Archive for Starting Pitchers

The Best pVals in 2023: Fastball Edition Part One

There are all kinds of ways to measure the effectiveness of a pitch. Pitch Values (pVals) or “Pitch Type Linear Weights” give us a sense of, from the glossary, “…the changes in average run expectancy from one count to another”.

while the changes in run expectancy between an 0-0 count and a 0-1 or 1-0 count are obviously very small, when added up over the course of the season, you can get an idea of which pitch a hitter was best against.

pVals are not predictive and they don’t explain the true talent or raw characteristics of an individual pitch the same way Stuff+ or other pitch models can, but it does tell us what actually happened. Now, imagine that! You can dig into the specifics of pVals on the glossary page but for now, let’s celebrate this season’s greatest pVals.

Part one will look at four-seam fastballs and cutters. Part two (coming soon) will focus on sinkers and splitters.

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Poll 2023: Which Group of Pitchers Performs Better? A Review

During the all-star break, I once again polled you on which group of 10 starting pitchers would post a lower ERA during the second half, and which ERA range each group’s aggregate would fall into. Let’s now review the results.

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Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: September 25–October 1

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.

September 25–October 1
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @CHW (129) HOU (75) Zac Gallen (x2), Merrill Kelly 켈리 Brandon Pfaadt Zach Davies, Ryne Nelson
ATL CHC (86) WSN (143) Max Fried, Charlie Morton, Spencer Strider Bryce Elder (x2), Kyle Wright
BAL WSN (152) BOS (136) Kyle Bradish (x2), Grayson Rodriguez Dean Kremer, Kyle Gibson John Means
BOS TBR (68) @BAL (100) Brayan Bello, Chris Sale Tanner Houck (x2), Nick Pivetta, Kutter Crawford
CHC @ATL (48) @MIL (61) Justin Steele (x2), Jordan Wicks Kyle Hendricks, Javier Assad Jameson Taillon
CHW ARI (77) SDP (27) Dylan Cease Mike Clevinger José Ureña (x2), Jesse Scholtens, Touki Toussaint
CIN @CLE (109) @STL (136) Hunter Greene, Andrew Abbott Connor Phillips, Brandon Williamson, Ben Lively 라이블리
CLE CIN (100) @DET (167) Shane Bieber Logan Allen, Lucas Giolito Triston McKenzie (?), Cal Quantrill
COL LAD (11) MIN (52) Chase Anderson (x2), Ryan Feltner, Noah Davis, Chris Flexen 플렉센, Ty Blach
DET KCR (156) CLE (129) Reese Olson (x2), Tarik Skubal, Sawyer Gipson-Long, Eduardo Rodriguez Joey Wentz
HOU @SEA (134) @ARI (111) Justin Verlander (x2), Framber Valdez Cristian Javier, J.P. France, Hunter Brown
KCR @DET (167) NYY (174) Cole Ragans Zack Greinke Alec Marsh (x2), Jordan Lyles
LAA TEX (27) OAK (111) Reid Detmers Patrick Sandoval, Griffin Canning, Kenny Rosenberg, Tyler Anderson
LAD @COL (52) @SFG (127) Clayton Kershaw, Lance Lynn, Ryan Pepiot (@SFG) Ryan Pepiot (@COL), Bobby Miller Gavin Stone, Emmet Sheehan
MIA @NYM (106) @PIT (138) Braxton Garrett, Eury Pérez, Jesús Luzardo Sandy Alcantara (?), Edward Cabrera Johnny Cueto
MIL STL (102) CHC (66) Corbin Burnes, Brandon Woodruff, Freddy Peralta Adrian Houser (x2), Wade Miley
MIN OAK (145) @COL (52) Kenta Maeda (vOAK), Bailey Ober, Pablo López Sonny Gray, Joe Ryan, Kenta Maeda (@COL)
NYM MIA (136) PHI (91) Kodai Senga, José Quintana Joey Lucchesi, David Peterson, José Butto Tylor Megill
NYY @TOR (118) @KCR (127) Michael King (x2), Gerrit Cole Clarke Schmidt Carlos Rodón Randy Vásquez
OAK @MIN (70) @LAA (115) Paul Blackburn (x2), Luis Medina, JP Sears Ken Waldichuk, Joe Boyle
PHI PIT (93) @NYM (106) Aaron Nola (x2), Zack Wheeler Ranger Suárez, Taijuan Walker, Cristopher Sánchez
PIT @PHI (48) MIA (143) Mitch Keller (vMIA) Mitch Keller (@PHI), Johan Oviedo, Andre Jackson Luis L. Ortiz, Bailey Falter
SDP @SFG (127) @CHW (129) Blake Snell (x2) Seth Lugo, Michael Wacha Pedro Avila Matt Waldron
SEA HOU (52) TEX (50) Luis Castillo (x2), George Kirby (x2), Logan Gilbert Bryce Miller, Bryan Woo
SFG SDP (88) LAD (75) Logan Webb (x2) Kyle Harrison, Sean Manaea, Ross Stripling, Alex Wood
STL @MIL (61) CIN (127) Zack Thompson (x2) Miles Mikolas Dakota Hudson, Adam Wainwright, Drew Rom
TBR @BOS (81) @TOR (118) Zach Eflin, Tyler Glasnow Aaron Civale Zack Littell, Taj Bradley
TEX @LAA (115) @SEA (134) Jordan Montgomery Dan Dunning, Nathan Eovaldi Jon Gray (x2), Martín Pérez (x2)
TOR NYY (127) TBR (52) Kevin Gausman (x2), José Berríos Chris Bassitt, Hyun Jin Ryu 류현진 Yusei Kikuchi
WSN @BAL (100) @ATL (48) Josiah Gray Trevor Williams, Jake Irvin, Patrick Corbin, Joan Adon

