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Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: July 19–28

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

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

Since the All-Star break extended the current weekly matchup to Sunday, July 21, I’m splitting this article into two sections, one covering this weekend and one covering next week. For those of you playing in head-to-head leagues and haven’t hit your games started cap, here’s the projected starters for this weekend:

July 19–21
Team Series 1 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @CHC (103) Zac Gallen, Brandon Pfaadt Ryne Nelson
ATL STL (101) Max Fried Spencer Schwellenbach, Charlie Morton
BAL @TEX (94) Corbin Burnes, Grayson Rodriguez Dean Kremer
BOS @LAD (49) Kutter Crawford Nick Pivetta, Brayan Bello
CHC ARI (59) Justin Steele Shota Imanaga Kyle Hendricks
CHW @KCR (117) Jonathan Cannon, Drew Thorpe Chris Flexen 플렉센
CIN @WSN (108) Nick Lodolo Frankie Montas, Andrew Abbott
CLE SDP (106) Tanner Bibee, Gavin Williams Ben Lively 라이블리
COL SFG (77) Cal Quantrill, Germán Marquez, Austin Gomber
DET @TOR (124) Jack Flaherty Reese Olson Keider Montero
HOU @SEA (141) Hunter Brown, Framber Valdez Ronel Blanco
KCR CHW (195) Michael Wacha, Brady Singer, Seth Lugo
LAA @OAK (120) Tyler Anderson, José Soriano Griffin Canning
LAD BOS (33) Gavin Stone James Paxton Justin Wrobleski
MIA NYM (89) Trevor Rogers Edward Cabrera, Roddery Muñoz
MIL @MIN (47) Freddy Peralta Aaron Civale
MIN MIL (89) Joe Ryan Pablo López
NYM @MIA (181) Sean Manaea, Luis Severino Jose Quintana
NYY TBR (87) Gerrit Cole Nestor Cortes Marcus Stroman
OAK LAA (190) Mitch Spence JP Sears, Joey Estes
PHI @PIT (139) Aaron Nola, Cristopher Sánchez Tyler Phillips
PIT PHI (87) Luis L. Ortiz Martín Pérez, Marco Gonzales
SDP @CLE (110) Dylan Cease Matt Waldron, Michael King
SEA HOU (110) Luis Castillo, George Kirby Bryan Woo
SFG @COL (33) Blake Snell Kyle Harrison, Jordan Hicks
STL @ATL (108) Sonny Gray Kyle Gibson Miles Mikolas
TBR @NYY (80) Zach Eflin, Taj Bradley, Shane Baz
TEX BAL (87) Nathan Eovaldi, Max Scherzer, Andrew Heaney
TOR DET (73) Yusei Kikuchi, Kevin Gausman Chris Bassitt
WSN CIN (63) MacKenzie Gore, Jake Irvin Patrick Corbin
  • The Astros, A’s, Mets, Phillies, and Royals all look like they have pretty easy matchups this weekend. I’d avoid starters from the Brewers, Dodgers, Giants, Nationals, Red Sox, and Rockies. Also note that Milwaukee and Minnesota are off on Friday and play just twice this weekend.

Here are the projected starters for next week:

July 22–28
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @KCR (117) PIT (80) Zac Gallen, Brandon Pfaadt Jordan Montgomery (?), Yilber Diaz, Ryne Nelson
ATL CIN (87) @NYM (99) Chris Sale (x2), Reynaldo López (x2), Max Fried Spencer Schwellenbach, Charlie Morton
BAL @MIA (181) SDP (127) Corbin Burnes, Grayson Rodriguez Albert Suárez 수아레즈 (x2) Dean Kremer
BOS @COL (33) NYY (77) Tanner Houck (vNYY) Kutter Crawford Tanner Houck (@COL), Brayan Bello Cooper Criswell, Nick Pivetta
CHC MIL (84) @KCR (117) Justin Steele, Shota Imanaga Javier Assad (@KCR) Javier Assad (vMIL), Jameson Taillon, Kyle Hendricks
CHW @TEX (94) SEA (82) Garrett Crochet (x2) Erick Fedde 페디 (x2) Drew Thorpe Chris Flexen, Jonathan Cannon
CIN @ATL (108) @TBR (153) Hunter Greene (x2), Nick Lodolo Nick Martinez, Frankie Montas, Andrew Abbott
CLE DET (87) @PHI (35) Tanner Bibee, Gavin Williams Carlos Carrasco (vDET), Ben Lively Spencer Howard (x2), Carlos Carrasco (@PHI)
COL BOS (26) @SFG (164) Germán Márquez Austin Gomber Kyle Freeland (x2), Ryan Feltner, Cal Quantrill
DET @CLE (110) MIN (87) Tarik Skubal (x2), Jack Flaherty Reese Olson Matt Manning (?) Keider Montero
HOU @OAK (120) LAD (61) Hunter Brown Justin Verlander (?), Framber Valdez Spencer Arrighetti, Jake Bloss, Ronel Blanco
KCR ARI (82) CHC (103) Cole Ragans (x2), Seth Lugo Michael Wacha, Brady Singer Alec Marsh
LAA @SEA (141) OAK (61) Tyler Anderson, José Soriano Carson Fulmer (x2), Jack Kochanowicz (x2), Griffin Canning
LAD SFG (85) @HOU (75) Tyler Glasnow (?), Clayton Kershaw (?), Gavin Stone River Ryan, Landon Knack, James Paxton Justin Wrobleski
MIA BAL (122) @MIL (56) Max Meyer (?) Trevor Rogers Yonny Chirinos (x2), Edward Cabrera, Roddery Muñoz
MIL @CHC (103) MIA (141) Freddy Peralta Tobias Myers, Aaron Civale Colin Rea (@CHC) Joe Ross (?)
MIN PHI (82) @DET (101) Bailey Ober (x2), Pablo López, Joe Ryan Simeon Woods Richardson, Chris Paddack
NYM @NYY (80) ATL (146) Christian Scott (x2) Sean Manaea, Luis Severino David Peterson (x2), Kodai Senga (?), Jose Quintana
NYY NYM (49) @BOS (70) Gerrit Cole Carlos Rodón (vTBR), Luis Gil, Nestor Cortes Marcus Stroman, Carlos Rodón (@BOS)
OAK HOU (143) @LAA (120) Mitch Spence Hogan Harris (x2), JP Sears, Ross Stripling (?), Joey Estes Osvaldo Bido
PHI @MIN (47) CLE (106) Zack Wheeler (x2), Ranger Suárez, Aaron Nola, Cristopher Sánchez Tyler Phillips
PIT STL (110) @ARI (92) Paul Skenes Mitch Keller (x2), Luis L. Ortiz Martín Pérez, Marco Gonzales
SDP @WSN (108) @BAL (131) Dylan Cease Matt Waldron (x2), Michael King Randy Vásquez Adam Mazur
SEA LAA (157) @CHW (139) Logan Gilbert (x2), Bryce Miller, Luis Castillo, George Kirby, Bryan Woo
SFG @LAD (49) COL (146) Logan Webb (x2), Blake Snell, Jordan Hicks Robbie Ray (?), Kyle Harrison Hayden Birdsong
STL @PIT (139) WSN (141) Sonny Gray Lance Lynn (x2), Kyle Gibson Andre Pallante, Miles Mikolas
TBR @TOR (124) CIN (103) Ryan Pepiot, Zach Eflin, Taj Bradley Zack Littell (x2), Shane Baz Jeffrey Springs (?)
TEX CHW (160) @TOR (124) Nathan Eovaldi, Max Scherzer Jon Gray (x2), Andrew Heaney Michael Lorenzen (x2)
TOR TBR (77) TEX (75) Yusei Kikuchi Yariel Rodríguez, Chris Bassitt, Kevin Gausman José Berríos (x2)
WSN SDP (94) @STL (122) Mitchell Parker (x2), MacKenzie Gore, Jake Irvin DJ Herz Patrick Corbin
  • Many teams have only announced a handful of starters as they reslot their rotations coming out of the break. There may be some more guess work for who pitches when until each team announces how they’re lining everything up after the weekend. To make matters more complicated, there are a ton of injured starters who will likely be activated sometime next week including Tyler Glasnow, Clayton Kershaw, Robbie, Ray, Jeffrey Springs, Justin Verlander, Kodai Senga, and Jordan Montgomery. And then there are the potential minor league call ups like Max Meyer, River Ryan, and Matt Manning. All that to say, make sure you’re paying attention to the announced starters for each matchup and plan ahead.
  • The Cardinals and Mariners both have a pair of easier matchups next week. It’s easy to recommend every Seattle starter but St. Louis still has a few starters I’d be weary of starting even with such favorable matchups.
  • The Yankees have two tough matchups lined up next week, though they’re wrapping up a four-game set against the Rays on Monday giving Carlos Rodón a bit of a respite from the difficult opponents until his second start next week.

