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Starting Rotation 8.7

Saturday is here and it brings us a split slate of MLB action spread throughout the day! The afternoon is a small five-game slate and then we get to the main course of 11 games in the evening. We have a whole lot of work to do so let’s get right after it in the Starting Rotation 8.7 and figure out who we like to help lead us to green screens! 

Starting Rotation 8.7 – Early Slate 

Carlos Rodon – There are some warning signs with Rodon and I wouldn’t blame anyone if they tried a strategic fade. His velocity has been sketchy the past two starts and it is noteworthy he’s already at more IP in any season since 2018. Having said that, the Cubs are seventh in K rate against lefty pitching at 25.1% and Rodon is still sporting a 35.2% K rate on the year and it has held firm above 32% in any month of the season. His four-seam and slider combo both have a whiff rate over 30% and a wOBA under .275 with a total of 145 strikeouts. Even in July when his HR/9 went up to 1.38, the xFIP was still under 2.90. The Cubs are a lineup we need to consider picking on constantly, and I will likely be doing that today. The only facet that would knock me off him could be the weather in Wrigley, and only if the wind is blowing out. 

Cole Irvin – This is not a pitcher that typically makes our list since he has a K rate under 18% and all of his pitches have a whiff rate under 23.5%. The four-seam and changeup are his two primary pitches and both do have a wOBA under .265, which is going to help against the Rangers. They remain in the bottom five in all of our offensive categories and just haven’t been anything but a bad offense through most of the season. They are also 28th against the change and 26th against the fastball, which is a big help for Irvin. The swinging-strike rate is not super impressive at 9.5% and he’s holding righties to a .283 wOBA. At $7,500, he makes plenty of sense and we don’t need a boatload of strikeouts. 

Starting Rotation 8.7 Honorable Mention 

Robbie Ray – I’m likely to stick with that pairing but Ray is on the slate and we have to discuss him. It’s a double-header so be careful with offenses but we could potentially see Ray go for a complete game. Boston is inside the top 12 against the fastball, which is certainly a concern for Ray since he throws that pitch right about 60% of the time. He’s had three starts against the Red Sox and two have been excellent while one was tough. I also have some worries after the teams got into it a little bit last night and there could be some retaliation. Still, Ray is over a 30% K rate and his walk rate is still under 7%. His 15% swinging-strike rate is second in the league and the only fear is the Red Sox are top 10 in wOBA, wRC+, and OPS against lefties. 

I’m going to bet Andrew Heaney carries some popularity and you guys know exactly how I feel about Heaney when he’s chalk. Seattle does carry the third-highest K rate against lefties at 26.7% but is 15th in ISO and eighth in fly-ball rate. 

Starting Rotation 8.7 Early Stacks 

I’m really only going to focus on one offense for the short slate and it’s the left-handed hitters from the Chicago White Sox. The Cubbies have Adbert Alzolay pitching and he’s got some of the worst numbers against lefties in all of baseball. They are up to a .414 wOBA, 5.08 xFIP, 8.58 FIP, a 4.01 HR/9, and a 38.4% hard-hit rate. Yoan Moncada, Gavin Sheets, Cesar Hernandez, and Brian Goodwin are ALL in play if they make the lineup. Hernandez looks the best via the pitch data with a .261 ISO against the slider, which is the most-thrown pitch to lefties for Azolay. That’s still under 33% of the time, so we can focus on the other three hitters sitting over a .345 wOBA and a .150 ISO on the season. The other plus is they are very affordable so you can spend on pitching however you like. 

  • A’s against Drew Anderson 
  • Mets against Ranger Suarez 
  • Mariners righties against Heaney 

Starting Rotation 8.7 – Main 

So we’re going to attack the larger slate a bit differently. Four pitchers sit above $9,500 and I do have some type of interest in all of them. We’ll do quick hitters on each and then a ranking at the end, then move onto the other pitchers who make the list. This is a slate where I think you can strongly consider at least eight options with one punt that I really like. 

High-End Options 

Picking the right guy between Julio Urias, Luis Garcia, Yu Darvish, and Brandon Woodruff could be the key to this pitching slate. I have to imagine they carry four of the top six spots in projected popularity, roughly. 

Let’s start with who I’m not a huge fan of and that’s Woodruff. He’s seen his K rate go down every month since May and while 26.8% is still solid, it’s not quite as good as what he’s shown when pitchers were using sticky stuff. The Giants should roll out five lefties which means Woodruff will rely on the changeup more than normal. It does have a 40% whiff rate and only a .195 wOBA but it also has just 14 strikeouts. Even with the Giants striking out a lot at 25.7%, they did get Brandon Belt back which lengthens the lineup. Woodruff has more starts under 15 DK points than he has above 24 over his past 10. 

Garcia hasn’t completed five innings in either of his past two starts but his price is still way up there. I don’t quite understand Garcia, to be frank. The K rate is awesome at 29.3% and every pitch other than his four-seam has a whiff rate over 42%. That’s all four other pitches this man throws. His pure stuff is flat-out nasty. The issue is he’s using that four-seam 47.3% of the time and it’s not fooling anyone. It does have 39 strikeouts but it also has nine of 13 home runs, a .393 wOBA, and a whiff rate of 19.2%. Minnesota is ranked first against the fastball this season, a large red flag. Also, they could throw out four lefties and that’s been an issue for Garcia as well. Lefties have a .337 wOBA and a 1.40 HR/9. 

This is a great spot for Darvish by what the splits tell us. He should face five lefties plus the pitcher spot (although that didn’t work last time out as German Marquez took him yard) and Darvish has held lefties to a .263 wOBA, 1.17 HR/9, and a 28% K rate. The large fear with him is he had a Charles Barkley-style TURRIBLE July, racking up a 7.36 ERA, .385 wOBA, 3.16 HR/9, 24.1% K rate, and a 6.43 FIP. Arizona is sitting at a K rate over 24% so this is a soft landing spot for Darvish but those numbers are frightening. It’s a leap of faith even though Darvish is one of the game’s best pitchers when he’s on his A-game. 

Urias has honestly been a rock in the Dodgers rotation. He had a bit of a scuffle in June but righted the ship in July with a 2.30 ERA, .264 wOBA, and a 20% K rate. He’s got the right side of the plate at a 25% K rate and a .274 wOBA, both fairly strong marks. The xFIP to either side isn’t above 3.56 and his curve/changeup mix is the best weapon in his holster. Urias throws those two pitches roughly 50% of the time with the four-seam making up the other half. The curve/change has 84 total strikeouts and neither pitch has allowed a wOBA over .193. The Angels rank 17th and 19th against those two pitches. Even though the Angels offense is top 10 across the board in our offensive categories, I think Urias is up for the challenge. 

Rank – Urias, Darvish, Woodruff, Garcia

Not Quite High-End Options Due To Me Deciding The Cutoff Is $9,500 

Charlie Morton seems to have a love/hate relationship with me (I liked you when you were in Pittsburgh, you’re a good dude Mr. Morton) but it’s hard to cast him aside here. I suppose if Juan Soto is back the spot gets worse but Washington’s lineup is never going to look good on paper the rest of the way. Morton is sporting a ground ball rate over 47% and his K rate is just under 28%, an excellent mark for him. His swinging-strike rate of 12.2% is just about as good as it has ever been, so that checks out for him. The four-seam/curve mix is the backbone of his arsenal and they have a combined 125 strikeouts. The curve is still among the league’s best (he’s second in FanGraphs rating while Urias is first) and it’s only allowed a .184 wOBA with a 42.8% whiff rate. I’m going to be fascinated to see how these first five options shake out tonight in popularity. We may be able to use that to our advantage. 

If you want to ride the lightning, Shane McClanahan is that dude. It’s not the greatest spot ever as the Orioles are superior against lefties but we saw this kid’s upside in his last start. He went six innings, struck out seven Red Sox hitters, and only allowed a solo home run. I was able to watch and he was overpowering guys like J.D. Martinez and Xander Bogaerts. Through his 77 IP, the young lefty has a 28% K rate to go with an 8.3% walk rate and a massive 15.8% swinging-strike rate. Max Scherzer leads the majors at 16%. His four-seam hasn’t been a huge plus yet with a .403 wOBA but his slider/curve/change mix all have a whiff rate over 41%, a wOBA under .275, and have 71 of 91 strikeouts. Baltimore should send out eight righties and they only have a 28.9% hard-hit rate. Just remember, he’s a rookie on Tampa. The range of outcomes is wide but he could be left behind on this slate. 

The Punt To Afford Some Hitters 

To tweak a famous Michael Buffer phrase, Let’s Get Ready To Gomberrrrrrr!!

Austin Gomber barely survived the first inning last game, throwing 40 pitches and giving up four runs with a -3.4 DK point score. That start was against the Padres, so it’s easy to chalk that up as understandable. Tonight’s start comes against the Marlins, a much different offense. Miami is 28th or lower in wOBA, wRC+, ISO, OPS, slugging, and they strike out at a 27.9% clip against lefties. On top of that, they are eighth in ground ball rate. Even if you only look at Coors stats, Gomber has a 49.4% ground ball rate, 4.13 xFIP, 20.6% K rate, 0.85 WHIP, .240 wOBA, and a 1.98 ERA. He’s far too cheap and I think popular, although he should be. My general plan is to pair one of Gomber or McClanahan with Morton, Urias, or Darvish. 

Starting Rotation 8.7 Honorable Mention 

Jose Berrios/Tanner Houck – This could turn into a bit of a pitcher’s duel in the doubleheader nightcap. Houck likely has the hardest path to glory but his first 39 innings in the majors have been excellent all around. The ERA is 1.62, the FIP/xFIP combo is 2.38/2.99, and the K rate is 33.6%. It’s risky using him against Toronto but let’s see what lineups look like for both teams. Houck has generated a 13% swinging-strike rate thus far but he has been worse against righties at a .304 wOBA. hat’s an issue against righty-heavy Toronto. 

