Archive for Starting Pitchers

Three Appearance Fastball Velocity Risers and Fallers: May 16, 2023

Welcome to the first automated installment of fastball velocity risers and fallers. For reference, here are a few articles that explain both the process and the importance of increased or decreased velocity when predicting future success:

This article won’t take the place of my weekly RotoGraphs article and will not have much analysis. Instead, it will only provide data tables for your own analysis.

Relievers
Relievers only qualify to be placed in the table below if they have three appearances in the last 25 days. Though the time range is 25 days, the calculation only includes the three most recent appearances. In addition, I have isolated the table to relievers who have displayed an average change of .60 or greater in either direction (increase vs. decrease).
Reliever Three Appearance Fallers
Name Third recent Second recent Most recent Most recent increase Second recent increase Avg Change
Amir Garrett 96.3 95.0 93.4 -1.63 -1.22 -1.43
Bryse Wilson 94.9 94.3 92.4 -1.90 -0.59 -1.24
Félix Bautista 99.8 99.4 97.7 -1.67 -0.39 -1.03
Brent Honeywell 95.5 95.2 93.8 -1.40 -0.30 -0.85
Carl Edwards Jr. 93.9 93.7 92.3 -1.36 -0.24 -0.80
Andre Pallante 96.6 95.5 95.0 -0.52 -1.04 -0.78
Pete Fairbanks 97.7 97.4 96.2 -1.20 -0.34 -0.77
Keegan Thompson 93.8 93.7 92.3 -1.37 -0.06 -0.72
Austin Pruitt 92.1 91.9 90.7 -1.28 -0.15 -0.72
Dylan Floro 93.0 92.7 91.6 -1.12 -0.26 -0.69
Dinelson Lamet 95.3 94.5 94.0 -0.50 -0.80 -0.65
Jordan Hicks 101.8 101.5 100.5 -0.97 -0.28 -0.62
* Among all starting pitchers with three appearances in the last 25 days.
**>= -.60 Average Change

 

Reliever Three Appearance Risers
Name Third recent Second recent Most recent Most recent increase Second recent increase Avg Change
Bryan Abreu 95.6 98.3 99.0 0.70 2.72 1.71
Erik Swanson 92.4 92.6 94.6 2.00 0.18 1.09
Jason Adam 92.4 93.1 94.3 1.23 0.65 0.94
Tyler Rogers 82.2 82.4 84.0 1.57 0.27 0.92
Anthony Banda 93.0 93.1 94.9 1.73 0.08 0.90
Ryan Thompson 90.9 91.0 92.6 1.65 0.05 0.85
Brock Stewart 95.6 96.1 97.2 1.12 0.51 0.82
Anthony Bass 93.7 94.9 95.3 0.35 1.20 0.77
Reiver Sanmartin 89.5 90.9 91.0 0.10 1.38 0.74
Nick Anderson 93.0 94.0 94.5 0.51 0.95 0.73
Jhoan Duran 100.5 101.2 101.8 0.68 0.65 0.67
Richard Bleier 87.9 89.0 89.3 0.28 1.03 0.66
* Among all starting pitchers with three appearances in the last 25 days.
**>= .60 Average Change

 

Starters

Starters only qualify to be placed in the table below if they have three appearances in the last 25 days and threw in at least the first inning in each of those appearances. The 25-day range should be wide enough to include three consecutive starts, but I may alter that time period in the future. Like in the above relievers table, I have isolated the table to starters who have displayed an average change of .60 or greater in either direction (increase vs. decrease). One final note, I do not remove pitchers who were recently injured. I think it’s advantageous to see how a pitcher’s velocity changed prior to injury. In today’s post, Drew Rasmussen is a good example.