A few general schedule notes first:

  • We’ve made it to the final week of the season. Ottoneu head-to-head leagues should be all wrapped up leaving teams in points leagues to battle it out for the top three spots in their leagues. A reminder that the innings pitched cap is a soft cap, so make sure you plan out when your starters are going next week and try to stack as many of them as you can on the day you think you’ll go over the cap.
  • Be on the lookout for teams that re-slot their rotations in preparation for the playoffs or teams who try to line up their starters for a final push into the postseason. Double-check your probables and be ready to switch to a backup plan if things go sideways.
  • The Orioles, Royals, and Tigers all have easier matchups to close out the season. Those teams don’t normally have a ton of “must start” pitchers but the schedule aligns perfectly to give them some nice and easy opponents next week.
  • The Cubs and Mariners are both fighting for a playoff spot in their respective Wild Card races and they’ll be going up against some tough offenses. You’ve got to start the three aces on Seattle’s pitching staff but I’d be weary of calling on their two young rookies. It’s even tougher for Chicago since they’ll spend all of next week on the road against two very good teams. Justin Steele is fighting for the NL Cy Young and he even has a two-start week next week, but I think I’d only be comfortable starting him against the Brewers.

Notable two-start pitchers:

  • Blake Snell
  • Kevin Gausman
  • Logan Webb
  • Luis Castillo
  • Zac Gallen
  • Aaron Nola
  • Justin Verlander
  • George Kirby
  • Michael King
  • Kyle Bradish
  • Reese Olson

Is John Means Back in Business?

It was in 2021 that John Means threw a no-hitter, striking out 12 batters along the way, matching his career-high single-game strikeout total. Were it not for a runner making it to first base on a dropped third strike, Means would have been the only Orioles pitcher in history to have thrown a perfect game. But, that was all back in 2021 and besides only eight innings pitched in 2022, John Means is back on the mound for the first time since April of that year. Is Means valuable this season, next season, and beyond? Let’s take a look at where he was and where he is currently in an attempt to answer that question.

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Ottoneu SP Drip: Finding Under-rostered Starters

The clock is ticking down on the regular season which means it’s crunch time for fantasy baseball players. It’s probably too late to affect the outcome of any Ottoneu head-to-head leagues at this point — your roster is what it is during championship week — but points leagues still have two weeks to continue to accumulate points and try and hit their positional and innings caps. Below, I’ve compiled four starters who look like they have easier matchups over these final weeks of the season and who are rostered in less than 60% of Ottoneu leagues. If you’re desperate for innings to reach your cap, these guys might be able to help.