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

The All-Star break is quickly approaching and the search for useful pitching is never ending. Here are a handful of pitchers who are rostered in under 60% of all Ottoneu leagues who could be nice pickups if you’re looking for an option to fill in for an injured starter or looking for another bullpen piece. I’ve also included two entirely speculative adds in case you really feel like rolling the dice.

Under-rostered Starters, Last 14 Days
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% Stuff+ Pts/IP Roster%
Andrew Heaney TEX 17.1 2.53 23.6% 82 5.96 42.3%
Yariel Rodriguez TOR 13.2 3.46 14.9% 96 6.56 36.1%
Luis L. Ortiz PIT 14 0.88 31.4% 105 7.64 6.9%

If you throw out Andrew Heaney’s first five starts in April, he’s accumulated 321.9 points across 12 starts since the beginning of May at a 4.80 points/IP clip. His overall line is being dragged down pretty significantly by that poor first month and he’s been particularly effective recently. This is nothing new from Heaney; he’s been pretty streaky throughout his career, especially since a lot of his value is derived from keeping the ball inside the park. The most encouraging aspect of this hot streak is the 19.4% K-BB% he’s running across these last 12 outings. It doesn’t come close to his career year with the Dodgers back in 2022, but it’s on par with what he was posting with the Angels before that. He’s probably worth an add during this hot streak if he’s available in your league.

Yariel Rodríguez missed about a month of the season with a back injury but he’s looked particularly strong since returning a few weeks ago. The Blue Jays used him as an opener in front of a bulk reliever a couple of times but have handed him a full starter’s workload in his last two starts. He’s responded by allowing just a single run in 12.2 innings against the Astros and Mariners. Encouragingly, he’s only allowed four walks while striking out 12 during those two outings, alleviating some of the concerns about his ability to command his repertoire. He was also working as a reliever in Japan’s NBP before coming over to the States this year presenting some risk that his workload is being monitored or limited by the Blue Jays to keep him healthy.

The Pirates had been using Luis L. Ortiz as a long reliever or bulk reliever for most of the season but they’ve allowed him to make full starts in two of his last three outings and things have gone swimmingly. Against the Reds and Mets, he tossed 12 innings of one-run ball with 12 strikeouts and no walks. Not that long ago, he was a highly regarded prospect in Pittsburgh’s organization, peaking at number four on their 2023 prospect list. A pretty disappointing rookie campaign soured his outlook but he’s making good on those high expectations a year later. There are plenty of reasons why he’s taken such a big step forward this season: he’s throwing a much more spin efficient four-seam fastball that’s now generating plenty of whiffs; he’s throwing his cutter much more often at the expense of his changeup; but the biggest difference maker is an ability to command his entire repertoire. His strikeout-to-walk ratio has gone from 1.23 to 2.89 leading to better results across the board. The only limiting factor is his future role; the Pirates could continue to let him start for now but he could be pushed back to the bullpen once Jared Jones or Bailey Falter are activated off the IL.

Under-rostered Relievers, Last 14 Days
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% gmLI Stuff+ Pts/IP Roster%
A.J. Puk MIA 6.2 0.92 34.8% 2.09 107 11.56 49.5%
Andrew Nardi MIA 5.2 2.46 18.2% 1.79 107 9.21 37.6%
Porter Hodge CHC 6.1 1.91 18.2% 1.97 107 9.56 19.4%
Hunter Bigge CHC 0.3%
Kris Bubic KCR 1 -0.83 66.7% 0.01 90 11.40 11.0%

After a failed experiment as a starter, A.J. Puk is back in the Marlins bullpen and posting fantastic results as one of their top setup men ahead of Tanner Scott. Since returning from a shoulder injury in mid-May, he’s posted a 2.63 ERA and a 2.92 FIP across 24 innings. Over the last two weeks, he’s really stepped into a high leverage role, collecting four holds and nine strikeouts across 6.2 innings. I’ve also listed Andrew Nardi above since he’s been a solid setup man in Miami’s bullpen for nearly the entire year. It’s no secret that the Marlins will be looking to sell at the trade deadline which could open up even more high leverage opportunities for Puk or Nardi if Scott is traded away. And it’s even possible one of Puk or Nardi are moved to a contender as well.

I recommended Porter Hodge about a month ago in this column and all he’s done since then is post a 1.59 ERA and a 2.99 FIP across 11.1 innings. He’s finally seeing some high leverage opportunities in a Cubs bullpen that’s been an absolute mess this year. Héctor Neris is currently the ninth inning guy, but every role behind him is pretty much up for grabs. If you wanted to really speculate, Chicago just called up Hunter Bigge a few days ago. He’s posted outstanding strikeout rates at every minor league stop, and if things go well upon his debut, he could quickly force his way into the high leverage conversation too.

