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Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Aces and Bases.  Today we have a big 12 game main slate on Fanduel. 

While we have one true ace, there are a bunch of really solid options that I like that are in good matchups.  We also have a Coor’s game that may be impacted by weather again.  

With that being said, let’s dig in to today’s slates!

MLB DFS: The Aces

Robbie Ray ($8.3k) vs. Atlanta Braves – This is purely a GPP play.  Braves always have potential to put up a big number with some of the bats in that lineup.  However, against lefties this  year they have been brutal.  They have a high K rate over 27%.  What’s more concerning is their power numbers.  They have just a .557 OPS and a .129 ISO.  We’re more than a month into the season at this point.  Targeting lefties against this lineup may be a thing this year.  It’s surprising. 

Ray has seen a resurgence this season.  In his last 3 starts he’s gotten 40, 39, and 40 FD points.  At his price point, that’s damn good.  His price is starting to creep up based on his recent production but it’s still in a manageable zone.  So is this resurgence real?  Or is it a façade? 

Ray is relying more on his fastball this year than he has in years past.  He’s throwing it over 60% of the time compared to a career average of 50%.  Ray’s biggest battle in his career has been his control. 

Throwing the FB more has given him much better control.  He’s getting first pitch strikes 65% of the time vs. 58% for his career.  This has all really helped with his success this year.  It’s the Braves and this match-up could go south really quick, but I’m a big fan of Ray for GPP’s tonight. 

Freddy Peralta ($8.6k) vs. St. Louis Cardinals – Cardinals have a pretty potent lineup.  They have big bats in Arenado and Goldy.  But if they have a weakness, it’s against righties.  While their K rate is average at nearly 24%, they have a below average OPS and wOBA to righties.  Peralta showed last week that even if he gives up a few big hits, he still has the ability bring it back with his elite K rate of 40.8%. 

Peralta is relying a lot more on his slider this year, throwing it 35% of the time.  Some of the bigger bats in this line up (Goldy, Molina, and Bader) have whiff rates north of 37% to this pitch this year. 

Really like Peralta’s chances of bouncing back tonight after a sub-par outing against the Phillies last week.  Peralta gave up 5 ER early last week against the Phils but still managed to K 8 and get you 21 FD points. He’s someone that even if he’s struggling a bit can still put up a respectable number.

Walker Buehler ($10.8k) vs. Seattle Mariners – Stud Mariners prospect Jared Kelenic is expected to be called up Thursday.  So we have a few more days of picking on the Mariners before they finally get some pop in their lineup.

First, let’s take a look at what the Mariners are doing this year vs. righties.  They own a 25.4% K rate, a sub .300 wOBA, and a .665 OPS. They are a very attackable team when righties are on the mound. 

While his K rate is considerably lower than it has been over the past couple of years, Buehler still sports a very respectable 27% K rate this year.  A lot of this has to do with his first three starts where he only K’d 4 in each.  Over his past 3 starts, he’s had 9, 10, and 8 K’s.  Very encouraging trend.  Outside of Mitch Haniger and to a much lesser extent Kyle Seager, this lineup really struggles with the pitch mix that Buehler will throw tonight. 

One final positive spin for Buehler is his hard hit rate.  For the season, he’s struggled with his hard hit %.  It’s at 41%.  In his last start vs. the Cubs it was down to 26.7%.  I’m hopeful this is a trend that will continue.  All signs point to Buehler continuing his string of strong outings. 

A strong case could also be made for Brady Singer ($7.8k) vs. Detroit Tigers and Kwang-hyun Kim ($6.3k) vs. Milwaukee Brewers.  Both are facing opponents that have K rates vs. their handedness north of 28%.  The cons of playing them though are the Tigers are playing much better ball of late and Kim is a low K pitcher.  On a night where we have decently priced pitchers, I don’t think you’ll need to go here. 

MLB DFS: The Bats

Toronto Blue Jays vs. Bryse Wilson – Wilson has been pretty dreadful this year.  In a short sample size of only 12 IP he’s already managed to give up 4 homers.  That’s one every 3 innings for those counting at home.  Of all the pitchers on the slate tonight, that’s by far the worst.  He is also sporting a near 6 xFIP and a swinging strike rate below 10%.  He’s not missing bats and he’s giving up the long ball.  Match made in heaven. 

Wilson has been throwing his sinker considerably more this year, 25% of the time.  How have the Blue Jays handled the sinker this year you ask?  Pretty damn well.  Vladimir Guerrero ($4k), Randal Grichuk ($2.8k), Marcus Semien ($3.4k), and even the struggling Cavan Biggio ($2.5k) have been hitting this pitch hard this year and with success.  All have hard hit rates over 40% and wOBA’s over .400 to the pitch.  I’m all in on the Blue Jays tonight. 

Washington Nationals vs. Chase Anderson – Nationals get to face off against a pitcher this year that has struggled.  Anderson for the season has a 5.42 xFIP and is giving up a decent amount of hard contact at 32%.  He’s not getting many K’s as his K rate is a meager 17.8%.  

We also have a pitcher that is a reverse splits pitcher.  Since 2016, he’s giving up a .372 wOBA and a .249 ISO to righties.  Because of that, we don’t need to shy away from someone like Trea Turner ($4k).  With Juan Soto ($4k) back in the lineup this is going to be a tougher lineup.  Yes Soto hasn’t been good so far this year, but it’s only a matter of time before he goes off. 

Atlanta Braves vs. Robbie Ray – Wait, didn’t you just write up Robbie Ray as one of your pitchers?  Yes, yes I did.  This is a hedge play.  If you aren’t going to go with Ray tonight, you should strongly consider the Braves bats.  Yes, the Braves have struggled mightily vs. southpaws this year.  Yes, Ray has been better with his control this year and in turn performing better. 

We have enough historical data at our hands to show us that the Braves should not be this bad vs. lefties and that Ray can blow up at any time.  Guys like Ronald Acuna ($4.5k), Marcel Ozuna ($3.3k), and Ozzie Albies ($3.2k) have historically done extremely well vs. southpaws.  A breakout for all could very well be in the cards tonight.  

Some other sports I also like tonight are the Chicago White Sox vs. Kent Maeda and Kansas City Royals vs. Matthew Boyd. 

MLB DFS: The Wrap Up

This is going to be a fun slate.  We have some really good mid-tier pitching to go along with Walker Buehler.  We also have some pretty wide open spots for offense.  There’s a chance for some rain in Atlanta but the game that’s really at risk is Colorado.  

Good luck and hope to see you in the green tonight!

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @rangerzfan79 and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD 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 5.11

After a sketchy slate on Monday, we get the return of a full slate Tuesday night and have some actual pitching options to choose from! I know, good news all around after just five games last night. With 22 pitchers to break down (two are repeats after the Rockies game was postponed), let’s get right into Starting Rotation 5.11! 

Starting Rotation 5.11 – Main Targets 

Walker Buehler 

Mariners Rank vs Pitch Types – FB – 28th CB – 23rd CT – 7th SL – 20th

Those who have paid attention in Discord likely assumed that John Means would be in the top slot, but we’ll get to him shortly. I don’t often say this but I believe Buehler is the top option as far as high salary goes on this slate. For one, Seattle loses the DH as they travel to Los Angeles. For another, Buehler leans heavily on the four-seam and the Mariners are third-worst against fastballs with a top-eight K rate of 25.4%. Buehler has his K rate climbing and is just under 27% to go with a matching 2.99 FIP/xFIP combo. His hard-hit rate is out of place at 41.7% but I’m not sure just that is enough reason to fade him, especially when the swinging-strike rate and CSW are 12.1% and 30.1% respectively. I can’t imagine why –

The projected lineup could work in Buehler’s favor as well. Seattle might only have two lefties in J.P. Crawford and Kyle Seager in the lineup and no, I’m not counting Yusei Kikuchi as a lefty hitter. Buehler is giving up a .343 wOBA, .794 OPS, and a 1.80 HR/9 to the left side of the plate. If you wanted to give Seager a look as a one-off since he has over a .250 ISO and is the second-best fastball hitter on the team, it could be a low-owned great play. Overall, Buehler looks like a very strong option and has picked it up in the strikeout department the last three starts with 27 total punch-outs. The fact he’s under $10,000 on DK helps as well. 

John Means 

Mets Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 11th CH – 16th CB – 20th SL – 26th

Figuring out what to expect with a pitcher after throwing a no-hitter can be difficult. Means threw 113 pitches, which is a good bit. He’s also thrown at least 93 in every start, so I wonder how far above and beyond he went with the pitch count. You would still have to think a quick hook is in play, as Means is vital to this Orioles rotation. I’m at the point with Means that I don’t fear really any matchup, but the Mets are on the tougher side. It’s not particularly the power elements, but they are top-seven in wOBA and wRC+ while leading in walk rate and OBP against lefty pitching this year. Having said that, Means is sitting on a 30.1% K rate, 15.7% swinging-strike rate, and a 31.6% CSW. The latter two numbers are both inside the top 15 among qualified starters this season. 

His K rate has taken a significant jump this year and the four-seam/changeup combo is the main reason why, as they have 42 of 50 strikeouts. Means has the number one rating on FanGraphs for his change at 9.3 and the next closest is Gerrit Cole at 8.0.

It’s only allowed a .138 wOBA and possesses a 41.5% whiff rate. Means has both sides of the plate under a .200 wOBA and has been spectacular this year. The only small concern is how the Orioles handle him, and for that reason, I have Buehler ahead by a small margin. 

Freddy Peralta 

Cardinals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 24th SL – 7th CH – 4th

For a pitcher to give up five runs (including a grand slam), three walks, eight strikeouts, and still whiff eight hitters on 73 pitches is some kind of game. That’s exactly what Peralta did last time out but I’m ready to go right back to the well. For one, he put his foot down after a terrible first inning and didn’t let another run across. The opposing lineup also sets up beautifully for him as the Cardinals should play six righties and the pitcher spot. Peralta is currently striking out righties 51.5% of the time, which is absurd. His FIP and xFIP to that side of the plate is under 1.85 and St. Louis is whiffing almost 24% of the time as a team. That rate has a good chance to be higher if they’re facing this… whatever this whiffle ball is all night –

When we zoom out for the big picture, Peralta’s 40.8% K rate would be second to only Jacob deGrom, and the swinging-strike rate is 14.2%. The four-seam and slider have accounted for 50 of 53 strikeouts and both pitches are over a 32% whiff rate on the season. The walk rate of 13.1% is still a significant issue but he proved he can pitch through disaster, so I’m ready to play him again tonight with no issues. 

Robbie Ray 

Braves Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 22nd SL – 16th CB – 3rd

Ray has got things happening this season with three straight games over 20 DK points, one of which came against these very Braves. One of the reasons for that is Atlanta is 29th in every offensive category that we discuss, saved from the basement only by Detroit. It’s been fascinating to see Ray evolve this year into a heavy four-seam pitcher.

He’s gone from throwing it 47% of the time last year to over 60% this year while dropping that slider to under 19%. In 2020, the slider was the main strikeout pitch with 33 on the year. One of the issues though was an obscene walk rate of 17.9%. His K rate has dropped a bit but it’s still 25% while the walk rate is down to a career-best 7.8%. 

Ray has thrown the four-seam 279 times already to righties and has 24 strikeouts and only a .276 wOBA allowed. He’s found another 2 MPH on it and the slider, and the whiff rate on the four-seam has jumped by 5% to 24.8%. The righty hitters do have a .344 wOBA against him but so far this year, Atlanta has all of one active player above a .350 wOBA to lefty pitching. Ozzie Albies, Marcell Ozuna, and Austin Riley are all under a .270 mark as of now. Eventually, they will hit better against lefties but until they do, we can use Ray and his newfound abilities in GPP. 

Shohei Ohtani 

Astros Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 3rd SF – 28th SL – 1st CT – 24th

The longer DK leaves the price down this low for Ohtani, the more I’m going to continue to hammer him when he starts. In the last three, he’s scored 18, 21, and 21 DK points. That’s already a solid start but what if I told you he pitched 14 innings, allowed 21 base-runners, and still managed those scores? Ohtani has whiffed 25 hitters in those three starts and he’s not even at a full pitch count. The splitter continues to be absolutely evil, as hitters are looking for their first hit against it on the year.

It boasts a whiff rate of over 61% and is responsible for virtually every strikeout. There is going to be a start where Ohtani gets his 22.6% walk rate under control and I’m going to be there for it.

His ground ball rate is almost 60% and he’s given up exactly one barrel so far. Both sides of the plate are under a .290 wOBA but righties especially are struggling to make contact with a 48.5A% K rate and no home runs allowed. Ohtani will likely see six RHH tonight and that gives him one of his best avenues of success. Houston does boast the best K rate in baseball, but Ohtani’s stuff is different. They also are only 22nd in walk rate, so perhaps this is the one that everything clicks. The salary is just too low for the potential here when he’s hitting 20+ DK points despite a terrible walk rate and WHIP.

