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Starting Rotation 6.1

The calendar has flipped to June and we have a nice-sized slate for Tuesday night. There are some very strong options on this slate but they are highly concentrated in the higher tier of salary, with one player likely to carry most of the attention. Let’s not waste much more time and jump into the Starting Rotation 6.1 to lay the foundation for green screens once again! 

Starting Rotation 6.1 – Main Targets 

Tyler Glasnow 

Yankees Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 19th SL – 23rd CB – 19th

I don’t believe that the Yankees lineup is going to scare anyone here, as they’ve been shut down by Tarik Skubal and Rich Hill on consecutive days. Maybe the DK pricing algorithm hasn’t received that memo. Glasnow scored 37 DK points at $10,500 and his salary CAME DOWN $700.

If they still worry anyone, that’s going to be their issue because Glasnow is a fantastic play and should still be chalky. He continues to be top-five in K rate overall (36.2%), swinging-strike rate (16.9%), and CSW (33.7%) among qualified starters. The Yanks are hovering between eighth and 12th in K rate to righty pitching and are also no higher than 14th in wOBA, wRC+, ISO, OPS, or average. 

Glasnow is slightly worse to righty hitters and we talked about this in the last start. The “worse” side is a 1.24 HR/9, 3.01 xFIP, a .293 wOBA, and a 35.1% K rate. That’s not nearly enough to take me away from Glasnow in this spot and the Yankees offense just hasn’t given us a ton of reason to worry. I fully expect Glasnow to give up some production, but not enough to not end up between 22-26 DK points with a much higher ceiling. 

Note – I had planned on giving Aaron Nola a very strong look and full write-up, but the pricing on DK leaves me mostly off him. Perhaps he can be worth it in GPP but the salary for Glasnow combined with his ceiling is too hard to pass on. I’m not likely to stray from the upper end in salary tonight with Glasnow SO underpriced and he makes an easy combo with the next pitcher. 

Chris Bassitt 

Mariners Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 29th CT – 7th SL – 25th CH – 22nd CB – 29th

I’m not sure there’s much of a better spot for Bassitt to ask for coming off a complete-game shutout of the Angels last time out. The 114 pitches aren’t a giant red flag, but it is noteworthy Bassitt normally sits around 95 or so. Still, he’s been so good this season and the Seattle offense has been a target all year long. They rank 24th in wRC+, 27th in wOBA, 28th in OPS, and they whiff at a 25.6% rate which is the eighth-highest. That’s going to fit like a glove with the 26.1% K rate and a 25.3% hard-hit rate.

We can talk about the Mariners rolling out five lefties, which is technically the worse side of the plate for Bassitt. Just like Glasnow, “worse” is a relative term since lefties only have a .285 wOBA, .206 average, and a K rate over 26%. The four-seam and slider do the damage as far as the strikeouts go and those pitches have 49 of 74 strikeouts on the season. The slider in particular has been excellent with a .118 wOBA and a 64.1% whiff rate. It seems a little odd that Bassitt doesn’t throw it more, but you can’t argue with the success this year.

Robbie Ray

Marlins Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th SL – 13th CB – 22nd

It was a rare poor start from Ray last game out but that’s not going to deter me here. Miami does have some pop against lefty pitching as they are 15th in ISO and slugging, but they also whiff the fourth-most at 27.8% and are bottom-five against the main pitch for Ray. Not only are they bottom-five, but the two best fastball hitters in Miguel Rojas and Brian Anderson also are on the IL. Without those two, Miami ranks 29th. The four-seam has the most strikeouts of any pitch for Ray at 31 of 60 and has a 22.7% whiff rate.

That pitch has also given up eight home runs so there is always going to be a danger with Ray, but the Miami K rate is too high to not chase. Ray himself sits at 28% and he’s still not walking almost anyone with a 6.1% walk rate. The 1.13 WHIP would be the best he’s ever posted so home runs tend to hurt a little less if they’re solo shots. His HR/FB rate is awfully high at 25.9% and the xFIP is only 3.39. Only Adam Duvall and Jesus Aguilar have ISO’s over .200 from the right side of the plate (and I do like them as a mini-stack) but Ray has a clear path to 20+ DK points tonight. 

Alex Wood 

Angels Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 20th SL – 10th CH – 15th

The Angels aren’t exactly a world-beater on offense against lefty pitching and Wood has been excellent this season. His 2.94 ERA is in line with a 2.91 xFIP and you have to love the 56.8% ground ball rate. That would be second if he qualified at this juncture and guess who leads the league in ground ball rate to lefty pitching? That would indeed be the Angels are only around league average in the rest of our offensive categories.

LA might look solid against the slider at 10th but they are overall in the negative numbers and Wood’s slider is doing some work. Of the 50 strikeouts Wood has recorded, 39 have come from the slider and it’s sporting a .198 wOBA. Righty hitters have had a very difficult time with Wood this year, generating just a .256 wOBA, .584 OPS, and a whopping 30.7% K rate. LA loses the DH in this park on top of everything else and Wood checks all the boxes. 

Honorable Mention 

Michael Pineda – The matchup is very nice for him but I’m not crazy about the price tag in the least. 

Sonny Gray – He seems capped around 85-90 pitches which isn’t terrible, but the extra $200 for Bassitt seems well-spent. 

Starting Rotation 6.1 Stacking Options 

  1. Coors Field – Both the Colorado and Texas offenses will be wildly popular. 
  2. Twins against Bruce Zimmermann (Nelson Cruz, Mitch Garver, Josh Donaldson, Kyle Garlick, Jorge Polanco) – this stack is very underpriced. 
  3. Giants against Andrew Heaney (Evan Longoria, Buster Posey, Austin Slater, Donovan Solano)
  4. Dodgers against John Gant (Max Muncy, Gavin Lux, Mookie Betts, Justin Turner)
  5. A’s against Marco Gonzales (Mark Canha, Jed Lowrie, Stephen Piscotty, Chad Pinder)
  6. Royals against Will Crowe (Adalberto Mondesi, Whit Merrifield, Salvador Perez, Carlos Santana, Andrew Benintendi)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 6.1 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.31

We have a nine-game slate this afternoon and it looks like a slate that we’re going to need to spend up on pitching. There is one player that I believe we can take chances with but overall, the bottom rung in salary doesn’t offer much. It certainly doesn’t offer a Tarik Skubal today so this could be a challenge to fit in bigger name bats. We’ll discuss some stacks as always in the Starting Rotation 5.31 but before that, let’s talk about who we need to target on the mound! 

Starting Rotation 5.31 – Main Targets 

Carlos Rodon 

Cleveland Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 21st SL – 21st CH – 27th

Rodon has taken on Cleveland twice before and has racked up a total of 72.2 DK points and has a no-hitter, so things have gone well for him. Overall, Rodon has turned in 48.2 innings this season that has been nothing short of dominant. The 1.29 ERA isn’t here to stay but the FIP/xFIP is 2.01 and 2.66 so there’s not massive regression waiting for him. Among pitchers who have at least 40 innings pitched, Rodon is third in K rate at 38.5% and fifth in the swinging-strike rate at 16.9%. Opposing hitters are not getting good swings with a 24.7% hard-hit rate and a 5.1% barrel rate. 

Both sides of the plate are under a .230 wOBA and if Cleveland decides to play any lefties, they could be in some trouble. Lefties have a 42.9% K rate and a 0.42 FIP. The four-seam/slider combo has been electric with additional velocity from last season and has 70 strikeouts on the season. The slider is only sixth in FanGraphs ratings but has a .109 wOBA, 48.3% whiff rate, and has given up one (1) single in 52 at-bats. With Cleveland ranking 25th in wOBA, wRC+, and OPS, Rodon has one of the easiest paths to success today. 

Corbin Burnes 

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – CT – 30th CB – 24th FB – 26th CH – 10th

When your offense is the lowest-ranked team against the cutter, Corbin Burnes is about the last pitcher you want to see. His cutter is the highest-rated cutter in baseball, and it’s not exactly a secret. Through 53 BBE, it has yielded a .197 wOBA, .154 average, a 34% whiff rate, and 39 of 74 strikeouts. Overall, Burnes is one of only two pitchers that is over 42% for his K rate and the FIP/xFIP combo is an astounding 1.07 and 1.66. By those metrics, the 2.33 ERA is actually too high and could go down a little bit. The hard-hit rate is 20.9% and the ground ball rate is 52.7%, inside the top 15 in the league. 