If you really wanted to go out on a limb and speculate, Kris Bubic could be your guy. He recently returned from his Tommy John rehab but the Royals have decided to move him to the bullpen because their starting rotation is currently filled with solid options. A year ago, he looked like he was in the middle of an exciting breakout and the velocity jump that helped fuel that success looks like it has stuck around after his injury. The Royals bullpen hasn’t been great with their current closer, James McArthur, looking pretty shaky at times. It’s possible Kansas City will want to try and keep Bubic stretched out in case they need him for the rotation, but they could also push him into higher leverage opportunities as a fireman to alleviate some of the pressure on their relievers.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: July 8–14

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

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

July 8–14
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI ATL (141) TOR (104) Zac Gallen (x2), Brandon Pfaadt Tommy Henry (?), Ryne Nelson Slade Cecconi
ATL @ARI (106) @SDP (66) Chris Sale (x2), Max Fried, Reynaldo López Charlie Morton (x2), Spencer Schwellenbach
BAL CHC (141) NYY (88) Corbin Burnes, Grayson Rodriguez Dean Kremer (vCHC), Albert Suárez 수아레즈 Cade Povich, Dean Kremer (vNYY)
BOS OAK (128) KCR (141) Nick Pivetta, Tanner Houck, Kutter Crawford Brayan Bello (x2), Josh Winckowski
CHC @BAL (53) @STL (123) Shota Imanaga, Justin Steele, Jameson Taillon (@STL) Jameson Taillon (@BAL), Kyle Hendricks, Hayden Wesneski
CHW MIN (31) PIT (110) Garrett Crochet Erick Fedde 페디 Drew Thorpe, Jonathan Cannon Chris Flexen 플렉센, Mike Clevinger
CIN COL (121) MIA (128) Hunter Greene Nick Lodolo (?), Carson Spiers Andrew Abbott (x2), Frankie Montas
CLE @DET (165) @TBR (123) Tanner Bibee Gavin Williams (x2), Ben Lively 라이블리 (x2) Logan Allen, Carlos Carrasco
COL @CIN (88) @NYM (77) Cal Quantrill (x2), Ryan Feltner Dakota Hudson (x2), Kyle Freeland, Austin Gomber
DET CLE (106) LAD (88) Jack Flaherty (x2), Tarik Skubal Reese Olson Kenta Maeda (x2), Keider Montero
HOU MIA (150) TEX (82) Ronel Blanco (vMIA), Framber Valdez Hunter Brown, Ronel Blanco (vTEX) Shawn Dubin, Spencer Arrighetti
KCR @STL (123) @BOS (79) Michael Wacha, Cole Ragans, Seth Lugo Alec Marsh, Brady Singer
LAA TEX (68) SEA (106) José Soriano, Davis Daniel (vSEA) Davis Daniel (vTEX), Tyler Anderson Roansy Contreras (x2), Griffin Canning
LAD @PHI (24) @DET (165) Tyler Glasnow Gavin Stone, Bobby Miller (@DET) Bobby Miller (@PHI), Landon Knack, James Paxton
MIA @HOU (26) @CIN (88) Trevor Rogers (x2), Kyle Tyler, Roddery Muñoz, Yonny Chirinos, Edward Cabrera
MIL PIT (123) WSN (108) Freddy Peralta Tobias Myers, Aaron Civale Colin Rea (x2) Dallas Keuchel
MIN @CHW (119) @SFG (132) Bailey Ober, Pablo López, Joe Ryan David Festa (x2), Simeon Woods Richardson
NYM WSN (130) COL (161) Christian Scott (x2), Luis Severino, Sean Manaea Jose Quintana (x2), David Peterson
NYY @TBR (123) @BAL (53) Nestor Cortes, Gerrit Cole Carlos Rodón (@TBR) Marcus Stroman, Luis Gil, Carlos Rodón (@BAL)
OAK @BOS (79) @PHI (24) Joey Estes (x2), JP Sears, Mitch Spence Hogan Harris, Luis Medina
PHI LAD (40) OAK (99) Zack Wheeler (x2), Ranger Suárez Cristopher Sánchez, Aaron Nola Michael Mercado
PIT @MIL (42) @CHW (119) Paul Skenes, Mitch Keller Luis L. Ortiz (x2) Bailey Falter, Martín Pérez (@CHW) Martín Pérez (@MIL)
SDP SEA (134) ATL (126) Michael King (x2), Dylan Cease Matt Waldron Randy Vásquez
SEA @SDP (66) @LAA (79) Logan Gilbert (x2), Luis Castillo, George Kirby Bryce Miller, Bryan Woo (?)
SFG TOR (115) MIN (90) Logan Webb Jordan Hicks (x2), Kyle Harrison Blake Snell (?) Hayden Birdsong
STL KCR (165) CHC (148) Sonny Gray Miles Mikolas (x2), Andre Pallante (x2), Lance Lynn, Kyle Gibson
TBR NYY (95) CLE (99) Ryan Pepiot (x2), Zach Eflin, Taj Bradley Shane Baz, Zack Littell
TEX LAA (104) @HOU (26) Max Scherzer Jon Gray (@LAA), Nathan Eovaldi Michael Lorenzen, Andrew Heaney, Jon Gray (@HOU)
TOR @SFG (132) @ARI (106) Yusei Kikuchi (x2), Chris Bassitt, Kevin Gausman Yariel Rodríguez, José Berríos
WSN @NYM (77) @MIL (42) Jake Irvin (@NYM), MacKenzie Gore Mitchell Parker (vSTL), Jake Irvin (@MIL) DJ Herz, Mitchell Parker (@MIL) Patrick Corbin

A few general schedule notes:

  • A few teams have pretty wonky schedules next week as the season heads into the All-Star break. The Mets wrap up a four-game, wrap around series against the Pirates before hosting a couple of pretty easy matchups in the Nationals and Rockies at home. While I won’t recommend every starter in their rotation, you can feel pretty good about starting Christian Scott for both of his games as well as Luis Severino and Sean Manaea.
  • The Nationals also have a four-game, wrap around series against the Cardinals that wraps up on Monday. That gives Mitchell Parker a more palatable start before his tougher matchup against the Brewers later in the week.
  • Not only does St. Louis have that weird Monday game, they have a two-game series against the Royals, an off day on Thursday, and then a four-game set against the Cubs that includes a scheduled double-header on Saturday. The off day means they can keep their entire staff on schedule without having to callup a spot starter for the twin bill over the weekend. And like the Mets, all three of their opponents next week look pretty weak; it’s an easy call to start most of their starters next week.
  • The Cubs don’t have the same luxury the off day affords the Cardinals so keep an eye on who their announced starters are for that weekend series.