Under-rostered Starters, Last Two Weeks
Player Team Opponents IP FIP K-BB% HR/9 Pts/IP Roster%
Dean Kremer BAL @CLE, BOS 14 4.40 4.8% 0.64 3.89 52.2%
Zach Thompson STL MIL, @MIL, CIN 10 4.06 11.9% 0.90 4.07 27.6%
Sawyer Gipson-Long DET @OAK, CLE 10 2.26 33.3% 0.90 6.91 13.8%
Pedro Avila SDP STL, @CHW 12.1 6.75 -3.8% 1.46 2.13 3.2%

Dean Kremer shows up in this column again! He had one five-run clunker a week ago but his FIP since the All-Star break has been a tidy 4.27, a full run higher than his ERA. He has continued to keep the ball in the yard while maintaining his acceptable strikeout-to-walk ratio. He’s not flashy, but he feels like a safe option over these final two weeks of the season. His schedule lines up to face the Guardians on the road and the Red Sox at home; the first game is a slam dunk and the second looks safe too since Boston’s offense is so horrendous on the road.

Since moving to the starting rotation full-time in mid-August, Zach Thompson has put up a 4.15 ERA backed by a 3.77 FIP in seven starts and another bulk relief appearance. His last start against the Phillies was the first time he had allowed more than three runs in an appearance during this stretch. His strikeout-minus-walk ratio is a solid 18.2% and he hasn’t been hurt by the long ball too much. If you can get him on your roster ahead of his next start on Wednesday, he’d be lined up to make three starts for your fantasy team, twice against the punchless Brewers and once against the Reds at home.

Sawyer Gipson-Long has impressed over his first two starts in the majors, allowing just three runs in 10 innings while striking out 16. His minor league strikeout rates took a big step forward this year and that success has followed him to the big leagues. It’s a super small sample size, but two of his pitches are running whiff rates over 50% and his sinker is earning a whiff on 35% of the swings against it. Those look like legit weapons and Stuff+ is impressed with the underlying physical characteristics of his pitch arsenal. He has starts in Oakland and against the Guardians at home to close out the season and both of those look pretty juicy. Ride the hot hand while you can and hope that he can continue his early success.

If you’re feeling really risky, Pedro Avila could be an option to turn to. Since joining the rotation in mid-August, he’s put up a 5.95 ERA and a 5.29 FIP in four starts and one bulk relief outing. Most of that damage came in a single game against the Dodgers where he allowed seven runs in just 2.2 innings; take that outing away and his ERA drops to 3.71. His next two outings should be against the Cardinals at home and then the White Sox on the road. Neither is a perfect matchup, so I’d recommend turning to him only if you’re completely desperate for innings to hit your cap.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: September 18–24

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.

