The Weekly Planner – 5/8 – 5/14

For the past five-plus years, I’ve contributed The Week Ahead and Impact Report at Rotoworld. Those articles included a look at two-start pitchers, streamers, waiver pickups, and injuries. Many readers planned their week and FAAB deadlines around those articles, so my plan is to contribute something similar weekly throughout the 2023 season in this space.

If there’s something else you’d like to see, please let me know in the comments section.

 

Two Start Pitchers

American League

Strong Plays

Shane McClanahan: @BAL, @NYY

Dylan Cease: @KC, HOU

Tanner Bibee: DET, LAA

Lucas Giolito: @KC, HOU

Hunter Brown: @LAA, @CHW

Logan Gilbert: TEX, @DET

 

Decent Plays

Zach Eflin: @BAL, @NYY

Jon Gray: @SEA, @OAK

Nestor Cortes: OAK, TB

Kyle Gibson: TB, PIT

Louie Varland: SD, CHC

Andrew Heaney: @SEA, @OAK

Zack Greinke: CHW, @MIL

 

At Your Own Risk

JP Sears: @NYY, TEX

Clarke Schmidt: OAK, TB

Jordan Lyles: CHW, @MIL

Michael Lorenzen: @CLE, SEA

Drew Rucinski: @NYY, TEX

 

National League

Strong Plays

Zac Gallen: MIA, SF

Logan Webb: WAS, @ARI

Mitch Keller: COL, @BAL

Anthony DeSclafani: WAS, @ARI

Max Scherzer: @CIN, @WAS

 

 

Decent Plays

Marcus Stroman: STL, @MIN

Charlie Morton: BOS, @TOR

Miles Mikolas: @CHC, @BOS

Brandon Pfaadt: MIA, SF

Tony Gonsolin: @MIL, SD

Braxton Garrett: @ARI, CIN

 

At Your Own Risk

Michael Wacha: @MIN, @LAD

Kyle Freeland: @PIT, PHI

Jake Irvin: @SF, NYM

Luke Weaver: NYM, @MIA

 

Streamers

These are pitchers I’m considering as single-start streamers this week in a 12-15 team mixed league that are available in at least 50% of leagues.

American League

Jhony Brito: OAK (5/10)

Mike Clevinger: @KC (5/11)

Kyle Bradish: PIT (5/12)

 

National League

Antonio Senzatela: @PIT (5/10)

Rich Hill: COL (5/10)

Sean Manaea: WAS (5/10)

Tommy Henry: SF (5/11)

Adrian Houser: KC (5/14)

 