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: July 1–7

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

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

July 1–7
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @LAD (47) @SDP (101) Zac Gallen Brandon Pfaadt Jordan Montgomery Ryne Nelson (x2), Slade Cecconi
ATL SFG (87) PHI (61) Reynaldo López (x2), Chris Sale, Max Fried Charlie Morton Spencer Schwellenbach
BAL @SEA (139) @OAK (162) Grayson Rodriguez, Corbin Burnes Albert Suárez 수아레즈, Cade Povich, Cole Irvin Dean Kremer (?)
BOS @MIA (193) @NYY (78) Kutter Crawford (@MIA), Nick Pivetta, Tanner Houck Brayan Bello Josh Winckowski
CHC PHI (61) LAA (129) Justin Steele Shota Imanaga Jameson Taillon, Kyle Hendricks, Hayden Wesneski (vLAA) Hayden Wesneski (vPHI)
CHW @CLE (66) @MIA (193) Garrett Crochet, Erick Fedde 페디 (@MIA) Erick Fedde (@CLE) Drew Thorpe, Jonathan Cannon Mike Clevinger (?)
CIN @NYY (78) DET (108) Hunter Greene Carson Spiers Andrew Abbott, Frankie Montas Graham Ashcraft (x2)
CLE CHW (158) SFG (75) Tanner Bibee Gavin Williams (?), Ben Lively 라이블리, Triston McKenzie Logan Allen
COL MIL (56) KCR (134) Ryan Feltner (vKCR) Austin Gomber (x2), Ryan Feltner (vMIL), Dakota Hudson, Cal Quantrill, Kyle Freeland
DET @MIN (63) @CIN (103) Tarik Skubal (x2), Jack Flaherty Reese Olson Kenta Maeda, Casey Mize
HOU @TOR (96) @MIN (63) Framber Valdez Hunter Brown (@TOR), Ronel Blanco Spencer Arrighetti (x2), Hunter Brown (@MIN)
KCR TBR (111) @COL (35) Brady Singer (vTBR), Michael Wacha Alec Marsh, Cole Ragans Seth Lugo, Brady Singer (@COL)
LAA @OAK (162) @CHC (136) Tyler Anderson Davis Daniel Roansy Contreras (x2), Zach Plesac, Griffin Canning
LAD ARI (63) MIL (63) Tyler Glasnow Gavin Stone Bobby Miller (x2), Landon Knack, James Paxton
MIA BOS (80) CHW (193) Trevor Rogers Valente Bellozo (x2), Kyle Tyler, Roddery Muñoz, Yonny Chirinos
MIL @COL (35) @LAD (47) Freddy Peralta Tobias Myers Bryse Wilson (x2), Dallas Keuchel (x2), Colin Rea
MIN DET (153) HOU (103) Bailey Ober, Joe Ryan Simeon Woods Richardson (vDET), Pablo López David Festa, Simeon Woods Richardson (vHOU)
NYM @WSN (108) @PIT (172) Tylor Megill, Luis Severino Christian Scott (?), Sean Manaea David Peterson (x2), Jose Quintana
NYY CIN (103) BOS (40) Gerrit Cole Luis Gil (x2), Carlos Rodón, Marcus Stroman, Nestor Cortes
OAK LAA (155) BAL (75) Mitch Spence (vLAA) Joey Estes, JP Sears, Mitch Spence (vBAL) Hogan Harris, Luis Medina
PHI @CHC (136) @ATL (42) Zack Wheeler, Cristopher Sánchez, Ranger Suárez Aaron Nola Michael Mercado (x2)
PIT STL (141) NYM (49) Jared Jones (vSTL), Mitch Keller Paul Skenes, Jared Jones (vNYM) Martín Pérez Bailey Falter
SDP @TEX (125) ARI (94) Dylan Cease Michael King, Matt Waldron Adam Mazur (x2), Randy Vásquez
SEA BAL (42) TOR (99) Luis Castillo (x2), George Kirby, Logan Gilbert, Bryce Miller Jhonathan Diaz
SFG @ATL (82) @CLE (66) Logan Webb Jordan Hicks (x2) Blake Snell (?), Spencer Howard Hayden Birdsong
STL @PIT (172) @WSN (108) Sonny Gray Kyle Gibson (x2), Miles Mikolas, Lance Lynn Andre Pallante
TBR @KCR (139) @TEX (125) Ryan Pepiot, Zach Eflin, Taj Bradley Zack Littell (x2) Aaron Civale
TEX SDP (80) TBR (75) Max Scherzer Nathan Eovaldi Jon Gray, Michael Lorenzen, Andrew Heaney
TOR HOU (73) @SEA (139) Kevin Gausman Yusei Kikuchi, Chris Bassitt, José Berríos (@SEA) José Berríos (vHOU) Yariel Rodríguez (x2)
WSN NYM (16) STL (108) MacKenzie Gore (vSTL) MacKenzie Gore (vNYM), Jake Irvin DJ Herz, Mitchell Parker Josiah Gray (?), Patrick Corbin

A few general schedule notes:

  • The Orioles have a pretty nice West Coast road trip next week against the punchless Mariners and A’s. Dean Kremer is on the verge of returning from the IL, so pay attention to his status and the member of the rotation he bumps out.
  • The Angels also have a pair of easier matchups against the A’s and Cubs, but their starting rotation is such a mess, I can’t really recommend starting anyone from their staff except for Tyler Anderson. Davis Daniel did have a brilliant debut yesterday, so if you want to take a flier on the unheralded prospect, he’s got a pretty cushy matchup for his second start of his career.
  • The Brewers have the unenviable task of traveling to Colorado for four games and then heading to Los Angeles to face the high-powered Dodgers offense. Freddy Peralta avoids a start in Coors so he might be the only viable starter from their rotation, but you could risk a start from Tobias Myers against the Rockies if you’re feeling really lucky.
  • Along with their tough series against the Brewers, the Dodgers will also host the Diamondbacks who are hitting particularly well right now. You’ll probably want to wait to see if Bobby Miller can put together a strong start before inserting him back into your lineups — his start against the White Sox this week was pretty ugly.

Ottoneu Drip: Finding Under-rostered Pitchers: June 25, 2024

We’re a little less than half way through the regular season and the search for useful pitching is never ending. Here are a handful of pitchers who are rostered in under 60% of all Ottoneu leagues who could be nice pickups if you’re looking for an option to fill in for an injured starter or looking for another bullpen piece.

Under-rostered Starters, Last 3 Starts
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% Stuff+ Pts/IP Roster%
Jameson Taillon CHC 19 3.09 19.7% 88 5.20 55.8%
Miles Mikolas STL 19.1 2.32 15.5% 88 6.74 34.2%
Tobias Myers MIL 17.1 2.91 15.6% 92 5.85 22.6%

Jameson Taillon started off the season strong, got hurt, returned and struggled for a few weeks, and has finally come back around to find some success over his last three starts. Against the Rays, Cardinals, and red-hot Mets, he’s allowed just three runs in 19 innings with a phenomenal 6.0 strikeout-to-walk ratio. Unlike Myers above, Taillon has earned his success despite seeing rather normal looking batted ball peripherals. He’s probably worth an add during this hot streak if he’s available in your league.

Miles Mikolas has always enjoyed some on-again, off-again success as an innings-eater for the Cardinals. Last year was a down season for him but he’s regained some of the strikeouts that he had lost; his K% is now back up closer to where it was in 2022 when it reached a career high 19%. There really isn’t all that much that’s different in his profile — being so dependent on the command of his entire repertoire, he can go through tough stretches when he isn’t locating very well. Right now, he’s got a good feel for his pitch mix and has spun three excellent starts in a row. None of the teams he’s faced during this stretch have been all that impressive — at home against the Pirates and Giants and away at the Cubs — but it’s probably worth riding the hot streak if you’re desperate for pitching.

Tobias Myers has been thrust into a much larger role than expected thanks to all the injuries the Brewers have suffered in their pitching staff. He struggled after making his debut in late April but he’s settled into the big leagues and has been particularly impressive in June. Across four starts this month, he’s allowed just two runs while compiling a pretty good 3.0 strikeout-to-walk ratio. He’s definitely benefitting from some good batted ball luck — his BABIP allowed this month is a measly .182 — but he’s also cut his barrel rate allowed in half. Looking under the hood, he’s increased the usage of his mediocre fastball in June, though he’s run a .307 expected wOBA with his heater during this hot streak. More impressively, he’s running whiff rates higher than 30% on both his slider and changeup which gives him two pretty decent weapons to attack batters with once he’s established the fastball.