Berrios sparkled in his first start for the Jays, striking out seven across six scoreless innings. I definitively prefer Morton in the much easier matchup but Berrios has a K rate of 25.8% and his curve has a .245 wOBA and a 36.1% whiff rate. That is his primary pitch but Boston is second against it. 

Starting Rotation 8.7 Stacks 

Oh boy, do I hope the Reds still have runs left in their bats. I mentioned to Jimmy in Discord I feel like the Buccos get freight trained every trip into Cincy and they have scored 17 runs through the first two games. Their starters have been destroyed and now they send Mitch Keller into the lion’s den. That’s….not good for Pittsburgh as Keller has a wOBA over .375 to each side of the plate. He uses the fastball around 50% to each side as well and the Reds feast on that pitch. Jonathan India, Jesse Winker, Nick Castellanos, Joey Votto, and Tucker Barnhart are all over a .235 ISO and .388 wOBA against righty fastballs. 

Since some of these hitters are very expensive, I plan to pay up for one spot and I lean Votto. He has the best marks against the fastball and has a .443 wOBA with a .354 ISO against righties, the best on the team. India is at a .365 wOBA and I want the leadoff hitter, but I may prioritize a different second baseman tonight. After that, Castellanos is still just way too cheap even though he’s looked not quite there in his first two games back from the IL. Mitch Keller is about to fix that and he’s at a .412 wOBA on the year. If you’re wearing a Reds uniform, I’m interested and it’s mostly going to be the puzzle of fitting with my other stack. 

We can still get a nice chunk of Coors exposure and the Rockies face off against Jesus Luzardo. I’m going to apologize to Ghost right now because he loves Luzardo (I love the talent too) but this is not a great spot. I’m passing on India because Brendan Rodgers looks spectacular for a cheaper salary. Luzardo’s fastball is what gets him into trouble with a .352 ISO with a 57% hard-hit rate and his sinker carries a .237 mark. Rodgers crushes fastballs with a .462 ISO and has a .448 wOBA against lefties. Trevor Story hammers the sinker with a .370 ISO and a 58% hard-hit rate to go with a .367 wOBA on the year against lefties. Lastly, Garrett Hampson is sitting at a .243 ISO against lefties and is a great cheap way to get into Coors tonight. 

  • Dodgers against Jamie Barria
  • Tigers/Cleveland game stack 
  • Rays against Spenser Watkins 
  • Braves against Josiah Gray 
  • Astros against Michael Pineda 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 8.7 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 8.6

Almost every single team is in action tonight and we have 28 choices to pick from. We do get the luxury of having some bigger names on this slate but the quality of options drops off a cliff. That means we may need to find some value bats along the way in Starting Rotation 8.6 to set our foundation for green! 

Starting Rotation 8.6 – Main Targets 

Corbin Burnes 

Burnes got rocked by Atlanta last time out and this particular spot is a mix of risk and reward. We saw yesterday a pitcher of the quality of Merrill Kelly tame the San Francisco bats and there’s a couple of factors at play there, in my mind. For one, the Giants simply carry a high strikeout rate against righty pitching at 25.8%. The other is a bit harder to quantify past the Giants have been playing a little over their heads. Looking at the lineup would not lead you to believe that their offense is a top-tier unit and we could see some second-half regression. Burnes is still rocking a K rate of 36% and his FIP/xFIP combo is a sterling 1.50/2.20. 

A factor under the risk column is the Giants are second against the cutter this season. That has been the bread and butter pitch for Burnes with a .272 wOBA, 32.6% whiff rate, and 85 strikeouts. The K rate dipped for Burnes in July at 29.4% but his FIP/xFIP was still under 2.65 each. Both sides of the plate are under a .260 wOBA and they both whiff over 33% of the time. I can see him being a must-play in cash but I am undecided in GPP. On such a big slate, we could potentially spend down. 

Chris Bassitt

Can I just put “Dylan Bundy just dominated this lineup, play Chris Bassitt” and move on? No? Alright, here we go. He shoved against the Angels lineup last time out for nearly 30 DK and since the start of July, Texas is 29th or 30th in OBP, slugging, OPS, wOBA, and wRC+. They do come up to 19th in ISO but that’s certainly not scary. The K rate is 23.5% for this lineup and Bassitt is using a sinker, four-seam, or cutter almost 75% of the time this year. Texas is 29th against the cutter and 25th against the fastball, another big plus for Bassitt. None of his fastball-style pitches has a whiff rate over 28.2% but he’s sort of like Lance Lynn – he just gets it done. His K rate is right about 25% and his hard-hit rate is under 28%. There is very little to pick at here and I honestly think I like Bassitt better than Burnes. 

Alek Manoah 

This will be a gutsy play as Manoah walks into a start against the Boston Red Sox, but that doesn’t mean he can’t succeed at all. His fastball/slider mix has been excellent so far, especially the slider. He doesn’t have near the innings to qualify but if he did, his fastball would be around 18th and the slider would be 13th across the entire league. The slider has a .210 wOBA and a 37.2% whiff rate across 227 pitches. Manoah should face five righties and that’s great news for the slider. That and the four-seam are his main two pitches against righties while lefties see the sinker the second-most. It doesn’t appear that the 13.2% swinging-strike rate is a mirage. 

Boston has also jumped up in strikeouts a little bit since the start of July, over 23%. Manoah only threw 17.1 innings in July (Tampa twice and Kansas City once) but he might have figured some things out. The ERA was 1.02, the wOBA was .189, the K rate was 33.3%, and the FIP was 1.75. He didn’t give up a home run (and the xFIP was almost 4.00) but when a prospect of his pedigree puts that on the field, it’s hard to not at least consider him regardless of opponent. 

John Means 

I was sort of waiting on Means to show he was fully back from injury and that happened in the last start with 24.5 DK points. He induced a 24% whiff rate and 35% on his changeup alone, not to mention a 31% CSW. He also used the change as a primary pitch as opposed to the four-seam. Tampa is 14th against the changeup but Means is rated at 10.6, which would be the best in baseball. Means also features a K rate over 23% and the Rays have remained awful against lefties even since July. Sure, Nelson Curz will help but we’re talking bottom-five in wOBA, wRC+, OPS, slugging, and OBP with a 25.1% K rate. Means has held righties to a .262 wOBA, has a 25% K rate, and a 28% hard-hit rate. At under $9,000, he makes plenty of sense in my view tonight. The last time we attacked the Rays with a lefty, Yusei Kikuchi was around 3%. I’d love to get Means at that percentage tonight.

German Marquez 

It may not ever be comfortable to use pitching in Coors Field but spots don’t get a whole lot better than this against the Marlins. They strike out 25% of the time on the season and are 26th in fly-ball rate against righty pitching. They are 28th in ISO, 24th in OPS, and no higher than 20th in wOBA or wRC+. Marquez has a K rate of 25% and a ground ball rate at 52.6%, which really fits against Miami. Marquez also has a lower HR/9 at home, a lower WHIP, and he’s better against righty hitters. They only have a .250 wOBA to go with a 30.4% K rate and a 3.06 xFIP and Miami is slated to throw out six righties plus the pitcher spot. The slider and curve both have a whiff rate over 42% on the year and they have combined for 109 of 124 strikeouts. I’m certainly interested in him tonight and provided he gets a righty-heavy lineup to face, the spot fits Marquez’s strengths perfectly. 

Logan Webb

We talk all the time that a lot of times, home/road splits aren’t the most useful metric to talk about past extreme parks. To wit, Webb has pitched on the road against the Mariners, Phillies, Padres, Rockies, Reds, Dodgers, Cardinals, and Dodgers again. It’s really no wonder the road ERA is 4.62 and the home mark is 1.85. When we look at the xFIP, it’s 3.25 on the road and 3.04 at home and that makes far more sense. Webb sports a ground ball rate over 60% through 73 innings and the Brewers are 11th in that metric at 44.1%. On top of that, he has a K rate over 24% and Milwaukee is at nearly 25% as a team. 

It might be the third pitch in usage, but the slider has been lethal for Webb. He’s used it more to righties and that isn’t totally ideal as five lefties will probably be in the Brewers lineup. However, he still uses it against lefties and it has a .180 wOBA, 45% whiff rate, and 33 strikeouts. His changeup is the primary pitch to lefties and that pitch has 24 strikeouts, so there is an upside at this salary. I’m not sure if I’ll dip any further down the ladder. 

Starting Rotation 8.6 Honorable Mention 

Adam Wainwright – It’s tough to argue that I’d play Waino ahead of Bassitt but the matchup is soft on paper. KC is in the NL park so they lose the DH (although that likely doesn’t matter with their lineup) and they rank 20th against the curveball. That’s the main pitch for Wainwright and it has 55 strikeouts. For what it’s worth, he has almost double the innings pitched at home than on the road and the ERA is two runs lower. The xFIP does tell a different story as it’s similar home or on the road, which is a small part of why I’d just play Bassitt. 

Kyle Muller – His xFIP of 4.60 compared to the 2.43 ERA is a bit worrisome but Muller has flashed some upside through his 29.2 IP with a score of 31 DK. He’s also never crossed the 19 point barrier past that one start, so I do feel like he’s overpriced even with a 27% K rate and a 13.8% swinging-strike rate. The nationals also proved to be a pain again yesterday with five earned runs hung on Aaron Nola so I feel like there are other options we can look at. 

Wade Miley – I wonder if folks might be a little skittish with Miley on this slate after Uber-chalk Sonny Gray burned the field last night. Pittsburgh is seventh in ground ball rate against lefties while Miley is at a 50.4% ground ball rate himself. Pittsburgh is only at a 20.6% K rate so the price is high-ish but they are also bottom 10 in all of our offensive categories. If Gray hadn’t had one poor inning, the Pirates did virtually nothing last night and the offense has been struggling. 

Starting Rotation 8.6 Stacks 

On a big slate, I want to generally stick with 3-4 man stacks and I want the Yankees, which we’ll get to in a minute. However, I’m inclined to lock in Bassitt as one pitcher and then sit in the Means/Marquez/Manoah range for my second option. That means we need some cheap options and we’re talking about the late-night hammer with ….the Arizona Diamondbacks. I know, exactly who you thought, right?