Player Notes

  • The JJ Bleday-for-AJ Puk swap between Oakland and Miami is turning into one of the most interesting trades of the spring. Puk has emerged as the Marlins closer, while Bleday suddenly looks like a real player after struggling prior to this season. The former fourth overall pick in the draft, Bleday was called up to play regularly for the A’s after a great start to his season at Triple-A. There’s reason to believe he’s made real adjustments with his new organization, as well. Bleday struck out 27% of the time at Triple-A last season, but that rate was down to sub-13% in 119 plate appearances before he was promoted. His inability to make contact has been a huge culprit for his inability to hit for average, including a .228 batting average at Triple-A last season. There has never been a question that the 25-year-old had a power of an MLB corner outfielder, including 25 home runs between Triple-A and the majors last year. While I’m not quite ready to go all-in based on the still relatively small sample size, Bleday is an interesting flier in mixed leagues.
  • Royals infielder Maikel Garcia appears to be another call-up worthy of attention. The undersized infielder has started off hot with the Royals, just as he did when he got called up in September. There was some trepidation with the bat after a slow start at Omaha, hitting only .242 in 112 plate appearances, but Garcia performed much better at that level in 186 plate appearances last season hitting .274-7-28 with 12 steals in 40 games. There are two other developments worth watching in his game. Garcia has been more patient this season (16 walks in 22 games at Triple-A, and the power has started to develop over the last year. He hit 11 home runs last season and carried that power surge into the Venezuelan Winter League, with four homers. Logically, there’s nothing standing in the way of Garcia seeing regular at-bats as the team’s third baseman the rest of the way, and his excellent base stealing skills give Garcia a high fantasy ceiling.
  • Of course, Cubs first baseman Matt Mervis was the most anticipated prospect called up this week and for good reason based on what he’s done since the start of last season. The Duke alum hit .309-36-119 between three levels last season, and he’s picked up where he left off hitting .286-6-27 in only 112 plate appearances at Iowa. Eric Hosmer’s addition was clearly a stand-in for Mervis, who continues to show plus power and solid contact for a power hitter. The only major limitation worth watching is his spot in the batting order, hitting seventh in his first two games. It should also be noted that he’s probably not the best first base prospect to be promoted before the All-Star break, as Reds first base prospect Christian Encarnacion-Strand has been tearing the cover off the ball at Triple-A since returning from injury and should be up whenever the Reds have had enough of their current first base experiments.
  • Bryce Miller is one of the more interesting FAAB pickups of the week, and his price is fluid with his first start against a real lineup (Houston) coming today after dominating Oakland in his debut. The hype about his fastball is real. It averaged 95 mph in his debut, and he threw the pitch 70% of the time. With the heavy usage and lack of great secondary stuff, the concern comes when he faces the league for the second time. Miller is an extreme flyball pitcher who struggled with the long ball in his four starts at Double-A earlier this season, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see some blowups and a highly variable ERA this season.
  • Pierce Johnson remains the clear closer in Colorado despite the return of Daniel Bard. The Denver native has converted two saves this week and has continued to miss bats on command after missing most of last season in San Diego due to injury. He currently has a career-high 13.5 K/9. There are some red flags with a 5.4 BB/9 and home run issues, but the curveball-fastball combo is working just fine overall. Bard is easily the highest paid reliever in the Rox pen, but Bud Black has yet to use him in anything close to a high-leverage situation and it remains to be seen if that will change.
  • During the offseason, I saw a lot of what I felt to be misguided speculation that groundball pitchers would be penalized by the lack of shifts. This idea came with an assumption that MLB would be using the same “dead” ball as last season, which was a very risky bet. It appears we’ve reverted back to something closer to the 2019 ball, and thus groundball pitchers have been a savior for many fantasy squads with a high floor and fewer blowups, as much of the Giants starting rotation can attest. That brings me to a pitcher coming back from injury and worth watching. Milwaukee groundball specialist Adrian Houser has a career 54% groundball grate that was much higher in 2020-2021 when he was pitching some of his best baseball. Houser doesn’t miss many bats, with a mediocre career 7.2 K/9, but his ability to provoke groundballs has made him a serviceable backend starting pitcher and someone worth watching if he looks strong in his season debut today.

The Weekly Planner – 4/3 – 4/9

For the past five-plus years, I’ve contributed The Week Ahead and Impact Report at Rotoworld. Those articles included a look at two-start pitchers, streamers, waiver pickups, and injuries. Many readers planned their week and FAAB deadlines around those articles, so my plan is to contribute something similar weekly throughout the 2023 season in this space.

My current intention is to post on Saturday, but with some more freeform notes rather than a set format. I’ll post my player and team observations from the past week, as well as some matchups to consider for the upcoming week, in addition to my look at the scheduled two-start pitchers and streamers.

If there’s something else you’d like to see, please let me know in the comments section.

 

Two Start Pitchers

American League

Strong Plays

Drew Rasmussen: @WAS, OAK

George Kirby: LAA, @CLE

Hunter Brown: DET, @MIN

Reid Detmers: @SEA, TOR

Jon Gray: BAL, @CHC

 

Decent Plays

Brady Singer: TOR, @SF

Nestor Cortes: PHI, @BAL

Kyle Bradish: @TEX, NYY

Nick Pivetta: PIT, @DET

Tyler Mahle: @MIA, HOU

Jose Berrios: @KC, @LAA

Yusei Kikuchi: @KC, @LAA

Michael Kopech: SF, @PIT

Matthew Boyd: @HOU, BOS

 

At Your Own Risk

Zach Plesac: @OAK, SEA

James Kaprielian: CLE, @TB

Kris Bubic: TOR, @SF

 