Brady Singer

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 27th SL – 22nd

I’m not sure why Singer is so cheap, but he shouldn’t be. I know it fell apart for him in the last start but he had some umpire issues and I think that cost him towards the end of his time on the mound. It’s impossible to be mad at him because the ump in question was Angel Hernandez. Someone needs to get that man out of baseball. When Hernandez did call a proper zone, Singer was pitching well –

We’re not that far removed from him reeling off 32, 20, and 17 DK points. Any of those outcomes would play tonight and he gets the Tigers, who continue to lead the majors in strikeouts. Singer is respectable at a 23.6% K rate and combining that with a 31.1% CSW doesn’t hurt either. The ground ball rate of 50% insulates him from damage to some extent, as it’s more likely Detroit will have to string together some hits. 

Even though Detroit will likely play six lefties, Singer should be able to get through it with a .286 wOBA, .632 OPS, and a K rate of 22.4%. It is a touch worrisome that five hitters have a wOBA over .370 against the sinker because Singer uses it about 38% of the time to lefties. Having said that, his sinker is only giving up a .246 wOBA so far this year so it wouldn’t keep me away at the salary. We could pair up Singer and Buehler for barely $15,000 on DK and I wouldn’t be shocked if that winds up being popular. You can play any offense you like at that point. 

Starting Rotation 5.11 – In Play 

Lance McCullers – As he is every time he toes the rubber, McCullers is in play and that’s especially true if Buehler winds up popular. McCullers can be a grenade or a GPP-winning style play any given start, as evidenced by his 13% walk rate. He does balance that with a 27.5% K rate and a 55.1% ground ball rate but the Angels ranking sixth against the curveball is a small concern. It’s interesting because we highlighted his lack of curveball usage against righty hitters in the last start. Sure enough, he only threw nine all start, leaning on his slider and changeup. The Angels are above league average against both pitches and should roll out six RHH. In fairness, McCullers has the right side of the plate down at a .266 wOBA. The change is his highest whiff rate pitch at 47.6% but it also gives up the highest wOBA at .347. With the metrics being a mixed bag, it’s best to leave him for GPP only but still in play. 

Marcus Stroman – I never like paying this price, but I wouldn’t take Stroman out of play either. Baltimore is about average in ground ball rate to righties, but they also whiff over 24% of the time and are dead last in wOBA to that handedness. Baltimore’s lineup does have four hitters with a wOBA over .350 against righty sinkers, but I still have faith in Stroman to put up a solid game. It’s just a matter of it being fantasy relevant. His K rate isn’t great at 21%, but that would represent his career-best number so maybe he has a touch more upside than I generally give him credit for. 

Madison Bumgarner – It’s time to take him somewhat seriously. I wanted nothing to do with him at the start of the year, and that looked solid. His first three starts generated a total of seven DK points. After that, MadBum has looked vintage while throwing 23 IP, giving up three earned runs, and whiffing 25 hitters. There is a very noticeable correlation with that streak –

The curve and four-seam have been largely responsible for his strikeouts and Miami is 30th and 20th against those pitches. The barrel rate sat at 14.9% last season but he’s cut it in half at 7.1% so far this year. His swinging-strike rate also has seen a big jump from 7.5% to 12.3%. It sure looks like the 2 MPH difference in his four-seam and cutter are making a big difference, and he’s looking for his fifth straight game of 20+ DK points. 

Nathan Eovaldi – It’s been an adventure playing Eovaldi lately, with two great games and two very poor games. This one shapes up as not the greatest spot for him, as Oakland is middle of the league in K rate to righties. Eovaldi isn’t a huge strikeout pitcher as the K rate is only 22.4%. His splits look poor to righties with a .319 wOBA but the BABIP is over .380. His FIP is 1.87 to that side and 2.05 overall. He’s not getting hit hard at all with a 4.3% barrel rate and a 21.4% hard-hit rate. I really wonder if the field totally ignores him after burning them in the Tigers matchup. If that’s the case, he’s an interesting GPP option, but I would only be interested in MME formats. 

Yusei Kikuchi – Oh boy, this is scary but the 2021 stats are very kind to Kikuchi in this spot. The Dodgers have fallen to 23rd or worse in average, slugging, OPS, ISO, wOBA, and wRC+ to lefty pitching. Only two hitters in their everyday lineup have a wOBA over .370 this season in Chris Taylor and Justin Turner. Kikuchi is using his cutter almost 40% of the time and has a .307 wOBA against it.

In turn, the Dodgers are 28th against that pitch and Mookie Betts is the only player who sits above a 0.3 FanGraphs rating. The K rate isn’t monstrous at 22.7% but the ground ball rate is 52.9%, which is 10th in the league. The Dodgers are 10th as a team in ground ball rate to lefty pitching. We know the Dodgers can come to life at any point, and the 27.3% HR/FB rate to righties seems unsustainably high for Kikuchi. He’s shown ceiling to a team like Houston and could have that same outcome tonight. 

Pablo Lopez – About the only two reasons Lopez is not the main target is because he just picked against these D-Backs, and we don’t always love that. He continues to fully breakout with a 25% K rate and the lowest WHIP of his career at 1.08. You also love to see the 28.6% fly-ball rate coupled with a 28.3% hard-hit rate, which helps keep the HR/9 below 0.70. The four-seam and the change have accounted for virtually every strikeout for Lopez this season and that is a small concern because Arizona is top-five against both pitches. Lopez is also worse to LHH with a .303 wOBA and will face five in all likelihood. Lopez has pitched too well to leave him out, but I don’t think he’s a necessity at all. 

Chris Bassitt – I’m not using him but Bassitt is having an excellent season thus far. His K rate is 24.6% and he’s only yielding a 3.5% barrel rate. Bassitt throws six different pitches this year but the main three are the sinker/four-seam/cutter mix, accounting for about 75% of his mix. What’s really interesting is his best strikeout pitch is the slider with 16 but he throws it under 8% of the time. Bassitt is also suddenly generating a swinging-strike rate of 12.3% and his career mark is 8.8%, so that is a noticeable shift. It’s one of the main reasons you could play him tonight if you wanted to. 

Kenta Maeda – He went from probable chalk on Sunday to sitting in a very crowded tier tonight. The matchup is different and it’s tougher, but how much tougher is it? The White Sox are two different offenses depending on the handedness of the pitcher. When they face righties, they lead the league in ground ball rate at 52.1% and it’s almost a 4% lead. The jump to a 2.20 HR/9 for Maeda might be mitigated by the White Sox sitting bottom-four in ISO to righties. They are league average in K rate at 23.6% and Maeda has dropped to a 21.2% rate himself. One of the largest factors is his splitter since it had a 45.6% whiff rate last year compared to a 20.7% rate this season. He’s coming off his best start of the season and nobody will touch him. If he can continue to get back to what he put on the field last season, the price is very low. 

Kwang Hyun Kim – This is low-key one of the better pitching slates of the season so far, as we have a ton of options that can work in my eyes. It’s hard for me to overlook Ohtani, but Kim is well in play for $200 less. The FIP is 2.65 and the xFIP is only 3.60, which is very respectable. Kim has the K rate at almost 24%, meaning he can take advantage of the 28.7% rate Milwaukee is showing. Now, the Crew continues to be a top 10 offense in the rest of our categories but Kim has the HR/9 under 0.51 and a swinging-strike rate of 12.5%. He’s mostly a four-seam/slider pitcher, and Milwaukee is fifth against the fastball and 30th against the slider. Kim only throws the four-seam about 5% more than the slider, and the latter pitch has 12 of his 18 strikeouts and a 37.3% whiff rate. The BABIP looks like it should come down as well as both sides are over .340. We can’t play everyone for sure, but with many options available we can make some fun pivots tonight based on where the field is projected to go. 

Dylan Cease – Quietly, Cease is putting up some serious numbers this season. The K rate is 32%, he has a FIP/xFIP combo of 2.80/3.57, and his HR/9 has gone from 1.85 to 0.59. Considering the K rate last year was 17.3% and the swinging-strike rate has jumped up almost 4%, what in the world has changed for Cease? Well, for starters his four-seam and slider both are seeing a little more movement and he’s using the four-seam more. The slider has already racked up more strikeouts than it did all of last year.

Cease is getting almost 8% higher on the swing rate on balls outside of the zone and has a 5% drop in contact when hitters swing at balls inside the zone. These are pretty major shifts, and it’s important to note he’s still just 25 and is only at 161.2 IP experience-wise at the major league level. The Minnesota offense is a tough cookie and only whiffs 22.9% of the time, but are beat up a little right now as well. We could get Cease before the field notices his improvements, but it’s not an easy matchup for him. 

Starting Rotation 5.11 – Out of Play 

Jordan Montgomery – We talk about the Rays offense against lefties often, because they whiff at a 31.7% rate which is the second-worst in baseball. They are also in the bottom half in our offensive categories, and you would think that means we’d have Montgomery in play. I can’t quite get there as the leash has been fairly short with him since he’s not thrown more than 89 pitches yet. The K rate is just over 21% and the hard-hit rate is 35.1%, so neither mark is super special. What really worries me is Tampa can play six righty hitters and they have a .351 wOBA and a 1.93 HR/9 on the season. That’s enough for me to pass on a slate this size. 

*Note – Both pitchers in Colorado are repeated since they are starting tonight. 

Dinelson Lamet – The Padres are being very careful with Lamet and he hasn’t thrown more than 30 pitches yet in either start. We’d be lucky to see 50 pitches and he’s far too expensive for that, not even counting the fact he’s in Colorado. 

Antonio Senzatela – The ground ball rate is 52.4% so maybe that helps, but the K rate is 13.1% and the Padres are sporting the second-best K rate to righties in baseball. Righty hitters are tagging Senzatela for a .398 wOBA, .973 OPS, a 2.25 HR/9, and a 5.77 FIP. I’m happy to pair up the Padres offense (among others) with Singer and a pitcher like Buehler or Means tonight. 

Chase Anderson – He’s rocking a FIP/xFIP combo that is both over 5.30, has a 17.8% K rate compared to an 11.9% walk rate, and Washington can mash lefties. Righties have tagged Anderson for a .364 wOBA and an OPS of .840. There are way too many pitchers to like to take this route. 

Matthew Boyd – It’s not exactly like Boyd is out of play, but we don’t have a category for “I like about 10 pitchers better than him” so here he sits. Boyd has been quite good, but the K rate is barely 17% and the xFIP of 4.96 is a pretty stark contrast to the 2.27 ERA. With a fly ball rate of almost 46% and an HR/FB rate of just 2.1%, it’s not hard to see why the xFIP is not his friend. The scary part is a lot of that xFIP comes from the right side of the plate, something KC is rife with. Boyd did just hag 20 DK on them, so it’s possible but I’ll be fine targeting others tonight. 

Erick Fedde – Righties have gotten the better of him so far this year with a 1.80 HR/9, .310 wOBA, and a 35.9% hard-hit rate. To his credit, Fedde has a 27% K rate to that side and Philly whiffs an awful lot but there a ton of options tonight. I’m not playing one that has a career ERA of 5.12 over 222.1 IP. 

Luis Patino – It’s very unclear what his role is tonight. He could just be an opener, he could be used as a traditional starter…it’s the Rays so who really knows. He had been piggybacking with Shane McClanahan but that changed Sunday. If we get news, this will be updated but this is not the slate to take a shot at a pitcher possibly going 2-3 innings. 

Bryse Wilson – We’ve seen Wilson for 54.2 IP in the majors and none of them have been all that good. The xFIP is 5.65, the HR/9 is 1.81, the K rate is only 16.9% (10.7% in 12 IP this year), and righties have a career .368 wOBA with a .886 OPS against him. The left side of the plate is even worse and the HR/9 is up over 2.60. That’s not where I want to head, especially against the Jays. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.11 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 5.10

We only have six games on the slate for Monday but the Starting Rotation 5.10 options may be less than half of that. This one looks to be a tough cookie and we may see a lot of the field gravitate towards a very small player pool. That means that we can take some chances as leverage, but it also may not be the worst idea to stick with the chalkier options and be different elsewhere. Let’s lay the foundation for the Starting Rotation 5.10 and figure out what direction we want to head to find the green!

Starting Rotation 5.10 – Main Targets 

Alex Wood ($9,800 DK/$8,900 FD)

Rangers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 13th SL – 11th CH – 26th

I would be surprised if Wood is not the chalk on the slate, even after a bit of a speed bump in his last start. It was in Coors so it’s pretty easy to overlook and Wood has been dominant across his three other starts this season. The venue of San Francisco helps Wood since Texas will lose their DH spot and he’s been great through 23 IP with a 25.6% K rate, 0.78 HR/9, 13.1% swinging-strike rate, and his 33.3% CSW. If he had the innings to qualify, the CSW would be seventh in baseball and he has a FIP/xFIP combo of 3.10 and 2.82 to prove that the 1.96 ERA doesn’t appear to be a fluke. 