The D-Backs are facing lefty Ryan Weathers and he’s really dodging bullets against righty hitters. He’s given up a .338 wOBA, 5.21 xFIP, a 1.74 HR/9, and a whopping 43.5% hard-hit rate to that side of the plate. Ketel Marte, Nick Ahmed, and Asdrubal Cabrera are all over a .335 wOBA and the first two hitters I mentioned are over a .210 ISO. Marte especially has obliterated lefties in 41 PA at a .552 wOBA. Even if you choose not to stack Arizona, he’s a pretty nice one-off. 

I think my favorite three-man stack on the slate might well be Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton, and Kyle Higashioka. Marco Gonzales takes the mound and he’s getting mashed by righty hitters with a .418 wOBA, 5.67 xFIP, and a 48.4% fly-ball rate. He features the sinker prominently at about 42%, which has an average distance of 308 feet. It’s 318 feet down the line in New York so do the math there. Additionally, Judge and Stanton have a wOBA over .500 against the sinker with ISO’s over .285. Higashioka sits at a .375 ISO against lefty sinkers and he and Judge are over a .400 wOBA against lefties in general. Even Stanton is over a .340 mark and they are a very affordable trio. 

  • Astros against Bailey Ober
  • Cleveland against Matt Manning 
  • Braves against Erick Fedde 
  • Mariners against Deivi Garcia 
  • Orioles against Ryan Yarbrough 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 8.6 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 8.5

We have another split slate today with smaller slates in both the afternoon and evening. Regardless of slate, the pitching options are not really great. Since they’re about even in terms of games, we’re going to be going over both slates so let’s dig into the Starting Rotation 8.5! 

Starting Rotation 8.5 – Early 

Aaron Nola – His popularity is going to be sky-high since he’s clearly the most talented pitcher on the slate. On paper, playing him makes all the sense in the world. The Washington lineup is severely hampered but they have been feisty in spots we haven’t expected since the Trade Deadline. Nola sports a 28.8% K rate and the four-seam and curve have done the most strikeout damage with 94. His four-seam has been an issue at the same time with a .365 wOBA and just a 22.8% whiff rate. Juan Soto is the best fastball hitter on the team and sits seventh in the league. That’s a concern for Nola since the lefties have a .316 wOBA against him. His road numbers have also been poor this year across 64.2 IP with a 5.29 ERA and the FIP and xFIP are both much higher as well. The difficult part is on this short of a slate, we may not like a whole lot else. 

Alex Wood – I’m super interested to see what the field does with him today. He’s seen some regression that he was due since the start of June but July leveled out so his 3.83 ERA pretty much matches the FIP and xFIP. The K rate was also over 26% in July compared to 25.2% on the season so I feel comfortable with the current form, for the most part. It’s also interesting to see that Arizona is a tougher matchup for lefty pitching. They are top 12 in all of our offensive categories but in two starts, Wood has racked up 11 IP, 15 K’s, 4 ER, and eight total hits. What could help explain that is Arizona sits 26th against the slider and that has been the money pitch for Wood. He’s racked up 66 strikeouts, a .237 wOBA, and a 39.3% whiff rate. Wood throws it 31.7% of the time so he has to be in play on this slate. 

Spencer Howard – Let’s walk on the wild side in the first start for Howard as a Texas Ranger. Lifted from the Phillies at the Deadline, Howard does have some pedigree and former potential. Things never took off in Philly but there is reason to hope. For one, Howard has a K rate over 32% in the minors this season and it sits at 24.4% through 28.1 IP in the majors. I don’t love the fact he’s been using the four-seam 69% of the time but it does have 17 strikeouts with the .353 wOBA. He’s induced an 11.2% swinging-strike rate in Philly this year and 12.2% in the minors. While he does have issues against righty hitters at a .374 wOBA this year, the Angels lineup is not imposing. Since the start of July, LA sits 27th in ISO, 23rd in OPS, 21st in OBP, 24th in wOBA, and 22nd in wRC+. They have only whiffed 22.6% of the time in that span but at Howard’s price, you don’t need a lot of strikeouts. Just get me five quality innings and we’ll call it square. 

Starting Rotation 8.5 Early Honorable Mention 

Merrill Kelly – I’m not sure if I need to go here, but Kelly is at least on the board. San Fran is a very good offense, but they also strike out the second-highest rate to righty pitching. He’s better to lefties at a .266 wOBA and he uses the changeup a lot to that side of the plate. It hasn’t registered a ton of strikeouts but it does have the highest whiff rate of any pitch in the mix. Only two of the top six hitters against the change hit from the left side of the plate for the Giants. The arrival of Kris Bryant has balanced the lineup a bit more, so let’s see what the Giants run out there on a getaway day. 

Starting Rotation 8.5 Early Stacks

This is a rare spot that I might somewhat cast aside the pitch date. The Colorado Rockies don’t look especially great against the sinker, which makes up the majority of the pitch mix for Jake Arrieta. He’s getting mauled this year with a 6.20 ERA and a 5.96 FIP while both sides of the plater are right around a .377 wOBA. He’s not striking many hitters out as he sits under 20% and the one player I want a piece of is Trevor Story. I’ve been skittish with him because he was not happy the Rockies didn’t trade him at the deadline but he rates as the best hitter against righty sinkers with a .283 ISO and a .445 wOBA. From there, we can use Sam Hilliard and his .286 ISO, C.J. Cron and his .408 wOBA in Coors, and Garrett Hampson at a .369 wOBA. Really, any player is on my radar from the Rockies lineup against Arrieta. 

In July, Tarik Skubal started to revert back to the home run prone pitcher with a 2.93 HR/9 and the K rate dropped to 20%. That is decidedly NOT what you want when the Red Sox are coming into town and J.D. Martinez, Kike Hernandez, Hunter Renfroe, and Xander Bogaerts all sit over a .315 wOBA and a .170 ISO against lefties. All of these hitters are well over a .220 ISO against fastballs and Skubal is using that almost half the time with a .321 ISO and a 41% hard-hit rate. You can interchange Xander and Story at shortstop and build out from there. 

  • Rangers against Dylan Bundy 
  • Cubs against Antonio Senzatela 

Starting Rotation 8.5 – Evening 

Sonny Gray – My goodness this slate is gross for pitching. Gray wouldn’t even be that high for me on a normal slate but on this one, I think he might be popular. If we can find other options we like and he’s heavy chalk, maybe we can find pivots. Now, in fairness to Gray, he’s had some poor results with a 4.26 ERA compared to a 3.32 xFIP and 3.82 FIP. Perhaps that starts to equalize with the Buccos ranking last in ISO against righty pitching. The .340 BABIP is easily the highest of his career and the highest since 2018 on top of that. 

There is still a lot to like for Gray based on the metrics like his 29.7% hard-hit rate, 29% K rate, and an 11% swinging-strike rate. The other good news for Gray is the righties in the Pirates lineup are not fearsome. Righty hitters have gotten to Gray for a .367 wOBA and a 4.77 FIP. The flip side is lefties only have a 2.73 xFIP, 33.1% K rate, and a .284 wOBA. He’s going to be overwhelming chalk in cash, but I’m unsure in GPP if I’ll go with the field yet. 

Framber Valdez – I don’t love the K-BB% for Valdez at just 10.7%. The K rate is low at 21.5% and the walk rate is high on top of that at 10.7% so I do prefer Gray even as what I expect will be a chalkier option. Valdez does sport a 10.2% swinging-strike rate which isn’t poor and the Twins don’t look that great against lefty sinkers. That’s the main pitch for Valdez at 49.5% but the strikeout pitch is the curveball. Minnesota ranks 20th against it and it has 50 of 66 strikeouts with a .162 wOBA and a 41.6% whiff rate. There should be three lefties in the Twins lineup and that helps as Valdez has a 2.91 xFIP and the 29.7% K rate. Righties do have a 3.76 xFIP and a wOBA over .300, but the options are limited here. I do like Gray slightly better with slightly less investment. 

Nestor Cortes – The glorious mustache is back on the mound tonight, fresh off a start that lasted five innings. I would expect he will get pushed towards that if not further now that the Yankees are down Cole and Jordan Montgomery on the Covid list. They need innings and Cortes has been strong in his 32.2 IP this year. The FIP is 2.18 and the ERA is 1.93 while the K rate is 30.5%. He does have some fly-ball tendencies at 42.9% but the hard-hit rate is just 28.2%. Cortes uses his four-seam around 44% of the time and it has 24 of 39 strikeouts so far. Seattle sitting at 27th against fastballs is nice and they whiff at 27% against lefties. Righty hitters only have a .208 wOBA and lefty hitters have a 2.65 xFIP against Cortes. Too many factors line up for him to not like him on this slate. 

Starting Rotation 8.5 Evening Stacks

We went to Cincinnati yesterday during the day and I’m heading right back there today. Wil Crowe takes the mound tonight and he has a 5.11 xFIP against lefty hitters along with a 4.62 mark against righties. Both the fly-ball rate and hard-hit rate are over 32% and that will likely not end well in Great American Small Park. One of the chalky parts of the stack could be Nicholas Castellanos. He could be back from the IL tonight and has crushed righties with a .415 wOBA and .256 ISO. He’s only $3,700 and the field likely flocks there. We can build out the stack with Joey Votto, Jonathan India, and Jesse Winker as main targets. They all rate well against the fastball and have at least a .358 wOBA and a .234 ISO against the fastball, which is the main pitch for Crowe. 

I’m likely going with mini stacks from there because if we use a Gray/Cortes combo our salary could be limited. We can utilize some cheap White Sox hitters like Andrew Vaughn and Seby Zavala against Daniel Lynch. He had an xFIP over 6.00 in his last start and Zavala is at a .318 wOBA with a walk rate over 30% while Vaughn crushes lefties with a .442 wOBA and .322 ISO. We just need two more spots to fill from the other stacks listed. 