Burnes is coming off a bit of a sub-par start but that was against the Padres and these are two different offenses. Detroit is starting to evolve into a lineup that isn’t a flow chart target anymore. In May, the Tigers are 15th in wOBA, wRC+, they are down to eighth in K rate, and are 11th in OBP. That’s an issue for another day as Burnes is one of the five-to-eight best pitchers in baseball and he’s under $10,000 on DK. 

Rich Hill 

Yankees Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 19th CB – 18th CT – 23rd SL – 23rd

I don’t expect Rich Hill to throw another 13 strikeouts tonight but he did just get the Yanks for 32.8 DK points. Hill has defied his age and is rocking a 3.63 ERA with a 3.75 xFIP and has the home run issues largely under control at a 1.21 HR/9 with a 27.9% K rate. His WHIP of 1.02 is the best since 2016 for the veteran and the swinging-strike rate of 12.1% is the best since 2011. His curveball has been the biggest reason as it’s rated as the fifth-best curve in the majors at this juncture. No, I did not think I’d be typing that in the year 2021 as the calendar gets ready to turn to June. It’s only allowed a .230 wOBA and has 19 strikeouts on the season. 

While Hill has given up all seven bombs to the right side of the plate, his 3.54 xFIP is not that scary at all and the K rate stays strong at 27.1%. We saw some of the upside in his earlier start and the Yankee offense is hurt and hasn’t been near what we thought in the spring. They remain below average in ISO, OPS, and wOBA this year while striking out 23.7% of the time. The salary is on the high side but Hill is having a legitimately good season thus far. 

Wade Miley 

Phillies Ranks vs Pitch Types – CT – 4th CH – 20th FB – 28th

Miley is not typically a member of this article but this slate is pretty poor overall for pitching. My intention as of Sunday night is to be very heavy on the Burnes/Rodon combo and work around the limitations with cheaper bats. However, if you’re looking for the riskier route and want the big bats, Miley could lead you down that path. The cutter data looks scary, but Odubel Herrera and Rhys Hoskins carry the majority of that rating. While Hoskins is a big threat with a wOBA over .430 and a .271 ISO, Herrera is at a .122 ISO and is a little less worrisome. 

Miley’s K rate is a paltry 18.9% but Philly is third in K rate to lefty pitching at 30.5%. The 59.4% K rate is second in baseball by exactly 0.1% so far and Philly is hitting a ground ball 44.4% of the time, 13th in baseball. Even with the Phillies being a righty-heavy team, Miley still has just a .270 wOBA to that side of the plate and a 1.08 WHIP. Philadelphia is below league average in every major offensive category we use and if Miley can score 15-18 DK points, that’s all you need.

Honorable Mention – Jose Berrios, James Kaprielian (gets a good offense to pick on but the 4.81 xFIP compared to a 1.53 ERA so far is worrisome), Vince Velasquez

Starting Rotation 5.31 Stacking Options 

  1. Rays against Jameson Taillon (Austin Meadows, Joey Wendle, Ji-Man Choi, Brett Phillips, Randy Arozarena)
  2. A’s against Logan Gilbert (Matt Olson, Mark Canha, Seth Brown, Ramon Laureano)
  3. Giants against Dylan Bundy (Mike Yastrzemski, Brandon Crawford, Buster Posey, Mike Tauchman)
  4. Astros who are very underpriced against Eduardo Rodriguez (Alex Bregman, Jose Altuve, Yuli Gurriel, Kyle Tucker, Carlos Correa)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.31 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.30

We get another 10 games for the Sunday slate and we actually have ace pitchers to trust! Those have been in short supply the past couple of days so this is a welcome change of pace. We also have some semi-decent punt options to take chances with so let’s get down to business in the Starting Rotation 5.30! 

Starting Rotation 5.30

Max Scherzer 

Brewers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 9th SL -30th CH – 26th CT – 4th CB – 30th

Mad Max takes the hill today and should be fairly chalky in all formats. For starters, Milwaukee is still fourth in K rate to righty pitching at 26.4%. Scherzer is still over a 35.5% K rate even with all the innings he’s thrown and he’s cut the walks down this year as well. The WHIP has really gone down from 1.38 last year to 0.85 this season and his 16.3% swinging-strike rate is fourth in the majors. Milwaukee should roll out four lefties and it’s interesting to note that the changeup is going to be heavily in play for Scherzer today. He’s not thrown a slider to a lefty hitter all year, using the change instead and it’s generated a .154 wOBA and a 32.3% whiff rate. 

That could be part of the reason that lefties are only sporting a .225 wOBA overall against Scherzer and the HR/9 is down to 0.61. It’s a bit odd to see the 2.14 HR/9 to the right side of the plate but the 2.89 xFIP and 23.5% HR/FB rate tell us Mad Max has been unlucky there. The Brew Crew is 22nd in ISO and 30th in OPS. Even with other strong options, Scherzer stands to be popular. 

Brandon Woodruff

Nationals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 11th SL – 11th CB – 12th CH – 15th

We didn’t have to go very far to find another strong option as Woodruff against Scherzer looks like a fantastic pitcher’s duel on paper. The righty for Milwaukee just reminded us of his upside even in tough spots as he worked the Padres for 34 DK and eight strikeouts. That’s not a huge surprise with a 30.8% K rate, 5.9% walk rate, and a 0.70 WHIP. The hard-hit rate is under 27% and the 46.2% ground ball rate is exactly what you want from a high K rate pitcher. To top it all off, the 31.3% CSW is top 15 in the majors. 

Both sides of the plate are under a .205 wOBA against Woodruff and the K rate doesn’t move that much either. His four-seam has taken over the lead in FanGraphs rating and the other metrics back that up. Of the 73 strikeouts Woodruff has, 45 have come from the four-seam and it’s generated a .089 average, .162 wOBA, and a 30.3% whiff rate. We can make a strong argument to go double ace right in the same game today. 

Lucas Giolito 

Orioles Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 22nd CH – 28th SL – 19th

It certainly appears the things are starting to click in for Giolito these past two games. He’s accumulated 14 IP, 16 strikeouts, and just two earned runs. The xFIP is hovering right about 3.55 which isn’t that different than last year and tells us the 4.04 ERA is still a touch inflated. His K rate has taken a hit as well from 33.7% last year to 28.6% this year, but Baltimore helps in that respect. They sit at 24.7% to righty pitching and are 0.5% from being inside the top 10. Baltimore is also 25th or worse in average, OPS, ISO, slugging, OBP, wOBA, and wRC+. With the pitch data in Giolito’s favor, this could be a fantastic spot. 

The changeup is the strikeout superstar with 40 of 66 so far and it’s only yielded a .234 wOBA and has a 38.1% whiff rate. You have to love the fact Baltimore is in the bottom-three to that pitch in addition to Giolito likely facing five lefties. They have a 0.64 HR/9 and a .242 wOBA against him this season. The .347 wOBA to righties looks worrisome but the .294 BABIP and 24.1% HR/FB have to come back to Earth at some point. I wouldn’t be surprised to see Giolito be not super popular on this slate, and I would be looking to take advantage of that. 

Tarik Skubal 

Bet you didn’t expect this one, did you? Listen, there’s every reason to stack the Yankees. I won’t blame anyone for doing so today. His game logs have caught my eye though and I wanted to dig deeper. Over the past four starts, Skubal has pitched 21 innings, struck out 31 hitters, given up two earned runs in three of four games, and has thrown at least 90 pitches. In three of those starts, he’s scored at least 19 DK and the past two games have been over 21. Is there some type of link that makes everything make sense? 

In the last start, he stuck with just four pitches and ditched the splitter and cutter. That’s not a big change, but the CSW sat at 31% that game. For reference, the season rate for Skubal is 26.6% and he generated a 38% whiff rate. It was pretty much the same story on the 19th as he just went with the four pitches and honestly, that may be almost all it takes. His splitter is terrible with a .548 wOBA given up. Losing that out of the mix is a huge gain for Skubal. 

