logo
Fantasy Baseball Hitter Targets: Whose process should lead to results?

Fantasy Baseball Hitter Targets: Whose process should lead to results?

NBC Sports15-05-2025
Today, I'm going to continue my recent stretch of trying to look at hitting process stats to find value in hitters who we can acquire via trade or on the waiver wire. Now that most regular starters have seen 500 pitches or more, we've reached a point in the season where we can look at one of my favorite process stats for hitters, Process+.
If you want to learn a little bit more about Process+, then I highly recommend you check out Nate Schwartz's article, which won an FSW Award. The stat, created by Kyle Bland at Pitcher List, is essentially a hitter's version of Stuff+. It's 'a combination of PLV's Decision Value, Contact, and Power metrics formatted into one holistic number' that represents how good a hitter has been at making good swing decisions, making contact on those swings, and making authoritative contact when he does hit the ball. That gives each hitter a Process Value grade as well as a Performance Value grade, which tries to represent how well they've actually done, independent of just the process.
For today, I'm going to focus on just the Decision Value and Contact Value portions of Process+ since those stabilize at 400 pitches, while Power Value doesn't stabilize until 800 pitches. Obviously, stabilizing doesn't mean a hitter owns that level forever, but it does mean that it's more meaningful and 'sticky' than it would have been at 200 pitches. By focusing on these categories, I'm hoping to continue identifying hitters who are doing everything right in their approach at the plate and making a good deal of contact and meaningful contact. In the long run, those should be the hitters we want to buy in on the most.
You'll find that many of the hitters below are rostered in a lot of leagues, and so maybe they are guys that you can trade for if the surface-level stats haven't yet caught up. However, I hope to also highlight a few hitters who may be underrostered and could still be found of waiver wires in certain leagues.
Hitters Who Just Missed the Cut
There are a few players who made the cut in terms of their Decision Value or Contact Value but fell too low in some of the other criteria. All of Bo Bichette, Josh Jung, CJ Abrams, Yainer Diaz, Kerry Carpenter, and Salvador Perez had over 100 contact Value, but not a single one of them posted over a 90 Decision Value. Some of this is that players like Bichette are able to make contact on a lot of pitches, so they swing at pitches out of the zone a lot, which will lower their Decision Value scores. We also have some guys like Yainer Diaz and who are struggling to start the year, and this Decision Value score may be a decent hint at why.
A few other players I had to remove because their Contact Value is so low. All of Jo Adell, Colt Keith, Andrew Vaughn, Jorge Soler, Kyle Schwarber, Brent Rooker, Rhys Hoskins, Randy Arozarena, Kyle Manzardo, Byron Buxton, and Kyle Stowers had Contact Value scores of 90 or under. Some of these guys, like Adell, Soler, Hoskins, and Stowers, have the power to make up for poor Contact Value scores. I wanted to try and be strict about which hitters truly qualified for this leaderboard, but, for the record, I do think Hoskins, Schwarber, and Rooker are totally fine with their approaches.
Lastly, there are a few hitters who posted below-average Strike Zone Judgment scores and needed to be removed from qualification. That included Oneil Cruz, Will Smith, Lars Nootbaar, Ryan Jeffers, and Ryan O'Hearn.
Fantasy Baseball Hitter Adds
A grade of 100 represents the league average mark for all of these categories.
Look at that company that Gleyber Torres is keeping on the Process+ leaderboard. He's well over the 100 grade mark in every category other than Power, where he still remains above-average. When I wrote up Torres for our Rotoworld digital magazine this off-season, I said, 'After a bounce-back 2023, Torres regressed again in 2024 and tension seemed to grow between him and the Yankees. Now that he's in Detroit, perhaps this is a much-needed fresh start.' So far, it seems that may be the case. He is sporting a career-low chase rate and his lowest swing rate since the COVID-shortened 2020 season. His overall contact rate has jumped up to 82%, and the swinging strike rate (SwStr%) has dropped to 7.6%. That more patient approach has allowed him to post the highest Ideal Contact Rate (ICR) of his career with a 9.3% barrel rate. He's not pulling the ball a lot, but that's OK in Comerica Park since his power will be a bit limited there as well. Everything else is saying that the early-season success for Torres is very much warranted.
Trent Grisham has both come out of nowhere and not this season. Certainly, nobody expected 12 home runs and a 186 wRC+ by the middle of May. Yet, when he left San Diego after the 2023 season, there were a lot of people who wondered if Grisham, who had posted a 12% barrel rate and a 43% pull rate, might really benefit from playing in Yankee Stadium. It didn't work out last year, but we may have been a year early. The injury to Giancarlo Stanton opened up some opportunities for Grisham, and he has recalibrated his approach a bit to be slightly less pull-happy than he was last season and also less passive. Last season, Grisham cut his swing rate down to just 36% overall, and his called strike rate soared. He is now swinging more often but still not chasing out of the zone, which has led to a lot more contact. It is a profile that's eerily similar to what he did in 2023 with the Padres, but with a 12% higher fly ball rate, which has helped both at Yankee Stadium and on the road. The big issue will be playing time. Jasson Dominguez is starting to heat up a bit, and Giancarlo Stanton is set to return (maybe) in the next few weeks. With Ben Rice also playing well, and none of those guys playing 2B or 3B, how can they get everybody into the lineup?
Brendan Donovan is an underrated player in fantasy baseball, but he has a lot of value because of his multi-position eligibility and his strong approach at the plate. He's not doing much differently this year. Perhaps chasing out of the zone slightly less, but it's pretty negligible. Still, this is a profile that worked for him last year and sets him up for another .280, 15 home run season while hitting third in the Cardinals' lineup. That's a player you'd want in most league types.
I've written about Adley Rutschman a few times now, but I don't see anything to be alarmed about. He may never develop into the 'best catcher in baseball' like many thought he would be when he was a prospect, but he's not doing anything now as a hitter that makes me think he's as bad as his stats suggest he is. He has the best barrel rate and the highest average exit velocity of his career. He's chasing almost half as much as he did last year and posting an 87% overall contact rate with just a 4.5% SwStr%. I do think he's being a bit too passive, which has led to an elevated called strike rate, but that's really the only issue I can find. His xBA is .275, and his xSLG is .474, and I think those expected stats match the profile I'm looking at more than the surface-level stats do.