September 11–24.
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI SFG (123) @NYY (141) Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelly 켈리 Brandon Pfaadt, Zach Davies, Ryne Nelson
ATL PHI (91) @WSN (123) Max Fried (x2), Spencer Strider, Bryce Elder, Charlie Morton Kyle Wright (x2)
BAL @HOU (59) @CLE (150) Grayson Rodriguez Kyle Bradish, Dean Kremer John Means (x2), Kyle Gibson, Jack Flaherty
BOS @TEX (39) CHW (157) Chris Sale Brayan Bello, Kutter Crawford (vCHW) Kutter Crawford (@TEX), Tanner Houck, Nick Pivetta
CHC PIT (132) COL (143) Javier Assad (x2), Justin Steele, Kyle Hendricks, Jordan Wicks Jameson Taillon
CHW @WSN (123) @BOS (80) Mike Clevinger, Dylan Cease Touki Toussaint (x2), José Ureña, Jesse Scholtens
CIN MIN (43) PIT (93) Andrew Abbott Hunter Greene Brandon Williamson Brett Kennedy (x2), Ben Lively 라이블리
CLE @KCR (120) BAL (43) Logan Allen Tanner Bibee, Shane Bieber (?), Gavin Williams Cal Quantrill (x2), Lucas Giolito
COL @SDP (89) @CHC (84) Ty Blach (x2), Kyle Freeland Chase Anderson, Peter Lambert, Chris Flexen 플렉센
DET @LAD (36) @OAK (166) Tarik Skubal Eduardo Rodriguez Reese Olson, Sawyer Gipson-Long, Joey Wentz, Alex Faedo (@OAK) Alex Faedo (@LAD)
HOU BAL (39) KCR (107) J.P. France, Framber Valdez, Justin Verlander (vKCR) Justin Verlander (vBAL), Hunter Brown, Cristian Javier
KCR CLE (170) @HOU (59) Brady Singer (vCLE), Cole Ragans Alec Marsh, Zack Greinke, Brady Singer (@HOU) Jordan Lyles
LAA @TBR (100) @MIN (61) Griffin Canning, Reid Detmers Kenny Rosenberg, Patrick Sandoval, Chase Silseth (?) Tyler Anderson
LAD DET (118) SFG (77) Lance Lynn (x2), Ryan Pepiot (x2), Bobby Miller, Clayton Kershaw Emmet Sheehan
MIA NYM (109) MIL (155) Braxton Garrett, Eury Pérez, Jesús Luzardo Edward Cabrera (x2) Johnny Cueto
MIL @STL (109) @MIA (159) Freddy Peralta (x2), Corbin Burnes, Brandon Woodruff Adrian Houser (x2), Wade Miley
MIN @CIN (36) LAA (123) Pablo López, Sonny Gray, Joe Ryan (vLAA) Joe Ryan (@CIN), Kenta Maeda Dallas Keuchel
NYM @MIA (159) @PHI (50) Kodai Senga José Quintana José Butto (@MIA), Joey Lucchesi David Peterson, Tylor Megill, José Butto (@PHI)
NYY TOR (45) ARI (111) Gerrit Cole Michael King Clarke Schmidt (x2), Carlos Rodón Randy Vásquez
OAK SEA (118) DET (173) Luis Medina JP Sears (x2), Paul Blackburn (x2) Sean Newcomb, Ken Waldichuk
PHI @ATL (43) NYM (59) Zack Wheeler (x2), Aaron Nola Cristopher Sánchez (x2), Ranger Suárez, Taijuan Walker
PIT @CHC (84) @CIN (36) Mitch Keller Johan Oviedo Bailey Falter, Quinn Priester, Luis L. Ortiz, Andre Jackson
SDP COL (143) STL (102) Blake Snell Michael Wacha (x2) Seth Lugo, Pedro Avila Matt Waldron
SEA @OAK (166) @TEX (39) Bryan Woo (@OAK), Luis Castillo, George Kirby, Logan Gilbert Bryce Miller, Bryan Woo (@TEX)
SFG @ARI (132) @LAD (36) Logan Webb Kyle Harrison (x2), Alex Cobb, Sean Manaea Keaton Winn
STL MIL (148) @SDP (89) Zack Thompson, Miles Mikolas Adam Wainwright (x2), Drew Rom (x2), Dakota Hudson
TBR LAA (134) TOR (77) Aaron Civale, Zach Eflin, Tyler Glasnow Taj Bradley (x2), Zack Littell
TEX BOS (111) SEA (82) Jordan Montgomery (x2) Nathan Eovaldi, Jon Gray, Andrew Heaney, Dane Dunning
TOR @NYY (141) @TBR (100) Kevin Gausman José Berríos, Chris Bassitt, Hyun Jin Ryu 류현진 Yusei Kikuchi (x2)
WSN CHW (143) ATL (20) Josiah Gray Joan Adon (x2), Jackson Rutledge, Jake Irvin, Trevor Williams, Patrick Corbin

A few general schedule notes first:

  • In standard head-to-head Ottoneu leagues, next week is the championship matchup. Double- and triple-check your probable pitchers and make a plan for the week ahead so you know your backup plans in case something goes sideways.
  • It’s a really unfortunate week to roster any Phillies starters; they head to Atlanta for three games and then return home to face the still dangerous Mets for four. Zack Wheeler has a double-game week which would normally be a boon, but it’s going to force fantasy players into some tough decisions during the biggest week of their season.
  • The Cubs get a pair of easy matchups next week, hosting the Pirates and Rockies for three games each. That makes nearly their entire rotation an easy pick to start with Jameson Taillon the only one I’d have any reservations about.