The four-seam needs work with a .451 wOBA and .315 average but his slider and change are actually getting good results. They both have a wOBA under .265 and both are over a 34% whiff rate. This slider is from 2020 but illustrates how good his slider can be –

New York is only 17th against the fastball this season and is 23rd in ISO against lefties. Skubal has also generated 21 ground balls over the last four starts and before that he’d never been over three in any appearance. The Yanks are fifth in ground ball rate to lefty pitching. There’s every chance Skubal ends up with negative points in this one and maybe the past two starts have just been picking on Cleveland and Seattle. That still wouldn’t explain the 19.7 DK against Minnesota where he stuck with a four-pitch mix. This is also the case where New York is likely going to be very popular and you can take it the opposite direction. Imagine getting 20 DK against the chalk stack of the slate. 

Michael King 

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th CT – 28th CH – 8th

This isn’t particularly a “King is pitching against Detroit” flow chart deal. It’s more that he is $4,000. We’ve talked about it before that when a pitcher is this cheap, we have to talk about him because it can be such an advantage building lineups. King threw 54 pitches last time out which was five days ago and he’s not a stranger to pitching multiple innings. Starting is a different animal but if we can get four innings and some strikeouts, things can work out. In the course of limited action this season, he’s faced 24 lefties and held them to a .245 wOBA, a .471 OPS, and a 29.2% K rate. Those are the metrics that make me excited since the Tigers typically roll out 5-6 lefties and whiff at a top-three rate. 

Honorable Mention – Eduardo Rodriguez (weather looks dicey, but he’s a great play if they play), Steven Matz, Josh Fleming, Kyle Freeland

Starting Rotation 5.30 Stacking Options 

  1. Twins against Brad Keller (Nelson Cruz, Miguel Sano, Josh Donaldson, Alex Kirilloff)
  2. Rockies against Chad Kuhl (Ryan McMahon, Raimel Tapia, Charlie Blackmon, Trevor Story, C.J. Cron)
  3. Yankees against Skubal since they are still in play even though I do think Skubal has a strong path to success (Aaron Judge, Gleyber Torres, DJ LeMahieu, Gary Sanchez)
  4. Royals against Matt Shoemaker (Carlos Santana, Adalberto Mondesi, Andrew Benintendi, Whit Merrifield, Salvador Perez)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.30 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.29

Saturday is a very weird slate in that we have a monster 10 game slate in the afternoon and then just five games in the evening. The bad part of all that is the number of arms on this slate is….not great overall. That doesn’t mean we can’t find some diamonds in the rough for the Starting Rotation 5.29 to lead us to green screens again! 

Starting Rotation 5.29 – Early Slate 

Yu Darvish 

I typically skip the pitch data breakdown for Darvish since his repertoire is so varied, but we’ll note the Astros are 12th against the cutter and first against the slider. We’ve seen the good and bad about targeting the Astros offense in the past few days. The Dodgers played them and Clayton Kershaw cleaned up for us while Trevor Bauer struggled. Darvish has had a run of picking on some bad offenses like Seattle, Colorado, and Pittsburgh so the difficulty will be ramped up here. Still, Darvish looks strikingly similar to the 2020 season with a 30.8% K rate, 0.89 WHIP, 12.4% swinging-strike rate, and a 32.3% CSW. 

The splits don’t give much of a lean as both sides of the plate are at a .256 wOBA or lower and righties have the worse mark. What does help Darvish as far as the splits are the K rate to righties as it comes up to 34.5% and the Astros are predominantly a righty lineup. Every single pitch for Darvish sports a whiff are over 21% and ace-level pitching can beat the best lineup, even when that lineup whiffs only 18.4% of the time. 

Freddy Peralta 

Nationals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 11th SL – 12th CH – 18th

Peralta reminded us in his last game that he’s still not in the stud ace tier that we can trust every single time out. His pitch count ballooned quickly to over 100 and he was out of the game before he made it through five innings. The Nationals don’t strike out a lot but Peralta still has enormous upside with a 38.4% K rate. That would be third in the majors if he had the innings to qualify but that can be the Catch-22 with him. The four-seam/slider mix do it all with 72 of 76 strikeouts on the season and they both have at least a 32.1% whiff rate and a wOBA under .275. 

Just like Darvish above, the opposing lineup could fall particularly well for Peralta and his splits. Washington is projected to play five righties and the pitcher spot, and Peralta has a 47.6% K rate to that side of the plate. The xFIP is ridiculous at 1.95, along with a 1.70 FIP. Part of that is the slider usage to righties, as he’s thrown 210 of 280 to righty hitters. Much like the Darvish spot, Washington has the third-best K rate in the majors but Peralta has reached the point where he has the potential (keyword here) to overwhelm any lineup in baseball. 

Austin Gomber 

Pirates Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 30th SL – 18th CB – 28th CH – 3rd

DK doesn’t have this noted yet but this will be the second half of a doubleheader. That means only seven innings but for pitchers, we don’t mind that. Gomber has the potential to pitch the entire game and he may not drop 31.6 DK, but we talked in Discord last time about how he’s not nearly as bad as the one Giants start indicated. Since that whooping, Gomber has posted 11, 17, 21, 21, and 31 DK points. His salary is still far too low for a pitcher with a 24.6% K rate and an xFIP under 4.00. The HR/9 is only 1.18 and the Buccos are 27th in ISO to lefty pitching.

They also whiff overall at 23.8% and are in the bottom-five in every major offensive category that we value. His .323 wOBA to righties has been a little skewed by the struggles earlier in the year and since the calendar flipped to May, Gomber has a 2.97 ERA with a 3.01 xFIP and a .258 wOBA overall. The lefty has just crossed 150 IP in the majors and it looks like some things could be clicking for him. 

Deivi Garcia 

Tigers Rankings vs Pitch Types – FB – 26th SL – 21st CB – 27th CH – 8th

I mentioned at the start that the choices are not plentiful tonight, so I’m happy to take a shot with Garcia here. There’s not a way to get around things that haven’t gone super well for him this year. Through 15.2 IP in AAA, the ERA is over 5.00 and the xFIP is 4.51. His 38.1 IP in the majors has produced a 4.91 xFIP and a 1.64 HR/9 but has also generated a 22.6% K rate. Overall, the swinging-strike rate is 11.6% which is plenty at his salary. Detroit has been much better so this is certainly not risk-free, but they still are up around the lead in K rate to righty pitching. The good news for Garcia is his career wOBA to lefties is .291. The K rate has been low at 15.1% but the Tigers lineup can push it up higher than that. Garcia is only 22 years old and a top prospect in the Yankee system, so there’s pedigree bind this and potential upside for the salary. 

Honorable Mention – Nathan Eovaldi (salary is quite high), Trevor Rogers (terrible spot but talented pitcher), Mitch Keller (Road Rockies but Keller is wildly unpredictable)

Stacking Options 

  1. Blue Jays against Sam Hentges (Vlad Jr., Teoscar Hernandez, Randal Grichuk, Bo Bichette, Lourdes Gurriel)
  2. Royals against J.A. Happ (Whit Merrifield, Carlos Santana, Salvador Perez, Adalberto Mondesi) 
  3. White Sox against Matt Harvey (Tim Anderson, Jose Abreu, Yoan Moncada, Yermin Mercedes)
  4. Brewers against Jon Lester (Avisail Garcia, Manny Pina, Willy Adames, Lorenzo Cain, Keston Hiura)
  5. Cubs against Luis Castillo (Kris Bryant, Javier Baez, Ian Happ, Willson Contreras)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.29 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.28

It’s Friday night and we have plenty of games to choose from, but it doesn’t look like we’re going to have an overwhelming amount of choices. We do have a repeat from yesterday and we have one of the best pitchers in baseball, so let’s get rolling in the Starting Rotation 5.28! 

Starting Rotation 5.28 – Main Targets 

Gerrit Cole 

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th SL – 22nd CB – 27th CH – 9th

I’m hard-pressed to think of any reason why Cole won’t be the overwhelming chalk in cash and hovering at 50% or higher in GPP. This is one of the better spots he could ask for and there isn’t another pitcher with the same style of upside tonight. The last time he saw this lineup he posted 12 strikeouts for 39.1 DK points and it’s not hard to see why.