Yandy Diaz is doing the things he always does, but his batting average and on-base percentage are surprisingly low. He's chasing a little bit more out of the zone than we're used to seeing, which has lowered his contact rate by 2%, but he still has an 85.5% contact rate with just a 6.7% SwStr%. He has the third-highest barrel rate of his career and his highest average exit velocity ever. He's also lifting the ball more than he has since 2022, and perhaps that's a bit of an issue with the winds blowing in at his new home ballpark. Diaz is slashing .227/.283/.427 in 28 games at home, but that's where all six of his home runs have come. Is he selling out for a bit more power at home with a 32% fly ball rate, compared to a 29% mark on the road? It seems like just a small difference, so maybe it's just getting accustomed to the new stadium and environment? I don't see anything in the profile here that worries me, and I do see a .285 xBA that feels like it jives with the profile under the hood. I'd expect the summer to be kind to Diaz.
Brandon Nimmo was somebody I covered in an earlier approach article I wrote two weeks ago, and I still feel good about his approach at the plate, so check out that article for more details.
Last week, I wrote about Lourdes Gurriel Jr. in my article that focused on hitters who were attacking the first pitch more this season. In that article, I said that Gurriel was expanding the zone slightly more this season but had a solid overall % contact rate and a good swinging strike rate, which made me interested in adding him. The only issue was that his fly ball rate jumped by a lot, which had led to an alarmingly high 13% infield fly ball rate. I wanted Gurriel to keep the same approach but focus more on line drives and less on getting under the ball. Over the two weeks, he has gone 17-for-51 (.333) with three home runs and 10 RBI, so perhaps he is bringing this all back around.
Taylor Ward is another veteran hitter whose process and underlying skills are not being accurately reflected by his surface-level stats. He currently has a career-high 13.7% barrel rate and 91.2 mph average exit velocity. He's chasing slightly more outside of the zone but is still under 23% overall, which is good. His zone contact rate is 88%, and his overall contact rate is 80%, while his swinging strike rate is 2% better than last year. There's nothing in his swing decisions that suggests he is setting himself up for failure, which makes sense since he is on this leaderboard. So you have a veteran hitter who is making good swing decisions, making a good amount of contact, and making the hardest contact he's ever made. Could he lower the launch angle a bit? Sure, and maybe that's the trick, but I'd be buying shares here if somebody has moved on.
More Fantasy Baseball Hitter Adds
I didn't want to give you a list of mostly guys who are already on rosters and won't be traded, so if we knock down the number of pitches faced to 300, there are a few more hitters who emerge. Now, the Decision Value and Contact Value Stats haven't stabilized yet for these hitters, but it at least gives us a sense of a few additional hitters who are putting themselves in the right spots so far.
So far this season, Jake Meyers is chasing outside of the zone less often than last year, which has helped him improve his contact rate and cut his swinging strike rate. He's not being more aggressive in the zone, but pitchers are challenging him inside the strike zone 7% more often, which is a massive increase. So Meyers is laying off bad pitches and being challenged more, and simply meeting the challenge. He's also focusing on pulling and lifting the ball less, which has led to an all-fields groundball approach that is really helping his batting average. Considering you have Meyers on your team for his speed, we don't care if he's not producing power numbers. This new approach could allow him to hit .270, which would likely lead to 20 stolen bases while playing most days for the Astros. That's a solid player in a lot of league types.
Max Kepler and Alec Bohm appeared in that same article above that I mentioned Brandon Nimmo in, so make sure you check it out for more details, but I'm buying shares of both. It may be hard to get Bohm anymore since he's had a good run of late, but perhaps you can trade for him if somebody in your league wants more power. I still think Bohm will be slightly below average there, but he should be a valuable hitter in the other non-speed categories.
I'm not gonna lie, I was fully out on Jonathan India when he signed in Kansas City. I thought the park would hold up under double-digit home runs, and since he rarely steals bases, I thought you might be looking at a 10/10 season from a guy who hits .250. So far, that's kind of been correct. He's slashing .244/.339/.321 with one home run and no steals on the year. However, he's on this list because his process has been good. He has one of the lowest power scores of any hitters on here because his Decision Value and Contact Value are great. So far, in 13 games in May, he's hitting .296/.367/.426 with four doubles and that one home run. He's still not running, but he is hitting leadoff for the Royals, so if you need batting average and runs, India could be a guy for you. I would just limit that to deeper formats.
Miguel Andujar just won't go away. He won a starting job at the beginning of the year but then seemed to lose it when the Athletics called up Nick Kurtz. Only now, Andujar has seemingly shifted back to the infield and become the starting third baseman for the A's. On the season, he's slashing .316/.344/.444 with three home runs and one steal. Has you can see from the chart, his Decision Value and Contact Value are above-average, but he has fallen below with his Process+ score. Some of that has to do with his poor power numbers, but it's also because he's swinging at almost everything in the strike zone with a 70% zone swing rate. That means some of the pitches he's making contact on are not pitches that he can do damage on, even if they're strikes. Still, he makes an elite amount of contact and has hit a ball 111.4 mph this season, which is the hardest hit baseball since his rookie year. He puts the ball on the ground a lot and has just a 5% barrel rate, so I don't think you're getting the boost that you want that park to give you, but Andujar could hit .270-.280 in the middle of a solid lineup, and that has value in deeper formats.
I spoke with Mark Vientos earlier in the season about how his process had been great, but the results hadn't been there. Not much has changed since then. He is hitting .245/.313/.401 now, so that's a workable batting average if the power was there, but the power has been shockingly absent for Vientos. Yes, his 7% barrel rate isn't bad, and his 91 mph average exit velocity is in line with his career norms, but he's just not capitalizing when he gets his pitch to drive. He's chasing less outside of the zone, swinging more inside of the zone, and making solid contact in the zone. However, his SwStr% is still 13.1%, and he has an overall contact rate under 73%, so I think a lot of this could come down to how he's being pitched. Vientos is seeing more sliders than he ever has and is being pitched away nearly 50% of the time. He's likely trying to go with those pitches, which is why his pull rate has fallen to just 30%. It might make more sense for him to lay off those breaking balls away, even if they are strikes, and wait for something he can do more damage to. There is still a valuable fantasy hitter here, but he just needs to adjust to how MLB pitchers have started to attack him.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MLB Starting Pitcher News: Yusei Kikuchi turns it around, Jack Flaherty slips
MLB Starting Pitcher News: Yusei Kikuchi turns it around, Jack Flaherty slips