National League

Strong Plays

Carlos Carrasco: @MIL, MIA

Sean Manaea: @CHW, KC

 

Decent Plays

Steven Matz: ATL, @MIL

Freddy Peralta: NYM, STL

Charlie Morton: @STL, SD

Michael Grove: COL, @ARI

Taijuan Walker: @NYY, CIN

Drew Smyly: @CIN, TEX

Roansy Contreras: @BOS, CHW

 

At Your Own Risk

Ryne Nelson: @SD, LAD

Johnny Cueto: MIN, @NYM

Dylan Dodd: @STL, SD

Trevor Williams: TB, @COL

Ryan Feltner: @LAD, WAS

Connor Overton: CHC, @PHI

Chad Kuhl: TB, @COL

 

Streamers

These are pitchers I’m considering as single-start streamers this week in a 12-15 team mixed league that are available in at least 50% of leagues.

American League

Tyler Wells: @ TEX (4/4)

JP Sears: CLE (4/4)

Josh Fleming: @ WAS (4/4)

Hunter Gaddis: @ OAK (4/5)

Jhony Brito: @ BAL (4/8)

 

National League

Tylor Megill: MIA (4/6)

Bailey Falter: CIN (4/8)

 

Player Notes

  • I’m anxious to see the reported velocity risers, particularly those who pitched in the Cactus League, where data wasn’t as readily available. Several of those are two-start pitchers next week, including Reid Detmers and Sean Manaea. We also saw strong velocity trends in Spring Training from Nick Pivetta, Kyle Bradish, and Ryan Feltner, so that trio is worth watching as they make their first starts of the season.
  • Just because Michael Grove is gaining a rotation spot as a result of an injury, we shouldn’t assume he will lose it when Ryan Pepiot is ready to return. Grove is a solid prospect in his own right who has consistently posted a K/9 above 10.0 in the minors, and his 17/3 K/BB in 16.2 innings during Spring Training is indicative of a pitcher who could be taking the next step with his control. He has a very easy two-start week, and is worthy of an extra few bucks of FAAB for the chance those outings go well enough to keep his spot.
  • Kris Bubic has lost his luster as a prospect, but he’s one of the pitchers who could really benefit from KC’s new coaching staff. The lefty’s ERA ballooned above 5.00 last season, but he had a more respectable 4.40 ERA over his first two seasons after posting a pristine 2.23 ERA in 26 starts between Low-A and High-A in 2019. The Royals did him no favors by rushing him to the majors, and the control has been the big issues. The Royals have taken the more modern approach to throwing strikes in their new regime, encouraging pitchers to throw in the middle of the plate and let their movement work for them. This is a legitimate 12-team mixed league pitcher if Bubic’s control takes hold.
  • If you can find me a Jose Berrios fan who isn’t nervous heading into the season, I’ll call you a liar. The velocity and effectiveness was up and down again this spring in spite of some promising talk about his mechanical adjustments during the offseason. It should be noted that Berrios really didn’t lose much velocity last season, but his mechanics were all over the place and he certainly lost confidence. He didn’t do anything in Spring Training to regain that confidence, though the Jays are doing us a favor by moving to Monday to make his first start at Kansas City, compared to the alternative of facing St. Louis in the team’s first series.