Starter Three Appearance Fallers
Name Third recent Second recent Most recent Most recent increase Second recent increase Avg Change
Jake Woodford 94.3 92.0 90.7 -1.30 -2.27 -1.78
Michael Kopech 96.5 95.3 94.3 -1.05 -1.22 -1.13
Tyler Anderson 91.2 89.9 89.3 -0.58 -1.32 -0.95
Colin Rea 94.1 92.6 92.5 -0.07 -1.48 -0.77
Joe Musgrove 94.6 93.6 93.2 -0.47 -0.93 -0.70
Jack Flaherty 93.4 92.2 92.1 -0.10 -1.28 -0.69
Taijuan Walker 94.2 93.4 92.8 -0.57 -0.78 -0.68
Miles Mikolas 93.9 93.3 92.6 -0.76 -0.54 -0.65
Tanner Houck 94.6 93.8 93.4 -0.35 -0.85 -0.60
* Among all starting pitchers with three appearances in the last 25 days.
**>= -.60 Average Change

 

Starter Three Appearance Risers
Name Third recent Second recent Most recent Most recent increase Second recent increase Avg Change
Jordan Lyles 89.3 90.8 92.1 1.29 1.53 1.41
Grayson Rodriguez 94.6 95.4 97.4 2.01 0.75 1.38
Tony Gonsolin 91.5 93.2 93.6 0.40 1.67 1.03
Eduardo Rodriguez 90.9 91.6 92.9 1.34 0.67 1.00
Nestor Cortes 90.8 91.9 92.8 0.87 1.14 1.00
Julio Urías 92.7 93.4 94.7 1.29 0.67 0.98
Kyle Freeland 88.6 89.4 90.5 1.07 0.83 0.95
Edward Cabrera 95.5 96.1 97.3 1.21 0.59 0.90
Dean Kremer 94.3 94.3 95.9 1.56 0.07 0.82
Kyle Gibson 91.5 91.8 93.1 1.32 0.31 0.81
Mitch Keller 94.6 95.4 96.2 0.79 0.79 0.79
Merrill Kelly 켈리 91.6 92.6 93.1 0.48 0.96 0.72
Dylan Cease 95.1 95.8 96.4 0.56 0.77 0.66
Justin Steele 91.2 92.2 92.5 0.33 0.99 0.66
Drew Rasmussen 95.1 95.3 96.4 1.11 0.17 0.64
Shane McClanahan 96.2 96.8 97.5 0.64 0.62 0.63
Tyler Wells 92.2 92.2 93.4 1.25 0.01 0.63
Griffin Canning 94.1 94.2 95.3 1.16 0.10 0.63
* Among all starting pitchers with three appearances in the last 25 days.
**>= .60 Average Change

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Drip: May 19–21

Welcome back to the SP Drip. My goal for this bi-weekly column is to comb through the upcoming schedule each week to find a few under-owned pitchers (less than 50% ownership across Ottoneu) who could be used to help you hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues or to make sure you’re hitting your innings pitched cap in points leagues. Tuesday’s article will cover the weekend (Friday, Saturday, Sunday) and Friday’s article will cover the upcoming week (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday). That way, you’ll have time to start your auctions in time to actually drip these pitchers into your lineup.

Upcoming Schedule:

May 19–21
Home wOBA HR Park Factor Away wOBA
ATL .349 98 SEA .304
PIT .318 95 ARI .335
CIN .310 116 NYY .318
TBR .368 94 MIL .311
WSN .307 104 DET .287
PHI .324 106 CHC .334
TOR .326 105 BAL .326
NYM .313 97 CLE .284
TEX .339 101 COL .314
HOU .300 102 OAK .304
CHW .300 108 KCR .300
STL .336 94 LAD .335
LAA .331 107 MIN .314
SDP .307 98 BOS .340
SFG .324 90 MIA .301

Teams with favorable schedules over the weekend include the Braves, Diamondbacks, Giants, Marlins, Mets, Nationals, Rays, Rangers, and Red Sox.

Teams with tougher schedules include the Angels, Blue Jays, Cubs, Mariners, Orioles, Padres, Phillies, Reds, Rockies, Twins, and Yankees.