NBC Sports

time3 days ago

  • NBC Sports

MLB Starting Pitcher News: Yusei Kikuchi turns it around, Jack Flaherty slips

It's Wednesday, which means it's time for us to visit the bump on Hump Day and discuss starting pitcher news. Each week in this article, I'll be taking a deeper look at a few trending/surging starting pitchers to see what, if anything, is changing and whether or not we should be investing in this hot stretch. The article will be similar to the series I ran for a few years called Mixing It Up (previously Pitchers With New Pitches and Should We Care?), where I broke down new pitches to see if there were truly meaningful additions that changed a pitcher's outlook. Only now, I won't just look at new pitches, I can also cover velocity bumps, new usage patterns, or new roles. However, the premise will remain the same: trying to determine if the recent results are connected to any meaningful changes that make them worth investing in or if they're just mirages. Each week, I'll try to cover change for at least four starters and give my clear take on whether I would add them, trade for them, or invest fully in their success. Hopefully you'll find it useful, so let's get started. Most of the charts you see below are courtesy of Kyle Bland over at Pitcher List. He created a great spring training app (which he's now carried over into the regular season) that tracks changes in velocity, usage, and pitch movement. It also features a great strike zone plot, which allows you to see how the entire arsenal plays together. I'll also use Alex Chamberlain's awesome work with his Pitch Leaderboard. Matthew Pouliot, Earlier in the season, I wrote about Yusei Kikuchi's confusing start to his tenure with the Angels, which included movement changes on his slider and a new arm slot. He wasn't bad in the early going, posting a 3.06 ERA in his first 12 starts; however, that came with a 12.3% walk rate that led to a 1.52 WHIP and just 58 strikeouts in 64.2 innings. That made him borderline unusable in fantasy leagues despite the good ERA. Then came this report from Jeff Fletcher at the beginning of June: Something to watch tonight: Yusei Kikuchi has seen his BB rate go up and K rate go down this year. Pitching coach Barry Enright told me they realized his grip on his slider and FB had changed from last year. Will be interesting to see if going back to the old grip helps. In five starts in June, Kikuchi has posted a 2.25 ERA and 1.06 WHIP. He has seen his walk rate shrink down to 7.1% while his strikeout rate has exploded to 32.3%. So has it all just been the grip change on the slider and fastball? The easy answer is no. Kikuchi's fastball has been a bit harder in June with just 0.5 inches more Induced Vertical Break (iVB) and an almost identical vertical approach angle to May. His swinging strike rate (SwStr%) is down on the pitch in June, as is his CSW, and his barrel rate allowed is the highest it's been at any point in the season. In truth, it seems like Kikuchi's fastball has actually been worse after this tweet. Similarly, as you can see from Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard below, Kikuchi's slider hasn't changed much in June either. Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard The vertical and horizontal movement is essentially the same as it was in May. The same goes for the velocity. The approach angles have shifted a little bit, but that might have more to do with Kikuchi raising his arm angle over two degrees in June. In fact, overall, Kikuchi has a 36-degree arm angle at release in June, which is up from 33 degrees in May. That's notable because his arm angle was 42 degrees last year, so he had dropped it considerably at the start of the season and may be working to get it back closer to last year. The biggest reason, in my opinion, for Kikuchi's success has been his reliance on the curveball. He threw the pitch 9% of the time in May but is now up to 21% usage in June. In his five starts this month, the curve has a 16.8% SwStr% and 38.3% CSW with just a 23.8% Ideal Contact Rate (ICR). It has been, unquestionably, his best pitch. Over this stretch in June, he has used it just 7.2% of the time to lefties and 25.3% of the time to righties, which makes some sense since he's throwing his slider to lefties nearly 53% of the time in June while posting a 19% SwStr%, so he doesn't really need the curveball to lefties. In June, Kikuchi is using the curve to righties both early in the count and late. It has a 66.7% early count usage but also a 29.3% two-strike usage. It's early called strike rate of 27.3% is fine but just barely above-average; yet, it's 31% PutAway Rate, which measures how often a two-strike pitch leads to a strikeout, is excellent. He has a solid 70% strike rate on the curve this month to righties, which means he's either getting it over the plate early in the count for weak contact or having them chase off the plate in two-strike counts for swings and misses. This has been crucial for him because, on the season, his slider has just a 10% SwStr% to righties and only a slightly above-average PutAway Rate, so he has needed the curve to pick up the slack. The curve has been his most-used early count pitch to righties in June, with the changeup being his second most-used early count pitch this month. Kikuchi has a 67% strike rate on the changeup to righties with a 16.4% SwStr% and 44% ICR, so going changeup/curve heavy early in the count to righties has helped and has also allowed him to save his four-seam fastball more for two-strike counts. In June, he used his four-seamer 38% of the time in two-strike counts to righties; however, it has just a 6.3% PutAway Rate, which is much lower than the 31% PutAway Rate it's had to lefties this past month. At the end of the day, this feels very similar to what Kikuchi did last year in the second half, but with him leaning on his curve this year instead of his slider. He has always been a streaky pitcher, so we know to use him during his hot streaks, but he doesn't feel fundamentally different here. He's using his slider aggressively against lefties and then turning to the four-seamer later in counts, and is using his curve and changeup early against righties while mixing in the four-seamer and slider later. It can work, and it has. But this doesn't feel like a new Yusei Kikuchi. If you look at Fangraph's leaderboard for June, you'll see Wrobleski among the leaders in SIERA. Over 26.1 innings in five appearances, Wrobleski has allowed eight earned runs on 22 hits with 26 strikeouts and six walks. That's a 2.73 ERA with a 1.06 WHIP and 3.00 SIERA. I felt that was worth investigating. Nick Pollack first put me onto some of Wrobleski's changes during an episode of our 'On the Corner' podcast. Nick's first point was the increase in fastball velocity. The left-hander averaged 95.1 mph on his four-seam fastball, but that's up to 96.6 mph over his five performances in June. That has also come with slightly more extension, but his 5.5-foot mark is well below league average with below-average raw movement. He does have a great Height Adjusted Vertical Approach Angle, which means that, from his release point, his four-seamer stays up more than most and almost seems to 'rise' as it approaches the plate. That's why it's nice that he uses it 60% of the time in the upper-third of the strike zone. He does a better job of getting it up and inside to lefties than to righties, but that's also to be expected. Another big change, as you can see from Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard below, is that Wrobleski has lowered his arm angle almost five degrees from last season. That's a pretty substantial difference. The lower arm slot may have contributed to his increased extension and velocity, but we do know that it has likely impacted the change in his overall slider movement. Last year, he threw the pitch 87.4 mph with 2.6 inches of gloveside movement and 32.8 inches of drop, including gravity. This season, the pitch is slightly harder, with 3.2 inches of gloveside movement and nearly 35 inches of drop. As you'd expect, the lower arm slot has also altered the horizontal approach angle, which has led to far more groundballs and much weaker contact, in addition to a slight increase in swinging strike rate. In June, he threw the slider 30% of the time to lefties and nearly 18% of the time to righties. Righties see it primarily as a two-strike offering, with a 47% usage rate in those counts, and the pitch has a solid 27% PutAway Rate. Lefties get the pitch in all counts, with a 58% early count rate and a 39% two-strike rate, but it has just an 8.3% PutAway Rate against lefties in June, which is not ideal. That leads to the biggest issue with Wrobleski still. He has just a 6% SwStr% and 13.8% strikeout rate against lefties during this strong June run. He's primarily slider/sinker to lefties and mixes in his four-seam and curve, but none of those miss a ton of bats. He could perhaps get more swings and misses if he turns to the four-seamer more in two-strike counts, but it remains to be seen if he will. There has been marked improvement against righties this season. Some of that has to do with him getting rid of his sweeper and adding in a cutter. The cutter sits at 92.1 mph with just 1.2 inches of horizontal movement and 8.3 inches of 'rise' if you were to remove the effects of gravity. In June, Wrobleski used the cutter 73% of the time early in the count against righties. The pitch has an 85% true first-pitch strike rate but also a 40% chase rate in two-strike counts when he does choose to use it. The pitch has a 14.5% SwStr% and 30.6% CSW against righties in June with a 36% ICR. Using the cutter early in the count has set up the slider in two-strike counts, in addition to the four-seamer fastball, which he used 53% of the time in two-strike counts to righties in June. It also had a nearly 21% PutAway Rate, so that combination has been useful for him in two-strike situations. Another development for Wrobleski has been a revamped changeup, which is almost three mph harder with nearly six inches more vertical movement, when accounting for gravity, and less armside movement. The pitch has a lower zone rate but a slightly higher swinging strike rate. It's his fifth most-used pitch against righties, so it won't make or break him, but it's nice to see him possess such a deep arsenal against righties. It's unclear what role the Dodgers envision for Wrobleski, and I don't love his profile against lefties, but if he's going to stay in this piggyback role, he could be a useful option