  • Yankees against Tyler Anderson 
  • Blue Jays against Triston McKenzie 
  • White Sox against Daniel Lynch
  • Astros against Griffin Jax 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 8.5 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 8.4

We do have somewhat of a split day in MLB today as there is a four-game slate in the afternoon and then an 11 game slate in the evening. We’re going to focus solely on the 11 games in the article and then we can chat about the four gamer in Discord. The 11 game slate doesn’t appear to have many value options but let’s get down to business in the Starting Rotation 8.4 to carve our path to green screens! 

Starting Rotation 8.4 – Main Targets 

Lucas Giolito 

My initial lean is to not pay up for Giolito, but we have to talk about him. He just faced this Royals offense and scored 22 DK points which would be fine at this price point but not great. Giolito has been a bear to peg correctly this year and Kansas City doesn’t strike out a ton, which limits the upside a bit. They are only at 22.2% this year which is the sixth-lowest in the league. KC also ranks 23rd against the fastball and 17th against the changeup which is about 80% of the arsenal for Giolito. The four-seam has struggled the most with a .325 wOBA allowed but it should help that Jorge Soler was the third-best fastball hitter in the KC lineup. 

It’s just been a weird year for Giolito. He’s sporting a K rate over 28% and the only pitcher that has a higher swinging-strike rate than his 15.1% mark is Max Scherzer. You would think that would to some stability but that just hasn’t been the case. His K rate is close to each side and even though the wOBA is higher against righty hitters at .316, the xFIP is almost the exact same around 3.80. Giolito is fine but I don’t see him as a must-have in any format. 

Jameson Taillon 

I’ll be the first one to say that the price is scary but I wonder if that sours the field on him. He did just win AL Pitcher of the Month and he really earned it. Through 31 IP in that month, the ERA was 1.16, the K rate was 20.5%, and the WHIP was 0.97. Now, the K rate isn’t spectacular and the xFIP was a frightening 5.14. If this was a different matchup, I could be arguing the other way but Taillon draws a Baltimore offense that has struggled mightily against righty pitching this year. The K rate is 24.6% to go along with the 29th OPS, 30th wOBA, and 28th wRC+. Additionally, they are bottom-five against the fastball and that’s been a key for Taillon in this great run. 

To wit, that pitch garnered a positive FanGraphs rating in every start in July except for one that was rated -0.2. Taillon has also seen his best results against righty hitters, which should occupy seven of nine slots in the batting order. His walk rate is just 4% with a 4.24 xFIP and a 27.5% hard-hit rate. It’s going to be interesting to see what the field does with him, especially with the next two pitchers on our list. 

Shohei Ohtani

It’s hard not to love Ohtani tonight as he brings a 30.1% K rate to the mound and he’s cut his walk rate down to under 11%. Texas is 17th in walk rate against righties and that likely will get worse with Joey Gallo in New York. They are also top 12 in K rate at 24.6% which sets up well for Ohtani. His swinging-strike rate of 13.7% would be ninth if he qualified and his splitter continues to be the destroyer of worlds. It still has a 53.9% whiff rate and a .112 wOBA against it through 32 BBE. The new Texas lineup could really line up perfectly for him as well because they are projected for eight righties. Ohtani’s strength is against righties with a 36.2% K rate, a 0.23 HR/9, and a .232 wOBA. He does feature the slider a bit more to righties than the splitter but that pitch has a 37% whiff rate and Texas is 22nd against that pitch. All in all, I think Ohtani will wind up being my favorite pitcher on the night. 

Max Scherzer 

Let’s start out by discussing the fact this is not the easiest matchup on paper. Houston is the only team in baseball with a K rate under 20% against righty pitching. Just on that facet, it’s not a spot that screams upside. They are also first in wRC+, second in OPS and wOBA, and seventh in ISO. Normally this is a team that we run away from but Mad Max is debuting in Dodger Stadium at $9,100. Maybe he winds up not being a cash play. Maybe we just need some exposure in GPP but this salary is insane, regardless of matchup. He doesn’t have to face the DH and I mentioned earlier that he leads the league in the swinging-strike rate at over 16%. The K rate overall is 34.3% and LA should help his fly ball tendencies as well. 

The loss of the DH is really a big deal because that will likely take Yordan Alvarez out of the lineup if Houston plays their normal one. That leaves them righty-heavy and that means a steady diet of the four-seam/slider combo from Scherzer. They have combined for 99 strikeouts so far and the slider has a .198 wOBA against it. Both pitches have a whiff rate over 34% as well, which helps explain why the K rate to that side is over 35% and the xFIP is 2.98. I won’t say I’m all on Max but the matchup is better than it might appear to be with no DH and I will absolutely be playing him tonight. 

Matt Harvey 

Harvey has looked a lot more like this in his past three starts –

This one is risky and that should go without saying. Still, Harvey has scored at least 18 DK in his last three starts and there have been some subtle changes in the pitch mix. He’s started to utilize the curve and change about 5% more each so they are around 17-19% in these past three starts. His curve hasn’t gotten great results but it does have the highest whiff rate of any pitch at 31.6%. His changeup has a .201 wOBA which is the lowest of any pitch as well. That has helped the four-seam play better and he has a positive FanGraphs rating in the past three starts on all three pitches. The seasonal data points to him being worse to righties in wOBA at .376 but that’s in part due to a .377 BABIP. The xFIP is only 4.17 and the Yankees whiff over 25% of the time against righties. I get the lineup is different now but they are 25th in ISO, 20th in wOBA, and 18th in wRC+. We did just see Jorge Lopez control this lineup and it’s not out of the realm to see Harvey do it as well. 

Starting Rotation 8.4 Honorable Mention 

Kevin Gausman – The Regression Monster has come for Gausman a little bit in these past couple of starts but this could be a good bounce-back spot. He hasn’t got out of the fourth inning in the past three starts and has given up 11 total earned runs. Still, the K rate is 30% and the D-Backs don’t have the most imposing offense. In the last start against them, Gausman racked up 27 DK points but I do prefer Ohtani for sure and likely Scherzer as well. 

Carlos Carrasco – Another pitcher that I’m fascinated to see what happens to tonight. The past two nights, Mets pitchers have been chalky and haven’t pitched exceptionally well. Carrasco is rolling into his second start of the year and could likely go up to 75-80 pitches. In the first game, he whiffed 25% of the hitters he faced but also had a 5.16 FIP. I tend to think he’s pricey and if he’s chalky as well, I’d be comfortable fading. 

Starting Rotation 8.4 Stacks 

We’re running it back tonight as the braves face another pitiful lefty in J.A. Happ after they walloped Jon Lester last night. Happ has gotten taken to the woodshed against righties with a .397 wOBA, 2.22 HR/9, and a 5.49 xFIP. His fastball and cutter both give up over a .235 ISO and a .354 wOBA. Jorge Soler, Ozzie Albies, Dansby Swanson, and Adam Duvall all hammer fastballs. They are all over a .205 ISO and a .390 wOBA against that pitch. Adam Riley is a stud against the cutter with a .308 ISO (and all the other players rate well too) and this lineup is set to smash. 

Not only can we afford a pitching combo of two pitchers over $9,000 each, but we can still stack up some Coors Field hitters. Alec Mills will pitch for the Cubs and he only has a K rate of 16.8%. While he is a ground ball pitcher at 55.4%, that’s not something I’m fearful of in Coors. He’s struggled against lefties with a .364 wOBA and an xFIP over 5.00. In Coors this season, all of Charlie Blackmon, Ryan McMahon, and Raimel Tapia have wOBA’s over .325 and ISO’s over .360. Even C.J. Cron is a strong play with a .400 wOBA and a .312 ISO, even though he’s on the right side of the plate. All of these hitters are super cheap for the opponent and venue. 

  • Blue Jays against J.C. Mejia 
  • White Sox against Carlos Hernandez 
  • Angels against Kolby Allard 
  • Tigers against Eduardo Rodriguez
  • Red Sox against Casey Mize 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 8.4 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 8.3

We have all 30 teams in action tonight and we finally have some good pitching options to choose from! These slates have been very far and few between lately but we can have some quality tonight. We also have to deal with Coors Field and a depleted Cubs lineup which complicates things a bit in the Starting Rotation 8.3 so let’s get busy! 

Starting Rotation 8.3 – Main Targets 

Gerrit Cole 

Cole had a bizarre outing the last time. It’s not often a pitcher gives up seven earned runs and still scores 13.2 DK points but that’s exactly what Cole did. He struck out 10 Rays hitters and he gets a far better spot for his ability this time around. I don’t really expect 13 strikeouts across seven innings like his first start against the Orioles since Cole has been far iffier since the crackdown on the sticky stuff. He’s still generating a 34.4% K rate with a 14.6% swinging-strike rate on the season which sits seventh in the league. 

His four-seam leads the way with 73 strikeouts and Baltimore sits 27th against that pitch, not to mention they are 10th in K rate against righty pitching period. Cole has also been better against righty hitting with just a .232 wOBA, 3.05 xFIP, and a 47.5% ground ball rate. He does see the K rate split significantly as righties are at 30.1% and lefties are at 39.2%. All in all, Baltimore is in a way worse spot tonight compared to their home run derby against Andrew Heaney last night.

Well. That’s not happening. As of Monday night, we don’t have an announced starter for the Yankees. That’s going to push more of the field to Wheeler I assume but we’ll have to see. 

Zack Wheeler 

I’m hoping that folks back off Wheeler based on the last game against the Nationals, but I don’t expect it (especially now). He’s pitched too well this season to be passed over but it will be interesting to see how Wheeler and Cole shake out for projected popularity. The Nationals lineup resembles a AAA lineup at this point with Juan Soto being borderline the only threat. Gone are Trea Turner, Josh Harrison, Kyle Schwarber, Yan Gomes, and even Starlin Castro. If you take all those hitters away, Washington is only about 20th against the fastball. His four-seam has 70 strikeouts on the season and a 25.7% whiff rate and his slider only has a .233 wOBA against it. 