Under-rostered Relievers, Last 14 Days
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% gmLI Stuff+ Pts/IP Roster%
Sam Hentges CLE 5.2 2.09 21.1% 0.95 104 9.86 38.6%
Dedniel Núñez NYM 5.1 2.58 42.1% 1.07 122 8.67 32.3%
Colin Poche TBR 7.2 1.71 24.0% 1.49 87 9.32 19.4%
Zack Kelly BOS 8.1 0.87 37.0% 1.42 108 10.41 1.9%

It’s tough to stand out in the Guardians elite relief corps but Sam Hentges has quietly put up some solid numbers over the last few years as a less heralded member of Cleveland’s bullpen. He’s back to his usual dominance this year, with career-best strikeout and walk rates so far. There are four pitchers ahead of him in the bullpen pecking order, but as a left-handed pitcher, he gets opportunities to pick up holds against teams with particularly difficult left-handed batters. Over the last two weeks, he’s earned three holds across six appearances.

With the Mets bullpen a mess, Dedniel Núñez has earned a number of high-leverage opportunities since being recalled from the minors at the tail end of April. Ranked 33rd on their pre-season prospect list, Núñez has nasty stuff but a lack of command has really held him back from truly standing out as a relief prospect. He’s managed to gain a much better feel for his pitch mix this year — he’s allowed just three walks all season long — and that’s helped his raw stuff play to its strengths. With his recent background as a starter, New York has been using him in a multi-inning role, which has allowed him to accumulate a ton of Ottoneu points pretty quickly.

As long as he has good feel for his slider, Colin Poche will be a useful high-leverage option in the Rays bullpen. He’s been super effective since being activated off the IL a few weeks ago after missing a month with a back injury; over his last eight outings, he hasn’t allowed a run and has only allowed five baserunners. He’s probably sitting either second or third in line behind the closer Pete Fairbanks but is still seeing plenty of high-leverage work.

Zack Kelly earned a shot in the big leagues after going undrafted and getting released multiple times thanks to a pretty big increase in fastball velocity in 2022. He didn’t really stand out in limited work that year and the following season, but he’s in the midst of a breakout season so far this year. The biggest difference, beyond maintaining his improved velocity, is the introduction of a sweeper and cutter to his pitch mix. The breaking ball, in particular, has been something he had struggled to develop over the years, and now that he’s finally comfortable with one, he’s flourished. He’s earned a bit of high-leverage work recently alongside a couple of gigs opening for a bulk reliever. He’s struck out 16 this month against just three walks, a significant improvement over the 10 free passes he handed out over the first two months of the season.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: June 24–30

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.

June 24–30
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI MIN (76) OAK (165) Brandon Pfaadt (vMIN), Zac Gallen (?) Jordan Montgomery, Slade Cecconi Ryne Nelson
ATL @STL (134) PIT (128) Reynaldo López (x2), Chris Sale, Charlie Morton (@CHW), Max Fried Spencer Schwellenbach (x2)
BAL CLE (80) TEX (156) Grayson Rodriguez, Corbin Burnes Albert Suárez 수아레즈 Cade Povich (vCLE), Cole Irvin, Dean Kremer (?)
BOS TOR (113) SDP (56) Tanner Houck (x2) Kutter Crawford Brayan Bello, Nick Pivetta
CHC @SFG (130) @MIL (63) Justin Steele (@SFG), Shota Imanaga Jameson Taillon, Javier Assad, Justin Steele (@MIL) Kyle Hendricks (@SFG) Kyle Hendricks (@MIL)
CHW LAD (9) COL (78) Garrett Crochet (vCOL) Garrett Crochet (vLAD) Erick Fedde 페디, Drew Thorpe (vATL), Mike Clevinger (?) Chris Flexen 플렉센 (x2)
CIN PIT (91) @STL (134) Nick Lodolo (x2), Hunter Greene (x2) Frankie Montas Andrew Abbott, Carson Spiers
CLE @BAL (76) @KCR (106) Tanner Bibee (@KCR) Tanner Bibee (@BAL), Ben Lively 라이블리 Gavin Williams (?), Logan Allen, Triston McKenzie
COL @HOU (54) @CHW (108) Cal Quantrill Ryan Feltner Austin Gomber, Dakota Hudson, Kyle Freeland (?)
DET PHI (80) @LAA (67) Tarik Skubal (x2), Jack Flaherty Reese Olson Casey Mize (x2), Kenta Maeda
HOU COL (95) @NYM (100) Framber Valdez Hunter Brown, Ronel Blanco Spencer Arrighetti, Jake Bloss
KCR MIA (182) CLE (93) Cole Ragans (x2), Seth Lugo (vMIA), Brady Singer Michael Wacha (?), Seth Lugo (vCLE) Alec Marsh
LAA OAK (121) DET (113) Tyler Anderson (x2), Patrick Sandoval Griffin Canning (x2), Chase Silseth (?), Zach Plesac
LAD @CHW (108) @SFG (130) Bobby Miller, Gavin Stone, Tyler Glasnow James Paxton (@SFG) James Paxton (@CHW), Landon Knack
MIA @KCR (106) @PHI (32) Braxton Garrett Trevor Rogers, Jesús Luzardo Roddery Muñoz (x2), Yonny Chirinos (x2)
MIL TEX (128) CHC (95) Freddy Peralta (x2) Tobias Myers Bryse Wilson, Colin Rea, Carlos Rodriguez
MIN @ARI (80) @SEA (113) Joe Ryan (x2), Bailey Ober, Pablo López Simeon Woods Richardson Chris Paddack
NYM NYY (67) HOU (110) Tylor Megill Luis Severino, Sean Manaea, Jose Quintana, David Peterson
NYY @NYM (100) @TOR (110) Gerrit Cole (x2), Luis Gil, Nestor Cortes Carlos Rodón Marcus Stroman
OAK @LAA (67) @ARI (80) Mitch Spence, JP Sears Luis Medina (x2), Joey Estes, Hogan Harris
PHI @DET (158) MIA (123) Aaron Nola (x2), Ranger Suárez (x2), Zack Wheeler, Cristopher Sánchez Taijuan Walker
PIT @CIN (108) @ATL (87) Paul Skenes Mitch Keller, Jared Jones Bailey Falter (x2), Luis L. Ortiz
SDP WSN (123) @BOS (56) Matt Waldron (vWSN), Dylan Cease Yu Darvish (?), Michael King, Matt Waldron (@BOS) Randy Vásquez
SEA @TBR (165) MIN (54) Luis Castillo, George Kirby, Logan Gilbert Bryan Woo (x2), Bryce Miller
SFG CHC (141) LAD (67) Jordan Hicks, Logan Webb Blake Snell (?), Spencer Howard (vCHC), Keaton Winn Spencer Howard (vLAD)
STL ATL (119) CIN (139) Sonny Gray Lance Lynn (x2), Miles Mikolas, Kyle Gibson (vCIN) Kyle Gibson (vATL) Andre Pallante
TBR SEA (113) WSN (139) Taj Bradley (x2), Ryan Pepiot, Zach Eflin Zack Littell, Aaron Civale
TEX @MIL (63) @BAL (76) Nathan Eovaldi, Max Scherzer Jon Gray (x2), Michael Lorenzen, Andrew Heaney, Dane Dunning
TOR @BOS (56) NYY (41) Chris Bassitt (x2), Kevin Gausman (x2), Yusei Kikuchi José Berríos Yariel Rodríguez
WSN @SDP (76) @TBR (165) MacKenzie Gore, Mitchell Parker, Jake Irvin DJ Herz Patrick Corbin (x2)

A few general schedule notes:

  • Atlanta has a couple of easier matchups next week but they also have a makeup game scheduled for Thursday in Chicago. That means they’ll travel to St. Louis for the first half of the week, make their one-day stop on the Southside, and then head home to face the Pirates. It looks like Charlie Morton and Drew Thorpe are the two pitchers scheduled to start in that game.
  • Philadelphia also has a pair of easier matchups next week against the Tigers and Marlins, and the only reason why that Miami series isn’t colored blue above is because they’re playing in Philadelphia and the comfy confines of Citizens Bank Park.
  • The Blue Jays have a pretty tough slate of games against the Red Sox in Fenway and then the Yankees at home. It also looks wise to fade starters from the Rangers too; they’re on the road against the Brewers and Orioles.