against right-handed-heavy lineups with a good chance of earning wins. This is more of a full-on pitch mix analysis for Burrows, which was inspired by the fact that he's 22nd in SIERA among all starting pitchers with at least 20 innings in June. In 26.1 innings last month, he had a 2.73 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, and 3.18 SIERA, with a 22% K-BB% that ranked 18th among that same leaderboard of starting pitchers. So is this something we can believe in? Well, for starters, Burrow has a 95 mph four-seamer with 16.5 inches of iVB. It's not a particularly flat fastball, so it doesn't miss many bats, but he throws it in the zone often and doesn't allow much hard contact. That's a good start. It is interesting to note that the graphic above shows that Burrows has lowered his arm angle quite significantly after his two appearances in May. It doesn't seem to have done much to the overall shape of his pitches, but it has shifted the attack angle on his pitches. His slider and changeup, in particular, have lost some of their vertical attack in place of horizontal attack angle with that lower arm angle. What's interesting is that both the slider and changeup are performing worse since the lower arm angle. The four-seamer is performing better, and that might be why he's going to it more often, upping his usage by 11% overall. In June, Burrows has gone to the four-seamer 45% of the time to righties while using the slider 34% of the time, the changeup 14% of the time, and the curve just over 7% of the time. The four-seamer is primarily his early count pitch, and we established that it's a solid one. The slider has also been used 72% of the time early in counts to righties. Considering it has just a 39% zone rate and 57% strike rate, I don't love him using it early in the count and would rather he use it late, considering it has a 33% PutAway Rate. However, I think that may have something to do with setting it up early. Overall, it's a fairly mediocre pitch. The changeup is better with a 12% SwStr% to righties in June, to go along with a 67% strike rate and a 44% ICR. He also uses it early in the count 63% of the time to righties but mixes it in 23.4% in two-strike counts, where it has a 31.4% chase rate and 37.3% PutAway Rate. Overall, it's a really solid offering, but it's not quite an ideal swing-and-miss pitch to righties, so Burrows is still missing that. However, his approach of four-seam and changeup over 80% of the time to lefties is one I can get behind. The changeup gets plenty of called strikes early against lefties but can also miss bats with two strikes. His curve has been used mostly early in the count to lefties, but it has just a 15% zone rate and 26% strike rate to lefties in June. It also doesn't miss many bats in two-strike counts, so it's just a show-me third pitch. At the end of the day, Burrows has a solid fastball and a good changeup that form a good foundation, but until he gets a two-strike whiff pitch and righties, he's going to be limited to being used primarily as a streamer against teams who aren't loaded with right-handed hitters who can hurt him. Back in April, I noted the changes that the Red Sox had made to Quinn Priester's arsenal and how I thought it would lead to some Tobias Myers-type of success in Milwaukee. ⚾️Quinn Priester trade returned lots of value for Boston, but they revamped his arsenal and then shipped him off to succeed elsewhere. They added a cutter, tightened up his SL and narrowed the wide movement gaps. It has a real Tobias Myers feel for MIL. It may have taken a bit of time, but Priester has been really good since the middle of May, posting a 2.42 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, and 38/7 K/BB ratio in 44.2 innings. While some of that has to do with matchups against Colorado, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, and Minnesota, he also faced the Cardinals, Braves, and Phillies, and that Reds matchup was in Cincinnati. So what else could be the cause of his recent success? The first thing that stands out is that his cutter usage jumped back up in June, in addition to ticking back up in velocity. This was a new pitch that Boston added in the offseason, so it makes some sense that his usage of the pitch would fluctuate as the year went on. He has used the pitch just 13% of the time against righties during those last eight starts, but 27% of the time against lefties. It's not an elite pitch, registering just 91 mph with one inch of glove-side movement and more lift than the average cutter at that speed. However, he has tremendous control of the pitch, posting a 56% zone rate and 67% strike rate against lefties. He keeps it up in the zone often but doesn't just bury it inside, with a 43% outside rate against lefites over this stretch. However, that has also led to plenty of groundballs but a little bit more hard contact than I'd like to see, with a 60% ICR against lefties. Priester uses the cutter and sinker early in the count to lefties, which sets up a slider and curve as the two-strike offerings. He doesn't throw the curve often, but it has a 15.2% usage against lefties over his last eight starts with a 20% SwStr% and 29% PutAway Rate. I think he might be able to turn to that pitch more often to get swings-and-misses against lefties. However, that won't help him against righties. He rarely throws the curve to righties, so he often relies on the slider and cutter in two-strike counts. The cutter has a 6% PutAway rate against righties over his last eight starts, and the slider is also below average with an 11.3% mark. What the Brewers have done is narrow Priester's arsenal, getting rid of the changeup, and trying to get him to focus more on the cutter, slider, and sinker working off of one another to keep hitters off the barrel and induce weak contact. As I said in my tweet above, this strikes me as a similar path to what they did with Tobias Myers, but with fewer pitches. I think that makes Priester a fine option in deeper formats, but he's not going to miss enough bats to have huge fantasy appeal, and the high contact rates make him risky against good offenses. The last three starts of June were not kind to Jack Flaherty, who allowed 18 earned runs on 16 hits in 13 innings with 12 walks and 15 strikeouts. That's a 12.46 ERA, 2.15 WHIP, 22.4% strikeout rate, and 17.9% walk rate. Yikes! My first thought was to check and see if Flaherty was doing anything differently in June that might have led to this. If you just look at pitch usage and shapes, not much stands out as being different. He's leaned into his four-seam fastball more, but that has more to do with the lack of success of his breaking pitches (more on that later). We can see some difference in the shape of his curveball, which seems to have lost both vertical and horizontal break in June. Not much, but enough that it attracts our attention. The curve still had a 23.6% SwStr% in June, which is right in line with its usual numbers, and the barrel rate allowed was better than what the curve allowed in May. Yet, that change in curve shape may be connected to another option, which Nick Pollack suggested during one of our podcasts, that Flaherty may have simply been tipping his pitches. I discussed this earlier this year with Shane Baz, and he has since had a solid run of production. During these last three starts when we saw the change in shape on Flaherty's curve, the pitch had a 31% zone rate and 59% strike rate with a 50% swing rate against, an 87.5% zone contact rate, and an absurd 62.5% ICR. It still has a 22% SwStr%, but this is worth exploring. On the season, Flaherty's curve has a 30% zone rate and 60% strike rate with a 50% swing rate against, so those are basically the same numbers we're seeing in this three-game stretch. However, for the year, the curve has a 74% zone contact rate allowed and a 38.6% ICR. So the curve was in the zone as often and swung at as often, but hit far more often and much harder. Huh. Was it locations? Throughout the season, Flaherty's curve has been 60% gloveside to righties and 86.4% LoLoc% (Low location, meaning the bottom third of the strike zone). He's used it 48% of the time in two-strike counts to righties with a 31.6% PutAway Rate. Over this last three-game stretch, the PutAway Rate fell to 30%, so essentially the same, and he used it in two-strike counts just 36% of the time, but that may have just had to do with a lack of confidence. The pitch to righties was gloveside 68% of the time over that small sample and low 86% of the time, so the locations were pretty identical. To lefties, Flaherty has used the curve armside 45% of the time and gloveside 34% of the time, while keeping it low 84.5%. He's used it 52% of the time early in counts, and it has a 25% early called strike rate and 23% PutAway Rate. Over the last three-game stretch, the curve to lefies was armside 40% of the time and gloveside 33% of the time, while being low in the zone 77.5%. Perhaps you could argue that he hasn't been burying the curve to lefties as much, but the rest of the location profile is similar. He's still using it early in counts 57% of the time, with a 22% early called strike rate, and 21% PutAway Rate, so another instance where there doesn't seem to be a huge change in location and usage. All of that tells me that something was off with the curveball. Perhaps it was a minor change in shape. Perhaps hitters were able to spot something out of the hand and sit on the curve more effectively. However, nothing stands out to me as being a major red flag. The issue is just that Flaherty's slider has been struggling a bit since the start of May, so he can't afford his curve to get hit like this. Since May 3rd, Flaherty's slider has a 11% SwStr%, which is well below the 13.8% MLB average for a slider. It also has a 37% zone rate, 58% strike rate, and 44% ICR. All of those are about 5% below average or more. So if Flaherty's slider has been mediocre for 10 starts, and his fastball is an average pitch to begin with, that puts a lot of pressure on his curve to carry him. I don't think the curve is as bad as we've seen it recently, so I still think Flaherty can have some use as a streamer in good matchups, and I wouldn't outright cut him. However, I don't think you should feel that you need to hold Flaherty in shallower leagues if there are intriguing options on the wire.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Jurickson Profar returns, Jacob Lopez is on a heater
Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Jurickson Profar returns, Jacob Lopez is on a heater