Cole sits third in K rate, eighth in swinging-strike rate, and second in CSW on the season. That comes with a 1.71 FlIP, 2.23 xFIP, and a 1.81 ERA. We’re early on in the season, but he has the be the favorite for the AL Cy Young at this juncture. With Detroit still flirting with leading the majors in K rate to righties, this is a lock and load situation. 

Walker Buehler 

Giants Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 6th CB – 21st CT – 1st SL – 28th

I still don’t believe that Buehler will outscore Cole, but there’s every chance he gets close. He’s been on a roll with at least 20 DK points in the last four games and the last two spots wouldn’t have looked great on paper. He’s worse to lefties with a .308 wOBA, a 1.42 HR/9, and a 23.1% K rate. Even still, he walked right through the Arizona and San Francisco lineups that are loaded with lefties. Every single one of his pitches has a whiff rate over 26.5% this season and only the cutter has a wOBA over .276. The good news for Buehler is he’s only thrown the cutter to lefties 67 times on the year, so the Giants being the best cutter time isn’t a large concern. 

Overall, the FIP/xFIP combo is solid at 3.35 and 3.29 but you can see why Coles is a much better play on paper. Buehler also only has a 26.6% K rate, which is right around 10% lower than Cole. One aspect that is helping Buehler is the first strike rate is 8% higher than 2020 at 66.7%. I like Buehler overall but would plan on being far more invested in Cole. 

Hyun Jin Ryu 

Cleveland Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 20th CH – 28th CT – 21st CB – 19th

Ryu is sort of a Steady Eddie type of pitcher at this point but the matchup vaults him into higher consideration. Cleveland has already been no-hit twice and they have not been able to hit lefties thus far. They rank 25th in wRC+, 26th in wOBA, OPS, and 23rd in slugging. The K rate is only 22.2% and Ryu is down from 2020 but 24.6% is nothing poor, especially at this salary. The hard-hit rate is only 22.9% and Ryu has a 30% CSW, which is still top 30 in the league.
The wOBA to righties is over .300 but the BABIP is .297, a touch high and the xFIP is only 3.31. My one fear is the K rate is only 21.3% and that is low but Cleveland has been such a poor offense, I can’t ignore Ryu in this game. He has a 20 point upside at a very playable salary.

Shohei Ohtani 

A’s Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 10th SF – 16th SL – 9th CT – 26th 

Note – Due to *checks notes* ….transportation issues, Ohtani will start tonight instead. Everything is the exact same.

Normally, Ohtani is a building block on any slate for me but I think we need to have some caution here. While the Angels insisted there were no injury concerns, Ohtani’s velocity was down in his last start by 3-6 MPH. That is a huge drop and effectively took the four-seam out of the mix. He threw it 40 times but it was not nearly as efficient and he threw his cutter 32% of the time, knowing the fastball wasn’t there for him. If his four-seam/splitter combo is down 5-6 MPH, Ohtani is not going to be that great of a pitcher. 

Even with the struggles last game, the splitter still only has two hits given up and a 58.2% whiff rate with a .084 wOBA. Oakland’s lineup typically features five righties and that should help Ohtani as well. The right side of the plate only has a .200 wOBA, .401 OPS, and a massive 44.8% K rate. If Ohtani is right, I would absolutely love him here since Oakland is over 24% in K rate to righty pitching. There is a significant risk because there is no way to know where the velocity sits before the game starts. 

Casey Mize

Yankees Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 18th SL – 21st SF – 10th CB – 18th

I don’t blame you if you don’t want to take this risk, but I’m still interested in the way Mize has been pitching over his last handful of starts. He’s cleared 21 in his past two and now has three straight over 17 DK which is great to see from the young man. The K rate is still not special at 18.7% but he’s racked up 17 over the past 20 IP pitched so he’s getting there. We’ve seen repeatedly this season that New York can struggle with righty pitching. They are top 10 in K rate at 25.1%, 22nd in slugging, 16th in OPS, 17th in ISO, and 14th in both wOBA and wRC+. 

I’m not going to sit here and pretend this is a sure-fire play. The FIP and xFIP are both over 4.40 while the ERA is 3.42, so things could go south. New York is projected to play seven righty hitters and that would be the best scenario for Mize. He’s held RHH to a .279 wOBA, 0.99 WHIP, and the 18.4% K rate. The price and pedigree make sense to take some chances in GPP tonight. 

Honorable Mention – Ian Anderson, Sean Manaea

Starting Rotation 5.28 Stacking Options 

  1. White Sox against Matt Harvey (Tim Anderson, Jose Abreu, Yoan Moncada, Yermin Mercedes)
  2. Twins against Kris Bubic (Nelson Cruz, Josh Donaldson, Kyle Garlick, Mitch Garver, Jorge Polanco)
  3. Nationals against Brett Anderson (Trea Turner, Juan Soto, Josh Harrison, Yan Gomes, Ryan Zimmerman)
  4. Brewers against Jon Lester (Avisail Garcia, Manny Pina, Willy Adames, Lorenzo Cain, Keston Hiura)
  5. Rangers against Justus Sheffield (Adolis Garcia, Nick Solak, Charlie Culberson, Khris Davis)
  6. Red Sox against Cody Potent (J.D. Martinez, Rafael Devers, Xander Bogaerts, Kike Hernandez)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.28 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.27

Thursday brings us all-day baseball, as we have five games in the afternoon and then another six in the evening. We’ll be doing some quick notes on the six-game slate and then the full breakdown for the seven-game, so let’s get right to work in the Starting Rotation 5.27!

Starting Rotation 5.27 – Afternoon

Note – The Mets/Rockies game is on the afternoon schedule and it looks as if Marcus Stroman will pitch the first one. Please refer to his writeup from yesterday to read why we like him, and you could potentially make a case to fade Shane Bieber on this slate with Stroman and the next pitcher. 

Pablo Lopez – This could be weird considering the next pitcher on the list, but Lopez might well be my overall favorite option. Philly is 21st against the changeup so far and that is the main pitch for Lopez with 28 strikeouts, a .287 wOBA, and a 24.6% whiff rate. The Phillies are also right on the verge of being a top-five strikeout offense in the majors at 26.2% and this game is in Miami. Lopez has always had very significant home/road splits and this year he’s been lights out in Miami. Through 29.2 IP, he’s accumulated a 0.61 ERA, .222 wOBA, 0.91 WHIP, and a 28% K rate. With Bryce Harper out of this lineup on top of everything else, all the boxes are checked for Lopez. 

Shane Bieber – We all expected some regression for Bieber this season but it’s hit harder than expected to this point. The .354 BABIP continues to drag him down but the 2.93 FIP/2.72 xFIP also gives us hope it quiets down soon. Bieber still has a 35.5% K rate which is the highest on the slate by a wide margin and the Tigers are still sitting second in K rate to righties at 27.1%. Lefty hitters are the main portion of the Detroit lineup with five and they have a .333 wOBA. They also have a 38.6% K rate and a .393 BABIP so you have to feel like those numbers come down at some point. 

Matt Boyd – I still can’t say I love the 4.72 xFIP but Cleveland isn’t a scary lineup to lefty pitching, especially in their current state. They sit 26th in wOBA, 25th in wRC+, 17th in ISO, 26th in OPS, and 27th in OBP. It’s true they may not strike out a ton at 22.1% and Boyd is under 20% for his K rate, but getting six or seven strong innings is what you’re looking for here. Boyd is sporting a 28.2% hard-hit rate and he’s pumping in strikes to start hitters with a 73.1% first-strike rate. Only five pitchers sit above 70% and only Julio Urias is higher than Boyd. He’ll typically see eight righty hitters but even then, Boyd has them held to a .286 wOBA and a .641 OPS. 

Honorable Mention – Tyler Anderson, possibly Kyle Hendricks but he’s been tough to get a hold of this season. I lean towards being fine playing him since his splits to lefties look terribly but include a .458 BABIP and a 3.91 xFIP. I do prefer Boyd for $300 more. 