Wheeler will face a balanced lineup in all likelihood with four righties and four lefties but that hasn’t mattered much. The wOBA to lefties is .254 and righties have only managed a .257 mark. His K rate is above 28.4% to each side as well so there’s not a particular weakness based on the splits. I love Wheeler in a bounce-back spot here this evening. 

Yusei Kikuchi 

The results have been uneven for the lefty lately but this is a fantastic spot. We’ve hammered any quality lefty against the Rays all season long. They sit 22nd or worse in wOBA, wRC+, OPS, ISO, slugging, OBP, and they strike out 27.1% of the time. Not only does Kikuchi have all that going for him, but his strikeout pitch has also been the slider with 41 on the season. That and the changeup also boast a whiff rate over 35% on the season while Kikuchi is flirting with a 27% K rate. He’s also sporting a ground ball rate over 50% to combat the 39.2% fly-ball rate for the Rays. 

Tampa could also throw out three lefties and that would help Kikuchi a lot. His K rate to that side of the plate is 34.4% with an xFIP of 2.23. Even against righties, the xFIP is 3.73 and they whiff almost 25% of the time. The price is slightly elevated but with the matchup at hand, there’s not a big reason not to utilize him. 

Kenta Maeda 

I don’t think this is the greatest spot for him but I think he could be a little chalky. The Reds whiff under 23% of the time and it’s not the best ballpark considering he has a 35.5% fly-ball rate. Now, the good news is Maeda has been pitching as we all assumed since the start of July. In his 29.1 IP, he had a 2.15 ERA, 3.00 xFIP, .231 wOBA, and a 33% K rate. Those metrics would be insanely valuable at his salary. It’s more of a matter of if he can do it in this park against this offense. 

His splitter and slider both have a whiff rate over 31.5% of the time even with the struggles he’s had in the early part of the season. The lineup is split evenly between righties and lefties so there’s no real advantage there but Maeda doesn’t have to face a DH, which helps. At a guess on Monday night, I bet the Wheeler/Maeda combo is the cash duo for the field. 

Adrian Houser 

This may seem like an oddball play since the strikeout is king and Houser doesn’t have that capability. He is facing the Pirates for the third time in six starts, which is a small concern but the first two starts resulted in 23 and 17 DK points. If he qualified, he would lead the majors in ground ball rate by around 5% at 59.9%. The Pirates simply don’t whiff a lot but they are 11th in ground ball rate themselves. A big issue on this slate is I’m not sure how comfortable I am dipping below this threshold. He’s only a salary saver and if the field flocks to Maeda, he could make a very interesting pivot. There is really not a lot to talk about here. You’re playing him with the salary involved and hoping he grounds the Pirates offense with 3-4 strikeouts.

Starting Rotation 8.3 Honorable Mention 

Note – With the loss of Cole on this slate, one of the pitchers we talk about here is likely going to turn into a main target. I want to see where the field goes to figure out who the cash option would be and who would be a nice pivot in GPP. 

Walker Buehler – Houston does sit just 13th against the fastball and Buehler relies on it heavily but this isn’t the spot for me. Houston is dead last in K rate against righties at 19.8%. Buehler has been on a roll in the last four starts with at least 28 DK points, but the price is just a hair too high for the matchup in my eyes. 

Sean Manaea – I’m not always a fan of pitchers against the same offense twice in a row but Manaea has been lights out the past two games with 22 strikeouts over 13 innings. The Padres are missing Fernando Tatis which is a serious downgrade to that offense. His K rate is over 27% on the season and while the Padres don’t strike out a ton, they are right around 23%. I like other pitchers better but I’m not sure I can mount a strong argument against it if you want to play him. 

Hyun Jin Ryu – I prefer Kikuchi for just $100 more but Ryu faces Cleveland who sits in the bottom-five in wOBA and wRC+ against lefties on the year. His K rate is just 20% which is a big reason why I prefer Kikuchi and his swinging-strike rate is the lowest it’s been since 2014. 

Kyle Freeland – This is pretty much just an MME style play because I think the Cubs could come in popular. They are not overly expensive for a Coors Field offense and Freeland had a fairly strong July. The ERA was only 2.40, the wOBA was .292, and the HR/9 came down to 0.60. He started to use the four-seam a lot more around 45% and that has been the best pitch results-wise. 

Starting Rotation 8.3 Stacking Options 

Brian is once again missing one of his favorites as Jon Lester takes the mound and the Atlanta stack against him is super affordable. We can start with the newest players in Jorge “Free Square” Soler has a .357 wOBA and .276 ISO on the season while Adam Duvall sports a .212 ISO. He has struck out a TON at 363% against lefties but that shouldn’t be an issue against Lester. Both players are easy to fit even with expensive pitching and that’s not even counting someone like Ozzie Albies, who should be a core play in any build. He’s racked up a .275 ISO and .402 wOBA against lefties and he and Dansby Swanson have hit the four-seam/cutter combo the best on the team. Those pitches make up over 60% of Lester’s arsenal on the season and both have given up a wOBA over .420. Righties in general have a .395 wOBA, 5.44 xFIP, 6.19 FIP, and a 2.09 HR/9 against him so a hitter like Austin Riley is in a prime spot as well. 

On a slate this size, I will typically max out at no more than four hitters from a team, and usually, I keep it at three. With that in mind, I’m going right back to the Giants tonight as they smash lefties and they face Madison Bumgarner. MadBum hasn’t been totally atrocious but the 42.3% hard-hit rate and the 47.4% fly-ball rate to righties seem like something that will bite him here. Buster Posey, Darin Ruf, and Austin Slater all stand out. Posey and Ruf are both over a .425 wOBA and .215 ISO this season while Slater sits at a .351 wOBA. They are all in the positives against the cutter (Slater is tops on the team) and that pitch is giving up a .359 wOBA from Bumgarner. Of course, Kris Bryant is in play as well. 

  • Yankees against Alexander Wells 
  • Angels against Jordan Lyles 
  • White Sox against Kris Bubic 
  • Phillies against Patrick Corbin (pending lineups)
  • Rockies against Zach Davies 
  • Mariners against Luis Patino (lefties only)

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 8.3 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 8.2

Welcome into the Monday slate and I’ll be honest – there are not going to be a ton of options. If your initial reaction looks like this, I can’t say I blame you. 

We only have seven games and we may struggle to find even five options that we really think can pitch well. Even by the recent standards, the Starting Rotation 8.2 is going to be a challenge but we’re up for it to find the green screens! 

Starting Rotation 8.2 – Main Targets 

Note – As of this writing, the Angels have not announced their starting pitcher. It could be Shohei Ohtani, which would be a very chalky option if he’s available. Let’s pretend Ohtani will not pitch until Tuesday and we can update is Discord if we have to. 

Tylor Megill

If you would have mentioned to me two months ago I would have been thinking about paying $9,600 for Tylor Megill, I would have responded with a hearty “Who in the world is Tylor Megill??”. Well, here we are and here I am at least considering it. Do I think Megill is actually worth the salary? That’s a stretch but he has shown strikeout ability through 35.1 IP with a 27.1% rate. The swinging-strike rate of 11% is strong as well and three of his four pitches have a whiff rate over 28%. The FIP/xFIP of 3.44/3.89 are a good bit apart from the 2.04 ERA but it’s not like the former combo is poor. 

The splits are far from something we can put in stone, but the early returns would suggest that the Marlins lineup helps Megill. He gets five righties in a normal Miami lineup and has held them to a .209 wOBA, 3.09 xFIP, and whiffs them at a 29.3% rate. The Marlins are also consistently in the bottom 10 of our offensive categories with a K rate over 25%. I want to see exactly how chalky he is before making the final decision. 

Anthony DeSclafani 

Tony Disco has one thing going for him that Megill doesn’t and that’s an actual track record to fall back on. In his two starts against Arizona, he’s racked up 13.2 IP, 12 K’s, and just three earned runs. That would certainly play on this slate and he has turned to the slider/four-seam combo as his main two pitches. Not only do they both possess a whiff rate over 25.5% but the D-Backs are 23rd or worse against both pitches. The K rate for DeSclafani is only 23.3%, which isn’t special but it’s not the worst either. Arizona should help in that facet as well with a K rate over 24%, the 12th highest in the league. It should be a lefty-heavy lineup but DeSclafani has a .277 wOBA to that side and a 3.68 xFIP, which is better than the 4.19 mark to righties. I believe DeSclafani will be my favorite on the slate as of now. 

Josiah Gray 

If you haven’t read this article most of the year, welcome in. If you have, you all know I have a weakness for talented young pitchers and the upside they present. Gray is inside the top 50 prospects in baseball, depending on where you read. He’s also had some poor results so far in eight innings with a 6.75 ERA and an 8.28 FIP. So what in the world is he doing here? Let’s discuss. 

First off, the xFIP is just 3.79 and it highlights the absurd 44.4% HR/FB rate thus far. I have to stress it’s only eight innings but the K rate has been 37.1% and the swinging-strike rate is 20%. He’s given up almost an earned run per inning and he’s still scored 12 DK points in both starts. Every pitch has a whiff rate over 35.1% so while there is a risk, there is some serious upside here as well. Philly has a 23.7% K rate on the season and his xFIP is better to righties, as is the K rate. Philly is projected to put out six righties and is no better than 16th against any pitch on the season. 

Starting Rotation 8.2 Honorable Mention 

Andrew Heaney – I will mention him but I can’t see myself playing him tonight. It’s the first start for him in Yankee Stadium and that may not end well for a pitcher that has a 1.53 HR/9 on the year. Baltimore is far better against lefties on top of that at seventh in OPS and wRC+ to go along with 10th in wOBA. The xFIP to righties actually looks pretty solid at 3.51 but the 43.4% fly-ball rate and a hard-hit rate over 35% is scary. 