  • There’s been some worry that Tylor Megill’s velocity was down during Spring Training after suffering arm injuries last season. Though, I think it’s important to note that Megill’s velocity was well up early last season, yet he developed into a sleeper prior to 2022 after posting 99/27 K/BB in 89.2 innings during his rookie campaign. That’s to say I believe Megill is capable of being very effective at a lower velocity. More concerning was his lack of control during Spring Training, with 13 walks in 17 innings.
  • How should we treat Colorado’s closer situation? It’s impossible to say when Daniel Bard might return from anxiety, though the fact that he’s still with the team and throwing is a good sign. There are two facts to consider: 1) Bud Black has demonstrated loyalty as a manger, particularly to veterans. He stuck with Bard for far too long as the closer in 2021, even after he struggled. 2) Pierce Johnson is a native of Colorado, and showed very capable in his first save chance on Friday on the road. Johnson’s injury history is long, but he looks healthy at the moment. I’d expect Bard to work his way back into the job whenever he returns, but you might be able to net a handful of saves from Johnson in the meantime.
  • German Marquez pitched better on Opening Day vs. San Diego than I saw in all of 2022. Before poo-pooing a Colorado starting pitcher, consider that Marquez was a playable option in 12-team mixed leagues from 2017-2021 with 175-plus strikeouts in three seasons and a sub-1.30 WHIP in four seasons. We saw some velocity decline in 2021 and 2022, but Marquez averaged 96.1 mph on Opening Day, which is the best velocity of his career. We often talk about using Rockies hitters at Coors Field, but Marquez has also proven to be a serviceable road situational option with a career 3.75 ERA, 1.17 WHIP, and 8.3 K/9. I’m comfortable using him on the road, even at Dodger Stadium next week.
  • Aledmys Diaz was an overlooked hitting option during draft season. He should open some eyes now that he’s starting for Oakland at shortstop vs. right-handed pitching and batting third in the order. The run-scoring opportunities are still limited in that lineup, but per 162 games Diaz is a .267-21-75 hitter in his career. You could do worse for a middle infielder.
  • Ji Hwan Bae got the surprising start at second base for Pittsburgh on Opening Day and made the most of it with two hits and two steals. I felt that Bae was an underrated fantasy prospect, with high batting average and elite speed. His added versatility with the new ability to play the outfield gives him even more intrigue. If the production continues, it’s also inevitable that we’ll see Bae near the top of the order as a high batting average and OBP player.
  • There’s a lot of attention paid to Joey Wiemer’s promotion by Milwaukee not only for the fact that he was promoted but also for the fact that Sal Frelick was not promoted. The promotion made sense from a team construction standpoint because Wiemer is right-handed, an area of weakness for the Brewers roster. However, Wiemer was outplayed in Spring Training by Frelick, and my long-term outlook for Frelick is much higher. That’s not to say Wiemer can’t help fantasy teams as a 20/20 man in back-to-back seasons, but his margin for error is small with Frelick behind him plus the eventual return of Tyrone Taylor. As for Frelick, I actually his path to the majors in center field, where young Garrett Mitchell currently resides. Mitchell had a good spring and solid MLB debut last season, but his contact skills aren’t up to Frelick’s standard.