The three-pitch mix is relatively even, but the strikeout distribution is certainly not with 18 of 22 coming from a slider. Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Adolis Garcia are the primary concerns with that pitch as both are inside the top 10 in baseball against it. Garcia boasts a wOBA over .350 but also has a K rate over 27% to lefties while Kiner-Falefa is sporting a .111 ISO to LHP. I’m also not sure how you hit this thing –

Wood is also holding the right side of the plate to a .186 wOBA, .400 OPS, and has a 30.8% K are to that side. Even though the price is higher than I’d particularly like, the slate dictates Wood being one of the most appealing options on the board. 

Tyler Mahle ($8,400 DK/$8,900 FD)

Pirates Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 30th SL – 2nd SF – 16th

Note – Most of Mahle’s write-up is from yesterday, with things changed just based on the new matchup. 

Mahle is looking to bounce back after getting whacked in the last start and gets a weakened offense even though Kyle Hendricks wouldn’t know that. He is quietly 10th in K rate in the majors among qualified starters at 32.8% and has the swinging-strike rate at 12.2% with a 32% CSW. His ERA/FIP/xFIP are all under 3.90 and when those numbers are relatively in harmony, I’m more inclined to believe them in the longer run. The nice thing is the HR/FB rate is 15.6% so that should be fairly stable, meaning the 45.7% fly-ball rate doesn’t have to completely scare us off.

It’s also interesting to note that the slider is performing differently this year. In 2020, it had a 41.5% whiff rate and a .253 wOBA. This season, the wOBA is .335 and the whiff rate is only 28.6%. It’s seeing less movement this year and I wonder if he gets this pitch “right”, what is going to happen. The profile already is strong. If the slider returns to 2020 form, it could get really fun. The splitter has picked up some slack as a strikeout pitch but the slider could still be a key for him.

Pittsburgh is only going to have three lefties in their lineup in likelihood, but I’m not that concerned with Mahle’s .445 wOBA to the right side of the plate. His BABIP is .393 and the HR/FB rate is 30.8%, both of which are fairly ridiculous. Mahle is still striking out 29.4% of the righties he’s faced and Pittsburgh is over 22% in K rate themselves. 

Kyle Gibson ($8,600 DK/$9,500 FD)

Giants Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 9th SL – 28th CT – 1st CH – 21st

Not only is he one of the few options on the board that we can turn to, but this spot shapes up nicely for Gibson. First off, the splits push his potential as he’s been fantastic to lefty hitters. Gibson has only yielded a .203 wOBA, .448 OPS, and 2.58 FIP to that side of the plate. The negative is the K rate is only 15.9% but some of that might be helped by the fact the Giants are third in K rate to righty pitching at 27.9%. The biggest reason the K rate is so low is his best strikeout pitch is the slider with 18 total punch-outs and a whiff rate over 52% but he doesn’t utilize it to lefties very much, just 22 times so far this season. It’s the strongest argument why the ceiling may not be as high as we’d like. 

Even having said that, it’s hard to overlook Gibson at this point. The K rate of 21.3% isn’t going to wow you by any stretch but the FIP/xFIP are both under 3.90 and he’s not allowing any hard contact, with a 5.2% barrel rate and a 27% hard-hit rate. The 52.2% ground ball rate is top 15 in the league and I can’t help but wonder if the 13.4% swinging strike rate tells us the K rate could get higher. Gibson ranks 18th in that metric and all 17 of the pitchers that rank higher than him are at least over 23% in their K rate. It’s at least an interesting comparison even if it’s not predictive. 

Jordan Holloway ($4,000 DK)

D-Backs Ranks vs Pitch Types – SL – 15th FB – 3rd CB – 12th

So the Marlins have not announced an official starter as of Sunday Night. Craig Mish states that Holloway should be getting a big chunk, and since Holloway threw 61 pitches five days ago, that would make perfect sense. It remains to be seen if he starts or if a Marlins pitcher is the opener, but either way, I’m ready to roll him out there on this slate. Holloway is 24 years old and has all of 10.1 IP at the major league level, but he possesses a big four-seam that averages 95.4 MPH and can get to the 97-99 MPH range. Additionally, he’s throwing his slider right about 50% of the time as his lead pitch and it has only surrendered a single and a double through 14 BBE. 

The 27% K rate he currently sports is interesting in and of itself, but Holloway has sat between 35.7% and 22% in his last three stops in the minors (albeit two years ago now). The swinging-strike rate is a touch low at 10.5% but the CSW is up to 32.1%. His two main pitches are both over 29% whiff rate so that helps a little. Since he only pitched three innings the last time, I have slightly less fear that the D-Backs already saw him. There’s not a lot of predictability in 10.1 IP, but the price is right. Regardless of starting or being the long man out of the bullpen, he needs to be paid attention to at this salary. If he can get close to 75 pitches and 15 DK points, Holloway could be quite the bargain and unlock the offenses we want tonight. 

Starting Rotation 5.10 – In Play 

Luke Weaver – Typically, he will be in the out-of-play category but this is one where we can at least think about him. Now, I can’t see much of a path to beat out the other high-priced arms in DK points. Past one random start against the Reds, Weaver has been under 11 DK in every other start and has no real business at $9,000. Why is he in play? Well, the Marlins represent possibly the best matchup Weaver can get. 

He’s using his four-seam and changeup almost 95% of the time and Miami is 20th against the fastball and dead last against the change. Weaver does have a 22.3% K rate and the changeup has his best whiff rate at 25.9%. The Marlins do not have a hitter over a 0.5 rating against the change and the .381 wOBA it’s given up could even out for this start. They are also 28th in OPS and ISO, which could mitigate the 46.1% hard-hit rate (yeeeesh) and the 1.82 HR/9. I’m not a big fan, but this has some potential to get off the chalk I suspect at the top of the salary tier. 

Luis Garcia – This is where the slate takes us, and I severely doubt I land on Garcia tonight. Still, we have to at least note the 28% K rate through his 24.2 IP so far and the hard-hit rate is only 28.3%. I don’t love the 53.3% fly-ball rate but at least the swinging-strike rate is 14.2%. The four-seam is only at a 14.6% whiff rate but his secondary pitches of the cutter and slider both are over 46%. They also both have a wOBA under .120 but the four-seam is at .395 and he’s throwing that one 46.7% of the time. It’s a very tough spot as the Angels are top-five in wOBA, wRC+, OPS, and slugging with a K rate barely over 22%. I’m intrigued by the talent but he seems pricey for the matchup at hand. 

Starting Rotation 5.10 – Out of Play 

Dinelson Lamet – The Padres are being very careful with Lamet and he hasn’t thrown more than 30 pitches yet in either start. We’d be lucky to see 50 pitches and he’s far too expensive for that, not even counting the fact he’s in Colorado. 

Martin Perez – The Orioles are top 12 in average, OPS, slugging, wOBA, and wRC+ against lefties this season and 14th in ISO on top of that. They are 29th against the changeup but Perez throws the cutter the most at 35% compared to 22.9% for the change. Baltimore smacks the cutter with the fourth-best rating and Cedric Mullens stands out. Not only is he the best cutter hitter in the league, but he also has a .447 wOBA to lefty pitching. Perez has given up a .332 wOBA to lefties, and the righties are over .315 as well. 

Mitch Keller – He’s coming off his best start of the year, but there are some underlying issues with it. On the year, Keller is throwing the four-seam 57% of the time. In the Padres start, Keller threw it 69% of the time and it stymied the Friars. I’m not sure that’s a good idea for Keller in this spot. Not only did San Diego only whiff on two of 22 four-seams, but the Reds are also the best-rated team against the fastball this season. Cincinnati is also top-five in all of our offensive categories and both sides of the plate are over .345 in wOBA. If Keller pumps in fastballs at nearly a 70% rate in this start, it could well be a short one. 

Jorge Lopez – I suppose there could be a path for Lopez to annoy the Red Sox with a 45.5% ground ball rate and the 24.7% hard-hit rate. The 6.14 FIP doesn’t help breed confidence at all and both sides of the plate are over a 2.00 HR/9. I will not the righties have a 3.64 xFIP and just a .322 wOBA but I don’t think I have the guts for this one. 

Antonio Senzatela – The ground ball rate is 52.4% so maybe that helps, but the K rate is 13.1% and the Padres are sporting the second-best K rate to righties in baseball. Righty hitters are tagging Senzatela for a .398 wOBA, .973 OPS, a 2.25 HR/9, and a 5.77 FIP. I’m happy to pair up the Padres offense (among others) with Holloway and a pitcher like Wood or Mahle tonight. 

Jose Suarez – We have an 83.1 IP sample between last year and this, and Saurez frankly looks terrible. The xFIP is 5.85, the HR/9 is 2.59, and the hard-hit rate is 48.7%. Righties have faced him 296 times and racked up a .443 wOBA, 1.071 OPS, .349 average, and a 3.22 HR/9. The Astros check-in as my top stack as of Sunday night. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.10 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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Welcome to the Sunday Funday edition of Aces and Bases.  Today we have a big 11 game main slate on Fanduel and that’s what we’ll focus on. 

First, Happy Mother’s Day to all those moms reading this. 

Outside of Jacob Degrom today, there’s no clear ace.  However, there are a few intriguing options that while they carry some risk, they should carry some reward too.  It has the make-up for a fun slate though.

With that being said, let’s dig in to today’s slates!

MLB DFS: The Aces

Jacob Degrom ($12.5k) vs. Arizona Diamondbacks – All signs point to Degrom making his start today.  Luis Rojas said after the game that he was good to go after throwing a bullpen and also playing catch. 

1.39 xFIP, 48% K rate, 23% swinging strike rate.  That’s all you really need to know about DeGrom.  He’s one of the best pitchers of our generation.  If he’s throwing, he should either be in your lineup or a strong consideration for your lineup.  I’d continue to monitor his status all morning leading up to first pitch, but all signs point to him being good to go. 

Sandy Alcantara ($9k) vs. Milwaukee Brewers – Brewers snapped their 6 game losing streak last night.  But they also faced a pitcher that isn’t of the same quality as Alcantara.  Brewers for the season are striking out at a near 27% clip vs. righties this season.  I wouldn’t call Alcantara a strikeout pitcher, but he’s been striking out about a batter per inning this season. 

With the Brewers striking out so much against righties, I could see Alcantara exceeding that average today.  Another encouraging sign with Alcantara is that he’s been doing an excellent job of limiting hard contact.  His hard contact rate for the season is only 24%.  One of the lowest marks of any pitcher going today.  When looking at pitchers, I try to find spots where guys can have a ceiling game.  Brewer represent that opportunity today.  

Nick Pivetta ($8.5k) vs. Baltimore Orioles – Pivetta is rolling right now.  Two really solid starts in a row.  One vs. the Mets, one vs. Tigers.  Today he gets to take on a not so scary Orioles lineup.  The Orioles haven’t been as bad as advertised this year.  But they are still an attackable team. 

Orioles K at a 25% clip vs. righties to go along with low OPS and wOBA.  Pivetta’s pitch of choice after his fastball is the curveball.  This is not a pitch that the Orioles handle all that well.  Look at some of the whiff rates below.  Again, I try to find ceiling opportunities for pitchers when they start.  Orioles today represent that opportunity for Pivetta. 

Some notes on other pitchers.  I also really like Tyler Mahle ($8.9k) vs. Cleveland Indians.  It’s a great matchup for him.  There’s some serious risk in that game with weather and when targeting pitchers, I don’t like that kind of risk. Lucas Giolito ($9.6k) has been performing much better of late, with 15 K’s in his last 2 outings.  A strong case could be made for him today.  I just liked the other 3 guys better. 

MLB DFS: The Bats

Boston Red Sox vs. Dean Kremer – Kremer is relying on his fastball more this season than he did last year.  57% vs. 51%.  His fb has been hovering around the high 92 mph range.  The good thing for us is that this is a pitch and velocity that the Red Sox tee off on.  

Alex Verdugo ($3.2k)JD Martinez ($4.3k)Xander Bogaerts ($3.6k), and Rafael Devers ($3.5k) all have ISO’s greater than .230 against this pitch to go along with low whiff rates and very high hard hit rates.  This is going to be a tough matchup for Kremer.  Red Sox are my favorite stack of the day.

New York Mets vs. Riley Smith – It’s been a while since I’ve written up the Mets as a stack.  They just have a really good matchup today and are finally hitting the ball well.  For the season Smith has an xFIP of 5.53, the worst of any pitching going today.  He hasn’t really been giving up the long ball much with only 2 homers surrendered this year.  But he also hasn’t been fooling batters with a super low K rate of 11.5%. 

Smith is a sinker ball pitcher.  Jeff Mcneil ($2.9k)Francisco Lindor ($3k), and Michael Conforto ($3.2k) have all had a lot of success against this pitch.  While sinker ball pitchers tend to throw more ground balls, the three guys I mentioned all have average distances over 300 feet against it.  I’m not as worried about the ground balls from them. 

Both Mcneil and Lindor are finally coming around with their bats.  They’re still cheap compared to what they are doing and what they can do.  Look for them to keep rolling today.

