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First-place Phillies ready to resume season vs. Angels
First-place Phillies ready to resume season vs. Angels

Canada News.Net

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Canada News.Net

First-place Phillies ready to resume season vs. Angels

(Photo credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images) Fresh off an MVP performance in the All-Star Game, Kyle Schwarber leads the Philadelphia Phillies into Friday's series opener against the visiting Los Angeles Angels. Schwarber went 0-for-2 with a walk through nine innings in Tuesday's Midsummer Classic. However, the Philadelphia slugger saved his best work for the 'swing-off,' a 3-on-3 home run derby used for the first time to determine a winner instead of calling it a tie. 'There's a lot of guys who are way more deserving of this award,' Schwarber said after homering on all three of his derby swings. 'I'm just happy that we get a win with the National League and it's going to come home with us to Philly.' The Phillies were up and down heading into the All-Star break, finishing the first half with a 2-1 win over the San Diego Padres to improve to 55-41 and maintain first place in the NL East. Cristopher Sanchez, who logged 7 1/3 sharp innings in that contest, was one of several Philadelphia starters who shined during the season's first half. Jesus Luzardo (8-5, 4.14 ERA) was sensational through his first 11 starts, but the results have been shaky at times over his last eight outings. That said, his final start of the first half was a sizzling effort against the San Francisco Giants -- three hits allowed over seven scoreless innings in a 13-0 romp. 'He did exactly what he told me was going to do,' Phillies manager Rob Thomson said of the 27-year-old left-hander. 'Attack the hitters, fill up the strike zone, trust his stuff and just let it happen. That's what he did.' Luzardo has faced the Angels seven times (three starts) while posting a 1-1 record with a 2.53 ERA. Los Angeles has yet to announce a starter for Friday's contest. One of the top options could be All-Star left-hander Yusei Kikuchi (4-6, 3.11), who opted not to pitch in Tuesday's exhibition game. Kikuchi's last outing came Saturday against the Arizona Diamondbacks. He allowed three runs and six hits over 5 2/3 innings in a 10-5 victory. Kikuchi has made one career start against Philadelphia -- back in August 2023 as a member of the Toronto Blue Jays. He gave up one run and four hits in six innings that day en route to a 2-1 victory. The Angels took two of three from the Diamondbacks to end the first half of the season. They sit at 47-49, just four games back of the third and final wild-card spot in the American League. As far as the Los Angeles players are concerned, the time to win is now. 'In years past, it was good to see positive results, even if that didn't result in wins,' Angels catcher Logan O'Hoppe said. 'But to be honest with you, we're over it. Like we know what we're capable of doing and we need to win games.' This is the Angels' first trip to Philadelphia since 2023. The teams met in Anaheim last season with the Phillies taking two of three in a series where every game was decided by two runs or fewer.

Angels interim manager Ray Montgomery has different tack than Ron Washington. Is it working?
Angels interim manager Ray Montgomery has different tack than Ron Washington. Is it working?

Yahoo

time08-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Angels interim manager Ray Montgomery has different tack than Ron Washington. Is it working?