Stacking Options 

  1. Padres against Adrian Houser (Fernando Tatis Jr., Manny Machado (if active), Tommy Pham, Wil Myers) 
  2. Cubs against Tyler Anderson since it is the fourth time they’ve seen him (Kris Bryant, Javier Baez, Willson Contreras, Ian Happ)
  3. Marlins against Spencer Howard (Jesus Aguilar, Jazz Chisholm, Miguel Rojas, Corey Dickerson, Garrett Cooper)

Starting Rotation 5.27 – Evening 

Note – The Dodgers and Giants game is weird. Neither team has announced a starter, but both would line up for Walker Buehler and Alex Wood. Provided both are announced, I like both and would assume Buehler will carry the ownership up top. The Giants are leading the league in K rate to righties and have seen the offense weakened a bit with the loss of Brandon Belt. Wood is quite simply far too cheap. Yes, the Dodgers can be terrifying against lefty pitching but he’s under $7,000. This is a pitcher that has a 25.5% K rate, a 59.6% ground ball rate, and the ERA/FIP/xFIP trio are all under 3.00. Los Angeles also whiffs over 25% of the time against lefty pitching this year. If Wood can replicate his 17 DK point outing from the last game, I’d be happy at $6,900. We just need to know if they start. 

Chris Bassitt 

The Angels lineup is a lot less intimidating when Mike Trout is on the sideline, not like that’s going out on a limb to say. Bassitt has been great so far with a 3.69 ERA and it’s mashed almost exactly by a 3.66 xFIP. The K rate is almost 26% and batters are having a hard time hitting the ball with authority at a 5.4% barrel rate and a 25.9% hard-hit rate. The swinging-strike rate is a career-best at 11.6% and Bassitt can thank his O-contact rate going from 68.2% last year to 58.9% for that. The righty for Oakland is pretty even as far as splits with lefties sporting the better .301 wOBA. Both sides whiff about 25% and neither side is over a 1.16 WHIP. For the salary, it’s hard to find better consistency. 

Shohei Ohtani

A’s Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 10th SF – 16th SL – 9th CT – 26th

Normally, Ohtani is a building block on any slate for me but I think we need to have some caution here. While the Angels insisted there were no injury concerns, Ohtani’s velocity was down in his last start by 3-6 MPH. That is a huge drop and effectively took the four-seam out of the mix. He threw it 40 times but it was not nearly as efficient and he threw his cutter 32% of the time, knowing the fastball wasn’t there for him. If his four-seam/splitter combo is down 5-6 MPH, Ohtani is not going to be that great of a pitcher. 

Even with the struggles last game, the splitter still only has two hits given up and a 58.2% whiff rate with a .084 wOBA. Oakland’s lineup typically features five righties and that should help Ohtani as well. The right side of the plate only has a .200 wOBA, .401 OPS, and a massive 44.8% K rate. If Ohtani is right, I would absolutely love him here since Oakland is over 24% in K rate to righty pitching. There is a significant risk because there is no way to know where the velocity sits before the game starts. 

Dylan Cease 

Orioles Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 22nd SL – 16th CB – 22nd CH – 27th

I’ll be frank – I had Cease on my list before I saw the DK pricing. It is egregious and I think the salary alone leaves him as a GPP-only player tonight. Having said that, the spot is excellent for him. His slider has been a difference-maker this season with 23 strikeouts already and a whiff rate over 51%. It still gets hit a little bit with a wOBA over .300 but at least it hasn’t given up a home run yet. What we like is the K rate overall at 29% because the Orioles are striking out about 24% of the time. 

Their walk rate is only 8.1% and that is 21st. That is a big help for Cease and his 12.3% walk rate, which is quite high. His xFIP is still only 4.15 so even with some of his weaknesses, the K rate is worth chasing. Baltimore is no higher than 26th in average, OBP, slugging, OPS, ISO, wOBA, and wRC+. I just wish he was an awful lot cheaper and do prefer Buehler, Ohtani, Bassitt, and Wood ahead of Cease. 

Honorable Mention – Sonny Gray, Stephen Strasburg 

Starting Rotation 5.27 Stacking Options 

  1. White Sox against Bruce Zimmermann (Jose Abreu, Tim Anderson, Yermin Mercedes, Nick Madrigal Andrew Vaughn)
  2. Cardinals against Seth Frankoff (Tommy Edman, Dylan Carlson, Nolan Arenado, Paul Goldschmidt) 
  3. Mariners against Kolby Allard (Mitch Haniger, Ty France, Kyle Lewis)
  4. Rangers against Chris Flexen (Adolis Garcia, Joey Gallo, Nate Lowe, Willie Calhoun)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.27 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.26

After getting so many options on Tuesday, it’s not a huge shock that Wednesday doesn’t offer the same style of choices. Now, that doesn’t mean we don’t have options as two big-name aces are on the mound tonight and we’ll see a super exciting prospect debut. Let’s get to work and find out exactly who we need to be looking at in the Starting Rotation 5.26 to find the green screens again! 

Starting Rotation 5.26 – Main Targets 

Tyler Glasnow 

Royals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th SL – 11th CB – 13th

I’m more than willing to throw out the last start for Glasnow since it came against the Blue Jays. The ERA has crept up a bit but it had nowhere else to go but up, and now it matches the 2.87 xFIP and 3.24 FIP at 2.90. The big righty still sports a 36% K rate, 16.2% swinging-strike rate, and a 33.3% CSW. All three of those metrics are in the top six in the majors, so we need to remember that before we look at the last game and balk at him. Both secondary pitches still have a whiff rate over 40% and the four-seam has 37 of 87 strikeouts. His curve continues to dominate with a .093 wOBA and a 54.8% whiff rate. 

KC isn’t the best spot overall for strikeouts normally with a 23.1% rate against righties this year, but Glasnow is not the normal righty pitcher. It is interesting to note that Glasnow is slightly worse pitching to righties and KC has plenty of them in their normal lineup. The funny part is past Whit Merrifield, three RHH have K rates over 26% on the season. Glasnow is still sporting a 34.1% K rate and a .297 wOBA against that side of the plate along with a 28.9% hard-hit rate. Even with some small nitpicks, Glasnow is still in the softer matchup tonight between the two aces. 

Trevor Bauer 

Astros Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 4th CT – 13th SL – 1st CB – 16th

This is very similar to the spot Kershaw had last night in the fact it’s not the greatest matchup for Bauer, but great pitching can overtake a very good offense. Kershaw reminded us of that last night. Make no mistake, Bauer is one of the top 10 (at worst) pitchers in the league and even though I’m no a fan of him, this is the type of matchup he’s going to want to do very well in. Bauer is still sitting at a 36.2% K rate, a .077 WHIP, and a 3.12 xFIP. Some pitchers can survive and thrive with a fly-ball rate over 48% and Bauer checks that box as well. Even though the Astros rank well against the fastball, Bauer’s rates as the best in baseball on the FanGraphs scale. It’s been the best pitch in the arsenal with a .107 average, .184 wOBA, and 45 strikeouts. 

The Astros can attack from both sides so it’s good to see that Bauer does not show any serious splits, with both sides being under a .250 wOBA. Righties have the harder time against him and Houston typically has six in their everyday lineup, another boost for Bauer. His K rate jumps up to 39%, the hard-hit rate is down to 23.8%, and the xFIP is under 2.75 as well. While I do still side with Glasnow, I don’t think the gap is enormous by any stretch. 

Marcus Stroman 

Rockies Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 11th SL – 29th CT – 16th SF – 10th

I hope you enjoyed the relative safety that Bauer and Glasnow bring to the slate because that’s about where it stops. In fairness, Stroman typically has a safe-ish floor but his price remains high for my liking. Why is he in Rotation then? The majority of the slate after him is not very exciting as far as plays go. We can at least take comfort in the 20.3% K rate Stroman has. along with a 53.6% ground ball rate, the fourth-highest in the majors. When Colorado is on the road against a righty pitcher, they have the ninth-highest K rate in baseball along with the seventh-highest ground ball rate. 

Colorado is also 29th in hard-hit rate and then dead last in OPS, wOBA, wRC+, and ISO. That all works heavily in Stroman’s favor and even if he doesn’t have the same style of upside we typically want from $9,200, he is about the last pitcher we can feel some comfort level with. It also helps that the swinging-strike rate of 11.8% has never been higher for Stroman and hitters are swinging at 52.1% of his pitchers, also easily a career-best. A heavy strikeout team like the Rockies can extract some upside from him tonight. 