NBC Sports

time6 days ago

  • NBC Sports

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Jurickson Profar returns, Jacob Lopez is on a heater

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, where I review my favorite waiver wire adds and drops for each week of the MLB season. The premise is pretty straightforward. I'll try to give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When I list a player, I'll list the category where I think he'll be helpful or the quick reason he's listed. I hope it will help you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs. For a player to qualify for this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. I understand you may say, 'These players aren't available in my league,' and I can't help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they're available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types. Matthew Pouliot, Waiver Wire Hitters Jo Adell - OF, LAA: 36% rostered (POWER UPSIDE, POST-HYPE PROSPECT) I know we've done this a bunch with Adell in the past, and I'm not sure I buy it, but I do feel the need to point out that he's been playing well of late and he's still just 26 years old, so it would be foolish to assume he's a finished product. In 24 games in June, Adell is batting .274/.358/.670 with 11 home runs, 18 runs scored, and 18 RBI. His strikeout rate has settled around 25% over that span, which isn't ideal but is an improvement for him. However, you're adding him for the 11 home runs in 24 games. His power is unquestioned, and if he can just hit .240 the rest of the way, he could be a big addition to your fantasy teams. Over the last three weeks, his roster rate has climbed from 6%, so I'd imagine he won't make the cut next week. Another option if you're looking for power is Kyle Stowers - OF, MIA (28% rostered). Stowers is proving to be a particularly streaky hitter in his first big league season, but that's not a shock from somebody who is primarily a power bat. He had a prolonged cold stretch from late May into early June, but Stowers has homered in three of his last seven games and has gone 11-for-39 (.282) over his last 13 games with three home runs, 10 runs scored, and seven RBI. The lineup context isn't great, hence the seven RBI on three home runs, but if you're in deeper formats and need power or just want to ride his hot stretch until it flames out, go for it. Cam Smith - 3B/OF, HOU: 33% rostered (PROSPECT GROWTH, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE) Last week, I recorded a full video on why you should add Cam Smith, so you should check that out for more details than I can give in here, but I was optimistic that Smith would start to add back in some lift and power to his swing now that he had gotten confident with consistent contact. Additionally, if we use Pitcher List's Process+ stat, which measures the combined value of a hitter's Decision Value, Contact Ability, and Power, Smith has a Process+ score of 110. 100 is the league average, so we love to see that. Another option for primarily batting average is Ernie Clement - 2B/SS/3B - TOR (30% rostered). Clement is hitting .368/.411/.483 in 23 games in June with one home run, 17 runs scored, four RBI, and one steal. The 29-year-old has proved himself to be a solid batting average asset last season, and his multi-position eligibility makes him valuable in deeper leagues, even if he's not giving you much power or speed right now. Jurickson Profar - OF, ATL: 32% rostered (IMPENDING RETURN, COUNTING STATS UPSIDE) This is the week. Despite the fact that I think the rule is stupid, Profar is allowed to play in rehab games even though he was suspended for 80 games for breaking league rules. Whatever. It's dumb. But he can return on July 2nd, which is Wednesday. When he comes back, he figures to be the regular left fielder in Atlanta, so he's probably worth an add in all formats to see what he can do without the PEDs. Lane Thomas - OF, CLE (23% rostered) also seems to be turning things around a bit. People love to pile on Thomas because he was terrible when the Guardians acquired him last year, but he eventually settled in and hit .264 in 25 games in September with seven home runs, 13 runs scored, and 20 RBI, and then was good in the playoffs. I think we forget about that stretch. He was cold to start this season, but he played just 8 games before getting hurt. He gritted it out for five more games before landing on the IL. He came back for four games and then got hurt again, so the rhythm to the season has been a mess for him. Over the last week, he's gone 5-for-18 with two home runs, four RBI, two runs scored, and two steals. Perhaps he's starting to settle in? Michael Toglia: 1B/OF, COL: 22% rostered (STARTING JOB, POWER UPSIDE) Toglia is certainly more of a schedule-based add. I recorded a video explaining why I'm not really excited to add him in fantasy here. I just think his strikeout rates and contact issues are going to continue to be a problem. However, he has tons of power, and Colorado's next six games are in Coors Field and the six after that are in Fenway Park and Great American Ballpark, so these could be a solid two weeks of offense for Colorado. You could also add Mickey Moniak - OF, COL (11% rostered), who is hitting .292/.358/.750 over 15 games in June with six home runs, 12 RBI, 10 runs scored, and two steals. We've seen him go through these hot streaks before, and his strikeout rate remains high, so I don't expect this type of production to last, but he's seeing the ball well and has that same strong schedule that we mentioned with Toglia. Evan Carter - OF, TEX: 21% rostered (POST HYPE PROSPECT, HOT STRETCH) Kennedi Landry had a good piece on Evan Carter last week, highlighting some of the changes that have led to his strong performance since coming off the He admitted to putting a lot of pressure on himself after his injury, and cited playing looser and feeling like he had a better mental approach at the plate. In June, Carter is hitting .310/.403/.517 in 19 games with three homers, eight RBI, 11 runs scored, and three steals. We do know that Texas is not likely to play him against many lefties, so that could limit his value in weekly leagues, and he seems to get banged up quite frequently, so he remains an injury risk, but Carter is just 22 years old and has plenty of fantasy juice if he can stay healthy. An option primarily for batting average, who I have had on this list all season, is Jake Meyers - OF, HOU (12% rostered). Earlier this season, I published an article on hitters who were being more aggressive and swinging at the first pitch more often this year than last year. Myers popped up for me on that leaderboard, and I explained in detail why I'm a fan of his new approach. On the season, he's hitting .307 with 13 stolen bases, and he's slashing .337/.398/.386 in 23 games in June with 12 runs scored and five steals. That's valuable in most formats, as long as you don't need power or RBI. Nolan Schanuel - 1B, LAA: 18% rostered (BATTING AVERAGE ASSET, POTENTIAL POWER GROWTH) I've always liked Schanuel. He has tremendous plate discipline. He makes an elite amount of contact. He pulls the ball enough to do damage, and I think he's trying to be more selective in getting pitches he can drive. The power numbers aren't great, but Schanuel now hits at the top of a batting order that includes Zach Neto, Mike Trout, Jorge Soler, Taylor Ward, and Logan O'Hoppe. It's not a bad spot, and he has delivered of late, going .277/.352/.479 in 23 games in June with four home runs, 11 runs scored, 18 RBI, and two steals. That's a little bit of help in all five categories. I think Schanuel is emerging as a 1B who I may target in 2026 drafts. Brooks Lee - 2B/3B/SS, MIN: 18% rostered (BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE, CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME) Lee is another solid multi-position eligible player who has remained in the lineup even as the Twins have gotten healthy. With Royce Lewis on the IL with yet another lower-body injury, that should keep Lee as an everyday player in Minnesota, and, frankly, he has played enough to remain in the lineup even when Lewis does come back. Lee is hitting .365/.393/.533 in 23 games in June with four home runs, 11 runs scored, 16 RBI, and one steal. Interestingly, his power boom in June has come