2), Tanner Bibee (x2) Logan Allen (x2), Carlos Carrasco (@OAK), Triston McKenzie (x2) Carlos Carrasco (@MIN)
COL @ARI (102) @CHC (100) TBR (73) Kyle Freeland (x2) Cal Quantrill (x2), Austin Gomber (x2), Ryan Feltner (x2), Dakota Hudson (x2)
DET @CHW (124) @NYM (102) OAK (189) Tarik Skubal (x2), Kenta Maeda (x2), Jack Flaherty (x2) Casey Mize (x2), Reese Olson
HOU NYY (35) TOR (76) @TEX (49) Framber Valdez (x2) Cristian Javier (x2), Hunter Brown (x2) J.P. France (x2), Ronel Blanco (x2)
KCR MIN (131) @BAL (95) CHW (180) Cole Ragans (x2) Seth Lugo (x2), Brady Singer (x2), Michael Wacha (x2) Alec Marsh (x2)
LAA @BAL (95) @MIA (167) BOS (27) Reid Detmers (x2), Patrick Sandoval (@MIA) Patrick Sandoval (@BAL), Griffin Canning (x2) Tyler Anderson Chase Silseth (x2)
LAD STL (44) SFG (120) @CHC (100) Tyler Glasnow (x2), Bobby Miller (x2), Yoshinobu Yamamoto (x2) James Paxton (x2) Gavin Stone (x2)
MIA PIT (153) LAA (95) @STL (89) Jesús Luzardo (x2) A.J. Puk (x2) Ryan Weathers (x2), Trevor Rogers (x2), Max Meyer (x2)
MIL @NYM (102) MIN (89) SEA (111) Freddy Peralta (x2) DL Hall (x2) Colin Rea (x2), Jakob Junis (x2)
MIN @KCR (140) @MIL (102) CLE (149) Pablo López (x2), Joe Ryan (x2), Bailey Ober (x2) Chris Paddack, Louie Varland
NYM MIL (124) DET (155) @CIN (27) Jose Quintana (x2), Sean Manaea (vDET) Luis Severino (x2), Tylor Megill (x2), Sean Manaea (@CIN), Adrian Houser
NYY @HOU (31) @ARI (102) TOR (76) Nestor Cortes (x2), Carlos Rodón (x2), Marcus Stroman (x2) Clarke Schmidt (x2), Luis Gil (x2)
OAK CLE (169) BOS (80) @DET (175) JP Sears (x2) Alex Wood (x2), Ross Stripling (x2), Paul Blackburn (x2), Joe Boyle (x2)
PHI ATL (11) CIN (38) @WSN (140) Zack Wheeler (x2), Aaron Nola (@WSN) Aaron Nola (vATL), Ranger Suarez (@WSN), Cristopher Sánchez (@WSN) Ranger Suárez (vATL), Cristopher Sánchez (vCIN) Spencer Turnbull
PIT @MIA (167) @WSN (140) BAL (95) Mitch Keller (x2) Jared Jones (@MIA) Martín Pérez (x2), Jared Jones (vBAL) Bailey Falter (x2), Marco Gonzales (x2)
SDP SFG (149) STL (73) @SFG (175) Yu Darvish (x2), Joe Musgrove (x2), Dylan Cease (x2), Michael King (x2) Matt Waldron (x2)
SEA BOS (49) CLE (138) @MIL (102) Luis Castillo (x2), George Kirby (x2), Logan Gilbert (x2), Bryce Miller (x2) Emerson Hancock (x2)
SFG @SDP (144) @LAD (13) SDP (171) Logan Webb (@SDP) Logan Webb (@LAD), Jordan Hicks (x2) Kyle Harrison (x2) Mason Black (x2)
STL @LAD (13) @SDP (144) MIA (160) Lance Lynn (vMIA), Steven Matz (vMIA) Miles Mikolas (x2), Zack Thompson (x2), Lance Lynn (@LAD), Steven Matz (@LAD), Kyle Gibson (x2)
TBR TOR (107) TEX (75) @COL (82) Zach Eflin (x2) Aaron Civale (x2) Zack Littell (x2) Tyler Alexander (x2), Ryan Pepiot (x2)
TEX CHC (89) @TBR (124) HOU (36) Nathan Eovaldi (x2) Jon Gray (x2), Andrew Heaney (x2), Dane Dunning (x2) Cody Bradford
TOR @TBR (124) @HOU (31) @NYY (13) José Berríos (x2), Chris Bassitt (x2), Yusei Kikuchi (x2), Kevin Gausman (x2) Bowden Francis (x2)
WSN @CIN (27) PIT (109) PHI (64) MacKenzie Gore (x2) Josiah Gray (x2), Patrick Corbin (x2), Jake Irvin (x2), Trevor Williams

A few general schedule notes:

  • The first week in the Ottoneu season runs from March 20 through April 7 (including the two games in Korea). If your head-to-head league has a games started cap, you’ll have four extra days of games to juggle with a cap that isn’t proportionally bigger. And if you started any of the four starters from those games in Korea, you’re already down a start. Make sure you’re really keeping track of the best matchups and plan out your starters accordingly.
  • Most teams have either one or two off days over these first 11 days of the season. The Twins and Brewers have three off days which should give their starters an extra bit of rest.
  • I think JP Sears has a particularly nice pair of matchups to start the season. He’s had a great spring training and he’s lined up to face the Guardians at home and then the Tigers in Detroit. He’s an under-the-radar starter who could get off to a quick start this season.
  • The Astros have a particularly tough schedule to start the season with series against the Yankees, Blue Jays, and Rangers lined up. You could start Framber Valdez since he feels pretty matchup proof, but I’d fade Cristian Javier and Hunter Brown.