German Marquez 

Mets Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 24th SL – 17th CB – 26th

We’ve been hammering the Mets lineup with pitchers lately and they haven’t given us a ton of reason to stop doing so. It’s not their fault with the lineup they’re being forced to play but that doesn’t matter to us. Marquez is not exactly trustworthy but the price can’t be touched for the potential upside here. Marquez has a 4.82 ERA but also has a .336 BABIP and a 53.1% strand rate, which are both very unlucky. The 3.97 FIP and 3.89 xFIP are more indicative of how he’s pitched so far this season. The walks aren’t helping either at a 12.8% rate, but the 23.9% K rate balances that out a bit. 

The slider/curveball combo has accounted for 49 of 56 strikeouts and both possess a 45% whiff rate or higher, along with a wOBA under .265 each. He’s in some pretty elite company with those pitches –

The xFIP on the road is 4.46 and with the Mets lineup still in tatters, it’s fairly easy to see upside at this price tag. Marquez should get four righties and the pitcher spot and is striking out that side of the plate 29% of the time. 

Alek Manoah 

MLB Debut 

The track record of debuts so far this year has not been great. Logan Gilbert, Daniel Lynch, and others haven’t done much at the major league level. This is strictly GPP and we tend to think that Yankee Stadium is a tough debut spot. There’s truth to that, but we’ve highlighted on multiple slates that the Yanks bats just aren’t that good against righty pitching this year. They are 11th in K rate at 25% and rank no higher than 13th in wRC+, wOBA, ISO, OPS, and average. They have shown they can struggle. Manoah can also do this –

Through three minor league starts, Manoah has displayed a 40.9% K rate, 0.56 WHIP, and a 3.08 xFIP. He’s a big 6-foot-6 righty and he’s pitched six innings in each of the three starts on the farm. The fastball is 93-96 and the slider has generated nine strikeouts in AAA with only four hits against it, courtesy of MLB.com. He’s talented and has added to the arsenal this year with the help of our buddy the Pitching Ninja – 

As always, you have to be cautious with debuts and we’ve seen how bad it can go. Manoah has legitimate stuff and is worth a gamble under $5,000. 

Honorable Mention – Mike Minor with the Rays struggling against lefties with a huge strikeout rate, Chris Paddack

Starting Rotation 5.26 Stacking Options 

  1. Red Sox against Drew Smyly (JD Martinez, Xander Bogaerts, Kike Hernandez, Michael Chavis, Bobby Dalbec)
  2. Nationals against Jeff Hoffman (Juan Soto, Josh Bell, Kyle Schwarber, Trea Turner, Josh Harrison)
  3. Cleveland against Jose Urena (Jose Ramirez, Cesar Hernandez, Eddie Rosario, Josh Naylor, any lefty in the lineup)
  4. Padres against a Bullpen Game for Milwaukee, by the look of things Tuesday night
  5. Tigers against Cal Quantrill (we’ll see who is pitching behind him because he’s not pitched more than two innings in a game so far)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.26 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.25

Before we get rolling, just wanted to say a huge thank you to Brian for covering pitching Monday. He’s a pretty cool dude and came in very clutch for me, and it’s much appreciated. Tonight brings us no less than four ace pitchers and about six more that are either on the verge or at least their own team’s ace. That makes for a fun time for me and I’m not sure I’ll be spending down too much tonight. Let’s get to work for the Starting Rotation 5.25 and see who we’re going to target for us to find those green screens once again! 

Starting Rotation 5.25 – Main Targets 

Jacob deGrom 

Rockies Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 10th SL – 29th CH – 8th

I’m not particularly concerned with the injury at this point since deGrom tortured the St. Louis minor league team with no setbacks. If the Mets were concerned at all, they wouldn’t be letting him pitch and there’s no reason for us to fade him. He leads the majors in just about everything we could ask for, including a 46.1% K rate and a 21.6% swinging-strike rate. All three of his pitches boast a 36.6% whiff rate or higher. 

His 0.68 ERA is backed up with a 1.08 FIP and a 1.77 xFIP, so there’s not even that much concern there. Unsurprisingly, Colorado is much worse on the road with a 26.1% K rate and the 30th ranking in OPS, ISO, wOBA, and wRC+. There just isn’t much left to be said here. I suppose since he only threw 41 pitches, he could be somewhat limited but I’m not playing it like that tonight. Play him and let’s move on. 

Corbin Burnes 

Padres Ranks vs Pitch Types – CT – 17th SL – 2nd CB – 3rd CH – 17th FB – 21st

Regardless of what offense he’s facing, the DK salary of $9,100 is flat-out absurd. I’m assuming deGrom (rightly) gets all the attention which could leave Burns much lower in popularity than he should be. Yes, the Padres are a tough matchup and they just don’t strike out at 20.1% but Burnes has been a different animal this year. His K rate is just under 45% so far this season and the ground ball rate when teams aren’t striking out is 51.3%. What’s pretty interesting with that metric is the Padres are quietly fourth in ground ball rate at 46.6%. His hard-hit rate is also down at 21.8% and teams just can’t get the barrel to the ball that much at a 6.4%. 

The cutter for Burnes continues to be just other-worldly with a .179 average, .212 wOBA, 33.5% whiff rate, and 35 of 67 strikeouts. The slider, curve, and change are all over a 58% whiff rate on top of that and helps explain why the K rate is so high. If he comes in much less popular than deGrom, I’m not willing to say he’s a “pivot” in the normal sense because deGrom is the main play on this slate. However, in MME formats you can take some chances and it could open the door for a double ace approach that is (possibly, possibly not with the ridiculous salary) contrarian on this slate. 

Kevin Gausman

D-Backs Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 14th SF – 15th SL – 26th CH – 6th

If Burnes isn’t the most disrespected pitcher at his salary, Gausman may well be next in line. He’s started nine games and hit at least 20 DK in eight of them and is averaging over 25 per contest. On the last main slate he pitched, he was priced at $7,800 and scored 27.1 DK. His past two starts haven’t been on the main slates but he’s scored over 30, so naturally, DK moved his price down to $7,200. You may not know it by the attention he gets, but Gausman is rocking a 29.6% K rate and a 1.66 ERA. The FIP/xFIP combo is 2.48 and 3.21 so that’s not crazy high to cause a ton of concern. He is also 12th in the swinging-strike rate at 14.8% and 31.4%, respectively. 

The four-seam is ranked as a top-five fastball in the majors and the 7.8 rating for his splitter is tops by a whopping 5.6. Granted, it’s not a common pitch but the splitter has been phenomenal. It has 44 strikeouts out of 67 (the four-seam has all of the other ones), a .165 wOBA, and a 47.5% whiff rate. It’s interesting to see him be slightly worse to lefties at a .233 wOBA since he leans on that main two pitches almost all the time to lefties. It also tells us that Gausman has been elite when that’s the worst side. Lefties whiff 33.9% of the time and Gausman should face seven if Arizona plays a normal lineup. 

Lucas Giolito 

Cardinals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th CH – 4th SL – 5th

We’ve said for a while that there’s an ace in Giolito, even if that version was hiding for a few starts. Well, it came out and shoved for eight innings and 39 DK points last start and the price does not match the potential upside. To be clear, I will play Burnes for $400 more most of the way, but if the field goes that same route Giolito could get lost in the shuffle. If we’re talking about this year’s splits, Giolito could face some issues as righties have a .349 wOBA and .822 OPS this season. However, that might be a little misleading as the xFIP is 3.44 because his HR/9 is 2.63. That tends to happen when the HR/FB rate is 25.9%, and not likely to continue. 

One of the largest culprits of the up and down nature of Giolito’s season so far is the four-seam. In 2020, it finished at a 29% whiff rate, .260 wOBA, and a .201 average with 48 of 97 strikeouts. This year has seen it come down to an 18.9% whiff rate, .321 wOBA, .208 average with 16 of 61 strikeouts. Additionally, he’s already given up three home runs on it compared to four last season. Seeing St. Louis rank so low against that pitch is encouraging for Giolito, especially if he’s not popular. 

