Archive for Featured

Waiver Wire Report (Week 23)

In the article, I cover the players using CBS’s (about 40% or less initial roster rate) and Yahoo’s ADD/DROP rates. Both hosting sites have the option for daily and weekly waiver wire adds. CBS uses a weekly change while Yahoo looks at the last 24 hours. Yahoo is a great snapshot of right now while CBS ensures hot targets from early in the week aren’t missed. The players are ordered for redraft leagues by my rest-of-season preference grouped by starters, relievers, and hitters. Read the rest of this entry »


Bullpen Report: August 26, 2023

The 2023 version of the Bullpen Report includes five different sections, as well as the closer chart, which can be found at the bottom of the page.

We will always include a link to the full Closer Depth Chart at the bottom of the Bullpen Report each day. It’s also accessible from the RosterResource drop-down menu and from any RosterResource page. Please let us know what you think.

  1. Notable Workloads: Primary closers or valuable members of a closer committee who have been deemed unavailable or likely unavailable for the current day due to recent workload.
  2. Injury News
  3. Outlier Saves: Explanation for a non-closer earning a save during the previous day.
  4. Committee Clarity: Notes on a closer committee that clarify a pitcher’s standing in the group.
  5. Losing A Grip: Struggling closers who could be on the hot seat.

The “RosterResource” link will take you to the corresponding team’s RosterResource depth chart, which will give you a better picture of the full bullpen and results of the previous six days (pitch count, save, hold, win, loss, blown save).

Click HERE to view the full Closer Depth Chart.

Read the rest of this entry »


The Sleeper and the Bust Episode: 1210 – A List of Pitchers ft. PitcherList’s Nick Pollack

8/25/23

The latest episode of “The Sleeper and the Bust” is live. Support the show by subscribing to our Patreon!!

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PATREON

INJURIES/TRANSACTION NEWS

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Mining the News (8/25/23)

American League

Athletics

Kyle Muller made some adjustments while in the minors.

Recalled on Wednesday for what is now his third stint with the A’s this season, Muller returned having worked on a few adjustments in the Minors.

“Getting my delivery in a consistent point,” Muller said after his outing on Friday. “Staying on line. I’ve been working on the changeup a good bit. I threw a couple today that were so-so. I relied more on fastballs and curveballs. But everything is feeling good. I’m just trying to get consistent. Get my best stuff and, hopefully, ride that out for the rest of the season.”

Muller’s fastball velocity was also notable as it maxed out at 97.1 mph on Friday, which is well above his season average of 92.9 mph.

Muller’s #1 issue is his inability to throw strikes (career 4.8 BB/9, 4.6 BB/9 in 2023) and he has barely shown any improvement with a 3.7 BB/9 (41% Ball%, 4.7 equivalent BB/9) since his August promotion.

Orioles

Tyler Wells, John Means, and DL Hall will all return as relievers.

Wells has been transferred to Triple-A Norfolk, where he’s scheduled to pitch in relief on Wednesday night. The new goal? Bring the righty back to Baltimore to boost the bullpen.

“We’re going to shorten his outings a little bit,” manager Brandon Hyde said. “Have him throw less pitches and less innings and see how that goes, but we’re really encouraged. By giving him some rest, giving him some time off, he’s thrown the ball much better here as of late.”

And John Means, who has made three rehab starts amid his recovery from Tommy John surgery and could return by early September — possibly as a reliever rather than a starter.

And maybe DL Hall, the club’s No. 10 prospect per MLB Pipeline who is thriving in a relief role at Triple-A this month (a 2.70 ERA and 15 strikeouts in 6 2/3 innings) and was a valuable addition to the Orioles’ bullpen last September.

Twins

• The team is considering going with a six-man rotation.

One of the primary reasons the Twins are entertaining the idea is protecting several of their pitchers, including Bailey Ober, who received a no-decision after pitching an effective five innings in Tuesday’s contest.

With Ober having completed a career-high 136 1/3 innings (including 17 2/3 innings at Triple A) and Kenta Maeda coming off Tommy John surgery, the Twins could use the six-man rotation to reduce their pitchers’ workloads. Another possibility would be to have Keuchel piggyback Ober, a plan the Twins tried with mixed results early in the 2019 season with Michael Pineda and Martín Pérez.

Jose Miranda played with a shoulder issue all season.

It’s the same shoulder injury that prevented him from participating in the World Baseball Classic for Team Puerto Rico during Spring Training. And though he made the Opening Day roster and played, he noted that the shoulder bothered him far more than he let on — and although it bothered him primarily while throwing, it’s worth wondering if it affected his hitting more than he thinks, too.

“There was a point during the season that I was going through a lot of pain,” Miranda said. “I was playing through a lot of pain, but I just wanted to keep playing. I was grinding. I don’t know if it was the right thing, but you learn with everything that happens in your life. There were some points where I thought maybe surgery or something could have happened.”