Ray Montgomery is just three weeks into his interim tenure as Angels manager. And as his responsibility grows, he's well aware that so does the pressure. 'All blame, no credit,' he said Monday as the Angels began a seven-game homestand before the All-Star break. 'And I get that. That's just how it goes.' Since taking over as manager on June 20 for Ron Washington — who will remain on medical leave until the end of the 2025 season — Montgomery has guided the Angels (44-46) to an 8-8 record entering Tuesday. They've had the good: taking two of three from the Braves in Atlanta last week. And they've had the bad: getting swept by the Blue Jays at Rogers Centre over the weekend. Read more: Nolan Schanuel earns walk-off walk to lift Angels past Texas Rangers Montgomery said he understands the expectations aren't what they were a few years ago — when the Angels lost 89 or more games from 2022-24 — and that the Angels aren't so far away from their first postseason berth since 2014 thanks to their young core having a few seasons under its belt. 'We're not here to develop, although that's a piece to what we do,' Montgomery said. 'We're here to win. And for the Angels, it's important for us to have an opportunity where we are.' If anything, there's a case to be made that the Angels could be over .500 if a few plays had gone their way. Since Montgomery took over as manager, the Angels are 2-5 in one-run ball games, including all three games in the Toronto series. When asked what the Angels need to do or adjust to end up on the other end of those one-run contests — of which they'd been 17-11 across the full season — Montgomery pointed to big swings and specific plays. 'You can point to the big hits, I get it, but you can also point to the execution on smaller plays, too, that prevent runs,' he said. 'We made some mistakes in those games.' The Angels got one of those big plays on Monday night. Nolan Schanuel drew a walk-off walk for a 6-5 victory over the Rangers, wiping away miscues such as a dropped-third strike that led to a game-tying RBI double. Montgomery, in his fifth year with the Angels — fourth as a member of the coaching staff — turned to a decision he made in Atlanta last week as proof that one moment can change the game. Against the Braves last week, Yusei Kikuchi had been brilliant. The Japanese left-hander was two-thirds into the sixth inning of his then-scoreless outing. Instead of keeping Kikuchi — at 100 pitches — in to try and finish off the side as he worked through the Braves lineup for the third time, Montgomery pulled the southpaw in favor of right-hander Ryan Zeferjahn with two runners on base. It backfired. Murphy, who struck out twice against Kikuchi earlier in the game, hit a three-run home run to give the Braves a 3-2 lead, an advantage that would turn into an 8-3 loss. "If I leave Kikuchi in Atlanta, right, and he gets a guy he handled pretty good during the game, we may sweep that series too,' Montgomery said. [Games are] magnified now — I get it." Decisions like those are where Washington and Montgomery's managerial strategies may differ. Washington, a longtime MLB coach, comes from an era of giving starting pitchers a longer leash (it goes hand-in-hand with the Angels using just five starting pitchers so far in 2025). Montgomery, who comes from a scouting background in his post-playing career, may value analytical strategy more — holding pitchers from facing a lineup a third time through the order and playing matchups more. Angels catcher Travis d'Arnaud, who has played for new-school managers that emphasize analytics such as Kevin Cash, as well as old-school managers such as Terry Collins, says Montgomery toes the line in between both managerial styles. 'He's got a good feel,' d'Arnaud said. 'He trusts the staff, which is really good, and also trusts the bullpen, which is also really good. He has really good communication with every player, lets them know when they're playing — which is more of a younger thing — and so it's a mix of both [new- and-old school].' Read more: Angels can't keep pace during loss to red hot Toronto Blue Jays Strategy could be the difference between Murphy facing Zeferjahn rather than Kikuchi. Strategy may be the difference between a win and a loss — or staying in contention for an American League wild card spot. 'It's tough to say,' right-hander Jack Kochanowicz said when asked about the difference between Washington and Montgomery. 'You feel like each game is different. It's hard to really put an identity to either one of them, especially since Ray's so new to it, too. It's a small sample size.' For Montgonery, he said he's not going to dwell on the could-have-beens. Squarely in the chase — and in the zone between the franchise deciding between buying and selling at the trade deadline — he's just happy the Angels are in the conversation. 'If you told us coming up on the All-Star break, that we were in the mix a couple games above or below .500 — and I'm not ignorant of the fact that we've cost ourselves a few games, we should be a little better than we are — I would be happy with where we sit right now,' Montgomery said. Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Angels interim manager Ray Montgomery has different tack than Ron Washington. Is it working?
Angels interim manager Ray Montgomery has different tack than Ron Washington. Is it working?

Los Angeles Times

time08-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Los Angeles Times

Angels interim manager Ray Montgomery has different tack than Ron Washington. Is it working?