Highlighted matchups:

Recommended Starters
Pitcher Roster% Opponent Opponent wOBA FIP K-BB% HR/9
Carlos Carrasco 36.54% CLE .284 7.40 0.0% 1.98
James Paxton 30.77% SDP .307 2.90 40.0% 1.80
Jake Irvin 4.17% DET .287 5.24 9.4% 0.00
Patrick Corbin 1.28% DET .287 4.61 10.7% 1.42

There’s a couple of recommendations in that Nationals-Tigers series. I’ll talk about Irvin below, but Patrick Corbin deserves some more attention after holding the Mets to just two runs in six innings yesterday. The strikeouts weren’t there — just one in the outing — but he’s now strung together four good starts in a row.

James Paxton came off the IL over the weekend and looked pretty good in his first start in more than two years. He struck out nine, walked one, and allowed just four hits in five innings. His velocity looked good and his stuff looked as good as it did back when he was a frontline starter for the Mariners. He’s lined up to start against the Padres which feels like a pretty risky matchup, but San Diego’s offense is mired in a season-long slump and you have to hope that Paxton is up to the challenge of shutting down their star studded lineup.

Carlos Carrasco is scheduled to come off the IL on Saturday and gets a nice easy matchup against his former team to ease him back to the big leagues. He wasn’t pitching very well before hitting the shelf with his elbow injury and I’d usually recommend waiting a bit after a pitcher is activated off the IL to let him settle back into their routine. The matchup is just too good to pass up and he’ll be extra motivated since this is the first time he’ll be facing the Guardians since coming over to the Mets a few years ago.

Hot Starters:

Strong Starters, Last Two Weeks
Pitcher IP FIP K-BB% HR/9 P/IP
Jake Irvin 15.1 3.43 9.4% 0.00 5.24
Zack Greinke 15.2 4.06 15.3% 1.15 4.73

Since being called up at the beginning of the month, Jake Irvin has made a couple of good starts against the Cubs and Giants but was blown up for six runs in his last start against the Mets. The good news is that he struck out six and walked just one in that outing. He wasn’t a highly regarded prospect in the Nationals organization with the profile of a back-end starter. He’s got a nice matchup against the Tigers on Friday and that’s a good opportunity to see if he can bounce back from his last start and continue building on the success he saw in San Francisco.

Zack Greinke is still hanging around pitching for the Royals in his old age. His crafty approach to pitching worked well for him in his return to Kansas City last year and he’s back at it again this season. Over his last three starts, he’s allowed six runs in 15.2 innings with a 10:1 strikeout-to-walk ratio. He’s lined up to face the White Sox this weekend and then the Tigers next week.

Recap: May 12–14

Drip Retrospective
Player IP Pts Pts/IP
Ryne Nelson 4.2 -3.3 -0.70
Matthew Boyd 1.1 -13.1 -9.85
Marco Gonzales 6 20.1 3.35
J.P. France 6.2 32.2 4.83
Adrian Houser 4 -2.5 -0.63
Total 22.2 33.4 1.47
Season Total 414.1 1234.1 2.98

Another rough round of recommendations as Ryne Nelson, Matthew Boyd, and Adrian Houser just didn’t have it last weekend. J.P. France looked pretty good against the White Sox, lasting into the seventh inning with just a single run allowed on three hits and one walk.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Drip: May 15–18

Welcome back to the SP Drip. My goal for this bi-weekly column is to comb through the upcoming schedule each week to find a few under-owned pitchers (less than 50% ownership across Ottoneu) who could be used to help you hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues or to make sure you’re hitting your innings pitched cap in points leagues. Tuesday’s article will cover the weekend (Friday, Saturday, Sunday) and Friday’s article will cover the upcoming week (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday). That way, you’ll have time to start your auctions in time to actually drip these pitchers into your lineup.

Upcoming Schedule:

May 15–18
Home wOBA HR Park Factor Away wOBA
BOS 0.344 100 SEA 0.299
BAL 0.329 95 LAA 0.329
DET 0.291 93 PIT 0.326
MIA 0.297 93 WSN 0.304
TOR 0.327 105 NYY 0.309
NYM 0.315 97 TBR 0.368
STL 0.326 94 MIL 0.310
TEX 0.339 101 ATL 0.349
HOU 0.298 102 CHC 0.339
CHW 0.301 108 CLE 0.276
COL 0.313 111 CIN 0.307
OAK 0.306 91 ARI 0.332
SDP 0.314 98 KCR 0.304
SFG 0.327 90 PHI 0.326
LAD 0.337 107 MIN 0.302

Teams with favorable schedules next week include the Cardinals, Diamondbacks, Giants, Marlins, Nationals, Padres, Phillies, Pirates, and Tigers.