Notable two-start pitchers:

  • Max Fried
  • Freddy Peralta
  • Jordan Montgomery
  • Justin Verlander
  • Ryan Pepiot
  • Lance Lynn
  • Javier Assad

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: September 11–17

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.

September 11–17
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @NYM (113) CHC (108) Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelly 켈리 Zach Davies (x2), Ryne Nelson (x2), Brandon Pfaadt
ATL @PHI (23) @MIA (120) Spencer Strider, Max Fried, Charlie Morton Bryce Elder Kyle Wright (?), Darius Vines
BAL STL (117) TBR (97) Kyle Bradish Dean Kremer (x2), Kyle Gibson (x2), Jack Flaherty, Grayson Rodriguez
BOS NYY (111) @TOR (54) Chris Sale Kutter Crawford (vNYY), Brayan Bello James Paxton (x2), Tanner Houck, Kutter Crawford (@TOR)
CHC @COL (83) @ARI (108) Justin Steele Kyle Hendricks Jordan Wicks (@ARI) Jordan Wicks (@COL), Javier Assad, Jameson Taillon
CHW KCR (108) MIN (52) Dylan Cease (vKCR) Dylan Cease (vMIN) Mike Clevinger Touki Toussaint (x2), Michael Kopech, Jesse Scholtens
CIN @DET (176) @NYM (113) Andrew Abbott Brandon Williamson (?), Hunter Greene (?) Ben Lively 라이블리 (x2), Carson Spiers
CLE @SFG (192) TEX (84) Gavin Williams Logan Allen, Tanner Bibee Xzavion Curry, Cal Quantrill, Lucas Giolito
COL CHC (56) SFG (108) Kyle Freeland (x2), Chris Flexen 플렉센 (x2), Ty Blach, Chase Anderson, Peter Lambert
DET CIN (133) @LAA (75) Eduardo Rodriguez, Tarik Skubal Reese Olson Joey Wentz (x2), Alex Faedo
HOU OAK (120) @KCR (140) Framber Valdez (x2), Justin Verlander, Hunter Brown, Cristian Javier, J.P. France
KCR @CHW (97) HOU (63) Cole Ragans Brady Singer (x2) Jordan Lyles, Alec Marsh, Zack Greinke
LAA @SEA (81) @DET (176) Reid Detmers, Patrick Sandoval, Griffin Canning Tyler Anderson Kenny Rosenberg
LAD SDP (65) @SEA (81) Bobby Miller, Clayton Kershaw Lance Lynn (x2), Ryan Pepiot, Emmet Sheehan
MIA @MIL (111) ATL (75) Braxton Garrett (@MIL), Eury Pérez Jesús Luzardo, Braxton Garrett (vATL) Edward Cabrera (x2) Johnny Cueto
MIL MIA (81) WSN (127) Brandon Woodruff (x2), Freddy Peralta (x2), Corbin Burnes Colin Rea, Wade Miley
MIN TBR (93) @CHW (97) Sonny Gray (x2), Joe Ryan (x2), Pablo López Kenta Maeda Dallas Keuchel
NYM ARI (106) CIN (113) José Quintana (x2), Kodai Senga David Peterson, Tylor Megill José Butto, Joey Lucchesi (?)
NYY @BOS (50) @PIT (158) Gerrit Cole Clarke Schmidt (@PIT), Carlos Rodón (@PIT) Clarke Schmidt (@BOS), Carlos Rodón (@BOS), Luis Severino, Michael King
OAK @HOU (59) SDP (120) Paul Blackburn, Luis Medina Ken Waldichuk (x2), JP Sears, Kyle Muller
PHI ATL (25) @STL (124) Aaron Nola Zack Wheeler, Ranger Suárez Taijuan Walker (x2), Michael Lorenzen, Cristopher Sánchez
PIT WSN (156) NYY (129) Johan Oviedo Mitch Keller Andre Jackson (x2) Bailey Falter (x2), Luis L. Ortiz
SDP @LAD (27) @OAK (172) Blake Snell, Seth Lugo, Rich Hill Michael Wacha, Pedro Avila (@OAK) Pedro Avila (@LAD)
SEA LAA (86) LAD (50) Logan Gilbert (x2), Luis Castillo, George Kirby Bryce Miller Bryan Woo
SFG CLE (167) @COL (83) Kyle Harrison Logan Webb Alex Wood (x2), Alex Cobb
STL @BAL (97) PHI (79) Miles Mikolas Dakota Hudson (x2), Adam Wainwright, Drew Rom, Zack Thompson
TBR @MIN (63) @BAL (97) Tyler Glasnow (x2), Aaron Civale, Zach Eflin Zack Littell (x2), Taj Bradley
TEX @TOR (54) @CLE (142) Max Scherzer (@CLE) Max Scherzer (@TOR), Jordan Montgomery, Andrew Heaney, Nathan Eovaldi (@CLE) Nathan Eovaldi (@TOR), Jon Gray
TOR TEX (70) BOS (65) Kevin Gausman Chris Bassitt (x2), Hyun Jin Ryu 류현진 (x2), Yusei Kikuchi, José Berríos
WSN @PIT (158) @MIL (111) MacKenzie Gore Josiah Gray (x2), Patrick Corbin Joan Adon, Jake Irvin, Trevor Williams