Chicago White sox vs. Mike Minor – White Sox for the season have been superb against lefty pitching.  They have an .847 OPS and a .367 wOBA.  Today they get to face a lefty in Mike Minor who has a 4.58 xFIP for the season, is giving up fly balls, and has surrendered 6 long balls.  This has the makings of a great matchup for the White Sox.  Guys like Tim Anderson ($3.8k)Yoan Moncada ($3.2k)Yermin Mercedes ($2.9k), and Jose Abreu ($3.8k) should all feast today.  

Other spots I like today for hitting are the New York Yankees vs. Joe Ross and Miami Marlins vs. Brett Anderson.  Miguel Rojas ($3.1k)Jesus Aguilar ($3.9k), and Adam Duvall ($2.9k) all could have themselves a day against Anderson. 

MLB DFS: The Wrap Up

Weather will be a major factor today.  The games in the Midwest all appear to be at some type of risk today.  So Detroit, Cleveland, and St. Louis all need to be monitored.  Outside of the weather this looks to be a fun slate.  We have the best pitcher in baseball throwing and some bats that should tee off!

Good luck and hope to see you in the green!

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @rangerzfan79 and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD 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 5.9

We have 22 pitchers on the slate today and some uncertainty right off the top with the status of Jacob deGrom in flux as of Saturday night. Regardless of deGrom pitching or not, we do have some strong names taking the mound today. If deGrom does pitch, the slate is pretty straightforward but if not we could see the field run to many options. Let’s dive into the Starting Rotation 5.9 and go through our options to lay the foundation to find the green screens once again! 

Starting Rotation 5.9 – Main Targets 

Note – I’m not going to do a full write-up on deGrom since we don’t know if he’ll pitch. It’s fairly simple in my mind. If he’s on the mound, he’s a lock for cash. deGrom is the best pitcher in baseball and if the worst thing I can say about him is the D-Backs have some lefties in the lineup, that’s no reason not to pitch him. deGrom is “worse” to lefties and that includes a 42.9% K rate, a 2.20 xFIP, and a .254 wOBA. That’s going to play and in cash, I’m not sure you can mount an argument to not play him. 

I’ve typically been in the camp of being overweight on deGrom in GPP, but this could be the rare slate where you don’t have to be. Look, if he pitches, there should be zero injury concern and the Mets will not let him out there if he’s under 100%. That doesn’t mean they may not baby him and let him throw 80-85 pitches. deGrom is so good that he could still pay off on that theoretical pitch count, but it could be worth a fade as well. If we have no news other than deGrom is pitching, he’s the cash play, a strong GPP play and you can get creative in MME formats but you must have exposure. 

Lucas Giolito ($9,500 DK/$9,600 FD)

Royals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 17th CH – 13th SL – 13th

Maybe I’m just not adjusting quickly enough, but I still believe that there’s an ace in Lucas Giolito somewhere. For starters, his 4.99 ERA is still far above the 3.30 xFIP and that is very encouraging to me. His HR/FB rate has spiked to 21.4% while he hasn’t been over 13.6% in the last three seasons. That explains why the xFIP is so much lower and why the HR/9 is spiked at 1.76. That’s just simply not who he’s shown to be over the long-term and the K rate is still over 30%. Even the swinging-strike rate is 15.1% and the CSW is 29.7%. Both are down about 2% from last year but it’s not like those numbers are horrible. 

His changeup has been more hittable this season with a .305 wOBA compared to .254 last year, but it still has 23 of 41 strikeouts so that is the out pitch. The whiff rate is within 1% over the past two seasons but the four-seam is down about 8% in whiff rate from 2020. It’s showing slightly less vertical movement but nothing so serious that I think it won’t recover to last year’s rates. The righty splits look worrisome against the Royals with a .381 wOBA and a 2.84 HR/9. However, the BABIP is also .323 and the HR/FB rate is over 36%, which is part of why the xFIP to righties is still just 2.89. This screams positive regression for Giolito at some point. The Royals are 13th against the changeup but have a negative rating overall and only two hitters (Whit Merrifield and Andrew Benintendi) are above a 1.0 rating against that pitch. 

Sandy Alcantara ($9,400 DK/$9,000 FD)

Brewers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 7th CH -8th SL – 30th

A weird thing happened with Alcantara the last time he started against the Brewers. He whiffed four hitters in the first two innings, then proceeded to pitch another five without one single strikeout. It held his DK points down to 20.8, but I’m betting that doesn’t happen again. Do you know how hard it is to go five innings without striking out a Brewer? His K rate is over 24% for the first time in his career and the WHIP is only 1.01, while the hard-hit rate is under 25%. A big shift in his strikeout ability is coming from his swinging-strike rate, which is 14.4% and that is 12th in the league. It’s pretty impressive and the contact rate is down to 71.4%, a difference of 7.3% from last year. 

With the Brew Crew still sitting top-five in K rate, Alcantara has some ceiling to hit. He scored almost 21 DK with only four strikeouts. What we have to like is the changeup for Alcantara.

He’s using it 13.2% more this year and it leads his pitch types in strikeouts at 16. It’s also the pitch yielding the lowest wOBA at .176 and has the highest whiff rate at 39.2%. When we look at that Brewers start, he only threw the change 15% of the time and got three swings and misses on it. If he had thrown it a bit more, maybe the whiffs follow. He is a bit worse to lefties so far this year with a 22.6% K rate and a 4.56 FIP, but the wOBA is still just .273. 

Tyler Mahle ($8,400 DK/$8,900 FD)

Cleveland Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th SL – 23rd SF – 7th

We’re not even that far into May and yet, Cleveland has already suffered two no-hitters. That means pitchers are going to be appealing to them and that includes Mahle, who is looking to bounce back after getting whacked in the last start. He is quietly 10th in K rate in the majors among qualified starters at 32.8% and has the swinging-strike rate at 12.2% with a 32% CSW. His ERA/FIP/xFIP are all under 3.90 and when those numbers are relatively in harmony, I’m more inclined to believe them in the longer run. The nice thing is the HR/FB rate is 15.6% so that should be fairly stable, meaning the 45.7% fly-ball rate doesn’t have to totally scare us off.


It’s also interesting to note that the slider is performing differently this year. In 2020, it had a 41.5% whiff rate and a .253 wOBA. This season, the wOBA is .335 and the whiff rate is only 28.6%. It’s seeing less movement this year and I wonder if he gets this pitch “right”, what is going to happen. The profile already is strong. If the slider returns to 2020 form, it could get really fun. The splitter has picked up some slack as a strikeout pitch but the slider could still be a key for him.

Cleveland typically rolls six lefties in their lineup and Mahle has owned that side of the plate with a .201 wOBA, .415 OPS, and a 35.1% K rate. The lineup should break heavily in his favor and I think he gets the ship right after the last game out. he fact this next pitcher is likely chalk makes Mahle that much more appealing in the right contest.

Kenta Maeda ($8,300 DK/$7,400 FD) 

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – SL – 22nd SF – 29th FB – 29th

Did we see Maeda getting it together in the last start or was that just a mirage based on the matchup? I’m not sure if we get the answer in this start, because the matchup is phenomenal again. Well, unless your name is Jose Berrios in which case you can’t strike out the heaviest strikeout team potentially in baseball history, but I digress. Man, Berrios and I do not get along. Anyways, Maeda is coming off his best DK performance of the year by a long shot and he recorded eight strikeouts in under six innings. The metrics still do not look pretty for him with a 5.24 FIP, 2.20 HR/9, and a K rate barely over 21%. However, there just might be light at the end of the tunnel. 

The hard-hit rate is only 29.8% and the fly ball rate is 29%. Both are very good marks and it helps sustain the idea that the HR/FB rate of 25.9% is wildly out of whack. Granted, the career rate of 14.2% would already tell us that but still. It’s nice to see other metrics back it up. Also, Maeda has a BABIP of .341 compared to a .277 career mark. His slider is a big culprit right now as it has a .308 average, .428 wOBA, and four home runs allowed. It’s interesting because the whiff rate is exactly in line with 2020 at 33%.

His splitter has been an issue as well as it’s being hit more, and the whiff rate has bottomed out to 20.7% from 45.6% last year. In this last start, the swinging-strike rate overall was 36% even though the splitter was still down a bit. However, the slider generated a 43% swinging-strike rate, as did the four-seam. It was a hugely encouraging start overall. The lefty numbers aren’t the best but the BABIP is .383 to that side of the plate, and the HR/FB rate is over 30%. Maeda is too good to pitch so poorly for much longer and could flirt with 30 DK again. 

German Marquez ($7,300 DK/$7,800 FD)

Cardinals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 24th CB – 27th SL – 6th

On the surface, this looks out of whack. Marquez is sitting at a 6.21 ERA and he’s been slightly worse this season out of Coors. However, the FIP/xFIP match exactly at 4.10. The BABIP is a career-high at .337 right now, which seems likely to come down. His ground ball rate of 57.4% ranks fifth in the league among qualified starters and the 22.2% K rate is fine, if not spectacular. It’s not helping him that the walk rate is 13.7%, easily the worst of his career but St. Louis should help there since they have the 28th walk rate to righty pitching. They also rank bottom-six to the fastball and that may come in handy. 

The fastball has been a little rough for Marquez this season. It’s giving up a .362 wOBA and only generating a 14.5% whiff rate. That’s not that far off last season’s 15.1% rate and both the curve and slider have a whiff rate over 46% so far this season. They have also accounted for 27 of 34 strikeouts so far, so if the Cards continue to struggle against the four-seam we could see a big start from Marquez. His road numbers don’t look great but through 16 righties faced so far, they only have a .227 wOBA. I’m very encouraged by that because the wOBA last year to RHH on the road was .236 across 79 faced. With the Cards playing righty-heavy, that’s in the wheelhouse for Marquez. His only two road starts so far have been at San Francisco, which is a lefty-heavy lineup. I don’t believe Marquez should be overlooked in this spot. 

Justus Sheffield ($6,400 DK)

Rangers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 14th SL – 10th CH – 27th `

We’ve hit the point where I’m willing to take some chances for my SP2 on DK, but not on FD and this would be GPP only. I would bet the Seattle/Texas game is going to draw some attention for offense, but both pitchers have some potential (more on that in a minute). Texas whiffs a little over 24% of the time to lefties but is also 23rd in OBP, 19th in slugging, 21st in OPS, 25th in ISO, and 20th in both wOBA and wRC+. Better still, they are sixth in ground ball rate while Sheffield is over a 47% rate on his own with just a 31% hard-hit rate. 

The projected lineup for Texas features six righties, and that should work to Sheffield’s advantage. He has a 20.6% K rate and a 1.30 WHIP to that side of the plate, with a .306 wOBA. I really like the fact that his slider should be heavily featured, as he throws it to righties a good bit. It has a 37.5% whiff rate and 17 of 24 strikeouts, so he’s going to need it. Both the sinker and slider have a wOBA under .300 and this isn’t a salary we need a ton of strikeouts to pay off. 

Dane Dunning ($5,200 DK)

Mariners Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 27th SL – 18th CH – 10th

Some of the reasons I like Dunning are the same as Sheffield, although Dunning has a real K rate at 24.6%. His FIP is all the way down at 2.23 and the xFIP is still quite strong at 3.22. If Dunning qualified, he would be about 11th in ground ball rate at 53.7% and that could help counteract Seattle sporting the lowest ground ball rate in baseball to righties. It’s not going to hurt Dunning that they are eighth in K rate, either with his 29.5% CSW. Dunning also has the wOBA to both sides of the plate under .295 and his K rate is even to each side as well, so the lineup construction isn’t a make-or-break facet for him. 

I’m not typically a fan of the sinker (call it trauma from being a Pirates fan and seeing Gerrit Cole and Tyler Glasnow be forced to be “contact pitchers”) but Dunning has his working for him. It has generated 14 of his 29 strikeouts on just a 15% whiff rate and he’s throwing it nearly 60% of the time. The slider and changeup are working with it as they both have a whiff rate over 38% and Dunning has only given up seven extra-base hits through 28.1 IP. For the cheapest price on the board, I can’t see a reason not to pair him with deGrom in some GPP’s to afford the best pitcher on the planet and still get some bats. 

Starting Rotation 5.9 – In Play 

Nick Pivetta – He’s in play by the slimmest of margins since I think he’s too expensive. I’m just going to play Giolito more often than not, though in fairness Pivetta averages more DK points this season. The walks are really threatening to blow up for him as it is 15.1%. Among qualified pitchers, German Marquez leads at 13.7% so that tells you how high Pivetta is. He’s throwing his four-seam over 54% of the time and Baltimore is 13th against that pitch, but the slider is right behind the fastball in strikeouts and the Orioles are bottom 10 against that pitch. With Baltimore ninth in K rate to righties this year, Pivetta makes sense as a play. I’m just not sure if the ceiling is there when he’s pushing five figures on DK. 