Clayton Kershaw 

Astros Ranks vs Pitch Types – SL – 1st (by almost 10 points in FanGraphs ratings) FB – 4th CB – 16th

Is the spot horrible on paper? No doubt. Not only do the Astros destroy the slider as a team, but they are in the top-five in every offensive category aside from ISO with just a 16.9% K rate. Normally, I won’t even give lefties against Houston a second glance. Clayton Kershaw is not the normal everyday lefty and his salary is an inexplicable $8,000 on DK. His K rate of 29% is the best it has been since 2017 and the HR/9 is also the best since 2016, so there is a very clear path to success here even if it’s filled with danger. 

Houston is by far the best team against the slider but Kershaw’s has been just video game level good this year. Despite throwing it as his main pitch, it has generated a 45.4% whiff rate, .249 wOBA, and a .189 average with 51 of his 65 strikeouts. The .311 wOBA to righties is skewed a little bit by the home runs, which seem to be unlucky so far. Kershaw has a 2.98 xFIP and a 30.2% K rate to righties while suffering through a .333 BABIP. There is really no reason for him to be priced so low. There is a great chance he goes out and does Kershaw things and if folks don’t play him, they question why they didn’t go after an $8,000 Kershaw. 

Honorable Mention – Max Scherzer, Joe Musgrove, Rich Hill, Cole Irvin, Kyle Freeland for the bold 

Starting Rotation 5.25 Stacking Options 

  1. Rays against Brad Keller (Randy Arozarena, Joey Wendle, Austin Meadows, Brandon Lowe, Mike Zunino)
  2. Yankees against Steven Matz (Aaron Judge, Kyle Higashioka, Luke Voit, DJ LeMahieu, Gary Sanchez)
  3. Giants against Corbin Martin (Mike Yastrzemski, Brandon Belt, Brandon Crawford, Buster Posey, Mike Tauchman) 
  4. Angels against Hyeon-Jong Yang (Anthony Rendon, Shohei Ohtani, Jose Rojas, Justin Upton)
  5. Cleveland against Tarik Skubal (Jose Ramirez, Jordan Luplow, Josh Naylor)
  6. Twins against Dean Kremer (Nelson Cruz, Jorge Polanco, Alex Kirilloff, Max Kepler, Josh Donaldson)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.25 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.23

We have a 10 game slate for Sunday and while it’s not exactly brimming with big names, it does present us with some pretty fun options. There are multiple cheap starters worth looking into today which could help unlock just about any stack we want. Let’s get rolling and talk about who we should be targeting to find those green screens once again in Starting Rotation 5.23!

Starting Rotation 5.23 – Main Targets 

Freddy Peralta 

Reds Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 2nd SL – 21st CH – 13th

One of the many facets that pop off the page for Peralta is both his main pitches rank inside the top 12 in the majors. The four-seam is 12th and the slider is sixth in their categories, and they have combined for 75 of his 79 strikeouts. Neither pitch has yielded a wOBA above .269 and they both also have a 32.4% whiff rate or higher. So while the Reds rank well against the fastball, I’m not that worried because he’s also third in K rate at 39.7%. The swinging-strike rate is also seventh at 15.4%. He doesn’t even throw the changeup much but it’s still nasty –

The Reds lineup could potentially work in his favor as well. With Joey Votto and Mike Moustakas on the IL, Cincinnati should put forth five righties and the pitcher spot. Peralta has struck out that side of the plate to a 47.9% rate and has a 1.94 xFIP. I would much rather play him than Zack Wheeler against Boston at this salary range. 

Hyun Jin Ryu 

Rays Ranks vs Pitch Types – CH – 25th FB – 3rd CT – 9th CB – 7th

Oh, look, another lefty facing the Rays! Much like yesterday, I’m already interested due to the strikeout upside the Rays have shown when they face lefty pitching, over 30%. Through his eight starts, Ryu has shown a 2.94 FIP and a 3.08 xFIP, which gives us confidence in the 2.51 ERA. His K rate has come down slightly to 24.5% but the walks are down under 3% and the WHIP is under 1.00. It’s been very difficult to get a hard hit against Ryu as that rate is only 23.1% and his swinging-strike rate is right in line with his last four seasons at 11.7%. 

Righties have a .285 wOBA against Ryu but he also uses the four-seam/cutter/changeup mix mostly to the right side. Those three pitches have accounted for 39 of 45 strikeouts which leads me to believe the 22.6% rate he has right now is not here to stay. Ryu’s O-Contact is at 68.5% right now compared to his 61.7% rate so this could be the game where the K rate catches up to everything else a little bit. 

Max Fried 

Pirates Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 30th SL – 11th CB – 29th

Since coming back from injury, Fried has started three games and scored 22, 16, and 23 DK points. During those three starts, he’s averaging a 27.7% K rate, a 1.00 WHIP, and a .253 WHIP. Even if we zoom back and look at the whole season, the 5.46 ERA does not make sense with the 4.22 FIP and 3.92 xFIP in tow. His hard-hit rate is 25.3% and Fried has generated a 12.6% swinging-strike rate overall. Both the slider and curve have generated a whiff rate over 36.5% each and has 24 of 32 strikeouts thus far. 

The Pirates have struggled against lefties this season with a 24.5% K rate and were just handled fairly easily by Drew Smyly, who is not the same caliber pitcher at this point in their careers. Pittsburgh also ranks 28th in wOBA and OPS along with 26th in ISO, so the spot really works out well for Fried as he finds his footing in the 2021 season. 

Casey Mize 

Royals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 24th SL – 9th SF – 1st CB – 13th

It’s possible that Mize is starting to figure things out but I do think we should approach him with some caution. Any result that comes against Seattle has to be weighted since they are a dreadful offense. Still, it can’t be a bad thing for Mize’s confidence to go out and shove for almost eight innings. The K rate lacks at 17.8% but he flashed upside with eight last game and the 53% ground ball rate is very solid (it ranks eighth in the majors). Both the four-seam and slider have a whiff rate right around 27% and past one really poor start against these Royals, Mize hasn’t been all that bad. 

Since he’s faced the Royals’ offense since the disaster and posted a serviceable start, I feel a little better about him here. The .297 wOBA to the right side of the plate is his best rate and Kansas City plays five typically. Their most dangerous players are on that side as well for the most part. The K rate has been slightly lower at 16.8% but sometimes you have to take a leap with young pitchers. I wouldn’t go here in anything other than GPP but Mize has such a pedigree that I’m excited anytime he strings together three good starts. 

Kris Bubic 

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 27th CH – 8th CB – 24th

The 23-year-old lefty is back on the mound for the Royals today and he’s certainly earned the spot so far. In 18.2 IP, he’s sporting a 0.96 ERA with a 3.10 FIP and a 4.50 xFIP. While it’s quite clear he won’t keep an ERA under 1.00 and will suffer some regression, his price has not come up nearly enough yet. Bubic has generated a ground ball rate of 59.6%, helping mitigate the 12.9% walk rate (it was 9.9% last season and hasn’t been an issue in the minors very much at all). He has also only been hit hard 17% of the time so far and his changeup has a 33.3% whiff rate. It has eight of the 12 strikeouts and while Bubic is only at 20% of this K rate, he’s only $5,000. 

We talked in Friday’s article about how the Tigers have improved a bit offensively lately, but they are still a spot to attack. Bubic has three straight games of at least 14 DK and has been adding to his pitch count, working it up to 85 in the last start. There’s not much of a way around the 5.22 xFIP to righties, which is a concern but it does look better for his career at 4.48. The career K rate to that side of the plate is also 21.1%, more than acceptable at this salary and against a team that whiffs over 30% to lefties on the season. 