A few general schedule notes first:

  • The Braves have a double-header scheduled for Monday which could jumble up their rotation if they decide to call up a spot starter for one of those games. Kyle Wright is also on the mend and could be activated from the IL next week. Keep an eye on the listed probables because the Phillies and Marlins present matchups on opposite ends of the spectrum.
  • It looks like the Blue Jays are the only team to have a couple of tough matchups next week when they host the Rangers and Red Sox. Every other team has a mix of matchups that don’t present any easy decisions.

Notable two-start pitchers:

  • Framber Valdez
  • Brandon Woodruff
  • Freddy Peralta
  • Tyler Glasnow
  • Sonny Gray
  • Joe Ryan
  • José Quintana
  • Logan Gilbert
  • Max Scherzer
  • Dylan Cease

Ottoneu SP Drip: Finding Under-rostered Starters

I went back and checked and it’s been more than two months since I’ve written up some under-rostered starters. This column is finally back with a few suggestions for the stretch run. Most Ottoneu head-to-head leagues began their playoffs this week and teams in points leagues will soon need to start really thinking about managing their innings cap. Here are a few starters who have been performing particularly well over the last few weeks who are rostered in less than 60% of all Ottoneu leagues and a look at their remaining schedules.

Under-rostered Starters, Last Two Weeks
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% HR/9 Pts/IP Roster%
Griffin Canning LAA 13 2.03 30.6% 0.69 6.88 48.1%
Dean Kremer BAL 12 2.68 21.7% 0.75 5.66 41.3%
Brandon Williamson CIN 12 2.76 20.4% 0.75 5.36 37.8%
Paul Blackburn OAK 11 2.81 10.4% 0.00 5.02 37.5%
Javier Assad CHC 15 1.99 20.8% 0.00 6.93 24.7%

With Shohei Ohtani unable to pitch for the rest of the season, Griffin Canning is getting another shot to prove he can handle a starter’s workload. He had been working in a piggyback role with Chase Silseth but his last two appearances have been traditional starts. He’s excelled by allowing just three runs in 13 innings, striking out 16. The biggest difference I can discern in those two starts was a greater reliance on his hard changeup. It’s not his best pitch — that would be his slider — but it does help him keep left-handed batters at bay. He’s also got a pretty soft schedule to finish the season too with starts against the Guardians, Tigers, and A’s potentially on the docket.

Dean Kremer has been a frequent recommendation in this column this year and his up-and-down performance has likely kept his roster rate pretty low. He’s actually been on a pretty good run since the All-Star break with just a single start where he’s allowed more than three runs. His strikeout-minus-walk rate has been a fairly mediocre 11.3% during this stretch but he’s managed to keep the ball in the yard which had been his Achilles Heel previously. He has starts lined up against the Angels (today), Cardinals, Astros, Guardians, and potentially the Red Sox depending on how the Orioles shift their rotation with John Means’ impending return. I’d feel comfortable starting him in four of those five games.