Fantasy Baseball Relief Pitcher Rankings 2023

Updated 01/22/23

Rankings based on 15-team mixed, standard roto-scoring leagues.

Rating: 1-5, 5 is likely improvement, 1 is likely decline

Status: Sleeper (S), Deep Sleeper (DS), Bust (B)

RankPlayerLGTeamPosCommentsRatingStatus
1Edwin DiazNNYMRPHuge increase in sliders and velo increase. Even better in second half.3
2Emmanuel ClaseACLERPThrowing more sliders, control improved. Safest closer other than overuse.3
3Devin WilliamsNMILRPAdded GB which helped HR/9. Velo fell but fastball more effective. Clearly elite closer.4
4Josh HaderNSDPRPHR issues returned, other numbers the same. Velo best of career by far.3
5Kenley JansenABOSRPVelo still up and still thorwing more sinkers. Has settled in nicely.3
6Raisel IglesiasNATLRPVelo down slightly and reflected in K rate, still terrific results. Elite closer.4
7Jordan RomanoATORRPVelo down slightly, threw more sliders. Similar to 2020. Control improved in the second half.3
8Ryan PresslyAHOURPLost some velo, minor arm problems. Still elite.3
9Daniel BardNCOLRPGB% up to 52%, added velo. GB rate gives him a chance to maintain success.3
10Ryan HelsleyNSTLRPAdded 2 mph, dominant entire year.3
11Clay HolmesANYYRP76% GB, some struggles in second half after injury.3
12David BednarNPITRPMissed two months with back, returned in September. Repeat of 2021. Dominant.3
13Alexis DiazNCINRPTwo excellent pitches, control still shaky. Clear closer in last two months.3S
14Andres MunozASEARP53% GB, ridiculous K/BB. Averaged 100 mph and threw mostly sliders. Closer waiting to happen.3S
15Felix BautistaABALRPSudden velo increased fix control issues, shoulder was tired late in the season. Legit closer with slight injury and team risk.3
16Camilo DovalNSFGRP56% GB, elite velo. Control issues but cured HR issues.3
17Jose LeclercATEXRPVelo is back, throwing a lot of splitters. Finished year as closer.3S
18Jhoan DuranAMINRP61% GB, 101 mph FB, suddenly elite control. Closer upside.4DS
19Paul SewaldASEARPVelo still up from 2021, major HR issues. Most frequent closer after April.3
20Daniel HudsonNLADRPGB pitcher out of nowhere, throwing a lot more sliders. Strong closer candidate despite knee injury.4S
21Alex LangeADETRPAdded sinker and throws mostly curveballs. Good GB rate.3
22Taylor RogersNSFGRPHR issues in MIL. Velo down from 2021 but still fine. Clear rebound but unlikely to close at beginning of year after down year.4
23Pete FairbanksATBRRPHuge velo and GB increase, Clase-like upside if he can stay healthy.4S
24Kyle FinneganNWSNRPHuge velo increase, added control. Likely to close if he sticks around.3
25Trevor MayAOAKRP
26Evan PhillipsNLADRPAdded velo and added cutter. First time he's ever shown control but looks legit.3S
27Kendall GravemanACHWRPMaintained velo but more offspeed.3
28Jorge LopezAMINRP58% GB and +2.5 mph. Curveball became plus pitch. Command and velo down after trade.2
29Scott BarlowAKCRRPPrimary closer, velo was down, threw more curveballs. Obvious ERA regression.2
30Giovanny GallegosNSTLRPFour saves in 2nd half. Looked good.3
31Carlos EstevezALAARPSame pitcher as 2021, all velo.3
32Dylan FloroNMIARPNot a GB pitcher anymore, velo down after shoulder issues. Good in 2nd half but a lot of red flags.2
33Craig KimbrelNPHIRPVelo and K rate crash.2
34A.J. MinterNATLRPGot saves when Jansen was out. Added velo, threw more changeups.3DS
35Seranthony DominguezNPHIRPVelo back to rookie season. Didn't close in September but clear sleeper.3DS
36Aroldis ChapmanAKCRRPSignificant velo decline, awful control in consecutive years.3
37Brock BurkeATEXRPBig velo increase, wasn't good in 2021.3
38Luis GarciaAHOURPGB pitcher, continuing to add velo.3
39Jose AlvaradoNPHIRPVelo still up since 2021, but 43% sliders now with elite GB. Improvement looks real.4S