Teams with tougher schedules include the Astros, Braves, Mariners, Mets, Rangers, Reds, Rockies, Twins, and Yankees.

Highlighted matchups:

Recommended Starters
Pitcher Roster% Opponent Opponent wOBA FIP K-BB% HR/9
Ryne Nelson 44.87% OAK 0.306 4.73 7.6% 1.25
Nick Pivetta 31.09% SEA 0.299 5.79 13.3% 2.08
Michael Lorenzen 5.13% PIT 0.326 4.20 10.3% 0.96
Rich Hill 3.53% DET 0.291 5.03 12.7% 1.74

There are a pair of starters in that short two-game Pirates-Tigers series that make for nice targets. Rich Hill has put together a solid stretch of starts, particularly against some weaker opponents. Michael Lorenzen is a bit more of a risk against a Pittsburgh offense that’s been pretty potent to start the season. However, the Pirates have scuffled a bit over the last two weeks (.305 wOBA) and Comerica Park provides a friendly venue.

Nick Pivetta could also be a risky start, though the Mariners offense has been really struggling recently. He can’t stop allowing home runs, allowing at least one in every start save one (against the Rays of all teams). With a HR/9 over two, he’s been killing his Ottoneu value despite a passable strikeout-to-walk ratio.

Hot Starters:

Strong Starters, Last Two Weeks
Pitcher IP FIP K-BB% HR/9 P/IP
Dane Dunning 14.1 2.68 12.7% 0.00 6.03
Dean Kremer 17 2.84 9.6% 0.00 4.66

Dane Dunning has been filling in for the injured Jacob deGrom and has put together two solid starts against the Angels — five scoreless with just two hits allowed — and the Mariners — six innings of two-run ball. His stuff isn’t overpowering, but if he’s hitting his spots with his command, he can be effective. So far, that seems to be what’s driving his success. His next start will be against the Braves which will be a pretty significant challenge. Monitor that start and see how he looks afterward.

Dean Kremer has turned in a pair of impressive starts against some very difficult opposition, holding the Braves to just a single run last week and keeping the Rays off the board in his start this week. Those are the two best offenses in the league and his ability to handle them feels like a pretty significant step forward for him.

Recap: May 8–11

Drip Retrospective
Player IP Pts Pts/IP
Vince Velasquez N/A
Jhony Brito 4.1 -8.5 -1.97
Dane Dunning 6 35.8 5.97
Michael Lorenzen 7 44.8 6.40
Rich Hill 3.2 18.7 5.11
Peyton Battenfield 6 34.2 5.70
Total 27 125.0 4.63
Season Total 391.2 1200.7 3.07

Now that’s more like it. Even with the stinker of a start from Jhony Brito, Dunning, Lorenzen, Hill, and Battenfield carried a huge amount of points this week. The only nit to pick from that quartet of wins was the lack of bulk from Hill despite the great points per IP.


Reviewing the Rookie Starting Pitchers — Through May 9, 2023

Yesterday, I reviewed the five rookie starting pitchers who have posted a sub-4.00 SIERA so far. Now let’s discuss some of the other well-regarded prospects who haven’t been as fortunate, posting weaker skills.

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Reviewing the Rookie Starting Pitchers — Through May 8, 2023

Since fantasy owners generally always need starting pitching, we tend to jump on the new shiny toy that gets recalled from the minors in the hopes they could improve our pitching ratios. So let’s review the five rookie starting pitchers that have posted sub-4.00 SIERA marks so far.

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Ottoneu Starting Pitching Drip: May 12–14

Welcome back to the SP Drip. My goal for this bi-weekly column is to comb through the upcoming schedule each week to find a few under-owned pitchers (less than 50% ownership across Ottoneu) who could be used to help you hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues or to make sure you’re hitting your innings pitched cap in points leagues. Tuesday’s article will cover the weekend (Friday, Saturday, Sunday) and Friday’s article will cover the upcoming week (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday). That way, you’ll have time to start your auctions in time to actually drip these pitchers into your lineup.