Domingo German – His tier of salary is pretty crowded, so I don’t think I end up playing him. Still, the 3.88 xFIP is encouraging and the 2.16 HR/9 is a bit high with the 19.4 HR/FB rate. German has generated a 23.4% K rate and an 11.9% swinging-strike rate, which are both respectable. The overall issues he could run into are the Nationals are top-five in whiff rate and they are 12th against the curveball, which is the most-used pitch for German. I won’t be surprised if he posts a solid game but LHH are the best way to go against him with an 18.4% K rate and a .277 average. 

Adam Wainwright – He gets the flow chart spot of Rockies away from Coors, but that didn’t work out well yesterday. I struggle getting Waino right and he got hit around in the last start. Colorado is ninth against the curve, which could be a large issue for Wainwright. The curve and sinker have 25 of 37 strikeouts for him, and the curve has the best whiff rate of any pitch at 35.6%. Keep an eye on the lineup. Wainwright has a .433 wOBA to righties, but a .247 mark against lefties. That’s a major split and the RHH also sport a 2.35 HR/9 and 21.1% K rate. Three of the Rockies hitters are top 25 against the curve in Trevor Story, C.J. Cron, and Raimel Tapia. Story and Cron are the righties and both have a wOBA over .350 against RHP while Story is over .210 for the ISO. I do prefer others right around him but have no issues playing him either. 

Kyle Hendricks – This man has been wildly up and down this year, with plenty of down. However, the Pirates may now be without Colin Moran and yes, that’s a big loss. Shush, I know the Pirates aren’t very fun. This is frightening with a 3.34 HR/9, 7.29 FIP, and a 6.07 ERA but at least the xFIP is a respectable 4.57. The 19.6% K rate isn’t that bad for the salary range and if the Buccos are fielding a AAA offense, he’s worth some risk with a shot at over 20 DK points. It may be best to not look until after the slate to see how he did. 

Tyler Anderson – It’s undeniably a tough matchup, but so were the Padres. Anderson has been a seriously good find for the Bucs this season, and he’s not being priced like it yet. His K rate is 23%, the barrel rate is 7.5% and the swinging-strike rate is a career-high 13.5%. The main three pitches are the cutter, four-seam, and changeup and they have all but two strikeouts. The only pitch the Cubs are above average against this season is the cutter, and that’s the third pitch in the mix for Anderson, under 30%. The righties are the tougher side for him but they only have a .292 wOBA and Anderson balances that out with a 24.3% K rate. Chicago whiffs 28% to lefties so I think Anderson gives up a couple of runs but still has a solid outing. 

Starting Rotation 5.9 – Out of Play 

Zach Greinke – I swear the DK algorithm for salaries is three games behind for some pitchers. Greinke’s last three starts have scored 17.8, 6.8, and 6.8 DK and somehow he’s $10,800. The FIP/xFIP combo is both over 4.20 and the K rate is down to 18.8%. Since the WHIP and HR/9 are both inching up, it’s hard to want to go after him in this spot. He’s also surrendering nearly a .340 wOBA to righties, not what you want when facing the Jays. 

Brett Anderson – I can’t get behind the price tag here for a pitcher with an 11% K rate (not a typo) and a 5.10 FIP. The ground ball rate is 55.9% but even then, Miami is sixth in ISO and ninth in OPS. This seems like a tougher spot, not to mention he’s been out for about two weeks and it’s his first start back. His lone start over 20 DK of his four so far came against the Pirates, so grain of salt with that. 

Riley Smith – In 22 IP this season, he’s sporting a 5.51 xFIP, 11.5% K rate, and a 1.55 WHIP. He was never above a 23.8% K rate in the minors, so the strikeout concerns seem real. Both sides of the plate are over a .320 wOBA so there’s not even a lineup that would look appealing to attack. 

Sam Hentges – The Reds have really scuffled against lefties as a team but maybe this is the spot they turn it around a bit. We only have nine innings from Hentges but the 7.75 FIP is ugly, as is the 4.00 HR/9. His hard-hit rate is over 43% and the swinging-strike rate is 6.6%. I’m not that interested in that. 

Matt Boyd – There’s no doubt he’s been much better this season, but I’m sketchy here. He’s coming off a knee injury, so there’s a risk before the game even starts. His best start DK point-wise came against these Twins, and they are missing Byron Buxton now but a knee issue just scares me. Even though he’s pitching better and has a 2.94 FIP to back up the 2.27 ERA, the 17.3% K rate is a small issue. I’d rather play Anderson in a tough spot. 

Joe Ross – The Yankees are still having some issues with consistency if nothing else but Ross has a 2.03 HR/9 so far this year and it climbs just a bit to righties. Furthermore, his K rate drops to 14.1% to that side of the plate and the FIP is 5.77. If you’re lacking strikeout upside, I’m not that willing to risk playing you in New York. 

Mike Minor – The White Sox eat lefties and Minor is getting popped for a 1.67 HR/9 to righties. There’s no reason to play him when the Sox are top-five across the board to lefties (higher now after last night). 

Dean Kremer – He is better than the 6.43 ERA shows, but going against Boston is not very fun. The K rate is 23.4% but both sides of the plate are over a .380 wOBA. 

Nate Pearson – Ghost is a happy man knowing Pearson is with the big club, but I think (and I bet Ghost agrees) we should pump the brakes as far as playing him yet. The results in the majors last year were fairly ugly with a 2.50 HR/9, 7.19 FIP, and 6.04 xFIP. His K rate was under 20% and the Astros don’t whiff a whole lot, a top-three rate in baseball. He did throw 78 pitches in his lone minor league start this year but only made it through 3.2 IP. We’ll be playing him, just in better spots. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.9 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 5.8

Saturday is here and it brings us two separate slates and in the first look, I really don’t love the pitching. These days can be really fun though because as we go through the process, we can unearth some gems as Brian did in his Picks and Pivots yesterday. I wanted nothing to do with Brad Keller but he was well worth the price tag. We have 13 total games so let’s not mess around too much and get right into Starting Rotation 5.8 to see who we like for both slates. 

Starting Rotation 5.8 – Early Slate 

Max Scherzer – It will be interesting to see where the field heads. We’ve documented the Yankees struggling against righty pitching, and the highest rank in any offensive category we chase is 13th in wRC+. Scherzer is leaning into the four-seam/slider combo as his main weapons and that’s a good thing. His cutter and curve account for around 18% of his pitches and both of them carry a .316 average or higher, along with a wOBA of at least .320. The bad aspect of the fastball and slider combo is six of seven home runs given up have come from those two pitches. 

Scherzer is boasting a 32% K rate which would be his lowest full-season mark since 2016. The HR/9 is creeping up as well at a 1.62 mark. New York is whiffing 24% to righty pitching so far and a predominantly right-handed lineup isn’t doing Scherzer favors this year. His K rate drops to 30.6%, but the HR/9 is 2.29 and the FIP is 4.63. With a fly ball rate of 50%, there are real concerns here. I prefer the next pitcher, but we’ll see what the field does. 

Tyler Glasnow – We have on this slate a top-five pitcher in K rate at 38.3% and then we have Max Scherzer who is more expensive. Jokes aside, I think there’s a case that Glasnow is still the stronger play. It did unravel a bit for Glasnow in the last start in his last inning of work, but he also dominated this A’s lineup two turns ago for 35.6 DK. He’s still keeping his curveball as his out pitch, throwing it only 14.2% of the times but racking up 30 of his 64 strikeouts and giving up just three hits against it. When the curve fails, he can just give them the gas –

The 2.06 ERA is backed by a 2.39/2.70 FIP/xFIP combo and the hard-hit rate is only 23.9%. The 17% swinging-strike rate is third in the majors and the CSW of 35.5% is fourth. His splits are relatively even and even with RHH sporting a .255 wOBA, I’ll take that for the “weaker” side. Ge’s hit at least eight strikeouts in five of seven starts and has been a borderline lock for 20 DK points with a higher ceiling. 

Jose Berrios – He may not have the trust factor the top two pitchers do, but if there’s a spot for Berrios to put up a similar score this has to be it. Detroit is just about ready to take the lead in K rate to righty pitching and Berrios is enjoying the highest K rate of his career at 33.1%. It also looks like he’s been bitten by some poor luck, as the ERA is 3.58 but the FIP/xFIP is 2.34/2.73. That’s a significant gap and this could be where it starts to get right. His swinging-strike rate is good at 12.5% and the CSW follows at 30.7%.

The curveball is ranked ninth in the league and Detroit sits 27th against that pitch. The largest fear and the reason he is still a small step behind the top two is the splits. Lefties have done some damage against him so far with a .341 wOBA, .776 OPS, and only whiff 26.7% of the time. However, the BABIP to that side is .378 so that’s where some of the bad luck has come from. If it straightens out, he’s going to be right there with the elite arms. 

Joe Musgrove – The shine has come off Big Joe a little bit these past couple starts, as he’s totaled just eight IP and six ER. Still, the overall metrics look very good for him. The K rate and swinging-strike rate are both top-seven currently, so we can’t just discard him. Here’s the biggest reason why I’m not super pumped to play him – his cutter. Musgrove has undergone a pretty large shift in pitch mix this year, which has mostly been good for him. However, the one that hasn’t played well is the cutter, which he’s throwing 24% of the time. It’s yielded a .308 average, .654 slug, and a .445 wOBA. The number one team against that cutter just so happens to be the Giants. On top of that, Musgrove uses that pitch more than any to lefty hitters. San Francisco also has 5-6 lefties in the lineup so if the trends continue, his cutter could be his undoing today. 

Corey Kluber – The veteran still has a FIP/xFIP over 4.15 compared to the 3.03 ERA, so there’s some small trouble lurking. He’s generating a 46.3% ground ball rate which is good to see and the hard-hit rate is only 28%. Kluber has tacked together two straight great starts and the price does worry me slightly. Still, the 22.7% K rate keeps him in play though I’m not sold on him having the safest outcome. Washington is getting a little healthier with the return of Juan Soto as well. Kluber has held lefties to a .221 wOBA, but righties have a .372 mark along with a 16.7% K rate and a 6.29 FIP. If he can get by Trea Turner, the other righties are Yan Gomes, Starlin Castro, and Josh Harrison. Only Harrison and Turner are above a .315 wOBA on the season so Kluber is on the table. It helps that the changeup is one of his two best strikeout pitches and Washington is 21st against it this year. 

Kevin Gausman –  He’s basically a two-pitch pitcher at this point with the four-seam and the splitter, but when he’s got a 25.8% K rate and a 14.3% swinging-strike rate, you can’t complain. We talk about not wanting to attack the Padres often but if they get to Gausman, it will be for the first time. He has two starts over 20 DK points this year and the Padres are 21st against the splitter. That’s the strikeout pitch with 26 of the 40 Gausman has recorded and it has a 46.7% whiff rate. Neither side of the plate is over a .253 wOBA and both sides whiff over 22% of the time. Gausman was on the Covid list due to side effects from the vaccine, so we shouldn’t have concerns about him not feeling quite right at this point. 

Frankie Montas – It’s so hard to sign off on Montas, as much as I would love to. Only his splitter generates a whiff rate over 29% but that’s also his least-utilized pitch, so that doesn’t exactly help. He’s throwing the four-seam about 23% of the time and it’s getting mauled for a .538 slug and a .389 wOBA. Montas is in single digits in strikeouts on his three main pitches, which isn’t great at this point of the season. That helps explain the 20.7% K rate which is the lowest since 2018. One of the bigger shifts might lie in the Z-swing rate, which is defined by how much a hitter swings at a pitch inside the strike zone. Last year it was at 63.1% but this year it’s at 75%. Three of every four pitches he puts in the zone get swung at, which is a lot. Montas is slightly better to lefties but that’s still a .319 wOBA so I’m much more likely to just use Gausman. 

Carlos Martinez – Now, this could be the spot to get cheap. C-Mart is putting things together with three straight starts of at least 14 DK and the past two have been over 22. Sure, those offenses he faced have issues but so do the Rockies on the road, and we’re not talking about delicious ice cream here. (Ba-dum tssss). He’s not throwing a pitch more than his four-seam/cutter duo at about 25% each. Neither one of those pitches are spectacular and the cutter still doesn’t have a strikeout. I don’t know how, but there we are. They do help set up the slider, which has 11 and a 32.2% whiff rate. Only Ryan McMahon of Colorado has a rating higher than 0.5 on the slider this season. I know the K rate for C-Mart is putrid at 14% but the ground ball rate of 47.8% and hard-hit rate of 29.6% can help him get deep into this game. 

Trevor Williams – The four-seam continues to be his main pitch at 45.3% despite it sporting a .363 wOBA against it. The only redeeming factor is the Pirates are dead last against the pitch, so maybe he can string together 5-6 innings. Metrics-wise, there’s not much here. He’s worse to lefties with a .397 wOBA, .893 OPS, and 5.48 xFIP. Righties get him for a 2.45 HR/9 so you could talk me into a small Bucco stack for value, like Adam Frazier, Colin Moran, and Bryan Reynolds. All three are over .330 in wOBA, Moran has a .210 Iso to righty pitching, and Reynolds is 20th against the fastball in the league. Yes, that means everyone else is awful against that pitch but they are cheap for a reason. 