Ryan Jeffers retooled his swing his offseason.

Disappointed by his own performance, Jeffers spent this offseason retooling his swing mechanics with the help of hitting coach David Popkins. Their goal was to, as Jeffers puts it, “get the slack out of my swing” and eliminate unnecessary movements that slowed his timing and bat path, making him more fluid at the plate and quicker to the ball.

“We have really found something mechanically that works for me,” Jeffers said. “Mechanically, everything is different. You can visually see it when I’m up there. I feel confident with my mechanics, and that leads me to be able to really stick to a good approach. I’m not worried about my mechanics at all, so I can really lock into what I want to do every at-bat and how I want to attack a guy.”

After a lot of tweaks and experimentation, they changed Jeffers’ pre-swing setup, incorporating a “bat tip” timing mechanism to get him moving smoothly. They also toned down his mid-swing leg stride, adding toe-tap and no-stride versions depending on the situation and pitcher. Jeffers’ swing looks noticeably different, before and during, and the results are even harder to miss.

National League

Braves

• The team believes they can “fix” Yonny Chirinos

The Braves think that with good health this offseason and a spring working with their coaches and analytics people, he could return to something closer to his form of 2019-2020, when Chirinos had a 3.73 ERA in 29 games (21 starts) with 124 strikeouts and 32 walks in 144 2/3 innings, before Tommy John surgery and a fractured elbow. He’ll only turn 30 on Dec. 26.

Cardinals

Dylan Carlson is considering offseason ankle surgery.

Maybe no hard-luck player on the Cardinals roster typifies the kind of frustration-filled, sour season the team has been through than 24-year-old outfielder Dylan Carlson, who sat on the Cardinals’ bench on Saturday nursing not one but two injuries.

To further add to Carlson’s frustration is this nugget of news: He told MLB.com that he might need season-ending ankle surgery in the coming weeks and his next game action could be as far off as Spring Training in 2024.

Nolan Arenado was dealing with “dead arm” for the season’s first half.

So, what happened? According to Arenado, he experienced “dead arm” in the first half of the season for the first time in his career. The good news for Arenado (and St. Louis)? An extensive strengthening program put in place by the Cardinals’ training staff seems to have helped turn things around.

“I feel like it was the first time I’ve ever had dead arm,” the 32-year-old explained this week. “I don’t know what it was. … (In) the first half, I would do those plays where I throw off my back foot, and (the runner) would beat it out. Last year I would get ‘em out. This year, I’m not. There are little things, those adjustments I’ve had to make, but I feel like in the second half I’ve shown I’m back to being who I am.”

Cubs

Kyle Hendricks wants to improve his curveball.

Hendricks identified holding runners on base and his curveball as two imperfections he’d like to work on to get his game back to its best level.

“If I can bring all that together, my heater command and my changeup are the best they’ve been in a while,” Hendricks said. “So that’s really what I’m relying on.”

Dodgers

Tony Gonsolin might need offseason elbow surgery.

The Los Angeles Dodgers, citing right forearm inflammation, finally did what has been discussed often in recent weeks and placed the 29-year-old on the injured list. Gonsolin is “unlikely” to pitch again this season, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Saturday. He very well could require surgery, depending on the results of further testing this week.

“I mean, was (Gonsolin’s elbow) pain-free? Probably not,” Roberts said. “But I know as an organization, we were very clear in saying and knowing that you’re not going to hurt yourself worse, and we’re not going to try to do that to the player. So we were all aligned and felt good about that. So I do commend him (for trying to pitch).”

Mets

Brandon Nimmo is trading away batting average for power.

“Whether it’s on the ground or in the air, put it in play and see what happens,” he said to describe his old outlook. “This is more being a little bit more selective and look to drive the ball rather than just putting it in play.”

“Those situations where you’re trying to cover the whole zone and put something in play — it doesn’t always help,” hitting coach Jeremy Barnes said. “Instead of just trying to go for a knock, you may take that borderline pitch to get to the next pitch.”

In essence, sacrificing some average for some slug?

“Yes,” Nimmo said, “there probably is a tradeoff between power and average.”

Pirates

Oneil Cruz’s rehab has plateaued…

…as he is still dealing with discomfort.

Mitch Keller’s cutter velocity is ticking back up.

Keller attributed his success with the cutter to an uptick in the pitch’s velocity. His cutter clocked in at 90.2 mph against the Twins. While that velocity is right in line with his season average of 90.0 mph, Keller’s cutter velocity noticeably dropped midway through the season before creeping back up in recent outings.

In March, April and May, Keller had an average cutter velocity of 90.6 mph. Keller’s cutter velocity fell to 89.3 mph in June, then to 89.0 mph in July. The cutter’s drop in velocity coincided with the pitch’s reduced effectiveness.