Upcoming Schedule:

May 12–14
Home wOBA HR Park Factor Away wOBA
DET .292 93 SEA .301
MIA .296 93 CIN .308
WSN .301 104 NYM .315
BAL .331 95 PIT .328
NYY .305 102 TBR .371
TOR .332 105 ATL .349
CLE .280 101 LAA .334
BOS .345 100 STL .324
MIN .304 96 CHC .331
CHW .304 108 HOU .299
MIL .314 103 KCR .302
COL .312 111 PHI .328
ARI .336 94 SFG .327
OAK .304 91 TEX .343
LAD .334 107 SDP .316

Teams with favorable schedules include the Angels, Cubs, Diamondbacks, Mariners, Marlins, Rangers, Reds, and Tigers.

Teams with tougher schedules include the Blue Jays, Braves, Cardinals, Dodgers, Guardians, Nationals, Padres, Phillies, Rockies, and Yankees.

Highlighted matchups:

Recommended Starters
Pitcher Roster% Opponent Opponent wOBA FIP K-BB% HR/9
Ryne Nelson 46.80% SFG .327 4.77 7.6% 1.25
Matthew Boyd 30.77% SEA .301 4.72 12.7% 1.47
Marco Gonzales 11.22% DET .292 4.20 9.2% 0.88
J.P. France 4.49% CHW .304 2.55 20.0% 0.00
Adrian Houser 3.53% KCR .302 1.85 19.0% 0.00

Not a lot of recommendations for this weekend. There are a pair of starters in the Mariners-Tigers series who you could go after since both of those offenses have been sputtering and they’re playing in the cavernous Comerica Park. All three of the Tigers starters scheduled to start in the series fall below the 50% ownership threshold, but Matthew Boyd is clearly the best of the bunch. On Seattle’s side, Marco Gonzales has been solid if unspectacular this year. His last start was a gutty six inning outing against the Astros where he allowed three runs on six hits while striking out three.

Both J.P. France and Adrian Houser have made just a single start this year, though both draw a pretty nice matchup for their second start. France is a little bit more of a risky play since he’s pitching in the home run friendly Guaranteed Rate Field, but he looked solid against the Mariners in his major league debut over the weekend. Houser was activated off the IL on Sunday and made his first start against the Giants, throwing 4.2 innings with just two runs allowed and five strikeouts.

Despite allowing 13 runs across his last three starts, Ryne Nelson’s FIP during that stretch has been just 3.57 with a 4.23 xFIP. Six of those runs came in a start in Coors Field which is where the only home run he’s allowed over the last few weeks was hit. He’s lined up to start against the Giants at home over the weekend. San Francisco’s offense has been hitting pretty well, but Nelson’s home park is pretty home run friendly.

Hot starters:

Strong Starters, Last Two Weeks
Pitcher IP FIP K-BB% HR/9 P/IP
Kyle Freeland 18 4.13 12.3% 1.00 4.53
Patrick Corbin 18.1 4.44 14.9% 1.47 4.01

I just highlighted a different Rockies starter in my last column and I’m going back to that well again. Kyle Freeland has been pretty decent over his last three starts including a seven inning outing yesterday against the Pirates. He was fantastic against the Brewers at home last week, throwing five shutout innings with five strikeouts and just three hits. The same warnings apply here as they did for Ryan Feltner: avoid starts at home while playing the matchups on the road.

Say it ain’t so! It looks like Patrick Corbin might be showing some signs of life after three miserable seasons. He pitched a solid seven innings against the Cubs last week, allowing just two runs on three hits while striking out six. He’s scheduled to start against the Giants in San Francisco today. We’ll see if he can continue building off that start against Chicago.