Jose Urena – This will sound fairly simplistic, but two factors decide if I’m willing to gamble on Urena. The first is the ground ball rate. He leads the majors at 59.6%, which is a ton. So if the other team is sitting high in ground ball rate to righties, that’s a big checkmark for him. Minnesota is seventh in the league at 46.3%. We have one match, and the next facet is what style of lineup Urena could face. If it’s righty-heavy, that’s another check for Urena. The Twins should roll out at least six and Urena has a .214 wOBA, .455 OPS, and a 27.8% K rate to the right side of the plate. The crazy part is his strand rate to righties is 57.7% which is very low. There’s a path for another very solid game from Urena today, even if it might be a little scary to put his name in there. 

Chi Chi Gonzalez – There’s just nothing he does well that we would want to chase. The K rate is under 14% (yes, I know Martinez is the same but he has. much better chance at going deep into the game), the walk rate is 8.6% and he’s been a career 5.00 FIP through The lone shot he has getting through this game with a decent score is he’s better to righties, with a .239 wOBA. Lefties have a .385 mark and a FIP/xFIP combo over five but the Cards don’t have a ton of lefties. After Tommy Edman and Dylan Carlson up top, it’s righties the rest of the way. I’m still not overjoyed taking the risk there, and I’m aware I just stumped for Jose Urena. 

Wil Crowe – We have a 9.2 IP sample this season and he has more walks than strikeouts, the FIP/xFIP is 5.79 or higher, and the swinging-strike rate is barely 8%. He’s also thrown a total of 18 innings and both sides of the plate are over a .400 wOBA, so we can pass here. 

Starting Rotation 5.8 – Main Targets 

Clayton Kershaw ($10,500 DK/$11,000 FD) 

Angels Ranks vs Pitch Types – SL – 2nd FB – 23rd CB – 12th

Kershaw hit a speed bump last game with the shortest start of his career, so he’s well-rested for this game. Look, it’s not the most ideal spot but the pitching tonight is actually as bad as it looks in my eyes. He has his K rate at 25.8%, the barrel rate at 5.4%, and the swinging-strike rate is 15.6% which is eighth in baseball. The CSW is seventh at 32.5% so Kershaw is getting plenty of strikes. The slider is the sixth-best slider on FanGraphs ratings and the .313 wOBA to righties is being somewhat driven by a .333 BABIP.

Even better for Kershaw is no batter in the projected lineup has an ISO over .118 to lefty sliders other than *checks notes” Kurt Suzuki. That’s not the type of hitter that decides if we like a pitcher. Suzuki and Justin Upton are the only ones with a wOBA over .300 as well, so on a shaky slate, I’ll happily bet on a Kershaw bounce-back game. 

Lance Lynn ($9,500 DK/$10,400 FD)

Royals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 11th CT – 24th

This is almost by default, but Lynn might be the second-best option on the slate. He only threw 68 pitches last start, and he wasn’t exactly sharp but he did get through five innings. Lynn is a sure bet to throw 95+ pitches when he’s healthy and length is a great weapon to have as a starter in DFS. Lynn sports a K rate approaching 30% and a walk rate of just 4.1%, a great ratio. The splits are pretty even but he is slightly better to righties and the K rate jumps up to 35.4%. The most dangerous righties can be Salvador Perez and Whit Merrifield, but Merrifield is under a .300 wOBA to righty pitching so far this season. With the right side of the plate generating just a 13.8% hard-hit rate against Lynn, it very much looks like a night to spend on pitching and figure out a cheap hitter or two. 

Ian Anderson ($8,900 DK/$7,900 FD

Phillies Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 28th CH – 6th CB – 21st

I wonder if seeing Charlie Morton get mauled by Philly last night leaves Anderson in a weird spot. Some may be worried but this still isn’t the worst spot for Anderson by the metrics. Philly is still striking out 27.1% of the time, which is fourth to righty pitching. Anderson is over 26% for his K rate and has a 12.7% swinging-strike rate. It’s a bit worrisome to see the Phils rank sixth against the change, but Anderson’s version is ranked fifth in FanGraphs ratings.

It also is responsible for 16 of his 36 strikeouts and has the lowest wOBA of his main pitches at .219. The 42.7% whiff rate is easily the best as well and his 53.6% ground ball rate is 11th overall. The Phillies typically put out a lineup with five righties in it and Anderson sports a .246 wOBA, 0.38 HR/9, and 1.08 WHIP to that side of the plate. I feel like you could do worse tonight. 

Garrett Richards ($8,200 DK)

Orioles Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 17th SL – 22nd CB – 23rd

Let’s get nuts. I would only use Richards as an SP2 on DK, and when a pitcher seemingly randomly goes off for two straight starts, we want to figure out why. I credit Brian for pointing this out, but in the past two starts, he’s thrown the four-seam a little less and used the slider/curve combo more. Not only does that help with the pitch data Baltimore shows, but Richards has a whiff rate over 31% on those two pitches. In the last start especially, Richards only threw the four-seam 48% of the time and he generated 14 swings and misses. In the Mets start, that number was 19. These are serious numbers and helps explain why he racked up 17 strikeouts in that time. 

Baltimore is striking out at a top 10 rate to righty pitching, so Richards could take this new approach and conceivably continue building on it. The salary really is high but the hard-hit rate is only 29.4% and the 11.6% swinging-strike rate would be the second-highest in his career. Realistically, he’s had two very poor starts. One of them came against these Orioles at his first start of the year and one came against Toronto. It’s also interesting to at least note that he has 22 IP on the road with a pristine 1.64 ERA. The sample is small but he does happen to be on the road. On this slate, he passes as an option even at a very iffy salary. 

Starting Rotation 5.8 – Out of Play 

Christian Javier – To my eyes, I’m not using any other pitcher than the main targets tonight. It’s a very rough slate and not a cash slate in my mind at all. The options just aren’t good enough to do anything but play light and go for a GPP. Anyways, someone from DK has to explain why Javier scored under 10 DK points and saw his salary increase by over $1,000. That’s absurd. I’m not paying the top dollar on the slate for him, although I will say the 30% K rate and .184 wOBA to righties suggest he has a path to success. I’m just not buying it’s worth paying nearly $11,000 for that path, but I wouldn’t blame you if you felt differently. Javier has been outstanding this season. 

Dylan Bundy – Much like Javier, it’s not that I think Bundy is incapable of throwing a solid game. He has both sides of the plate to a .296 wOBA or less, not to mention a 1.35 HR/9 or less and a K rate of at least 25.8%. He just hasn’t displayed many ceiling games yet this season, with only one game over 20 DK points. That would be an expensive 17-18 DK. 

Steven Matz – Brian was also astute (and a little Mets homerism played a part here) in saying Matz had regression coming. Well, it has been hitting hard the past two starts as he’s given up 11 earned runs. Houston has the fourth-best K rate to lefties and is starting to crawl towards the middle of the league in the other offensive categories. Remember, they were hit by Covid and missed their main cogs for a little while earlier this year. 

Merrill Kelly – Both sides of the plate have a wOBA of at least .349 and lefties are only whiffing 11.1% of the time. With the Mets not striking out a lot to start with at 22.8%, I don’t see how Kelly generates a ton of fantasy points. 

Joey Lucchesi – Arizona is one of the best teams in the league to lefty pitching and stands out as one of the better stacks tonight. Lucchesi only has 10.2 innings but has a .437 wOBA, 1.087 OPS, and a 1.93 HR/9. 

Vince Velasquez – Vinnie Velo was excellent last time out, but the matchup is quite different tonight. Atlanta has the third-best K rate to righty pitching (Milwaukee is bottom-five) and Velasquez is getting hammered by righties with a .477 wOBA, 1.166 OPS, and a 5.00 HR/9 with a 10.21 FIP. 

Ljay Newsome – The 22.2% K rate isn’t enough to overlook a 5.52 FIP, 2.63 HR/9, and 45.5% fly-ball rate. 

Daniel Lynch – I’m excited for him to be in the majors, but the debut only generated three strikeouts. The White Sox are first in wRC+ against lefties and top-five in a lost everything else except for ISO. This is too dangerous of an offense to trust Lynch against and we can stack Chicago in this spot. 

Kohei Arihara – I’m not exactly excited to start a pitcher with a 6.42 FIP and 5.57 xFIP coming off an injection in his finger in the pitching hand that happened on Wednesday. 

Zac Lowther – He’s making his first major league start and has displayed a K rate of 26% in A+ and AA, but drawing the Red Sox is not ideal. To make matters worse, the fly ball rate at the last two levels has been at least 39.7%. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.8 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 5.7

The Friday night slate for MLB is as large as ever, but the pitching options are…fine, I guess? It’s interesting because there are quite a few spots that make sense, but I’m not sure we have a massive favorite as we’ve seen for the past few days. With there being a lot of names on the docket, let’s get rolling in the Starting Rotation 5.7 and figure out what paths we’re going to take for green screens! 

Starting Rotation 5.7 – Main Targets 

Carlos Rodon ($10,000 DK/$11,200 FD)

Royals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 7th SL – 13th CH – 21st

I’m trying to find a major red flag that would tell us Rodon is ready to fall apart, and we have to realize it’s only been three starts. Still, it’s hard to find the metric that makes Rodon unappealing. He’s up 2 MPH across the board and the four-seam/slider combo is doing some heavy lifting. Of the 36 strikeouts Rodon has recorded, those two pitches have 34 of them and the wOBA is under .190 for both pitches. 

They also both have a whiff rate over 35% which helps explain the massive jump in K rate up to 37.9%. Rodon has a WHIP of 0.64 and even with a no-hitter under his belt, that’s impressive. The barrel rate is just 6.4% and the swinging-strike rate is 17.3%. The Royals are not a big strikeout team at 17.9% but are bottom 10 in wOBA, wRC+, OPS, ISO, and OBP. Rodon has held RHH to just a .193 wOBA and he stands out as the top option if you’re planning on spending up to my eyes. 

Jack Flaherty ($9,400 DK/$10,200 FD) 

Rockies Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 8th SL – 16th CB – 10th

I’m surprised to see the Rockies rank so well in pitch data but it sure seems like that’s Coors-driven. Colorado away from home against righty pitching is pretty terrible. They are 30th in ISO, 22nd in wOBA, 24th in wRC+, 21st in OPS, and 27th in slugging. All of that comes with a 25% K rate and Flaherty has recovered nicely since his Opening Day disaster. His K rate is 25.9%, he’s got the HR/9 down to 0.79 after a 1.34 mark in 2020, and the hard-hit rate is under 29%. 

This is coming while pitching behind in the count more often than he would like since his first strike rate has gone from 61.8% in 2020 to 53.2% this year. Both sides of the plater are under a .290 wOBA given up and Flaherty has increased his four-seam usage. Even though it has just an 18.9% whiff rate, it’s still his best pitch with a .224 wOBA given up. Both sides of the plate are under a. 285 wOBA so far and there’s not much of an argument to leave Flaharty out of the pool tonight. He way even wind up chalky. 

Trevor Rogers ($8,800 DK/$10,400 FD) 

Brewers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 3rd CH – 9th SL – 30th

We get Rogers in a repeat spot but he has had one start since facing the Brewers. The last time out he gave up a three-run bomb against Washington but that was about it, scoring 12.5 DK points on just 77 pitches. I will say I’m not crazy about the price on FD since Rogers has only been over 85 pitches once this season. Even with potentially limited pitches, Rogers has a 33.8% K rate and only a 1.06 WHIP despite his 10% walk rate. The barrel rate continues to be solid at 5.6% and the swinging-strike rate is 16.5%, which is fourth in the league behind deGrom, Glasnow, and Bieber. That’s some pretty elite company. 

The natural inclination is to play righty hitters against lefty pitchers but Rogers has owned that side of the plate with a .250 wOBA, .550 OPS, and a 2.64 FIP. Additionally, the whiff rate on his four-seam is 35.3%, and has racked up 32 of 44 strikeouts. He does have some metrics that cause a little concern, but he’s also recorded at least six strikeouts in each start. With Milwaukee sporting a K rate over 29% so far against lefties, it’s not hard to see the upside for Rogers tonight. 

Julio Urias ($9,700 DK/$10,000 FD)

Angels Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25h CB – 12th CH – 10th

The results have been a little inconsistent, but Urias has been dominant so far by about every metric we use. The FIP/xFIP combo of 2.81 and 3.08 totally support the 2.87 ERA and he’s got the walks under control at 4.1%. His career rate is 8.4% so that is a very good sign. His K rate has also made a big jump and his curveball is a big reason why. It’s sporting a .150 wOBA .120 average, and a 34.1% whiff rate. It also leads in strikeouts among his main three pitches with 18 of 42 so far. This could be a strong reason for the curve being so good so far –

The best curveball hitters on the Angels are Justin Upton, Jared Walsh, and Anthony Rendon (who is on the IL). That’s not exactly terrifying considering Walsh whiffs over 38% of the time to lefty pitching. Urias also has the highest-rated curve in the league at this point. It is true that the Angels whiff only 20.7% of the time but Urias walks into any slate with serious upside. I’m not sure how much stock we should put in it but Urias has a 0.86 ERA on the road through 21 IP so far this year as well. 