Starting Rotation 8.2 Stacks 

Brian is somewhere in the Great White North, fending off penguins and seals so that means someone has to take up the mantle of writing up the Rays. It’s my turn to keep the seat warm because I love them tonight. Chris Flexen has not had the best time away from Seattle so far and the largest key is he has not shown a lot of strikeout ability at 15.5%. That has been the Achilles heel for Tampa as they sit inside the top 10 in OBP, slugging, OPS, ISO, wOBA, and wRC+. They’re an elite offense with a high K rate of almost 26%. If Flexen can’t miss bats, he should get mauled. 

Someone needs to explain to me the pricing on Austin Meadows. The seasonal data includes a .389 wOBA, and a .320 ISO. In his past 10 games, he’s averaged almost 10 DK points per game but he’s still only $4,500. Flexen uses the four-seam/cutter mix almost 55% of the time and Meadows has a wOBA over .380 and ISO over .210 against those pitches. Ji-Man Choi destroys the cutter with a .520 ISO and he’s sitting over a .400 wOBA on the year against righties. Brandon Lowe is expensive but also does his damage against fastball-style pitches and don’t look now, but Wander Franco is awake as well. He’s hitting .350 over the past 10 with an OPS closing in on almost .900. 

If you’re going with a Megill/Desclafani pitching duo, we need salary savers with the Tampa stack and I’m looking towards Baltimore. My favorite two are Pedro Severino and Austin Hays, with the Baltimore catcher really standing out. Heaney uses the fastball 54% against righties with a 47% hard-hit rate and a .249 ISO, easily the worst of any pitch. He’s given up 16 total home runs and 11 have come from the fastball. It just so happens that those Orioles hitters both have an ISO over .295 and a wOBA over .355 against that pitch. If you wanted to go with a 3/3 approach, Trey Mancini could take the place of Choi from Tampa since he also destroys the fastball with a .483. ISO. 

  • Yankees against Jorge Lopez
  • Mets against Jesus Luzardo 
  • Giants against Taylor Widener 
  • Brewers Bryse Wilson 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 8.2 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 8.1

It’s Sunday and we have 10 games in front of us and the pitching side of things remains mysterious in this part of the season. We had all sorts of oddball performances once again, including Yu Darvish striking out eight but giving up home runs left and right (by his standards). This slate doesn’t have the traditional “ace” so it will be another challenge to figure out in the Starting Rotation 8.1!

Starting Rotation 8.1 Main Targets 

Sandy Alcantara 

If this was before the Trade Deadline (and he was a little cheaper), I would love this spot for Alcantara. Seeing as how the Yankees should have at least two lefties in the lineup with newcomers Joey Gallo and Anthony Rizzo, the spot turns a bit more dangerous. Still, the Yanks are in Miami so they lose the DH option and Alcantara follows the path of other Miami pitchers who are better at home. The wOBA is .255 in Miami compared to .312 on the road and the IP are almost dead even. The K rate is not spectacular overall under 21% but the Yanks are still going to strike out a bunch. Alcantara is also better against righty hitters with a .232 wOBA at home and just a 3.00 xFIP. What I really love is the changeup has been the best strikeout weapon for Alcantara with 42 on the year and a 29.4% whiff rate. New York sits 28th against that pitch his year and over a 25% K rate as a team. 

Jose Berrios 

I’m very rarely on Berrios and you never know what the outcome will be in this scenario. The Jays badly needed starting pitching and paid a premium to get it. Berrios is a very capable pitcher but we know he can be inconsistent. The Royals are 19th against the curveball and that is the primary pitch for Berrios, generating 60 strikeouts and a 35.5% whiff rate. Kansas City is only striking out at 22% of the time against righties but they also sit under 20th in OPS, ISO, wOBA, and wRC+. Here is where the rubber is going to meet the road – the five lefties in this lineup. 

In the year, Berrios has a pretty poor .350 wOBA against lefties to go with a 4.50 FIP. Berrios is slated to face five lefties but they are not very good, to be frank. No lefty in the Royals lineup has a wOBA over .316 nor an ISO over .170 for Carlos Santana. The strikeout upside isn’t spectacular on paper, but with the pricing of other pitchers above him, I like Berrios more than normal today. 

Jordan Montgomery 

He was a little bit wild in the last start but managed to not give up any earned runs and scored 20 DK. He did pick up the win which was a nice bump but even still, Montgomery has flashed higher ceiling and this spot is an excellent one on paper. Miami leads the league in K rate to lefty pitching at 27.9% and is 28th in every single one of our offensive categories. That was with Adam Duvall and Starling Marte being Marlins before the deadline (Marte battled injury but still) and Montgomery gets the benefit of no DH just like Alcantara. We do have to mention the Marlins sitting fifth against the curve but they are 23rd against the changeup. With Duvall and Garrett Cooper out of the lineup, the curveball rating plummets to just 18th. He’s still generating a 13.3% swinging-strike rate and may well be the best value on the board. 

My plan as of now is to keep the options fairly limited. We only have 10 games. I looked at Adam Wainwright but the Twins are in the top 12 in ISO, OPS, wOBA, and wRC+ against righties the past 30 days with a K rate under 22%. That’s a tough sell in my eyes. 

Starting Rotation 8.1 Honorable Mention 

Charlie Morton – I more or less refuse to pay this price for Morton. It just doesn’t make much sense to me and even though Morton is a very good pitcher, he’s not going to pay this price tag off very often. His K rate has been stagnant around 28% basically the entire season and the xFIP has stayed around the season-long mark of 3.53. I can’t justify the salary since Morton is worse against lefty hitters and the Brewers are projected to have five. That side of the plate has a .298 wOBA and the slim chance to succeed for Morton is the 31.3% K rate. 

Marcus Stroman – We preach that game logs aren’t everything, but taking a look at Stroman’s is fascinating. Since the 17th of June, he’s had exactly one start with more than 12 DK points through seven starts. The amazing one was 34.2 DK and came against this Reds offense. Outside of June, Stroman has not sported a K rate over 20.8% and that’s my biggest gripe at this price. When he was $8,000, you didn’t need 7-8 whiffs or more. Now, you need him to go very deep into the game without giving up runs or find a strikeout rate he hasn’t shown much this season. 

Starting Rotation 8.1 Primary Stack 

I’m heading to Detroit since the Tigers are throwing out lefty Tyler Alexander, who has a FIP/xFIP combo over 5.00 to righty hitters. He throws a mix of pitches but all of them have at least a .200 ISO and a wOBA over .300 except for the sinker, about 20% to righties. My primary targets are going to be Pedro Severino, Austin Hays, and Cedric Mullins. While Mullins is a lefty, he has a wOBA over .380 against lefties and an ISO over .260 against lefty cutters, a pitch Alexander uses almost a third of the time to lefties. Severino and Hays are dirt cheap and sit over a .180 ISO on the season against lefties. 

I didn’t mention Trey Mancini or Ryan Mountcastle by design because one of my favorite two-man stacks on the slate is Juan Soto and Josh Bell. Cubs righty Adbert Alzolay gets utterly crushed by lefties with a .422 wOBA, 5.00 xFIP, 8.67 FIP, and a K rate under 20%. Bell has an ISO of .193 and Soto has racked up a .419 wOBA and .978 OPS against righties this season. Bombs away against Alzolay’s 4.22 HR/9 to lefties. 

Starting Rotation 8.1 Secondary Stacks 

  • Mariners lefties against Mike Foltynewicz
  • Phillies against Mitch Keller
  • Pirates against Kyle Gibson 
  • Mets against Vladimir Gutierrez 
  • Braves against Brian Anderson 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 8.1 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 7.31

It’s Saturday and we have two slates, one with five games in the afternoon and one with nine games in the evening. I’ll be honest, the five-game slate looks beyond terrible for pitching so we’re going to focus on the nine-game slate for the evening. The evening looks better but that is faint praise in the Starting Rotation 7.31 so let’s figure out who we need to utilize tonight! 

Starting Rotation 7.31

Yu Darvish 

It’s been tough sledding in July for Darvish with a 7.32 ERA through 19.2 IP (and a 5.95 FIP) but this is certainly a get-right spot. Darvish has pitched 71 IP at home and has been far better there and we just saw Joe Musgrove buzzsaw this Colorado lineup a couple of nights ago. He’s sporting a K rate of nearly 29% and a 12.8% swinging-strike rate. Colorado is also 26th against the cutter, which is the primary pitch for Darvish. That’s a good thing because the wOBA allowed on that pitch is .418. With Colorado on the road, it makes all the sense in the world to pay for Darvish. I do understand that paying for aces has been….well, not fun at all lately. We still have to deal with the metrics in front of us and this lines up for a smash spot for Darvish. 

Aaron Nola 

I know the Pirates don’t strike out a ton but it’s kind of difficult to fathom why Nola’s salary dropped by $600 after scoring 37.1 DK. We do like the fact that the four-seam has been the issue for Nola with a .377 wOBA and nine home runs allowed. The Bucs continue to be the worst team in baseball against the pitch and Pittsburgh is 26th against the curve. That has been the lead strikeout pitch for Nola with 55 on the season and the whiff rate is 36.9%. It’s also interesting to note that the ERA of 4.37 doesn’t match the FIP/xFIP combo of 3.54/3.41. He’s had issues keeping the ball in the park as well with a 1.40 HR/9 but the Bucs are 30th in ISO. Every weakness for Nola is a large weakness for the Pirate offense. His price is nonsensical, even if there are some small issues with the spot itself. 

Joe Ross 

I suspect that Ross is going to be popular on this slate because the Cubs completely and utterly laid waste to their major league offense yesterday. Gone are Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, and Javy Baez. Even Jake Marisnick got dealt. The projected Cubs lineup has Matt Duffy hitting cleanup, which is not ideal at all. Ross is a weird pitcher by some metrics. All of his pitches with the exception of the slider have a wOBA over .320 on the season. That’s not typically a pitcher we want but Ross has a 24.4% K rate to fall back on. The swinging-strike rate is 11.1%, which is the best mark since his rookie season in 2015. Ross has had some issues with lefties with a .336 wOBA given up but the K rate is almost 27% to that side. The lefties in the lineup are all over 20% in K rate and Ian Happ is the only power threat with a .236 ISO. The sum of the lineup for Chicago is flirting with a 25% K rate, perfect for Ross and his salary tonight. 