Recap: May 5–7

Drip Retrospective
Player IP Pts Pts/IP
Brad Keller 4.1 -31.1 -7.19
Kyle Muller 5.1 -0.6 -0.12
Ken Waldichuk 5 -9.2 -1.84
Joey Lucchesi 4 5.9 1.48
Michael Lorenzen N/A
Josh Fleming 5 -21.8 -4.36
Yonny Chirinos 5.1 19.7 3.69
Total 29 -37.2 -1.28
Season Total 364.2 1075.7 2.95

Ouch. Nothing good came from those recommendations last weekend. In the Brad Keller-Kyle Muller matchup on Friday, the A’s and Royals wound up scoring 20 runs combined. The only start that came close to being a win was Yonny Chirinos’s start against the Yankees, though he walked four and didn’t strike out a single batter in that outing.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Drip: May 8–11

Welcome back to the SP Drip. My goal for this bi-weekly column is to comb through the upcoming schedule each week to find a few under-owned pitchers (less than 50% ownership across Ottoneu) who could be used to help you hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues or to make sure you’re hitting your innings pitched cap in points leagues. Tuesday’s article will cover the weekend (Friday, Saturday, Sunday) and Friday’s article will cover the upcoming week (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday). That way, you’ll have time to start your auctions in time to actually drip these pitchers into your lineup.

Upcoming Schedule:

May 8–11
Home wOBA HR Park Factor Away wOBA
SEA 0.299 99 TEX 0.346
CLE 0.286 101 DET 0.285
PIT 0.335 95 COL 0.312
BAL 0.337 95 TBR 0.375
NYY 0.298 102 OAK 0.297
CHC 0.340 98 STL 0.324
KCR 0.292 93 CHW 0.296
MIL 0.315 103 LAD 0.344
LAA 0.334 107 HOU 0.302
ARI 0.326 94 MIA 0.303
SFG 0.329 90 WSN 0.297
CIN 0.304 116 NYM 0.316
PHI 0.329 106 TOR 0.324
ATL 0.353 98 BOS 0.351
MIN 0.312 96 SDP 0.318

Teams with favorable schedules next week include the Diamondbacks, Giants, Guardians, Nationals, Pirates, Rangers, Royals, Tigers, and White Sox

Teams with tougher schedules include the Astros, Blue Jays, Braves, Brewers, Cardinals, Mariners, Mets, Orioles, Phillies, Red Sox, and Reds.

Highlighted matchups:

Recommended Starters
Pitcher Roster% Opponent Opponent wOBA FIP K-BB% HR/9
Vince Velasquez 37.18% COL 0.312 3.79 14.6% 0.84
Jhony Brito 33.97% OAK 0.297 4.46 6.1% 0.79
Dane Dunning 16.03% SEA 0.299 3.31 7.6% 0.00
Michael Lorenzen 4.81% CLE 0.286 4.83 9.9% 1.29
Rich Hill 2.56% COL 0.312 5.34 12.9% 1.95
Peyton Battenfield 1.28% DET 0.285 5.89 3.9% 1.56

I covered both Vince Velasquez and Rich Hill in my last column on Tuesday as two guys who have been particularly good recently. The former made a start against the Rays yesterday and left after three innings with elbow discomfort. He said he was optimistic about the injury after the game but his status is clearly up in the air. If he’s healthy, he’s scheduled to take the mound against the Rockies at home on Tuesday. Monitor his status closely.

In that A’s-Yankees series there could be a couple of starters you could call on to take advantage of some weak offenses. Jhony Brito is scheduled to start Wednesday and he looked a lot better in his last start against the potent Rangers lineup; he threw five innings of two-run ball with five strikeouts against just one walk. There are a bunch of A’s starters who you probably shouldn’t trust, even against the weakened Yankees lineup. Plus there’s the complication of Aaron Judge potentially being activated from the Injured List early in the week. If you had to pick an Oakland starter, I’d go with JP Sears; he’s coming off six innings of shutout work against the Mariners.

The Guardians-Tigers series features two of the worst offenses in the league going head-to-head. Michael Lorenzen and Peyton Battenfield draw starts in the series and both are worth considering simply due to the lack of offensive quality they’ll be facing. The former is a pretty known quantity at this point in his career, but the Cleveland rookie features some promise even if the early results haven’t been pretty. Battenfield features a cutter that possesses a 38.2% whiff rate, a weapon that makes him a far more interesting flier than a veteran innings eater.