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: June 17–23

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.

June 17–23
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI @WSN (121) @PHI (63) Brandon Pfaadt Zac Gallen (?) Slade Cecconi (@WSN), Ryne Nelson, Jordan Montgomery Slade Cecconi (@PHI)
ATL DET (155) @NYY (44) Max Fried (vDET), Reynaldo López Chris Sale, Max Fried (@NYY) Spencer Schwellenbach, Charlie Morton
BAL @NYY (44) @HOU (53) Corbin Burnes Kyle Bradish, Grayson Rodriguez Albert Suárez 수아레즈 (x2), Cole Irvin
BOS @TOR (129) @CIN (68) Nick Pivetta (@TOR), Tanner Houck Brayan Bello, Kutter Crawford, Nick Pivetta (@CIN) Cooper Criswell
CHC SFG (100) NYM (44) Justin Steele, Shota Imanaga Javier Assad (x2) Jordan Wicks, Jameson Taillon
CHW HOU (78) @DET (175) Garrett Crochet, Erick Fedde 페디 Drew Thorpe, Jonathan Cannon (@DET) Jonathan Cannon (vHOU) Chris Flexen 플렉센
CIN @PIT (165) BOS (32) Nick Lodolo, Hunter Greene Andrew Abbott, Frankie Montas Carson Spiers (x2)
CLE SEA (97) TOR (134) Tanner Bibee Ben Lively 라이블리 Triston McKenzie (x2), Logan Allen, Carlos Carrasco
COL LAD (15) WSN (114) Cal Quantrill (x2), Austin Gomber (x2), Ryan Feltner, Ty Blach, Dakota Hudson
DET @ATL (124) CHW (172) Reese Olson (x2), Tarik Skubal, Jack Flaherty Casey Mize, Kenta Maeda
HOU @CHW (114) BAL (36) Ronel Blanco (@CHW), Framber Valdez Hunter Brown, Justin Verlander, Spencer Arrighetti, Ronel Blanco (vBAL)
KCR @OAK (175) @TEX (124) Cole Ragans, Seth Lugo Alec Marsh (x2), Brady Singer, Michael Wacha (?)
LAA MIL (63) @LAD (19) José Soriano (x2), Tyler Anderson, Patrick Sandoval Griffin Canning, José Suarez
LAD @COL (70) LAA (92) Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow James Paxton (vLAA) James Paxton (@COL), Walker Buehler, Bobby Miller (?), Gavin Stone
MIA STL (158) SEA (134) Jesús Luzardo Braxton Garrett (x2), Max Meyer (?) Roddery Muñoz, Trevor Rogers
MIL @LAA (97) @SDP (68) Freddy Peralta Carlos Rodriguez (x2), Tobias Myers (x2), Bryse Wilson, Colin Rea
MIN TBR (143) @OAK (175) Pablo López (x2), Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober, Chris Paddack Simeon Woods Richardson
NYM @TEX (124) @CHC (95) Luis Severino, Sean Manaea, Tylor Megill David Peterson (x2), Jose Quintana
NYY BAL (36) ATL (136) Carlos Rodón, Nestor Cortes (vATL) Nestor Cortes (vBAL), Luis Gil, Gerrit Cole (?), Marcus Stroman
OAK KCR (148) MIN (117) Mitch Spence, Joey Estes, JP Sears Hogan Harris (x2), Luis Medina
PHI SDP (24) ARI (34) Aaron Nola, Ranger Suárez, Zack Wheeler Cristopher Sánchez (x2) Taijuan Walker
PIT CIN (92) TBR (148) Mitch Keller, Jared Jones, Paul Skenes Bailey Falter (x2) Luis L. Ortiz (S)
SDP @PHI (63) MIL (95) Dylan Cease Matt Waldron, Michael King (vMIL) Michael King (@PHI) Randy Vásquez (x2), Adam Mazur
SEA @CLE (85) @MIA (202) Bryce Miller (x2), Bryan Woo, Luis Castillo, George Kirby, Logan Gilbert
SFG @CHC (95) @STL (143) Jordan Hicks (x2), Logan Webb Kyle Harrison Spencer Howard Keaton Winn
STL @MIA (202) SFG (117) Sonny Gray (x2) Lance Lynn, Kyle Gibson Miles Mikolas Andre Pallante
TBR @MIN (92) @PIT (165) Taj Bradley, Zack Littell, Ryan Pepiot, Zach Eflin, Aaron Civale (@PIT) Aaron Civale (@MIN)
TEX NYM (32) KCR (109) Nathan Eovaldi Jon Gray (x2) Michael Lorenzen, Andrew Heaney, Dane Dunning
TOR BOS (46) @CLE (85) Yusei Kikuchi (x2) Chris Bassitt, Kevin Gausman, José Berríos Yariel Rodríguez
WSN ARI (51) @COL (70) MacKenzie Gore Jake Irvin (vARI) Patrick Corbin, DJ Herz, Mitchell Parker, Jake Irvin (@COL)

A few general schedule notes:

  • On Thursday, June 20, the Cardinals and Giants will play their game at Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama. The listed field dimensions (321 ft to left, 393 to center, and 332 to right) are comparable to that of Petco Park, though that stadium in San Diego also has the marine layer to suppress offense. Those dimensions are smaller than the average MLB stadium, though renovating the walls and possibly moving them was on the list of preparations for this game. If St. Louis and San Francisco stick with their current rotation, Andre Pallante and Keaton Winn should be the scheduled starters for this game and neither is worth going out of your way to start in an unknown offensive environment.
  • The Angels, Nationals, Orioles, and Phillies all have tough matchups on the docket next week. There are just a handful of pitchers who are matchup proof on those teams, but the majority of their pitchers are safe to avoid.
  • The Marlins and Twins have pairs of easier matchups on the schedule. Miami might also be recalling Max Meyer this weekend and he’d slot into one of those easy matchups at home next week if he isn’t sent back to the minors.
  • We could see the activation of Gerrit Cole, Zac Gallen, and Bobby Miller off the IL next week. None of them have truly desirable matchups on the calendar, particularly Miller who could be activated only to have a start in Coors Field lined up.

Ottoneu Drip: Finding Under-rostered Pitchers: June 10, 2024

Now that we’re more than two months into the season, we can do a bit of digging to see if we can find pitchers who have improved from month-to-month, specifically looking at Stuff+ since it’s pretty reactionary to changes in a pitcher’s repertoire. Here’s a handful of pitchers who are rostered in under 50% of all Ottoneu leagues who could be nice pickups if you’re looking for an option to fill in for an injured starter or looking for another bullpen piece.