Brandon Williamson has seemingly settled into the big leagues after a rough-ish start to his major league career. He’s posted a solid 3.93 FIP in the second half with a good 16.7% strikeout-minus-walk rate; over his last six starts, he’s racked up 39 strikeouts against just six walks. A slight uptick in fastball velocity and a greater reliance on his changeup are likely the drivers behind this recent stretch of good outings. Unfortunately, he was placed on the COVID-19 IL last weekend and his outlook for the rest of the season is a bit up in the air. If he returns quickly, he could potentially start against the Cardinals, Mets, and Pirates to end the season but that’s obviously very tentative at this point.

Paul Blackburn has been the A’s best starter this year (which isn’t actually saying much) and he’s taken a pretty big step forward as far as his underlying metrics go. A new slider has helped him push his strikeout rate up to a career-high. Combined with his very favorable home park, he’s got some sneaky upside on a team that no one is paying attention to. I’d avoid his next two starts against the Rangers and Astros, but he’s got the Mariners (at home), Tigers, and Angels lined up to finish out the season.

Of the five pitchers listed above, I think I’m most interested in adding Javier Assad for this stretch run. He pitched out of the Cubs bullpen for nearly the entire season before getting shifted to the rotation in August. He’s thrived in longer outings and has been one of the key contributors to Chicago’s summer ascent. He hasn’t allowed more than three runs in any of his six starts since making the transition out of the ‘pen; his last two starts have been particularly impressive, allowing just a single run in 15 innings with 14 strikeouts and just 3 walks. He has scheduled starts against the Diamondbacks, the Rockies twice (avoid him in Coors Field), the Pirates, and the Brewers to finish out the season.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: September 4–10

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.