when he started pulling the ball LESS and hitting it in the air less, so I'm not sure if it will last, but he has a 28% line drive rate in June, and hard-hit line drives can leave the park too. I'd be primarily adding him for batting average, but some power may come too. If you're trying to get ahead of a hot stretch, Colt Keith - 1B/2B, DET (10% rostered) is a name to look at. Since June 1st, Colt Keith is 6th among all hitters who have seen at least 100 pitches in Process+. He's hitting .250/.324/.433 in 20 games over that stretch with two home runs, six runs scored, and eight RBI, but the swing decisions and contact suggest that those numbers should just continue to get better. Tyler Freeman - SS/OF, COL: 15% rostered (REGULAR STARTING ROLE, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE) Yes, another Rockies hitter. We talked about the schedule earlier, but we've also seen Freeman emerge as the regular right fielder for the Rockies since being called up. He has hit .324/.409/.432 in 41 games with nine stolen bases and 20 runs scored. Freeman had a solid enough season last year for Cleveland, and moving to Colorado should help him. Freeman makes a lot of contact, but the hard contact is limited, and his BABIP has been low in years past. Coors Field tends to boost BABIP, so Freeman could emerge as a .270 hitter with some decent speed and multi-position eligibility. Freeman is also 15th in Process+ since June 1st, so the stats are backed up by a strong approach. Another multi-position option is Caleb Durbin - 2B/3B/SS, MIL (6% rostered), who has hit .292/.366/.444 in 21 games in June with three home runs, 17 runs scored, and eight RBI. I would like to see more steals, since that's been Durbin's calling card in the minors, but it's nice to see the rookie adjusting to MLB pitching and starting to get on base more often. I think the steals will come. Parker Meadows - OF, DET: 11% rostered (POWER/SPEED UPSIDE, RETURN FROM THE IL) Meadows has struggled since coming off the IL, but I often think that we're too quick to turn away from a player just because he doesn't hit the ground running. Adjusting to MLB pitching is hard, even if you've been at this level before. Meadows was out for almost three months; it's going to take some time for him to get his rhythm back. He's a talented hitter and is playing pretty much every day in Detroit, and has gone 5-for-20 over his last six games, so may be starting to put it together a bit. I would still try to scoop him up before he gets hot. You could also add his teammate Wenceel Pérez - OF, DET (7% rostered), who is hitting .288/.338/.616 in 22 games in June with five home runs, 14 RBI, and 13 runs scored. He also hit .242 with nine home runs and nine steals in 112 games as a rookie last season. He's the everyday right fielder in Detroit right now, and I don't see that changing unless his production falls off a cliff. Kyle Teel - C, CWS: 6% rostered (PROSPECT CALL-UP, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE) Kyle Teel has entered a bit of a timeshare with Edgar Quero, which is not an ideal situation, but I think Teel has more offensive upside. He slashed .295/.394/.492 in 50 games at Triple-A with eight home runs and seven steals, and struggled when he first got called up but has gone 9-for-29 (.310) over his last 10 games with two runs scored. I believe in his approach at the plate and his overall skill set, so I think he'll continue to adjust to big league pitching, and he's worth a look in all two-catcher leagues. If you're looking for an option in a two-catcher format, you can go with Gary Sanchez - C, BAL (7% rostered), who figures to be the starting catcher in Baltimore with Adley Rutschman landing on the IL. The veteran will be more valuable against left-handed pitching, but he has gone 13-for-34 (.382) in 10 games since coming off the IL with four home runs, 10 runs scored, and 14 RBI. That will play in most league types, and with Rutschman not back until after the All-Star Break, that's almost another month of time with Sanchez as the primary starter. Christian Moore - 2B, LAA: 6% rostered (RECENT CALL-UP, POWER UPSIDE) Moore hit two home runs in a win over the Red Sox this week, but he also went just 4-for-20 on the week, which is essentially what you're getting with him. The rookie struggled to start the season in Double-A, but was playing solid in Triple-A and had a .279/.374/.422 slash line in 54 games across Double-A and Triple-A with five home runs and eight steals. He also had a 14% swinging strike rate and just a 70% contact rate, so that tells us there will be swing-and-miss issues in the big leagues. I would expect a .230 average but with some intriguing power and speed hitting near the bottom of a solid but not great lineup. It's not much different than what we should expect from fellow rookie Brady House - 3B, WAS (5% rostered). The former 11th overall pick in the 2021 MLB Draft was hitting much better in the minors, going .304/.353/.519 in 65 games at Triple-A with 13 home runs. His average exit velocity was 90.2 mph with a 46% hard-hit rate. House was pulling the ball at a career-high rate, nearly 50% of the time, while lowering his chase rate by 6%. He still swings and misses a lot (15% swinging strike rate in the minors) and has a 47% groundball rate that will cap his upside, but the new approach and solid enough zone contact rate let's me think that House could hit .240 in Washington with decent power numbers the rest of the way. Luke Raley - 1B/OF, SEA: 5% rostered (RETURN FROM IL, POWER UPSIDE) Raley has been out since late April with an oblique strain, but he returned last week and has gone 7-for-21 in six games with a homer and six RBIs. He hit 22 home runs with 11 steals for the Mariners last season, so he could be a decent source of power and chip in steals in deeper formats. He's likely to see most of his playing time in right field, but he could also play first base and designated hitter, which gives him added job security; although, he's unlikely to play against left-handed pitching. That's similar to the role that Pavin Smith - 1B/OF, ARI (7% rostered) has carved out for himself in Arizona. Smith is hitting just .200 in 20 games in June, but that comes with four home runs and 11 RBI. He's slashing .266/.380/.463 on the season but only has eight home runs, so if that home run production can tick up, he could provide real value in deeper formats. Isaac Collins - OF, MIL: 4% rostered (HOT STREAK, EVERY DAY PLAYING TIME) Collins has been on a bit of a heater since June 1st, hitting .315/.441/.556 in 19 games with three home runs, 14 runs scored, 12 RBI, and one steal. He also has 13 walks to 16 strikeouts, so the plate discipline overall has been pretty solid. He's pulling the ball near 50% of the time, mostly on the ground and on a line, which is good for his batting average but might cap the overall power upside. His average exit velocity is also only 87 mph in June, so this is not a hitter you're adding for power, but he has a solid approach that should lead to plenty of doubles and decent counting stats, hitting fifth or sixth in Milwaukee. Nolan Gorman - 2B/3B, STL: 3% rostered (INCREASED PLAYING TIME, POWER UPSIDE) I'll admit that I'm skeptical Gorman will ever make enough contact for me to truly like him in fantasy baseball; however, he's hitting .254/.342/.522 in 22 games in June with five home runs, 12 RBI, and 10 runs scored. His Process+ score of 110 is well above average for the same time period, but I do hate his 32% strikeout rate over that same span. I'm not sure how long this will last for Donovan Solano - 1B/3B, SEA (2% rostered), but we need to acknowledge that he's 17-for-41 (.415) in his last 14 games with three home runs and 13 RBI. He plays 1B around four times a week, so that makes him harder to roster outside of the deepest formats, but he hit .278/.331/.443 in 44 games in the second half last year, and has a .279 career MLB batting average, so he can help you there. Andrew McCutchen - OF, PIT: 3% rostered (CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME, HOT STREAK) This may be more of a Yahoo pick-up because McCutchen is OF-eligible there and isn't in many other formats. However, the veteran has been producing of late, hitting .270/.331/.423 over his last 35 games with five home runs, 14 RBI, and 15 runs scored. We know