Under-rostered Starting Pitchers, Last 3 Starts
Player Team IP FIP K-BB% Stuff+ Apr Stuff+ May & Jun Pts/IP Roster%
JP Sears OAK 19 2.94 12.0% 106 96 6.11 43.8%
Spencer Arrighetti HOU 14 3.51 16.4% 67 87 5.24 30.0%
Albert Suarez BAL 14 2.51 12.3% 86 88 6.00 24.7%
Joey Estes OAK 18.1 1.90 20.9% N/A 101 7.23 8.8%
Mitch Spence OAK 18.1 2.39 11.6% 101 102 6.02 5.6%

There are three starters from Oakland listed above which is a bit of a surprise. JP Sears is the most recognizable of that trio as he’s enjoyed spurts of success over the last two seasons. His downfall has been a particularly bad home run problem — something that particularly hurts his value in Ottoneu. In an effort to curtail those long ball woes, he’s adjusted his pitch mix to feature his sweeper as his primary pitch while also increasing the usage of his sinker to try and generate more contact on the ground. His flat four-seam fastball will always encourage fly ball contact but he generates the majority of his swings-and-misses with that pitch so he needs to strike a balance between whiffs and contact management. Recently, he’s been able to thread that needle; over his last three starts, he’s allowed just seven runs in 19 innings while running a pretty good 2.80 strikeout-to-walk ratio, and most importantly, keeping the ball in the park.

The other two Oakland starters are a bit more unproven. Mitch Spence was a rule-5 pick this offseason and is getting a chance to prove himself in the rotation over the last few weeks or so. Across his first five starts in the majors, he’s allowed just nine runs in 26 innings and is running a solid 3.00 strikeout-to-walk ratio out of the rotation. His underlying Stuff+ metrics look pretty decent, with his slider standing out in particular. He’s also running a groundball rate over 50% which gives him a little more value in Ottoneu if he can continue avoiding the long ball.

Pressed into the rotation for the same reasons Spence was, Joey Estes is making the most of it as well. A clunker of a start against the Astros back on May 16 is weighing heavily on his results, but outside of that ugly outing in Houston, he’s allowed six runs in 23.1 innings in his other four starts with a great strikeout-to-walk ratio. Stuff+ also loves his slider and cutter and his command of his four-pitch mix has been outstanding so far.

Spencer Arrighetti has taken a while to acclimate to the big leagues but he’s been on a pretty good run of starts recently. He’s allowed four runs across his last 14 innings with 19 strikeouts. His biggest issue is his lack of command; his walk rate is pretty high and he’s allowed at least two free passes in each of his starts this year. His Stuff+ scores have improved pretty dramatically from the first month of the season, with most of the improvements stemming from his fastballs. He’s in the same zone as Sears where his heaters get crushed when batters put them in play, but he’s also generating a significant number of whiffs with the pitch. Right now, he’s found that balance between earning swings-and-misses while also avoiding too much hard contact.

With injuries decimating the Orioles rotation, Albert Suárez 수아레즈 is getting another shot as a starter. So far, he’s allowed just seven runs in 29.1 innings out of the rotation. All the things I said about him back on April 23 still hold true:

“His calling card is a mid-90s fastball with plenty of carry that he can command at the top of the zone. Batters have swung and missed on nearly 20% of the heater’s he’s thrown in his two starts so far. That’s a ridiculous whiff rate, especially for a fastball. His repertoire is rounded out with a changeup and cutter, both of which are returning decent results so far.”

The ridiculous whiff rate on his fastball has fallen to merely above average with more exposure to big league hitters, but he’s still putting up solid results anyway. His ceiling might not be as high as expected based on his first three starts of the year, but he’s a solid fill-in starter who can provide quality innings for your team.


Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: June 10–16

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.

June 10–16
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI LAA (156) CHW (170) Brandon Pfaadt Ryne Nelson Jordan Montgomery (x2), Slade Cecconi
ATL @BAL (59) TBR (117) Chris Sale, Max Fried Reynaldo López, Charlie Morton Spencer Schwellenbach (x2)
BAL ATL (130) PHI (98) Corbin Burnes (x2), Kyle Bradish, Grayson Rodriguez Albert Suárez 수아레즈 (x2), Cole Irvin
BOS PHI (80) NYY (35) Tanner Houck Kutter Crawford (x2), Nick Pivetta Cooper Criswell, Brayan Bello
CHC @TBR (137) STL (89) Javier Assad, Ben Brown, Shota Imanaga Jameson Taillon, Justin Steele Jordan Wicks (?)
CHW @SEA (150) @ARI (115) Erick Fedde 페디 (x2), Garrett Crochet Jake Woodford (x2) Nick Nastrini, Chris Flexen 플렉센
CIN CLE (30) @MIL (43) Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo Nick Martinez, Andrew Abbott, Frankie Montas
CLE @CIN (41) @TOR (76) Tanner Bibee Ben Lively 라이블리 Triston McKenzie, Logan Allen, Carlos Carrasco
COL @MIN (117) PIT (98) Cal Quantrill Austin Gomber, Ryan Feltner Dakota Hudson (x2), Ty Blach
DET WSN (163) @HOU (76) Jack Flaherty (vWSN), Reese Olson, Tarik Skubal Jack Flaherty (@HOU) Kenta Maeda, Casey Mize
HOU @SFG (135) DET (100) Ronel Blanco, Framber Valdez Spencer Arrighetti (x2), Justin Verlander Hunter Brown
KCR NYY (65) @LAD (28) Seth Lugo (x2), Cole Ragans Brady Singer (x2), Alec Marsh Daniel Lynch IV
LAA @ARI (115) @SFG (135) Patrick Sandoval, José Soriano (@SFG) José Soriano (@ARI) Tyler Anderson Griffin Canning, José Suarez
LAD TEX (89) KCR (74) Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow Walker Buehler, Bobby Miller (?), Gavin Stone James Paxton
MIA @NYM (106) @WSN (117) Jesús Luzardo (x2), Braxton Garrett, Ryan Weathers Roddery Muñoz, Trevor Rogers
MIL TOR (65) CIN (41) Freddy Peralta Aaron Ashby (x2), Tobias Myers, Bryse Wilson, Colin Rea
MIN COL (124) OAK (128) Pablo López (x2), Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober Chris Paddack (x2), Simeon Woods Richardson
NYM MIA (154) SDP (78) Tylor Megill (vMIA), Luis Severino David Peterson, Sean Manaea, Tylor Megill (vSDP) Jose Quintana
NYY @KCR (78) @BOS (80) Nestor Cortes, Luis Gil Carlos Rodón (x2), Marcus Stroman (x2) Cody Poteet
OAK @SDP (117) @MIN (117) Joey Estes (x2), JP Sears (x2) Luis Medina, Mitch Spence Hogan Harris
PHI @BOS (80) @BAL (13) Zack Wheeler (x2), Aaron Nola Cristopher Sánchez, Ranger Suárez Taijuan Walker
PIT @STL (102) @COL (46) Paul Skenes (@STL) Mitch Keller Bailey Falter, Jared Jones, Paul Skenes (@COL) Luis L. Ortiz
SDP OAK (124) @NYM (106) Dylan Cease (x2) Michael King, Matt Waldron Randy Vásquez Adam Mazur
SEA CHW (148) TEX (111) Logan Gilbert (x2), Bryan Woo (x2), Bryce Miller, Luis Castillo, George Kirby
SFG HOU (163) LAA (167) Jordan Hicks, Logan Webb Kyle Harrison (x2) Keaton Winn (?) Spencer Howard
STL PIT (148) @CHC (100) Sonny Gray, Lance Lynn Kyle Gibson Miles Mikolas (x2) Andre Pallante
TBR CHC (130) @ATL (109) Ryan Pepiot (x2), Zach Eflin (x2), Taj Bradley, Zack Littell Aaron Civale
TEX @LAD (28) @SEA (150) Nathan Eovaldi (@SEA) Nathan Eovaldi (@LAD), Andrew Heaney, Jon Gray (?) Michael Lorenzen Dane Dunning
TOR @MIL (43) CLE (43) Yusei Kikuchi Kevin Gausman José Berríos (x2), Chris Bassitt Bowden Francis
WSN @DET (128) MIA (130) MacKenzie Gore Mitchell Parker, Jake Irvin Patrick Corbin (x2), DJ Herz