Rockies

Elehuris Montero is trying to clean up his swing.

Hitting coach Hensley Meulens needed to counteract Montero’s tendency to attempt to make contact with breaking pitches too far in front of the plate. Meulens rolled through data from Montero’s stride from his naturally open stance to the angle of his shoulders and everything in between. But he knows that addressing every single flaw (and most appear minor) merely leads to confusion.

“We’re trying to tell him to keep his hat to the point of contact, so he’s not pulling his head,” Meulens said. “For me, we’re asking that through the swing, the chin starts at the front shoulder and ends at the back shoulder.”


Roto Riteup: August 25, 2023

Nick Pollack is a fun house guest:

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Starting Pitcher Chart – August 25th

D. Ross Cameron-USA TODAY Sports

Daily SP Chart archive

The chart includes their season performance, their opponent’s wOBA versus the pitcher’s handedness over the last 30 days, my general start/sit recommendation for 10-team, 12-team, and 15-team (or more) leagues, and then a note about them. Obviously, there are league sizes beyond those three so it’s essentially a shallow, medium, deep. If a pitcher only has an “x” in 15-team, it doesn’t mean there’s no potential use in 10s and 12s, but it’s basically a risky stream for those spots.

These are general recommendations, and your league situation will carry more weight whether you are protecting ratios or chasing counting numbers. This is for standard 5×5 roto leagues. The thresholds for H2H starts are generally lower, especially in points leagues so I thought there would be more value focusing on roto.

From Miller to Keller is an 11-pitcher group that presents a ton of fun options to stream across many formats. There are some tricky spots, but plenty of upside!

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Starting Pitcher Chart – August 24th

Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

Daily SP Chart archive

The chart includes their season performance, their opponent’s wOBA versus the pitcher’s handedness over the last 30 days, my general start/sit recommendation for 10-team, 12-team, and 15-team (or more) leagues, and then a note about them. Obviously, there are league sizes beyond those three so it’s essentially a shallow, medium, deep. If a pitcher only has an “x” in 15-team, it doesn’t mean there’s no potential use in 10s and 12s, but it’s basically a risky stream for those spots.

These are general recommendations, and your league situation will carry more weight whether you are protecting ratios or chasing counting numbers. This is for standard 5×5 roto leagues. The thresholds for H2H starts are generally lower, especially in points leagues so I thought there would be more value focusing on roto.

Selective notes today… and probably for the rest of the year. Mostly because the obvious guys on the high and low ends really don’t need a ton of analysis and then I can spend more time researching the real heart of the slate.

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Simplifying My Life: Power and Contact Thresholds

There are too many stats (“Welcome to FanGraphs”), so I decided to take a step back and try to remove as much noise as possible when making decisions. I’m not reinventing any concept, just concentrating on the most important factors. The fewer, the better. Today, I’m going to focus on my “new” power factor and mention how I settled on Contact%.

I know several other sources have a focus on keeping their inputs basic, but each one disagrees with the results. I decided to add to the disagreement and pick out the best options for the standard roto game. Read the rest of this entry »


Paul Sporer’s Baseball Chat – August 23rd, 2023

Transcript is available!

1:04

Paul Sporer: Hello everyone, thanks for coming out!

1:05

Air Horn: BWAOW WOW WOW OWWWWWWWW

1:05

Paul Sporer: That’s a pretty good imitation!

1:05

Guest: rank for ROS homers: Santana Moore Suwinski Aranda

1:05

Paul Sporer: Is that Dylan Moore?

1:09

Paul Sporer: Santana/Suwinski are pretty close for #1, I’d look and try to estimate what kinda lefty SP load PIT might have that would hurt Suwinski. Moore is surging but still comes 3rd and Aranda just doesn’t play enough, so while he carries some intrigue, I’m not really buying into we see him carve out a real role

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Bullpen Report: August 23, 2023

The 2023 version of the Bullpen Report includes five different sections, as well as the closer chart, which can be found at the bottom of the page.

We will always include a link to the full Closer Depth Chart at the bottom of the Bullpen Report each day. It’s also accessible from the RosterResource drop-down menu and from any RosterResource page. Please let us know what you think.

  1. Notable Workloads: Primary closers or valuable members of a closer committee who have been deemed unavailable or likely unavailable for the current day due to recent workload.
  2. Injury News
  3. Outlier Saves: Explanation for a non-closer earning a save during the previous day.
  4. Committee Clarity: Notes on a closer committee that clarify a pitcher’s standing in the group.
  5. Losing A Grip: Struggling closers who could be on the hot seat.

The “RosterResource” link will take you to the corresponding team’s RosterResource depth chart, which will give you a better picture of the full bullpen and results of the previous six days (pitch count, save, hold, win, loss, blown save).

Click HERE to view the full Closer Depth Chart.

Read the rest of this entry »