the lineup around him isn't great, which will limit his overall fantasy upside, but McCutchen should remain solid for fantasy managers in deeper formats. Similarly, Andrew Benintendi - OF, CWS (2% rostered) is a veteran outfielder we've forgotten about a bit, granted, some of that is because he can't stay healthy. Still, Benintendi is hitting .248/.303/.477 in 30 games since coming off the IL with four home runs, 11 runs scored, and 18 RBI. He plays every day and hits third, which should help with some of the counting stats, and that could make him useful in deeper formats. Waiver Wire Pitchers Shelby Miller - RP, ARI: 37% rostered I'm pretty surprised Miller's roster rate remains this low. We know that both Justin Martinez and A.J. Puk are out for the season, so Shelby Miller is going to be the primary closer in Arizona for a while. He has a 2.18 ERA with 37 strikeouts in 33 innings and nine saves. Why are people chasing guys like Camilo Doval over Miller? Yes, with Corbin Burnes also out for the season, there's a chance that the Diamondbacks sell at the deadline. But that also means it's unlikely they bring in competition for Miller. The question is whether or not Miller himself gets dealt. It also seems like Calvin Faucher - RP, MIA (18% rostered) has taken the closer role in Miami again. I'm not sure how many saves you're going to get out of this, and Miami can't seem to settle on one guy, but if you're hurting for saves, Faucher could be a solid option. Landen Roupp - SP, SF: 33% rostered Roupp is one of my favorite starters on this list to roster. He impressed me in spring training and then took a little while during the regular season to get going, but has a 2.18 ERA over his last eight starts. The strikeouts haven't been what they were in the minors or in spring training, but it appears that Roupp has traded some swing-and-miss for better overall results, and I'm OK with that. Perhaps this is the pitcher version of Cam Smith, where he focuses less on striking guys out and more on just getting MLB hitters out consistently, and then once the confidence comes, he starts to tinker back towards trying for punchouts more often. Regardless, I'm buying in. Bryan Bello - SP, BOS: 28% rostered Over the last month, Bello has seen a real surge on the back of a new pitch mix, which I covered here. Bello has leaned into his cutter as his most-used pitch and started to dial back on his slider a bit. You can check out that article for more info, but I'm slowly buying back in on Bello; although, I'd love it even more if his changeup was as good as it used to be. Edward Cabrera - SP, MIA: 24% rostered Cabrera is another of my favorite starters to add on waivers. I was a fan of his pitch mix changes when he first debuted this season, and he has started to produce against good teams lately, too. Over his last two starts (against Philadelphia and San Francisco), Cabrera allowed three runs on five hits in 11.2 innings with 11 strikeouts and six walks. I am happy to add Cabrera in all leagues, but he's more of a streamer in 10 and 12-team formats. Orion Kerkering - RP, PHI: 23% rostered) Kerkering seems to be emerging as the primary reliever in Philadelphia. After Jordan Romano seemed to take the closer's role back over, Kerkering has been the team's most trusted reliever of late. He had gone 19 straight appearances without allowing a run before he struggled on Thursday. The strikeouts haven't been where they were last year, but the results have been good for most of the season. I expect the Phillies to mix and match some save opportunities going forward, so Matt Strahm - RP, PHI (15% rostered) is also worth rostering, but we also should expect Philadelphia to be buyers at the deadline, which could also mean a reliever gets added as well. Just something to keep in mind. Jacob Lopez - SP, ATH: 21% rostered I recorded a video this week on Jacob Lopez's outrageously good last four starts, so watch that to hear more about my thoughts on him and why I'm fine with rolling him out there to see how long this lasts. Robert Garcia - RP, TEX: 18% rostered Garcia is now the closer in Texas. I think. He has three saves in the last month, but his ratios have been pretty problematic. Although, his last five outings have been much better in that regard. The other issue is that Texas is not winning as many games as we thought they would at the start of the season. They could get hot at any moment, but Garcia has not proven to be a truly lockdown reliever, and he's a left-handed reliever, which gives him a platoon disadvantage against most of the hitters he's going to face. Chris Martin - RP, TEX (20% rostered) has also picked up two saves recently. I think Texas would rather have Martin in the 'fireman' role, but it's hard to tell at this point, so if you wanted to roster him for general solid ratios and the occasional save, that could work. Emmett Sheehan - SP, LAD: 12% rostered Sheehan made his season debut last week and looked good, throwing four scoreless innings against the Padres with six strikeouts. It was his first MLB start since undergoing Tommy John surgery, but he showcased a solid three-pitch mix with a four-seamer, slider, and changeup. He was 95 mph on the four-seamer with two inches more iVB, which got him to 17", and he also threw them upstairs. The slider and changeup were solid, and even if he's not a huge upside arm, he has a solid arsenal with command that should continue to improve as the year progresses. The Dodgers then demoted Sheehan and also said his next start will be at Triple-A; however, he might be up in two weeks and could have a spot in the rotation for a while. However, Tyler Glasnow is also working his way back, so this could be a messy situation going forward. Joe Boyle - SP, TB (7% rostered) is in a similar situation. I will fully admit that I was out on Boyle as a starter. I thought Tampa Bay might 'fix' him by moving him into the bullpen, but they turned him into a solid starter by REDUCING the movement on his pitches. Boyle was unable to harness his pitch mix and throw them in the strike zone, so they gave him a splinker and refused the use of his slider so that he had an easier time throwing strikes. It has worked wonders. In his nine starts since he got a spot start in Tampa Bay earlier in the season, Boyle has a 1.17 ERA, 0.83 WHIP, and 54/16 K/BB in 46 innings. With Taj Bradley continuing to struggle in Tampa Bay, you'd have to think that the team makes the swap sooner rather than later. Frankie Montas - SP, NYM: 5% rostered I recovered a video on Montas after his season debut this week, so I encourage you to watch that for my detailed thoughts. I'll treat him as a streamer going forward. Grant Taylor - SP/RP, CWS: 5% rostered Taylor has legit electric stuff, and I think he could be closing for the White Sox in short order, but it's anybody's guess what Will Venable wants to do. Taylor locked down a traditional save last weekend, but then he pitched the seventh inning during the week, and then he had a two-inning save on Saturday. His usage is all over the place, but he has been lights out no matter what role he has, which is why I think he's worth an add everywhere. Matt Brash - RP, SEA: 4% rostered Matt Brash is back and continues to show dominant stuff out of the bullpen. He has not allowed a run in 16.1 innings this year while striking out 17 batters. The Mariners love to use Andres Munoz as their 'stopper' or highest leverage reliever, so Brash could find his way into a few saves when Munoz has to put out a fire in the eighth inning. Richard Fitts - SP, BOS: 4% rostered Fitts is back in Boston's rotation and while I don't think he's a future stud, I'm still in the bag for him a bit. He was rushed back from his earlier rehab assignment after a pectoral injury because the Red Sox were without Walker Buehler and Tanner Houck at the time and weren't comfortable with Dobbins pitching three times through a batting order. That clearly backfired, and Fitts returned to Triple-A to essentially finish his rehab assignment, where he has looked sharp. His fastball maintained its velocity in his first start back, and I think Fitts has some decent upside in deeper formats. STREAMING STARTER PITCHERS MUST BE 40% ROSTERED ON YAHOO OR UNDER (ranked in loose order) Week of 6/30 Strong Preference Fairly Confident Some Hesitation If I'm Desperate