Tyler Anderson 

It’s never a sure thing when a fringe pitcher heads to a new team but Anderson gets a pretty soft landing spot with the Mariners. Texas is 29th in wRC+, ISO, slugging, and OBP while sitting 30th in wOBA and OPS. Those numbers all came with Joey Gallo in the lineup and even though he’s a lefty himself, that’s still a loss for the Rangers. They do get the ball in play to some extent with a K rate of just 23.4% but Anderson isn’t priced like we need a ton of strikeouts. Texas is also fifth in ground ball rate which should help Anderson’s 40.8% fly-ball rate. The xFIP for Anderson is almost identical to each side of the plate at 4.42 and 4.40 and he whiffs the right side of the plate at a 21.5% rate. Lastly, Texas is last against the changeup and that is the most used secondary pitch to righty hitters for Anderson with a 29.1% whiff rate.

Starting Rotation 7.31 Honorable Mention 

Brandon Woodruff – This is where I get really nervous about paying for pitching because Woodruff has seen his K rate consistently slip month by month. It’s still 27.6% in the month of July and Woodruff is still difficult to hit. The wOBA to each side of the plate is under .235 and the xFIP is below 3.10. He’s just been tough to get right and the last five starts are a great illustration. In two starts, the score has been under 16 DK and in three it has been over 23. His entire arsenal of pitches has a wOBA under .290 this year and he’s under $10,000. I just prefer Darvish against the Rockies in San Diego. 

Bailey Ober – You have to be a bit crazy to go this route but if there’s a lineup that Ober can do some work against, it’s the Cardinals. The young righty for the Twins not only loses the DH in St. Louis but he faces six righties of the eight regular hitters. On the season, Ober has a 28.7% K rate, 3.45 xFIP, and a .278 wOBA against righties. 

Starting Rotation 7.31 Primary Stack 

So my initial lean is to use Darvish/Ross as my pitching duo which means we need some cheaper hitters. I’m looking towards Seattle against lefty Taylor Hearn, who sports a 4.85 xFIP, 6.36 FIP, and a .369 wOBA to righty hitters thus far in 30 IP. I’m starting expensive with Mitch Haniger but we quickly can work our way down the salary structure for Ty France, Luis Torrens, and Tom Murphy. They all sit over a .205 ISO and a .325 wOBA against lefties. Additionally, Hearn throws the fastball around 57% of the time and Haniger and Murphy destroy that pitch. Haniger is at a .582 wOBA and .519 ISO while Murphy is over .405 for both. They each also have over 40 BBE, so this isn’t a very small sample. 

For a complimentary stack, I’m looking towards Cleveland. Their new addition of Myles Straw is projected to lead off and even though the stats against lefties look poor, leading off at minimum is always appealing. Amed Rosario and Franmil Reyes look great against the sinker from Dallas Keuchel as they both sit over a .220 ISO. Just against lefties period, they both sit over a .335 wOBA. Keuchel can be a bit tricky to full-stack because he can generate ground balls but as a 2-3 man stack, it makes perfect sense. 

Starting Rotation 7.31 Secondary Stacks 

  • Twins against Jon Lester (pending lineup)
  • Mets against Wade Miley 
  • White Sox against Triston McKenzie 
  • Dodgers against Merrill Kelly 
  • Brewers against Kyle Muller 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 7.31 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 7.30

We have all 30 teams in action tonight and I’m going to throw out one caution right off the bat. If you cannot be around for lock and can’t keep up on trade deadline news today, skip this slate. There are likely to be plenty of trades made before this slate starts and could swing it drastically. We rarely need that warning in MLB but that’s the nature of the day and Starting Rotation 7.30 so let’s dig in! 

Starting Rotation 7.30 – Main Targets 

Lance Lynn 

The Man comes around tonight and I am an unabashed Lynn stan. The guy is easy to root for since I’m around his age (and weight) but he’s out here shoving fastballs down hitters’ throats for a 27.4% K rate. Now, even though I’m driving the bandwagon we have to talk about some issues in this spot. Cleveland should have four lefties and Lynn has some splits issues. Lefties only whiff at a 23% rate and they have a 4.68 xFIP. The quality of these lefties isn’t exactly high past Jose Ramirez but it has to be noted. His ERA is sparkling at 1.91 but the FIP/xFIP combo is 3.15/3.96, not exactly great given the ERA. He’s only seen Cleveland twice, once with 10 strikeouts and once with two. That second start was consecutive against Cleveland so I’m not reading a ton into it. Cleveland is also 20th in OPS, 25th in wOBA, and 26th in wRC+ with a K rate of 23.9%. Even with some warts, I love Lynn tonight like usual. 

Corbin Burnes 

Things have been slightly worse for Burnes since the crackdown but he is still getting swings and misses. In the past four starts, the swinging-strike rate has been over 12% in three of them and Burnes has only allowed three total earned runs. Atlanta is still sitting around 25% for the K rate and maybe most importantly, they are only league average against the cutter without Ronald Acuna. There is really not a strong weakness in the splits for Burnes as both sides of the plate are under .245 for the wOBA. Additionally, neither side has an xFIP over 2.20 and both are over a 34% K rate. He will face five righties in a normal Atlanta lineup and that’s playing to the strength for Burnes. It’s a tough choice if paying up but I do give a slight lean to Burnes. 

Jameson Taillon 

He has been target more often than not but I’m not sure this particular spot could line up much better. First off, Taillon is using the four-seam 49% of the time and Miami sits 29th against the fastball this season. That’s a huge plus and Taillon also has a K rate of 23.1% and a career-high 12.2% swinging-strike rate. Secondly, going into Miami allows Taillon to not face a DH and it’s a major help to his fly-ball tendencies. The wOBA to righties isn’t spectacular at .313 but that is his stronger side and the hard-hit rate is only 27.2%. What’s interesting is the righty-heavy lineup is going to make the slider his secondary pitch. While it’s been poor for Taillon all year, the Marlins are just 16th against it. Looking at the game logs, Taillon has been lucky the past three games with xFIP’s over 6.15. However, that was twice facing Boston and once against Houston. The Marlins are a giant step down and now don’t even have Starling Marte or Jazz Chisholm in the lineup. 

Tony Gonsolin 

Seeing Gonsolin start to throw 80+ pitches consistently is a great thing and this could be a spot that we take advantage of it. His slider and splitter have been nasty this season, both with a wOBA of .240 or less and both with a whiff rate over 41%. Now, the four-seam has been an issue with a .408 wOBA and just a 17.1% whiff rate but the D-Backs are 23rd against the fastball. His hard-hit rate is just 24.7% and the swinging-strike rate is 12.1%, an excellent mark in his short season thus far. He generated a 16 DK score three starts ago against this Arizona lineup but it is now missing Eduardo Escobar. Arizona is also over a 24% K rate on the season and is dead last in OPS and 29th in ISO against righty pitching this season. He just needs his fastball to survive with those secondary pitches doing their thing. 

Logan Gilbert 

He has been an absolute pain so far to get right and the last start it fell apart. One of the tells for his starts and the ceiling is the four-seam usage. In his last 10 starts, there have been four that have exceeded 17 DK points. In all of them, the fastball has sat under a 68% usage rate. The slider has been at least over 18% and I’m just not sure why he’s reverting to his fastball nearly as much as he does in some starts. The last one was 76% and that’s just too much. The stuff is nasty as the slider and change are over 40% in the whiff rate and the change is ridiculous at 73.1%. The K rate is approaching 29% and the swinging-strike rate is 12.8%. Texas now doesn’t have Joey Gallo in their lineup and it frankly looks awful. I just can’t tell you how much Gilbert will rely on the fastball. If he trusts the slider and change, he should absolutely dominate and has ace upside. 

Touki Toussaint 

Keeping in mind that we only have 13.2 IP this season, Toussiant has been excellent and the price remains super low. His ERA of 1.32 isn’t out of line with the FIP/xFIP of 2.57/2.53. The K rate is sitting at 29.4% and he’s faced the Padres and Phillies in his two starts. The ground ball rate has been impressive at 53.3% and even though the Brewers scored 12 runs last night, the vast majority came against the Buccos bullpen. Toussiant has totally flipped his primary pitch in the sinker over the four-seam from 2020. Teams haven’t figured that or the curveball out yet as both are under a .180 wOBA. The curve actually has a 61.1% whiff rate through 46 pitches. The scary part is lefties have a 4.21 xFIP and he should face five, but they also have a ground ball rate nearing 70%. He’s still dirt cheap and the Brewers are sixth in K rate and 10th in ground ball rate against righties. Lastly, they rank 29th against the curve. Using a Toussiant/Gilbert combo is fascinating to me tonight with my primary stack. 

Starting Rotation 7.30 Honorable Mention 

Patrick Sandoval – The pitch count wasn’t excessive but it can be tough for starters to go so deep into a game the next time out. It doesn’t help that Oakland is 10th in ISO against lefties and 12th against the changeup. I will be going with Taillon but Sandoval has been excellent in his time in the rotation for the Angels. 

Martin Perez – We’ve attacked Rays with lefties all year but this might not be the lefty we want. He only has a 19.3% K rate and the price tag is pretty unappealing, but this is a player with some upside at under 5% popularity tonight. 

Starting Rotation 7.30 Primary Stack 

Daniel Lynch went out and shoved against the Tigers the last start, and good for him. Tonight represents a much larger challenge for him against the Blue Jays and he’s had a 15.4% K rate to the right side of the plate with a 40% hard-hit rate. He uses the four-seam 50% of the time and 1-6 in the Toronto lineup has at least a .350 wOBA and everyone except Bo Bichette is over .190 in ISO against that pitch. Teoscar Hernandez, Vlad, Bo, and Randal Grichuk all have destroyed lefties this year with at least a .343 wOBA. Teoscar is sitting at a .356 ISO and while everyone is super expensive, we have some cheaper pitching options to go with a full-stack. 