40Joe JimenezNATLRPVelo returned and was dominant again. ERA metrics closer to 2.3
41Tanner ScottNMIARPCloser much of the year. GB rate dropped, threw more sliders. Control still horrific, and much worse late.3
42Jimmy HergetALAARPGood since finding control, closed over last two months.3
43Hector NerisAHOURPMore fastballs, better control. Pitched much better than ERA.4
44Scott McGoughNARIRP00
45Ryan TeperaALAARPLost some velo, wasn't missing bats. Got some saves late.3
46Alex VesiaNLADRPAdding velo throwing more sliders with improved control.3
47Erik SwansonATORRPElite K/BB, improved despite less velo. Splitter was great.3
48James KarinchakACLERPGreat after returning from injury. Velo down slightly.3
49Kevin GinkelNARIRPAdded velo, finally broke out.3
50Brandon HughesNCHCRPGood milb track record, closed over last two months.3
51Chris MartinABOSRPAdded velo, more cutters. Insane control after going to LA. Closer sleeper.4S
52A.J. PukAOAKRPRare health. Saves in July. Control issues in second half.2
53Jason AdamATBRRPFound control with huge increased in sliders and changeups.3
54Robert SuarezNSDPRPMuch better control in second half, elite velo.3
55Adam OttavinoNNYMRPGB increase, fixed control. Closer potential if control continues.3
56Bryan AbreuAHOURPAdded 1.5 mph velo, dominant slider. Fixed control in second half.4S
57Brusdar GraterolNLADRPNew cutter, improved control and 63% GB. No out pitch.3
58Zach JacksonAOAKRPDecent two pitch pitcher, poor control. Closer chance.3DS
59Joe KellyACHWRPVelo and GB rates were fine. Should rebound.4
60Rafael MonteroAHOURPNow a GB pitcher and added velo, but has injury history.3
61Jalen BeeksATBRRPAdded significant velocity.3
62Garrett CleavingerATBRRPElite in TB, control fixed. Closer potential.4S
63Collin McHughNATLRPElite over two seasons, throwing all sliders and cutters.3
64Will SmithAFARPWas excellent after trade. Velo down slightly but really found control in Houston. Excellent closer potential after late surge.4S
65Joe MantiplyNARIRPDeveloped plus change, elite control.3
66Emilio PaganAMINRPVelo and GB rate increased. HR still huge problem. Good in second half.3
67Caleb ThielbarAMINRPAdded velo, terrific in second half.4
68Lou TrivinoANYYRPIntroduced slider, threw it much more in NYY. Much better in NYY, though should have been mid-3's overall. Not good enough to close.3
69Reynaldo LopezACHWRPElite control over last two seasons. Added huge velo, though HR rate a fluke.3
70Matt BushNMILRPVelo rebound, huge HR issues in Milwaukee. Curveball usage up in MIL.3
71Luis GarciaAHOURPGB pitcher, continuing to add velo.3
72Trevor StephanACLERPTransitioned from SP, great velo and two plus secondaries.3
73Colin PocheATBRRPGot save opps but had terrible HR issues.3
74Liam HendriksACHWRPHeld velo from 2021, remains elite.3
75Brad BoxbergerNCHCRPVelo down again. Overachieved.2
76Diego CastilloASEARPOne save in last two months, no longer a GB pitcher. Mostly sliders.3
77Gregory SotoNPHIRPVelo still great, control still terrible. Scary closer.2
78Michael KingANYYRPAdded two mph and sweeper, fractured elbow but no TJS.4
79Sam HentgesACLERP62% GB throwing more sinkers, good offspeed.3
80Andrew ChafinAFARPVelo in decline but still very good.3
81Aaron BummerACHWRPMissed three months with lat but finished healthy. 63% GB, velo down slightly.3
82Robert StephensonNPITRP
83Seth LugoNSDPRPAdded velo, seen as SP by some teams. HR rate concerning.3DS
84Brooks RaleyNNYMRPFound control over last two years. Almost all offspeed pitches.3
85Mychal GivensABALRPLosing velo, more sliders.2
86John SchreiberABOSRPAdded two mph, 56% GB. Save opps late in the year.3
87Mark MelanconNARIRPVelo and GB rate tanked. Looks finished, though he also looked bad in 2020.3
88Taylor ClarkeAKCRRPGood velo, more offspeed, elite control.3