Cubs' Craig Counsell Delivers Stern Message to Cade Horton After Rough Start
Cubs' Craig Counsell Delivers Stern Message to Cade Horton After Rough Start

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Yahoo

Cubs' Craig Counsell Delivers Stern Message to Cade Horton After Rough Start

Cubs' Craig Counsell Delivers Stern Message to Cade Horton After Rough Start originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Chicago Cubs rookie pitcher Cade Horton took the mound Friday night for his eighth start of the season, kicking off a three-game series with the Houston Astros. Advertisement Horton has been one of the young starting pitchers the Cubs have leaned on during the absence of Justin Steele and Shota Imanaga, and he's performed quite well. Coming into Friday night, Horton held a 3.73 ERA, which was good for third among the Cubs starters, behind just Imanaga and Matthew Boyd. However, Friday night was a rough outing for the young pitcher. After working through traffic in the first two innings, Horton couldn't get out of the third inning without the Astros getting on the board. Horton allowed three base runners in each of the first two innings, but escaped unscathed. In the third, he loaded the bases with no outs and surrendered his first run on a sacrifice fly. After striking out Christian Walker to create a path out of the inning, Astros catcher Yainer Diaz hit a three-run home run to put Houston up 4-0. Advertisement In the fourth inning, Horton allowed back-to-back singles followed by a second three-run home run. This time by outfielder Cam Smith, who the Cubs traded to the Astros this offseason. Horton's night was done after four innings. He gave up seven runs on eight hits and four walks. "I thought we had a good game plan going into it. I just never really caught my footing - let up too many walks, hit a guy up 0-2 - just a recipe for disaster," Horton said after the game. "I got my (expletive) kicked today." Horton's ERA rose to 4.80 after last night's outing. Manager Craig Counsell had a stern message for the rookie pitcher postgame, but also saw the performance as a learning experience. Advertisement "This was a really good regular season environment. The fans do a great job. This place is loud always. I just told Cade that this is a good example of what the playoffs are going to look like," Counsell said postgame. "Turn it up a couple notches, but of a road game we've that played this year, this is probably the best example that Cade's had of what it turns into against a tough lineup. So, that's the lesson you kind of take from it, and he'll be better next time." The Cubs' skipper showed confidence in his young starter at the end of his quote. After all, it was only Horton's eighth start in the major leagues, and he did so in a pretty electric environment. Chicago Cubs pitcher Cade Horton (22) delivers a pitch against the New York Mets during the second inning at Citi Fisher-Imagn Images As if two of the top teams in MLB meeting midway through the season with the same record wouldn't be enough to get the Astros' crowd riled up. Horton was also pitching on the night of the return of two former World Series champions in Kyle Tucker and Ryan Pressly, who joined the Cubs this offseason from the Astros. Advertisement It was an emotional night all around, and Horton happened to be the guy on the bump for the Cubs. However, Counsell seems confident his young pitcher will bounce back and be better next time out. The only other time Horton gave up four or more runs in an outing this season, the following start, he bounced back, throwing 5.2 scoreless innings. The Cubs and Astros will play the second game of their weekend series Saturday in Houston at 6:15 p.m. on FOX. Related: Cubs Might Find Shocking Trade Candidate in Orioles' Two-Time All-Star This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 28, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store