Zac Gallen ($8,900 DK/$8,400 FD)

Mets Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 10th CH – 20th CB – 16th CT – 25th

I’m going to be very interested to see what projected rostership will be here. I’m going under the assumption that Rogers is chalk at $8,800 while Gallen is going to get left to the side at $100 more coming off a bad game as Uber-chalk last time out. I fate field leaves him behind, we have to pay attention because Gallen is wildly talented. His K rate has eclipsed 30% for the first time in his career and his barrel rate is only 6% so far. He’s dropped the cutter usage by a significant amount from 25.7% last year to 9.6% this year. That’s likely a good thing as the cutter gave up a .363 wOBA in 2020 and has a .526 mark so far this season. Every other pitch is at .278 or under so his pitches are playing well right now. 

Playing Gallen is absolutely GPP only since the Mets have the second-best K rate of 20.7% on the season. In addition, Gallen has given up a .330 wOBA, .718 OPS, and only a 17.9% K rate to lefties thus far. That could turn into an issue in this start but Brandon Nimmo hitting the IL doesn’t hurt Gallen in the least. This is a bet on a very talented pitcher who has a career mark of a .288 wOBA to lefties, and that should come back to Earth a bit at some point. 

Charlie Morton ($7,700 DK/$7,900 FD)

Phillies Ranks vs Pitch Types – CB – 21st FB – 27th CT – 14th

This could be a very nice bounce-back spot for Ground Chuck. The Phillies have the second-highest ground ball rate and the sixth-highest K rate to righty pitching. Looking at Morton’s 5.08 ERA, you might not think this is a spot he can take advantage of but the 3.67/3.45 FIP/xFIP combo tells a better story. The 16% HR/FB rate is very high for him and the 65.1% strand rate won’t stay either. Morton is rocking a 27.5% K rate and a 5.7% barrel rate to go along with a 51.7% ground ball rate. That’s 15th in the league and the 31.2% CSW is really good as well. His curve is the most-used pitch to righties and has a 45.8% whiff rate.

It’s odd to see Morton struggling to righties because that’s very out of character compared to his career numbers. With the length of Morton’s career, I’m leaning towards that evening out sooner than later and with the Phillies not hitting his main two pitches well, this could be the start to pull it off. When it happens, we need to be there because Morton has a .295 wOBA to righties in his career. Even now, the .333 mark isn’t completely awful and we can expect a return to form at some point. I really like the price point and the potential for Morton tonight. 

Starting Rotation 5.7 – In Play 

Blake Snell – I would rather play Rodon, and it’s still a concern to me that Snell is the highest-salaried pitcher on DK and he’s yet to get past the fifth inning. When you’re paying top dollar, you need the starter to have a pretty good shot to get deeper into the game unless he’s whiffing almost every other hitter. The 31.6% K rate is great, but Snell is suddenly having a huge walk issue with a 12.8% rate. He hasn’t been in double-digits since 2017 and the Giants walk the second-most to lefties at a 12.2% rate. They are also in the top half of the league in every offensive category we value, making this a difficult spot for Snell. Of course, it doesn’t mean he can’t get through it but he also hasn’t thrown more than 95 pitches all year. At that point, we can play Rogers in a better matchup for $1,200 less. 

Sean Manaea – He’s well in play, but the path is a little murky for him. The Rays are in the top half of the league to his main two pitches and the K rate is good at 23.7%, but not spectacular. Now, Tampa should help with that because the K rate as a team to lefties is 31.3% and they are under league-average in the offensive categories we look at. The lineup is better than the stats shown to this point in theory, but it hasn’t hit the field yet. My largest issue with Manaea is the .326 wOBA to righties because the Rays will likely throw seven in their lineup. His K rate comes down to 19.8% and the xFIP is 4.19. It’s not a crooked number, but it’s clearly the worse side of the splits for him and why I may be hesitant myself. We can’t turn away from the K rate of over 31% for the Rays here, even if it’s in GPP. 

Chris Flexen – “In Play” means MME style, because I wouldn’t be terribly heavy on Flexen. Texas does carry the highest K rate to righty pitching so far and Flexen isn’t a stud in that metric at just 18.4%. He’s also worse to lefties with a .353 wOBA but the BABIP is .389 and his K rate to that side is 21.6%. Of the four lefties Texas should play, three of them have K rates over 26% so there are reasons to believe that Flexen can go six strong here. 

Mike Foltynewicz – Alright, I’m ready to take a shot here. Foltynewicz is using his four-seam 61% of the time and Seattle is 28th against that pitch. They are also eighth in K rate to righty pitching and Folty is at 22.3% for his K rate. We obviously don’t love the 2.43 HR/9 or the 42.4% fly-ball rate, but he’s cheap enough to take a chance on. 

Starting Rotation 5.7 – Out of Play 

Eduardo Rodriguez – I’m really on the fence here, because I don’t want to overreact to one tough start. E-Rod has been excellent for the most part this year, but Baltimore has come around a bit to lefty pitching. They are at least 12th in slugging, OPS, and wOBA but they do strike out 24.2% of the time. It also does help E-Rod that Baltimore is bottom-five against the changeup and that’s actually the most-used pitch for Rodriguez. The xFIP of 2.80 says the 4.18 ERA is likely a little high and his K rate of 27.9% is a career-high. Baltimore could roll out seven righties and that does pose a small issue, as E-Rod has yielded a .334 wOBA, .788 OPS, and a 2.14 HR/9 to that side of the plate. I’m likely to go other options around him in salary unless he comes in as chalk (which I doubt). 

Jose Urquidy – The K rate is a large issue here as it is only 19.7% and his xFIP is 4.93 compared to a 3.71 ERA. It’s not going to help him that Toronto could roll out seven righty hitters and Urquidy has a .347 wOBA, .807 OPS, and a 16.7% K rate with a 5.69 xFIP. Toronto is 15th in wOBA, wRC+, and only whiffs 23.3% of the time. 

Zach Eflin – Much like Urquidy, if I’m going to challenge a good offense on a large slate, I want a reward. The 21.7% K rate that Eflin sports makes that hard to imagine right off the hop, and it will be the third start for Eflin against the Braves this season. One start, he scored 26.8 DK, and the second one he only scored 4.7 so the range of outcomes appears wide. Eflin is better to the right side of the plate, which helps at a .257 wOBA and 25.8% K rate. Still, I can’t quite pull the trigger but that’s just me. 

Zach Plesac – He’s using a four-seam almost 40% of the time and Cincy is the top team in the league against that pitch, which is an issue. Also of concern is the K rate is under 18% for Plesac although he is generating a 24.8% hard-hit rate and a 51.5% ground ball rate. With Plesac giving up a 2.12 HR/9 to righties and facing hitters like Nicholas Castellanos is not going to be an easy task for him. The hope for Plesac and his path to success is the Reds struggle to righties on the road. They are bottom-three in average, OBP, slugging, OPS, wOBA, and wRC+. I just want to use pitchers with a higher K rate in the salary range. 

Jameson Taillon – I’m not buying into the last game for Taillon since it came against the Tigers. The Yankees are justifiably being careful with the righty, as he’s not pitched more than five innings and he’s not thrown more than 84 pitches. He’s likely a bit better than the 5.24 ERA shows since he has a 3.86 xFIP but the 2.01 HR/9 is concerning. The 53.3% fly-ball rate isn’t comforting either and lefties are hammering him so far. They have a .404 wOBA, .939 OPS, and a 3.00 HR/9. Now, that’s coming with a .455 BABIP but the FIP is also 5.21 so there are enough issues with the profile that I would pass at the salary. 

David Peterson – The Arizona offense is first in wOBA, ISO, OPS, and slugging so far this season. While Peterson carries a 29% K rate and will be interesting in some spots, this is not one of them for me. 

Anthony DeSclafani – The only two great starts for him so far have been against the Rockies in San Francisco, so this spot is tough to get behind. With San Diego sporting the second-best K rate to righty pitching, I’m not sure there’s a ton of upside. Does 15 DK really do much for you tonight? 

Griffin Canning – I’m interested in seeing how he does tonight since he’s been using the slider more and it had a .290 wOBA, 15 strikeouts, and 47.8% whiff rate. His HR/FB rate is 28.8% which is absurd and helps explain the 3.42 xFIP compared to the 6.20 ERA. The issues are A. it’s the Dodgers lineup that can explode any game and B. they are 12th against the slider. Maybe another night we can use Canning and his 29.5% K rate. 

Ross Stripling – He’s sporting a 43.9% fly-ball rate, a 7.8% swinging-strike rate, 1.74 WHIP, and Houston has the best K rate in baseball to righties. 

Rich Hill – He’s been a wild ride so far and has three starts of fewer than 4.2 IP. That alone is an issue, and even Oakland being 22nd against his curve doesn’t do enough to put him in play. They are second in ISO, ninth in OPS, and sixth in wRC+. Righties have a 2.18 HR/9 against Hill this season. I know that Hill dominated them once this year, but I’m betting he can’t do it again. 

Wade Miley – I’m not exactly running to stack Cleveland, but Miley has a 54.9% ground ball rate and could frustrate this offense. The main issue is he only has a 17.6% K rate and a strand rate over 80%. 

Patrick Corbin – I’m not thinking a 2.70 HR/9, 5.68 xFIP, and a 16.5% K rate will survive in New York. Oh, Corbin has gotten annihilated by righties for a .462 wOBA, 1.098 OPS, 3.63 HR/9, and an 8.93 FIP. The Bronx Bombers will justifiably be popular. 

Matt Harvey – He’s been fine but we need better than fine against Boston. His first two starts against them were worth 10 and eight DK points, and I’m not sure we should expect different tonight. 

Matt Shoemaker – I think the way to get to expensive bats (Yankees) and at least one high-salary pitcher is the Detroit Tigers. They strike out like that’s what they get paid for, but Shoemaker is giving up a .370 average, 1.151 OPS, .479 wOBA, 4.66 HR/9, and a 9.62 FIP to the left side. The Tigers should have at least five in the lineup tonight, and the majority are under $4,000 on DK. 

Austin Gomber – I can’t get to a pitcher that has a 5.09 xFIP and a 5.5% K-BB rate. He’s getting roughed up by righties with a .356 wOBA and the Cardinals are top-six in all of our offensive categories. 

Tarik Skubal – We’re looking at a 6.83 xFIP, 3.27 HR/9, and a 3.8% K-BB rate. Righties have just worked him over at a 4.50 HR/9 and just a 12.5% K rate. Minnesota has the tools to be an elite offense against lefties and could put out eight RHH. 

Brad Keller – He’s gotten waxed with a 5.52 xFIP, 6.01 FIP, and both sides of the plate have a wOBA of at least .393. 

Brent Suter – I almost put Suter in play, but this will be his first start of the season and he’s not thrown more than 37 pitches yet. I would guess he has about 50-60 tonight and the metrics don’t look poor with a 3.63 xFIP, 22.4% K rate, and a 54.3% ground ball rate. Let’s see if we get a pitch count before completely taking him off the table. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.7 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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Welcome to the Thursday edition of Aces and Bases.  Today we have a smaller sized 8 game main slate on Fanduel that has a start time of 1:05.  So for us East Coast folks, we’ll know if we cashed by dinner time! 

Our slate provides us today 1 clear ace, 1 near ace, and the Tigers.

Let’s dig in to today’s slate!

MLB DFS: The Aces

Gerritt Cole ($12.3k) vs. Houston Astros – Cole is the clear ace of the staff today.  For the season, he’s k’ing batters at a 44% rate, has a 16.4% swinging strike rate, and 1.78 xFIP.  The Astros are a stingy team against righties.  K’ing less than 20% of the time. But Cole is a stud and will find his strikeouts regardless of who he is facing.  There’s also a bit of a narrative today as he’s facing his old squad for the first time.  

Zach Wheeler ($9.1k) vs. Milwaukee Brewers – Just when you thought the Brewers were getting some help with Yelich back, they got it taken away after just one game.  Wheeler’s start to the season has seen some very volatile performance.  He’s had a couple of stellar outings, but he’s also had some very mediocre to poor outings. 

Facing off against the Brewers today though, he has a chance to get back on track with a solid outing.  Brewers on the season are struggling against righties.  They have a K rate of near 27% and below average ISO, OPS, and wOBA’s.  Wheeler is throwing his slider more this season than at any other point in his career.  Looking at the Brewers lineup, they all average a whiff rate greater than 30% to this pitch.  If he relies on this pitch more today, this has the makings of a ceiling game. 

Nathan Eovaldi ($8.6k) vs. Detroit Tigers – If there is a half decent pitcher throwing against the Tigers this season you can rest assured they will be in my player pool.  In Eovaldi we’re getting someone that’s more than a half decent pitcher.  In just 6 starts this year he’s already reached the 40 FD point mark 3 times.  I see no reason why today he shouldn’t get there for a 4th time. 