Hot Starters:

Strong Starters, Last Two Weeks
Pitcher IP FIP K-BB% HR/9 P/IP
Ryan Feltner 17 2.30 16.4% 0.00 6.32
Wade Miley 17 3.83 5.9% 0.53 4.37

I’d understand if you had completely missed out on the stretch of starts Ryan Feltner has put together recently. Over his last three turns in the rotation, he’s allowed just three runs while striking out 15 in 17 innings. Just one of those starts came at home in Coors Field and that’s really the sticking point with any Rockies starter. It’s a huge gamble to start them at home so you’re only really rostering them for half their appearances. At his peak, Germán Márquez was worth rostering; Feltner is definitely not at that point yet, but his stretch of solid starts makes him worth monitoring.

After tossing a seven-inning gem back on April 16 against the Padres, Wade Miley has followed it up with three solid starts including surviving Coors Field yesterday. The strikeouts aren’t there but he’s managing hard contact against him and isn’t walking anyone. He’s lined up to start against the Dodgers at home in his next turn through the rotation. If he can pass that test, he could be worth looking into to give your Ottoneu team some bulk innings.

Recap: May 1–4

Drip Retrospective
Player IP Pts Pts/IP
Domingo Germán 8.1 65.5 7.86
Kyle Gibson 6.2 11.0 1.66
Tyler Wells 6 -4.3 -0.72
Drew Smyly 7 27.9 3.99
JP Sears 6 42.0 7.00
Total 34 142.1 4.18
Season Total 335.2 1112.9 3.32

A pretty good week with two clear wins, another solid start, and just one clear loss. Domingo Germán looked dominant against the Guardians and his ownership rate has skyrocketed over the 50% threshold we’re working with. Tyler Wells actually looked pretty decent against the Royals, but he was undone by allowing three home runs, the only hits he allowed in his start.


The Weird and the Wonderful — Starting Pitchers Through May 2, 2023

Let’s finish up the week with one final look at the wackiest starting pitcher metric levels. Today, it’s all about the batted ball type distribution. Think grounders, liners, etc. Batted ball profile has a dramatic impact on performance, so it’s important to monitor, especially if a pitcher suddenly transforms into an extreme ground ball or fly ball pitcher.

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The Weird and the Wonderful — Starting Pitchers Through May 1, 2023

Yesterday, I shared our first set of weird and wonderful metrics for starting pitchers, digging into SwStk% and Hard%. Today, let’s continue the fun with some additional metrics.

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Ottoneu Starting Pitching Drip: May 5–7

Welcome back to the SP Drip. My goal for this bi-weekly column is to comb through the upcoming schedule each week to find a few under-owned pitchers (less than 50% ownership across Ottoneu) who could be used to help you hit your games started cap in head-to-head leagues or to make sure you’re hitting your innings pitched cap in points leagues. Tuesday’s article will cover the weekend (Friday, Saturday, Sunday) and Friday’s article will cover the upcoming week (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday). That way, you’ll have time to start your auctions in time to actually drip these pitchers into your lineup.

Upcoming Schedule:

May 5–7
Home wOBA HR Park Factor Away wOBA
SEA 0.297 99 HOU 0.309
CHC 0.348 98 MIA 0.305
PIT 0.344 95 TOR 0.327
CIN 0.309 116 CHW 0.298
TBR 0.377 94 NYY 0.297
PHI 0.335 106 BOS 0.340
NYM 0.323 97 COL 0.304
CLE 0.289 101 MIN 0.317
ATL 0.342 98 BAL 0.333
KCR 0.276 93 OAK 0.305
STL 0.329 94 DET 0.279
LAA 0.330 107 TEX 0.342
ARI 0.322 94 WSN 0.299
SDP 0.319 98 LAD 0.336
SFG 0.330 90 MIL 0.315

Teams with favorable schedules this weekend include the A’s, Astros, Brewers, Cardinals, Cubs, Diamondbacks, Giants, Mets, Nationals, Rays, Royals, and Twins.