89Andrew BellattiNPHIRP
90Tommy KahnleANYYRP
91Dylan ColemanAKCRRPControl issues but good velo and two plus pitches.3
92Bryan BakerABALRPGood milb track record and velo uptick.3
93Griffin JaxAMINRP3 mph velo increase and a lot more sliders. A completely different pitcher in the pen.4
94David RobertsonNNYMRPBest velo of career, throwing more sliders. Shaky control.3
95Michael FulmerAFARPVelo down, throwing mostly sliders. Not a really a closer candidate.3
96Jason FoleyADETRPGB pitcher with great control.3
97Wandy PeraltaANYYRPClosing opps. Added sinker and control.3
98Lucas LuetgeANYYRP
99Dillon TateABALRPLost velo after 2021 spike, but much better control. GB pitcher should be solid if control holds, and was clear saves fallback.3
100Tim MayzaATORRP58% GB and control control.3
101Nick VespiABALRPThrows junk but a solid RP.3
102Ron MarinaccioANYYRPControl issues but really misses bats.3
103Adam CimberATORRPLed league in appearances. More Ks but no grounders.3
104Yimi GarciaATORRPLost some velo, more fastballs.3
105Hunter HarveyNWSNRPAdded velo, trashed curveball. Closer potential if he stays healthy.4DS
106Dylan LeeNATLRPElite control, mostly sliders.3
107Josh StaumontAKCRRPControl was gone, curveball terrible.3
108Miguel CastroNARIRP
109Penn MurfeeASEARPSidearmer with great control. Mostly sliders.3
110Adrian MorejonNSDPRPGood control, could move to rotation. Lack of strikeouts concerning.3
111Hoby MilnerNMILRPDeveloped changeup, elite control.3
112Jonathan LoaisigaANYYRPMaintained GB rate, didn't miss bats with bad breaking ball.3
113Eli MorganACLERPAdded velo, HRs still an issue.3
114Lucas SimsNCINRPSurgery for herniated disc. Velo was way down.3
115Will VestADETRP
116Connor BrogdonNPHIRP43% changeups, strong K/BB.3
117Matt StrahmNPHIRPBest velo of career, control regression.3
118Cionel PerezABALRP51% GB, added velo. Control improvement. Probably not enough strikeouts to close.3
119Carl Edwards Jr.NWSNRPAdded changeup, K rate not great.3
120Rowan WickNCHCRPSome saves late in the year. Had HR issues.3
121Garrett CrochetACHWRP
122Domingo AcevedoAOAKRPCloser in September. Mediocre velo and K rates.2
123Jonathan HernandezATEXRPNo control since TJS, velo was good.3
124Tyler RogersNSFGRPGB rate still good, control regression.3
125Jake DiekmanACHWRPHorrible control and HR issues, velo still fine.3
126Jordan HicksNSTLRPStruggled but FB and GB were fine.4
127Pierce JohnsonNCOLRP
128Huascar BrazobanNMIARPGreat velo, mostly sliders. Was in Independent Ball.3
129Nabil CrismattNSDPRP50% GB, mostly changeups, added Ks.3
130Mason ThompsonNWSNRPDecent velo, not missing bats.3
131Jose QuijadaALAARPAdded velo, throws 84% FB. Still has control issues but got saves.3
132Jeremiah EstradaNCHCRPCloser potential, elite K rates in minors.3
133Richard BleierNMIARPGB down significantly.2
134Jovani MoranAMINRPImpressive strikeout numbers. Stuff isn't great.3
135Shawn ArmstrongATBRRPVelo up significantly, 4.36 K/BB with TB.4
136Phil BickfordNLADRPGreat other than HR issues.3
137Wil CroweNPITRPAdded velo and fewer fastballs, K/BB still lousy. Terrible second half.2
138Keegan AkinABALRPFirst time he's shown control since low minors. Sudden velo and GB increase.3
139Aaron LoupALAARP
140Matt MooreNFARPAdded velo and far more curveballs.3
141Enyel De Los SantosACLERPMissing bats and keeping ball down.3
142John BrebbiaNSFGRPStrong velo increase but not missing bats.3
143Jarlin GarciaNPITRPMoere offpseed, HR issues.2
144Phil MatonAHOURP
145Peter StrzeleckiNMILRPGreat K rates and success in minors, stuff is average.3
146Cole SulserNARIRP
147Trevor WilliamsNWSNRPVery good as RP, showed nice control as SP.3
148Brad HandNFARPSlider was bad, K rate still falling.2
149Matt BarnesABOSRPFinished year as closer, velo down slightly and curveball was bad. Huge ST to track.2