September 4–10
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI COL (156) @CHC (110) Merrill Kelly 켈리 (x2), Zac Gallen Brandon Pfaadt (vCOL) Zach Davies, Slade Cecconi, Brandon Pfaadt (@CHC)
ATL STL (126) PIT (117) Spencer Strider, Max Fried, Bryce Elder, Charlie Morton Darius Vines (x2)
BAL @LAA (64) @BOS (41) Grayson Rodriguez, Kyle Gibson, Kyle Bradish, Jack Flaherty Dean Kremer, Cole Irvin
BOS @TBR (78) BAL (64) Brayan Bello (x2), Kutter Crawford, James Paxton, Chris Sale Tanner Houck
CHC SFG (121) ARI (73) Justin Steele (x2) Kyle Hendricks (x2), Jordan Wicks, Javier Assad Jameson Taillon
CHW @KCR (181) @DET (169) Dylan Cease Mike Clevinger, Michael Kopech Touki Toussaint Jesse Scholtens (x2)
CIN SEA (11) STL (87) Andrew Abbott Hunter Greene (vSEA), Graham Ashcraft, Brandon Williamson Brett Kennedy, Ben Lively 라이블리
CLE MIN (89) @LAA (64) Gavin Williams (x2), Tanner Bibee (x2), Logan Allen, Lucas Giolito Cal Quantrill
COL @ARI (117) @SFG (174) Kyle Freeland, Ty Blach, Austin Gomber Peter Lambert (x2), Chris Flexen 플렉센
DET @NYY (105) CHW (142) Eduardo Rodriguez, Tarik Skubal Reese Olson Matt Manning Joey Wentz (x2)
HOU @TEX (73) SDP (92) Framber Valdez, Justin Verlander J.P. France (x2), Hunter Brown, Cristian Javier
KCR CHW (142) @TOR (73) Cole Ragans (x2) Brady Singer Jordan Lyles, Alec Marsh, Zack Greinke
LAA BAL (43) CLE (112) Reid Detmers (vCLE) Reid Detmers (vBAL), Patrick Sandoval, Griffin Canning Tyler Anderson Jaime Barria (x2)
LAD @MIA (169) @WSN (114) Clayton Kershaw (x2), Lance Lynn, Julio Urías, Bobby Miller Ryan Pepiot
MIA LAD (75) @PHI (21) Braxton Garrett, Eury Pérez, Sandy Alcantara Jesús Luzardo (x2) Johnny Cueto
MIL @PIT (135) @NYY (105) Corbin Burnes (x2), Brandon Woodruff, Freddy Peralta Wade Miley Julio Teheran (?)
MIN @CLE (147) NYM (103) Pablo López (x2), Sonny Gray, Joe Ryan, Kenta Maeda Dallas Keuchel
NYM @WSN (114) @MIN (73) José Quintana, Kodai Senga Carlos Carrasco, David Peterson Tylor Megill
NYY DET (133) MIL (103) Gerrit Cole (x2) Clarke Schmidt, Carlos Rodón Luis Severino, Michael King
OAK TOR (103) @TEX (73) Luis Medina (x2), JP Sears, Paul Blackburn Zach Neal, Ken Waldichuk
PHI @SDP (108) MIA (124) Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola Taijuan Walker (x2), Michael Lorenzen, Cristopher Sánchez
PIT MIL (128) @ATL (53) Mitch Keller Andre Jackson, Johan Oviedo Luis L. Ortiz (x2), Bailey Falter
SDP PHI (64) @HOU (57) Michael Wacha, Blake Snell Seth Lugo Rich Hill (x2), Pedro Avila
SEA @CIN (96) @TBR (78) Logan Gilbert, Luis Castillo, George Kirby Bryan Woo (x2), Bryce Miller (x2)
SFG @CHC (110) COL (167) Logan Webb (x2), Kyle Harrison, Alex Cobb Sean Manaea Tristan Beck
STL @ATL (53) @CIN (96) Miles Mikolas Zack Thompson (x2), Dakota Hudson, Drew Rom, Adam Wainwright
TBR BOS (101) SEA (66) Zach Eflin (x2), Tyler Glasnow Aaron Civale Zack Littell, Taj Bradley (?)
TEX HOU (39) OAK (133) Jordan Montgomery Dane Dunning, Max Scherzer, Jon Gray, Andrew Heaney (vOAK) Andrew Heaney (vHOU)
TOR @OAK (181) KCR (147) José Berríos (x2), Chris Bassitt, Hyun Jin Ryu 류현진, Yusei Kikuchi, Kevin Gausman
WSN NYM (76) LAD (30) MacKenzie Gore Patrick Corbin, Joan Adon, Jake Irvin, Trevor Williams

A few general schedule notes first:

  • The Ottoneu playoffs begin for most head-to-head leagues next week.
  • The Blue Jays and White Sox both have a pair of easier matchups next week. That’s great news for Toronto’s starters who have had a bunch of tougher matchups in the recent weeks. Dylan Cease is really the only starter who really benefits from Chicago’s scheduled series against the Royals and Tigers; the rest of their rotation is pretty flawed and would be risky starts no matter who the opponent is.
  • The Orioles and Padres both have tough matchups next week. Baltimore is on the road to face the Angels and Red Sox — both teams are extremely difficult to face in their home stadiums — while San Diego faces the red hot Phillies and Astros. Be weary of the Marlins schedule too; they host the Dodgers before traveling to Philadelphia next weekend.

Notable two-start pitchers:

  • Gerrit Cole
  • Corbin Burnes
  • Clayton Kershaw
  • Logan Webb
  • Pablo López
  • Justin Steele
  • Zach Eflin
  • José Berríos
  • Cole Ragans
  • Merrill Kelly

Paul Sporer’s Rest of Season Starting Pitcher Rankings

Jonathan Dyer-USA TODAY Sports

Here are my rest of season SP rankings. Let’s discuss in the comments if you have further questions about anyone. Obviously standings and situation will change how you manage these pitchers. If you’re chasing, open your window up a bit more… if you’re protecting, don’t hesitate to sit a Top 30 guy v. LAD or ATL (as a random example).

I will still have the Daily SP Chart running, too, so as things change with guys down the stretch, I’ll be able to adjust there.

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