Starting Rotation 7.30 Secondary Stack 

  • Tigers against Matt Harvey 
  • White Sox against J.C. Mejia
  • Red Sox against Josh Fleming 
  • Phillies against Wil Crowe 
  • Orioles against Tarik Skubal 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 7.30 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 7.29

Thursday is sort of a ho-hum day on the diamond as there could be just 10 games total, split into (possibly five) six and five-game slates. The pitching options on both don’t look all that great unless the Washington game plays, in which case I’d assume Zack Wheeler pitches for Philly. That remains to be seen so we’ll be skipping that game in the Starting Rotation 7.29 and talking about other options to lay our foundation for green!

Starting Rotation 7.29 – Early 

Note – There’s no telling at this juncture if the Nationals/Phillies game will actually play. If it does, I would be pretty surprised to see Max Scherzer pitch. He’s been in trade rumors very heavily these past couple of days and it just makes sense for the Nationals to not have him throw before the deadline (if he hasn’t already been traded). IF he starts, he’s the typical great play and there could be a great pitching duel between him and Wheeler. Let’s talk about other games. 

Gerrit Cole – I grant you the last time Cole met up with Tampa, he got knocked around but the strikeouts have come back for him lately. The K rate in July is back up to 37.8% so either Cole figured something out without sticky stuff or he’s just hiding it extremely well. Either way, this is a spot that he can take advantage of an inflated K rate since Tampa is sitting fifth at 25.5%. There’s the risk here since Tampa is also 11th in OPS and sixth in ISO against righties. 

Cole’s slider has been doing well these past three starts with a FanGraphs rating of at least 0.6 in each outing. The fastball was -1.3 in the last game but ahead of that, it’s been good as well. We also like the swinging-strike rate has averaged about 14% in the past three starts, right about his mark for the season. It will be interesting to see how popular Cole is and he’s definitely in play. If he’s mega chalk, we can make the case to fade as well especially if we get that Washington game. 

Carlos Rodon – He just keeps on chugging and he’s been so good this season that I’m inclined to just give him a pass when he has a poor start like last time out. Now, what has to be noted is the Royals offense has really picked up the pace against lefty pitching lately. Since the start of June, they are whiffing only 21.7% of the time and rank third in ISO. That’s not to mention top-six in wOBA, wRC+, OPS, and slugging. This is quietly kind of a tough spot. Even with that noted, Rodon has a wOBA of about .240 to each side of the plate and the K rate is not lower than 33.3% to either side as well. Rodon also features a whiff rate over 31% on his four-seam and slider which make up 85% of his pitch mix. With him being $1,000 less than Cole, he could be an intriguing pivot but the spot isn’t spectacular. He’s had one great start against the Royals and one poor one, the poor one coming in a second consecutive start. 

Luis Castillo – He is finally appropriately priced but that doesn’t mean I’m not interested. There’s a reasonable chance the Cubs lineup could be very poor since trade winds are surrounding them as well. Regardless of lineup construction, Castillo has been dominating for nearly two months now. Since the start of June, he’s started 10 games and given up a total of 12 earned runs, and racked up 65 strikeouts. The wOBA has been under .250 and the ERA has never crossed the 1.71 mark. The swinging-strike rate has not been under 11.5% in any of the last 10 starts and Chicago leads the league in K rate at 26.5% against righty pitching. Castillo is my favorite play on this slate and it’s more of a matter of finding the partner than anything else. 

Starting Rotation 7.29 Early Honorable Mention 

Luis Patino – On the surface, this looks questionable. However, Patino does have some pedigree and his splits should help him in this game. He has held righty hitters to a .262 wOBA, a 3.68 xFIP, 28.9% K rate, and just a 0.83 WHIP. The issues have come against lefties but the Yankees have been in short supply for the most part. Maybe Joey Gallo debuts but it’s still going to be a righty-heavy lineup. Patino uses the slider to righties much more than lefties and the pitch has been great for him so far. It has only given up a .217 wOBA and it has a 44.7% whiff rate. 

Starting Rotation 7.29 Early Primary Stack

Let’s go to San Francisco and look at an offense that has killed lefties so far this year in the Giants. I can’t say Price has been awful against righties so far at just a .317 wOBA but the Giants are fairly cheap and sport plenty of lefty killers. Buster Posey, Darin Ruf, and Alex Dickerson are all over a .440 wOBA and .200 ISO. The sinker has been an issue for Price with a .314 ISO given up and Run has a .500 ISO, making him an elite play at the salary. Austin Slater is also super cheap for a .216 ISO and a .346 wOBA. They allow plenty of flexibility to pitch who you like and have a nice secondary stack as well. 

Starting Rotation 7.29 Early Secondary Stacks

  • Mets against Drew Smyly
  • Reds against Alec Mills
  • White Sox against Carlos Hernandez 

Starting Rotation 7.29 – Main

Frankie Montas – With the news that Jared Walsh is on the IL, the Angels are now missing Mike Trout, Walsh, and Anthony Rendon. That’s a serious third of the lineup to be without and Montas (in theory) has an easier road than normal here. Now, he’s been frustrating to get right but Montas did nab the Angels for 28 DK in June. The results have been sketchy but the metrics look far more stable after the first month of the season for Montas. His xFIP has not been over 4.01 in any month and the K rate has been at least 24%. 

Through the first three starts in July, his K rate is 31% and that’s come against Cleveland, Seattle, and Houston. In those starts, his splitter has been a star as it has earned at least a 0.9 FanGraphs rating each start and his swinging-strike rate has been over 14.5% in each. His xFIP has been under 3.35 in each start and while he’s scary, he does make sense on this slate. We’ll get to the highest salaried pitcher on the slate shortly. 

Joe Musgrove – Let’s get this out of the way, this slate is another very poor one for arms. He started to hit the skids a little bit in June and July has been terrible through 20.1 IP. Musgrove has racked up a .344 wOBA, 5.31 ERA, and a 4.21 xFIP. The K rate has gone way south at under 24% since June hit and it has been under 18% in July. It’s difficult to not piece together the sticky stuff crackdown has been a problem for the righty. 

This is all about continuing to attack the Rockies outside of Coors Field. They are dead last in OBP, OPS, slugging, ISO, wOBA, and wRC+ this year on the road against righties and whiff 26.1% of the time, fifth-highest in the league. It helps that Musgrove should only face three lefties and is better against righties at a .240 wOBA and 0.92 WHIP. The Rockies lineup could also be even worse if Trevor Story gets traded, so Musgrove makes plenty of sense. 

Casey Mize – I’m nervous about the pitch count here but under $7,000 helps those fears go away a bit. He was back up to around 80 this past game after three straight starts sitting around 50 pitches and he faces off against Baltimore. They have been a target for righty pitchers most of the season and Mize has been far superior to the right side of the plate. They only have a .264 wOBA against Mize with a 26.1% hard-hit rate plus a 52.2% ground ball rate. It should be a strong spot for Mize since he uses the slider as a primary pitch to the right side. He’s thrown a slider 312 times to righties out of a total of 436 sliders and that has been the best pitch. It has the lowest average, wOBA, and the highest whiff rate at 30.8%. Mize should face six righties and Baltimore is 17th against the slider. 

Chad Kuhl – This is not a play that has any amount of safety, but Kuhl has been seeing better results lately while the metrics are a mixed bag. Some starts the xFIP and hard-hit rate look very legit, others show he’s been dodging some bullets. Milwaukee is sixth in walk rate but also sixth in K rate to righty pitching. That’s also good and bad for Kuhl because his K rate is 19.9% and the walk rate is 12.8%. Perhaps his best asset coming into this start is the slider is his primary pitch at 45.5%. It has a .308 wOBA but also has 39 of 53 strikeouts and a 33.5% whiff rate. Milwaukee is dead last against that pitch this year and is still short hitters due to Covid. We’re only talking about 16.1 IP in July but the K rate has jumped to 28.1%. That’s worth a shot at this salary on a shorter slate. 

Starting Rotation 7.29 Main Honorable Mention 

Freddy Peralta – You may be wondering why Peralta isn’t a main target and the largest reason is the pitch count. Not only did the Brewers give him almost two weeks off from game action, they only allowed him to throw 51 pitches last time out. They also made it a point to say that skipping starts and shortened starts are in play during the second half. With the Brewers having playoff aspirations, they could continue electing to be cautious with Peralta. He’s already past his career-high in IP at the major league level and his career-high at any level is 120 IP and that was in 2017. Even if they let him throw 70-80, he’d have to be incredibly efficient to pay off the salary. Given the slate construction, I can see Peralta being popular and that could be a large advantage if you fade him. 

Starting Rotation 7.29 Main Primary Stack 

Alexander Wells takes the mound tonight for the Orioles and I’m looking at the Tigers to continue to score runs after they went full ham yesterday. Wells has a matching 42.4% hard-hit rate and fly-ball rate, which explains a 5.77 xFIP and helps explain the 5.86 FIP. Since the start of June, Detroit ranks 11th in OBP, fifth in slugging, sixth in OPS, seventh in ISO, sixth in wOBA, and fifth in wRC+ while the K rate has dropped to 23.4%. This is a much more dangerous offense than folks realize. We’re heading to the normal suspects of Eric Haase, Jonathan Schoop, Robbie Grossman, Zack Short, and Miguel Cabrera. All of these hitters are sitting at least at a .325 wOBA and the first three are over a .220 ISO as well. The four-seam for Wells is sitting around 88 MPH and has a .347 wOBA in 15 BBE. Look for the ERA to start catching up to the other metrics tonight. 

Starting Rotation 7.29 Main Secondary Stacks 

  • Padres against Kyle Freeland
  • Blue Jays against Eduardo Rodriguez
  • You can go against a guy like Chad Kuhl as well with the Brewers hitters since Kuhl is so risky. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 7.29 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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