Teams with tougher schedules include the Angels, Blue Jays, Marlins, Orioles, Padres, Phillies, Rangers, Red Sox, White Sox, and Yankees.

Highlighted matchups:

Recommended Starters
Pitcher Roster% Opponent Opponent wOBA FIP K-BB% HR/9
Brad Keller 43.59% OAK 0.305 4.80 0.0% 0.30
Kyle Muller 38.46% KCR 0.276 5.48 3.6% 1.26
Ken Waldichuk 32.69% KCR 0.276 7.42 9.0% 2.90
Joey Lucchesi 8.33% COL 0.304 3.46 17.0% 0.73
Michael Lorenzen 4.49% STL 0.329 5.31 15.4% 1.93
Josh Fleming 3.21% NYY 0.297 2.97 8.9% 0.00
Yonny Chirinos 2.24% NYY 0.297 2.88 12.0% 0.00

There are three recommendations in that Royals-A’s series in Oakland this weekend. Brad Keller still hasn’t found his groove with his new breaking balls that he introduced this year, but the matchup and venue are just too good to pass up. Both Kyle Muller and Ken Waldichuk have been frequent inclusions in this column but neither has really pitched up to their potential yet. The Royals’ punchless offense is as good an opportunity to get their seasons back on track.

After sitting out most of 2021 and all of last year due to Tommy John surgery, Joey Lucchesi has been thrust back into the Mets rotation with all their injuries they’ve been dealing with. He’s made two starts so far and has looked pretty good; he shut out the Giants in seven innings in his first start and allowed three runs in 5.1 against the Nationals in his second. He’s lined up to start at home against the Rockies.

With Aaron Judge on the IL and the rest of the Yankees lineup really struggling to produce anything right now, it’s the perfect time to take advantage of this struggling team. This weekend, the Rays host New York and there are two starters who could make for nice drip candidates. Josh Fleming has worked as a long reliever for the most part this year. Make sure he’s actually listed as the starter and isn’t lined up to be the bulk pitcher after an opener. The same goes for Yonny Chirinos. He’s finally healthy after a long road to recovery after Tommy John surgery and a fractured elbow.

Hot starters:

Strong Starters, Last Two Weeks
Pitcher IP FIP K-BB% HR/9 P/IP
Vince Velasquez 19 2.71 22.4% 0.47 6.48
Rich Hill 17.1 2.81 18.9% 0.00 5.02
Yusei Kikuchi 17.2 3.28 24.20% 1.02 5.83

Now that we’re a little deeper into the season, I can point out some under-owned pitchers who have been throwing well recently who might not be making it into the recommended section above due to their matchups. I’m looking at data from the last 14 days to find these pitchers who are performing well.

The two Pirates starters have been phenomenal recently, part of the entire team’s fantastic month of April. Rich Hill continues to do his thing at 43 years old and has had a very nice run of three starts including a gem in Coors Field where he held the Rockies to just a single run in six innings back on April 17. I recommended Vince Velasquez for his start against the Nationals last weekend and he delivered a commanding performance. He’s now posted back-to-back shutouts in his last two outings. He looks like he’s in the middle of one of those hot streaks that remind us why he was so highly thought of as a prospect and why he’s continued to bounce around the league despite never really living up to his potential.

Yusei Kikuchi’s most impressive start came back on April 15 when he held the red hot Rays to just a single run in six innings. It seems like he’s gotten his control problems figured out while still racking up the strikeouts. His stuff is good enough that he could finally be breaking out five years after coming over to the US from Japan.

Recap: April 28–30

Drip Retrospective
Player IP Pts Pts/IP
Kyle Muller 5 11.7 2.34
Nick Pivetta 5 12.7 2.54
Dean Kremer 5 14.4 2.88
Vince Velasquez 6 38.4 6.40
Caleb Kilian 3.1 -5.3 -1.60
Total 24.1 71.9 2.95
Season Total 301.2 970.8 3.22

Velasquez’s start was the big win over the weekend but that was negated by the disaster of a start from Caleb Kilian in Miami. The rest of the slate was fine, not too bad but no clear wins either.