A few general schedule notes:

  • It’s pretty surprising to see the matchups against the Astros and the Braves highlighted in blue above (indicating that they’re an easier matchup). Both of these potent lineups are mired in pretty significant slumps — Atlanta has posted a .286 wOBA over the last 14 days and the Astros aren’t much better at .288 — and they both struggle to produce on the road. That means that the Giants and Orioles have a sneakily decent matchup against these two ball clubs you’d normally want to avoid.
  • Speaking of San Francisco, they’ve got a homestand next week against the aforementioned Astros and then the hapless Angels. The Diamondbacks also look like they have a pair of easier matchups lined up next week; they host the Angels and White Sox and could potentially welcome back Zac Gallen from the IL if his rehab goes quickly.
  • There are a bunch of teams with two tough matchups next week. The Royals probably have the most difficult pair of opponents in the Yankees and Dodgers and I’m fading every Kansas City pitcher, even Cole Ragans in LA. The Blue Jays, Brewers, and Reds each have hot hitting opponents on the docket too and you’d probably be better off avoiding having any pitchers from those teams in your lineups next week.

Ottoneu Starting Pitching Planner: June 3–9

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.

June 3–9
Team Series 1 Matchup Series 2 Matchup Start Maybe Risky Sit
ARI SFG (82) @SDP (133) Jordan Montgomery, Brandon Pfaadt Ryne Nelson (x2), Slade Cecconi (x2), Blake Walston
ATL @BOS (91) @WSN (108) Max Fried (x2), Reynaldo López, Chris Sale Charlie Morton Spencer Schwellenbach
BAL @TOR (56) @TBR (168) Grayson Rodriguez (x2), Corbin Burnes (x2), Kyle Bradish, Cole Irvin Albert Suárez 수아레즈
BOS ATL (96) @CHW (136) Kutter Crawford (x2), Tanner Houck Nick Pivetta, Cooper Criswell, Brayan Bello
CHC CHW (173) @CIN (98) Shota Imanaga (x2) Jameson Taillon, Javier Assad, Justin Steele, Ben Brown
CHW @CHC (145) BOS (33) Garrett Crochet Erick Fedde 페디 Jake Woodford (x2), Chris Flexen 플렉센, Nick Nastrini
CIN @COL (44) CHC (115) Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo Andrew Abbott (vCHC), Frankie Montas (vCHC) Andrew Abbott (@COL), Frankie Montas (@COL), Graham Ashcraft
CLE KCR (87) @MIA (150) Ben Lively 라이블리 Tanner Bibee, Triston McKenzie (@MIA) Triston McKenzie (vKCR), Logan Allen, Carlos Carrasco (?)
COL CIN (115) @STL (94) Ryan Feltner (x2), Cal Quantrill, Austin Gomber Ty Blach (x2), Dakota Hudson
DET @TEX (115) MIL (126) Tarik Skubal (x2), Jack Flaherty, Reese Olson Casey Mize Kenta Maeda
HOU STL (68) @LAA (63) Framber Valdez Justin Verlander (x2), Ronel Blanco Spencer Arrighetti, Hunter Brown
KCR @CLE (58) SEA (157) Cole Ragans, Seth Lugo (vSEA) Seth Lugo (@CLE), Brady Singer, Michael Wacha, Alec Marsh
LAA SDP (56) HOU (82) Tyler Anderson (x2), Patrick Sandoval, José Soriano, Reid Detmers Griffin Canning
LAD @PIT (147) @NYY (30) Tyler Glasnow (@PIT), Walker Buehler Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow (@NYY) James Paxton, Bobby Miller (?)
MIA TBR (180) CLE (98) Jesús Luzardo, Braxton Garrett Ryan Weathers Sixto Sánchez, Trevor Rogers
MIL @PHI (42) @DET (117) Robert Gasser, Freddy Peralta Colin Rea, Joe Ross Bryse Wilson, Tobias Myers
MIN @NYY (30) @PIT (147) Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober (@PIT) Bailey Ober (@NYY), Pablo López, Simeon Woods Richardson Chris Paddack
NYM @WSN (108) PHI (70) Christian Scott Luis Severino, Sean Manaea Jose Quintana, David Peterson
NYY MIN (98) LAD (56) Luis Gil (x2) Carlos Rodón, Marcus Semien, Nestor Cortes Cody Poteet
OAK SEA (159) TOR (108) Joey Estes (vSEA) Hogan Harris, JP Sears, Mitch Spence, Joey Estes (vTOR) Aaron Brooks 브룩스
PHI MIL (75) @NYM (112) Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola Cristopher Sánchez, Ranger Suárez Taijuan Walker
PIT LAD (82) MIN (124) Jared Jones (vMIN) Jared Jones (vLAD), Paul Skenes, Mitch Keller Bailey Falter Quinn Priester
SDP @LAA (63) ARI (129) Yu Darvish (x2), Dylan Cease, Joe Musgrove, Michael King, Matt Waldron (vARI) Matt Waldron (@LAA)
SEA @OAK (138) @KCR (65) George Kirby (x2), Logan Gilbert, Bryan Woo, Luis Castillo Bryce Miller
SFG @ARI (152) @TEX (115) Jordan Hicks, Logan Webb Kyle Harrison, Blake Snell Spencer Howard (x2)
STL @HOU (44) COL (136) Sonny Gray Lance Lynn, Kyle Gibson (vCOL) Kyle Gibson (@HOU), Miles Mikolas Andre Pallante (x2)
TBR @MIA (150) BAL (98) Ryan Pepiot, Zack Littell Aaron Civale, Taj Bradley Tyler Alexander
TEX DET (84) SFG (54) Nathan Eovaldi (x2) Dane Dunning, Andrew Heaney, Michael Lorenzen José Ureña
TOR BAL (56) @OAK (138) Kevin Gausman (x2), Yusei Kikuchi José Berríos, Chris Bassitt
WSN NYM (65) ATL (82) MacKenzie Gore (x2) Trevor Williams (x2), Mitchell Parker, Jake Irvin Patrick Corbin
  • The Mets and Phillies head across the Atlantic next weekend for a two game series played in London Stadium. Based on the limited park factors from the previous two series played in England, I’d recommend sitting your starters for both teams. The two games should be pretty high scoring affairs.
  • It looks like the Astros have a tough couple of matchups against the Cardinals and the Angels next week. You wouldn’t think that those two teams have high octane offenses, but St. Louis has been playing extremely well recently and Angel Stadium is a particularly easy place to knock balls over the fence. Framber Valdez is probably the only pitcher in their rotation who is matchup proof.