150JT ChargoisNMIARPFinished year healthy. 60% GB due to more fastballs, closer potential.4DS
151Eric TorresALAARP
152Chris StrattonNSTLRP
153Tejay AntoneNCINRP
154Duane Underwood Jr.NPITRP
155Steven WilsonNSDPRP
156Dany JimenezAOAKRPAdded velo and more curveballs. Lousy control, closed early in the year.2
157Yerry De Los SantosNPITRPElite milb track record, great GB, closer upside.4DS
158Nic EnrightNMIARP
159Trevor RichardsATORRP
160Brett MartinATEXRP
161Andrew KittredgeATBRRPTJS in June.3
162Jorge AlcalaAMINRPMinor elbow surgery, worthy flier based on 2021.3
163Joely RodríguezABOSRP
164Ryan ThompsonATBRRPSeason ended with elbow injury, decent GB rate and control.3
165Alex ColomeNFARPAll cutters and GBs, didn't miss bats.3
166Matthew FestaASEARP
167Andrew NardiNMIARP
168Tommy NanceNMIARP
169Chad SmithAOAKRP
170Ryan BrasierABOSRP.335 BABIP, great K/BB. Incredibly unlucky.4
171Ryne StanekAHOURPBest velo of career. Control was bad and HR is outlier.2
172Brandon WalterABOSRP
173Kirby YatesNATLRP
174Víctor AranoNWSNRP
175Steven OkertNMIARPAdded velo and lost of sliders, but HR and control still issues.2
176Erasmo RamirezNWSNRP
177Corey KnebelNFARPVelo down slightly, K rate sucked, bad shoulder injury.2
178Caleb FergusonNLADRP
179Jake CousinsNMILRP
180Joe BarlowATEXRP60% sliders, had wrist surgery. Wasn't missing bats.2
181Sean DoolittleNWSNRP
182Alex ReyesNFARP
183Victor GonzalezNLADRP
184Shelby MillerNLADRPThrowing mostly sliders, dominant.4
185Ken GilesAFARP
186Drew PomeranzNSDPRP
187Dinelson LametNCOLRPGot on track with Colorado, velo still down.3
188Andrew WantzALAARP
189Richard LoveladyAKCRRP
190Trevor GottASEARPNew cutter, showing elite control.3
191Hunter StricklandNFARPPoor control, saves out of desperation.2
192Buck FarmerNCINRPSlight velo increase and more curveballs.3
193Yency AlmonteNLADRPFound control again and threw slider more. Still overachieved.3
194Luis FríasNARIRP
195Zach PopATORRP57%, good velo. Doesn't miss bats.3
196Drew SmithNNYMRP
197Tony SantillanNCINRP
198Jesse ChavezNATLRP
199Justin MartinezNARIRP
200Josh SimpsonNMIARP
201Genesis CabreraNSTLRPVelo down, bad in second half.2
202Brent SuterNCOLRPVelo down slightly, throwing more changeups. Control has deteriorated consecutive years.2
203Luke WeaverNCINRPK/BB very good but running out of chances.3
204Amir GarrettAKCRRPVelo decline and awful control.2
205Ian GibautNCINRP
206Gavin HollowellNCOLRP
207Sam MollAOAKRP
208Lucas GilbreathNCOLRP
209Ian KennedyNFARPVelo starting to fall. Throwing all fastballs secon consecutive year.3
210Tim HillNSDPRP
211Nick AndersonNATLRP
212Jaime BarriaALAARPEffective in pen but still not missing bats, velo was down.2
213Matt WislerAFARP
214Julian MerryweatherNCHCRP
215Michael RuckerNCHCRP
216Jared ShusterNATLRP
217Sam LongNSFGRPAdded velo in pen, not missing bats.3
218Jose RuizACHWRP
219Reese OlsonADETRP
220Fernando CruzNCINRPPicked up from Mexico, good K rate and changeup.3
221Nate PearsonATORRP
222Rony GarcíaADETRP
223Mike BurrowsNPITRP
224Justin LawrenceNCOLRP
225Manuel RodríguezNCHCRP
226Archie BradleyAFARPRepeated elbow problems, has turned into GB pitcher with less velo.3
227Darius VinesNATLRP
228Nick SandlinACLERP56% GB, mostly sliders. Terrible control.3
229John KingATEXRP
230Joel PayampsNMILRP
231Andres MachadoNWSNRP
232Kyle NelsonNARIRP
233Zack BrittonAFARPReturned from TJS, immediately hurt shoulder. Velo was way down.2
234Matt FosterACHWRP
235Andrew AbbottNCINRP
236Codi HeuerNCHCRP
237Chase De JongNPITRP
238J.P. FeyereisenNLADRPShoulder issues, velo was down. Added control makes him more interesting.3
239Jake BirdNCOLRP56% GB, killed by LHP.3
240Joey CantilloACLERP
241Jimmy LambertACHWRP
242Levi StoudtNCINRP
243Bryan MataABOSRP
244Joey KrehbielABALRP
245Jake IrvinNWSNRP
246Corbin MartinNARIRP