Ray Montgomery is just three weeks into his interim tenure as Angels manager. And as his responsibility grows, he's well aware that so does the pressure. 'All blame, no credit,' he said Monday as the Angels began a seven-game homestand before the All-Star break. 'And I get that. That's just how it goes.' Since taking over as manager on June 20 for Ron Washington — who will remain on medical leave until the end of the 2025 season — Montgomery has guided the Angels (44-46) to an 8-8 record entering Tuesday. They've had the good: taking two of three from the Braves in Atlanta last week. And they've had the bad: getting swept by the Blue Jays at Rogers Centre over the weekend. Montgomery said he understands the expectations aren't what they were a few years ago — when the Angels lost 89 or more games from 2022-24 — and that the Angels aren't so far away from their first postseason berth since 2014 thanks to their young core having a few seasons under its belt. 'We're not here to develop, although that's a piece to what we do,' Montgomery said. 'We're here to win. And for the Angels, it's important for us to have an opportunity where we are.' If anything, there's a case to be made that the Angels could be over .500 if a few plays had gone their way. Since Montgomery took over as manager, the Angels are 2-5 in one-run ball games, including all three games in the Toronto series. When asked what the Angels need to do or adjust to end up on the other end of those one-run contests — of which they'd been 17-11 across the full season — Montgomery pointed to big swings and specific plays. 'You can point to the big hits, I get it, but you can also point to the execution on smaller plays, too, that prevent runs,' he said. 'We made some mistakes in those games.' The Angels got one of those big plays on Monday night. Nolan Schanuel drew a walk-off walk for a 6-5 victory over the Rangers, wiping away miscues such as a dropped-third strike that led to a game-tying RBI double. Montgomery, in his fifth year with the Angels — fourth as a member of the coaching staff — turned to a decision he made in Atlanta last week as proof that one moment can change the game. Against the Braves last week, Yusei Kikuchi had been brilliant. The Japanese left-hander was two-thirds into the sixth inning of his then-scoreless outing. Instead of keeping Kikuchi — at 100 pitches — in to try and finish off the side as he worked through the Braves lineup for the third time, Montgomery pulled the southpaw in favor of right-hander Ryan Zeferjahn with two runners on base. It backfired. Murphy, who struck out twice against Kikuchi earlier in the game, hit a three-run home run to give the Braves a 3-2 lead, an advantage that would turn into an 8-3 loss. 'If I leave Kikuchi in Atlanta, right, and he gets a guy he handled pretty good during the game, we may sweep that series too,' Montgomery said. [Games are] magnified now — I get it.' Decisions like those are where Washington and Montgomery's managerial strategies may differ. Washington, a longtime MLB coach, comes from an era of giving starting pitchers a longer leash (it goes hand-in-hand with the Angels using just five starting pitchers so far in 2025). Montgomery, who comes from a scouting background in his post-playing career, may value analytical strategy more — holding pitchers from facing a lineup a third time through the order and playing matchups more. Angels catcher Travis d'Arnaud, who has played for new-school managers that emphasize analytics such as Kevin Cash, as well as old-school managers such as Terry Collins, says Montgomery toes the line in between both managerial styles. 'He's got a good feel,' d'Arnaud said. 'He trusts the staff, which is really good, and also trusts the bullpen, which is also really good. He has really good communication with every player, lets them know when they're playing — which is more of a younger thing — and so it's a mix of both [new- and-old school].' Strategy could be the difference between Murphy facing Zeferjahn rather than Kikuchi. Strategy may be the difference between a win and a loss — or staying in contention for an American League wild card spot. 'It's tough to say,' right-hander Jack Kochanowicz said when asked about the difference between Washington and Montgomery. 'You feel like each game is different. It's hard to really put an identity to either one of them, especially since Ray's so new to it, too. It's a small sample size.' For Montgonery, he said he's not going to dwell on the could-have-beens. Squarely in the chase — and in the zone between the franchise deciding between buying and selling at the trade deadline — he's just happy the Angels are in the conversation. 'If you told us coming up on the All-Star break, that we were in the mix a couple games above or below .500 — and I'm not ignorant of the fact that we've cost ourselves a few games, we should be a little better than we are — I would be happy with where we sit right now,' Montgomery said.

Yamamoto, Kikuchi Join Ohtani on '25 MLB All-Star Roster; RBI-Leader Suzuki Overlooked
Yamamoto, Kikuchi Join Ohtani on '25 MLB All-Star Roster; RBI-Leader Suzuki Overlooked

Yomiuri Shimbun

time07-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Yamamoto, Kikuchi Join Ohtani on '25 MLB All-Star Roster; RBI-Leader Suzuki Overlooked

LOS ANGELES — Yoshinobu Yamamoto has been selected alongside Los Angeles Dodgers teammate Shohei Ohtani and Los Angeles Angles pitcher Yusei Kikuchi in the roster for the 2025 All-Star Game, Major League Baseball announced Sunday. The three Japanese players represent a joint record for an All-Star Game, which this year will be held on July 15. Yamamoto has received his first All-Star nod in the second season of his MLB career, while Kikuchi has been called up for a second time, following the 2021 game during his time with the Seattle Mariners. Ohtani is set to make his fifth consecutive appearance. Seiya Suzuki of the Chicago Cubs was not selected despite leading the major leagues in RBIs with 77 as of Sunday. He is also 6th in homeruns, with 25. 'Above all, an All-Star Game is special,' Kikuchi said. 'So, I'm as glad the second time around as I was the first time.' In his first year with the Angels, Kikuchi was the opening day pitcher for the first time in his career. So far this season, he has a 3-6 record, with a 2.81 ERA. 'All my teammates celebrated me,' Kikuchi said. 'I really feel happy for playing in this team.'

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

time02-07-2025

  • Sport
  • 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.

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