Honorable Mention – Cristian Javier, Eduardo Rodriguez, Jordan Yamamoto but I’m much more likely to use Bubic

Stacking Options 

  1. Nationals against Matt Harvey (Juan Soto, Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber, Josh Bell, Josh Harrison)
  2. Astros against Mike Foltynewicz (Yordan Alvarez, Kyle Tucker, Alex Bregman, Michael Brantley)
  3. Cleveland against J.A. Happ (Jose Ramirez, Jordan Luplow, Harold Ramirez)
  4. Blue Jays against Josh Fleming (Vlad Jr., Teoscar Hernandez, Randal Grichuk, Bo Bichette, Jonathan Davis)
  5. Orioles against Patrick Corbin (Trey Mancini, Austin Hays, Anthony Santander, Pedro Severino, Ryan Mountcastle)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.23 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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Starting Rotation 5.22

We get the normal split slate on Saturday with seven in the afternoon and six in the evening, so there is plenty of baseball to choose from! The early slate brings one of the bigger names to toe the rubber in the league but there are options behind him. The evening slate is pretty similar in that there’s one that could garner some serious attention but isn’t an absolute slam dunk. The difference is the other options on the evening slate are pretty rough. Let’s dig into Starting Rotation 5.22 and figure out who we need to be looking at and why to find green screens for both slates! 

Starting Rotation 5.22 – Afternoon

Shane Bieber

Twins Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 1st CB – 12th SL – 25th

I was a little excited when I saw Bieber because he’s been a bit of an odd pitcher this season. The ERA has bumped up from 1.63 to 3.17 this year and he’s just been more hittable, as the WHIP went from 0.87 last year to 1.22 this season. Now, the walk rate is up almost 2% but that wouldn’t explain everything, especially since the K rate is still above 36%. One of the biggest differences is just somewhat bad luck, as the BABIP is .341. The jumps have come from the four-seam’s average of .253 up from .210 last year and his curve has gone from .095 to .200. The whiff rate on both pitches are also down, which might explain the zone rate siting at 49.5% after 42.6% last year.

What this all tells me is Bieber has simply had some bad luck so far and there’s nothing to get too carried away with. Maybe he’s a little bit riskier but hitters are making far less contact when they swing at pitches outside of the zone, 32.1% in 2021 compared to 41% in 2020. Bieber should face five righties and he’s been better to that side of the plate with a .287 wOBA. On the flip side, lefties have a higher wOBA but also strike out at a 40.5% and the xFIP to both sides is under 2.75. The bottom line is I’ll still play Bieber with limited fear.

Lance McCullers

Rangers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 13th CB – 26th SL – 9th CH – 30th

Based on the last six game logs, McCullers would be due a big 30+ DK point game as he’s alternated between scoring in the teens and then into the ’30s. Anyways, he’s sporting a 27.7% K rate thus far and the 1.07 WHIP would be the best he’s ever produced. The 55.5% ground ball rate is fourth in the league and Texas is third against righty pitching, which is a nice fit for McCullers. His curve also remains a significant weapon with the second-best rating behind Julio Urias, a .197 wOBA given up, and a 37.2% whiff rate.

He throws it to lefties almost exclusively so Texas playing four helps him out. The splits overall would tell us that no style of lineup should hinder McCullers as both sides of the plate are between .260 and .265 for the wOBA. They also both whiff right about 27.5% and Texas is still at a 26.8% K rate to righty pitching. I don’t particularly want to pay the premium for Sonny Gray and would rather just play McCullers in just as good of a spot. 

Pablo Lopez 

I’m honestly not even bothering listing the ranks for the Mets because their lineup is unrecognizable right now. I mean, it looks like a Pittsburgh Pirates lineup after losing Pete Alonso yesterday as well. 

That is really bad folks and Lopez should be able to find his footing after two sub-par starts in a row. He’s not going to bowl you over with strikeout upside at 22.7% but he gets a good deal of ground balls at 44.9% and the hard-hit rate is under 31%. The changeup and four-seam are doing virtually all of the strikeout damage with 41 of 46 on the season. Perhaps the best facet for Lopez is he’s at home, which has always mattered for him and continues into this season. 

The righty has thrown 22.2 innings at home and 26.1 on the road. When he’s in Miami, the ERA is 0.79 and on the road, it balloons up to 5.13. His career difference is over three runs a game, so this is not a big surprise. The K rate jumps up to 27.2% and the HR/9 is 0.40, so he’s really not all that expensive when looking through that lens. 

Honorable Mention – Sonny Gray but my goodness the DK salary, Matt Boyd if you prefer not to spend on pitching in both slots. You can roll the dice with Brady Singer but if one of his two pitches isn’t working, it’s over for him. 

Stacking Options 

  1. Braves against Mitch Keller and whatever is left of the Pirates bullpen after last night ( Ronald Acuna, Marcell Ozuna, Austin Riley, Freddie Freeman, William Contreras)
  2. Nationals against Bruce Zimmermann (Trea Turner, Josh Harrison, Yan Gomes, Juan Soto, Ryan Zimmerman)
  3. Orioles against Jon Lester (Trey Mancini, Austin Hays, Pedro Severino)
  4. Astros against Jordan Lyles (Yordan Alvarez, Kyle Tucker, Alex Bregman, Michael Brantley) – this one will be tough to make work with high-end pitching. 

Starting Rotation 5.22 – Evening 

Walker Buehler 

Giants Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 5th CB – 21st CT – 1st SL – 28th

Buehler is coming off an excellent start in a spot that could have gone south for him, so that does help my interest tonight. It also helps that the rest of the options are not very good and he’s the clear-cut number one option. It is interesting to note that the cutter gives up the highest wOBA at .327 and that is close to his second-most used pitch this season. 

It has also given up two home runs so that stands out as a potential trouble spot but Buehler also exhibits a 27.5% K rate, a FIP and xFIP combo under 3.55, and a 30.8% CSW. His hard-hit rate is not ideal at nearly 40% but at least the ground ball rate is 40.9%. I’m also not in love with the .298 wOBA, 1.64 HR/9, and 23.9% K rate to the left side of the plate but he’s still one of the lead options on the evening. 

Robbie Ray 

Rays Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 3rd SL – 27th CB – 7th

The last game out for Ray was sort of what I think we can expect from this point on. He gave up four runs and got taken out of the yard multiple times, but he also only walked one and whiffed nine through just 5.2 IP. He’s been super consistent on his pitch count with every start but the first one of the season over 90 pitches. His 6.6% walk rate is ridiculous given his career rates and it’s all on the four-seam. It has given up seven homers but it also has 31 of 48 strikeouts for Ray. 

His 28.9% K rate would be top-20 if he qualified and we talked yesterday about how much the Rays are striking out against lefty pitching. Ray is at his best for the K rate against righties at an even 30% and the xFIP is 3.59. I believe he’ll always give up more than that metric would indicate just because of the fastball-heavy approach, but at this rate, you can live with it. With Tampa sitting 21st in ISO and over a 31% K rate to lefty pitching, Ray checks the boxes we look for. 

Adbert Alzolay 

Cardinals Ranks vs Pitch Types – SL – 5th FB – 21st

I think we could see Alzolay pick up some popularity at this price because any pitcher beneath his salary is seriously questionable. Alzolay is over 27% in K rate and his xFIP of 3.31 tells us the 4.62 ERA is a little underserved with a 24.2% HR/FB rate. He’s also cut his walk rate from 14.9% to 4.9% so the drop in K rate has been worth it for him. The 13.4% swinging-strike rate and CSW are 13.4% and 30.5%, both of which are career-highs. 

The slider has been incredible with a .137 average, .171 wOBA, and a 38.6% whiff rate. It also has 27 of 35 strikeouts so far and even though St. Louis has hit the pitch well, Alzolay’s would rank fourth if he had the innings to qualify. He has also dominated righties with a .208 wOBA, 31.9% K rate, and a 0.68 WHIP. With the Cardinals being mostly righty in their lineup, this spot rates well for Azolay. 

Honorable Mention – Chriss Bassitt after he came back down to Earth a little bit last start and Shane McClanahan solely for his strikeout upside at 30.6%. 

Stacking Options 

  1. Boston against Spencer Howard (Rafael Devers, JD Martinez, Alex Verdugo, Xander Bogaerts, Bobby Dalbec)
  2. San Diego against Justus Sheffield (Fernando Tatis, Manny Machado, Austin Nola, Trent Grisham)
  3. Chicago against Miles Mikolas (Ian Happ, Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, Javier Baez, Joe Pederson)
  4. Oakland against Dylan Bundy (Matt Olson, Mark Canha, Ramon Laureano, Seth Brown)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.22 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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