Tigers are K’ing at a 29% clip this season to righties.  That’s high!  While no one would ever call Eovaldi a strikeout pitcher, he’s someone that can rack up strikeouts.  For the season, he has a respectable 22% k rate and a 13.3% swinging strike rate.  While my ace today is Cole, the matchup that Eovaldi has can’t be overlooked.  We’ve attacked the Tigers with Kluber and Pivetta recently with success.  Let’s attack them again today with Nate the great.

MLB DFS: The Bats

Minnesota Twins vs. Jordan Lyles – The Twins let us all down last night.  Outside of a Garver HR they didn’t do much.  Look for a rebound today.  They get to face off against Lyles who for the season is sporting a 5.29 xFIP.  He is a fly ball pitcher facing off against a fly ball hitting team.  He’s already given up 8 homers in just 6 starts.  He hasn’t not allowed a homer in any start this year. 

The odds of at least one member of this Twins lineup hitting a bomb is pretty good.  There are other metrics surrounding Lyles that indicates we should see a nice bounce back from the Twins.  He’s allowing more than a 40% hard hit rate and 11 barrels through only 28 IP.  Hitters are just teeing off on him. 

Washington Nationals vs. Drew Smyly – The Nationals somewhat let me down last night.  Turner did homer, Castro got on base a couple of times, and Gomes homered as well.  Outside of that though, they didn’t do much. I’m going right back to the well tonight. 

Smyly has not been good this year.  Like Lyles he’s giving up a ton of long balls.  9 to be exact.  He has a high fly ball rate of 54% and a hard hit rate of 39%.  Those 2 combined are just a recipe for disaster.  He’s given up 10 barrels in less than 20 IP.  So he’s giving up a barrel just about every other inning.  That’s not what you want to see out of a pitcher. 

I’m going back to the well because the Nationals have been, for the most part, pretty damn good against lefties this season.  They have an .826 OPS and a .362 wOBA.  Trea Turner ($3.8k), Josh Harrison ($3.1k), Ryan Zimmerman ($2.8k), and Starlin Castro ($2.3k) are all still very affordable and are set up for success today.  If Yan Gomes ($2.5k) gets the start again today, I like him too.

Atlanta Braves vs. Jon Lester – I need to preface this with saying that the Braves have not been good vs. lefties this year.  They’ve actually been pretty bad.  They’re striking out a lot and not hitting for much power.  That said, Jon Lester is no longer a good MLB pitcher.  He had his first start of the season last week and while the ERA looks amazing, the underlying stats show a different story.  He allowed 7 baserunners in only 5 IP.  His hard minus soft hit rate was more than 20%.  Giving up that much hard contact is going to catch up to you at some point.

Is today the day?  Guys like Ronald Acuna ($4.3k), Marcell Ozuna ($2.9k), and Ozzie Albies ($3.2k) have long track records of success against lefties.  They’ll come out of their funk at some point.  Hopefully it’s today against Mr. Lester.  Ozuna remains underpriced for his upside. 

One other spot I do like today is the Kansas City Royals vs. McKenzie.  McKenzie has 4 outings where he has given up 4 walks.  He’s got really good stuff, but he just can’t control it yet.  I don’t normally chase SB’s, but Whit Merrifield ($3.7k) at the top of that lineup is set up for a game where he can have multiple steals. 

MLB DFS: The Wrap Up

There should be plenty of offense to go around today.  Weather, unlike the last couple of days, shouldn’t impact games much today.  There may be some wind in spots, but the sun will finally be shining for all games.  

Good luck and hope to see you in the green today!

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @rangerzfan79 and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD 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 5.6

Thursday afternoon brings us a very nice eight-game slate with some interesting pitching options up top and some not-so-interesting options after that. It’s a fairly top-heavy slate at the first pass, so let’s see if that holds up in the Starting Rotation 5.6 and lay our foundation for green screens! 

Starting Rotation 5.6 – Main Targets 

Gerrit Cole ($10,500 DK/$12,300 FD) 

Astros Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 9th SL – 3rd CB – 23rd CH – 14th 

Just when you thought Cole was dominant enough, he’s adding to his arsenal. I saw this on Twitter when Corey Kluber dominated the Tigers earlier in the week, but the Yankees are making an effort to have their pitchers throw a changeup if it works for them. Kluber is doing the same thing but Cole is throwing it a career-high 15.4%. His previous his was 10.5% in 2017 and last season it was only at 5.6%. Why is this important? Well, his change has been nasty. Only John (Mr. No Hitter) Means has a higher rated changeup via FanGraphs this year. It has generated 14 strikeouts, yielded a .050 wOBA, and sports a 47.1% whiff rate. I mean, sometimes facing a pitcher just isn’t fair – 

The other pitches for Cole are the normal suspects and his four-seam/slider combo has 43 strikeouts and neither pitch has given up anything over a .212 wOBA to this point. His 44.3% K rate isn’t that far behind Jacob deGrom for the number one spot and his HR/9 went from a 1.73 mark in 2020 to 0.24 so far this year. All of this is to say that the Astros are not the easiest matchup, it doesn’t matter with the outstanding metrics Cole displays. If you want the narrative angle, this is the first time Cole has faced Houston after leaving in free agency. For those who may forget, Cole was not used when Houston lost in Game 7 to Washington in the World Series. He then wore a Scott Boras hat in the postgame and tweeted a goodbye message to Houston almost immediately. Sure, the man secured the bag but I’m not sure Houston ended on the best note for him. I don’t have much use for narratives often but call this a hunch that Cole wants to absolutely show out today. 

Brandon Woodruff ($9,300 DK/$10,100 FD) 

Phillies Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 26th CH – 4th SL – 21st CB – 21st

I’m not sure Woodruff gets the love he should with Corbin Burnes being in his rotation, but he’s having a phenomenal year of his own. The 1.80 ERA is basically backed up by a 2.14 FIP and a 2.99 xFIP, along with a stout 30.1% K rate. His WHIP is only 0.80 in part due to a walk rate under 7%. Nobody can get a barrel on him at just 2.4% so far and the fly ball rate is also under 30%. That’s the kind of top-notch profile we look for and then we add in the Philly is a top 10 team in K rate to righty pitching. 

Technically, he is worse to righty hitters but we’re talking about a .216 wOBA, 28.8% K rate, and a 2.54 FIP. If that’s the poor end of your splits, I can’t say I’m worried about the opposing lineup all that much. What I really like here is that Woodruff’s four-seam is the strikeout pitch, with 26 of 40 so far. He’s only allowed a .177 wOBA on it so far and it’s the most-used pitch to righty hitters. With Philly typically sporting a righty-heavy lineup and being bottom-five against fastballs, it’s not hard to see why double ace is appealing yet again. 

Danny Duffy ($8,800 DK/$10,700 FD)

Cleveland Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th SL – 26th CH – 28th CB – 7th

It’s impossible not to feel like Duffy is going to bite us at these salaries at some point. Truthfully, I’d play Woodruff ahead of Duffy on FD almost every single time but my word has Duffy been fantastic so far. The xFIP of 3.71 would be the largest concern since it’s a full 3.00 runs higher than the ERA but I don’t think the expectation is for Duffy to sit at a 0.60 ERA all year. The K rate is sustainable at 28.8% in my eyes as it’s not a giant leap from last season’s 23.6%. His swinging-strike rate has never been better at 13.9% and he’s leaned more into his four-seam/slider combo than last season. That’s working as they have 27 of his 30 strikeouts to this point. The velocity for the four-seam is up almost 2 MPH and that’s helped generate a 28.1% whiff rate compared to 21.4% in 2020. He’s also touching 96, just ask Bob Ross –

Cleveland continues to be a fairly pop-gun offense, especially to lefties. The whiff rate is only 19.7% but they are no higher than 23rd in wOBA, wRC+, OPS, OBP, average, and slugging. They do climb to 14th in ISO but that’s not something to hold back Duffy. He’s been lights out to righty hitters with a .203 wOBA, .427 OPS, and a 28.9% K rate. Cleveland is projected to have eight RHH in their lineups and by the metrics, it’s hard to ignore Duffy. 

Nathan Eovaldi ($8,400 DK/$8,600 FD)

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 29th CB – 26th CT – 29th SL – 20th SF – 28th

You may as well get used to seeing pitchers against the Tigers because the strikeout is king in MLB DFS. Detroit is striking out at obscene rates regardless of which hand the pitcher throws with. They have a monster lead in K rate to lefties and are only 1% behind the Rangers for the lead to righties. The K rate of 22.4% for Eovaldi is accentuated by the opposition, and the pitch data certainly looks like it’ll be an advantage for him as well. Eovaldi sports a 4% barrel rate and a 27% fly-ball rate, excellent combos to use him against a poor offense. 

His splits are about dead even as well, so there’s not really a lineup from Detroit that takes me off this play. What’s interesting is he’s really cut back on the cutter usage. That’s not a bad thing because it’s not exactly a big strikeout pitch, though it does have seven so far. It’s also giving up a wOBA of .320 so it doesn’t need to be heavily utilized. There are not many pitchers I won’t use against the Tigers. 

Starting Rotation 5.6 – In Play 

Zack Wheeler –  Is Wheeler in play with a 26.6% K rate and a 0.93 HR/9? Absolutely. Am I going to use him all that much with Woodruff sitting right there? Well, that’s a different story. Look, the Brew Crew are still whiffing at a top-four rate of 27.2% and Wheeler’s 12% swinging-strike rate is the best he’s ever put up. Still, Woodruff is cheaper on DK. That’s going to play with my head. The results for Wheeler have been a roller coaster on top of that. He’s had two starts with over 35 DK points and four with under 14.5. Wheeler has the four-seam up to 97.3 MPH and has 16 strikeouts with it, the most of his repertoire. It’s also sporting a .316 wOBA and the Brewers are fourth against fastballs on the season. 

Lance McCullers – I’m not sure I have the guts to chase this play but there’s a route via the metrics that it does make sense. His curve and slider are the strikeout pitches, with 21 of 30 so far. They make up about 50% of his arsenal and New York is 18th and 15th against those pitches, respectively. Now, he throws the curve to lefties and the slider to righties. There is a large concern that he hasn’t thrown the curve to right-handers, as that is his best weapon. Well, maybe because the slider is filth –

Not using the curve to righties is the largest reason why I’ll likely skip McCullers. He also has a 27.3% K rate which is high enough to see some ceiling and the ground ball rate is 53.2, which is great to see in New York. That would also be 10th in the league if he qualified. Lastly, the RHH are the better side of the splits for him. They have a .405 OPS, .220 wOBA, and a 255% K rate. The best metric against the righties is the 63.3% ground ball rate. I can’t quite kick him out of the pool on a shorter slate but he is very scary. 

Taijuan Walker – It’s not exactly the perfect match, but Walker could get it done for DFS at this salary. His walk rate is a big issue at 13.3% but the Cardinals walk only 7.8% of the time, 24th in the league. They also have a 24.8% K rate which is 11th so it helps hide some of Walker’s weaker points. He only has a 23.9% K rate, which isn’t great with a walk rate that high. St. Louis is also 14th in ground ball rate, which might help mitigate Walker’s 34.8% ground ball rate. Walker is better against righties, and the Cards should have a total of seven including the pitcher spot. He’s only giving up a .256 wOBA, .567 OPS, and a 25% K rate. The four-seam/slider is his best combo with 20 strikeouts between them and neither pitch has a wOBA over .240. Really, his largest issue is the sinker because it has all of three strikeouts and is yielding a .449 wOBA. The Cards are average to four-seams and sliders, so Walker is in play. Just ditch the sinker and lean into the 94 MPH fastball. 

Triston McKenzie – This is ONLY if you MME, and not much exposure at that. I just can’t in good faith let McKenzie go at this salary without looking at him. Yes, he’s been largely a disaster this year with a 6.38/5.09 FIP/xFIP combo but the K rate is over 31% and the swinging-strike rate is 14.2%, ups from last year. In fairness, the walk rate is also up to over 21% so that looms large. His slider and curve make up about 28% of his pitches and they’ve yet to yield a hit and both have a whiff rate of at least 50%. The four-seam has been the issue with a .523 slug, .421 wOBA, and down 1 MPH in velocity. Last year, he had a .328 slug and a .299 wOBA on that pitch. Kansas City is seventh against the fastball, which is worrisome. I do like he’s got RHH down at a .282 wOBA and a 39.1% K rate, so perhaps this is a get-right spot for the young man. He’s too talented to continue down this route. 

Starting Rotation 5.6 – Out of Play 

Hyun Jin Ryu – If we didn’t have better options, I might be more inclined to play Ryu here. The glute injury isn’t a major concern but the matchup certainly is. Oakland can get after lefty pitchers and Ryu has seen the K rate drop down to 23.4%, although in fairness the 13.3% swinging-strike rate and the 32.2% CSW are both career highs. Ryu has been just alright to righties with a .322 wOBA and an OPS of .758. I’d rather go elsewhere today. 

Michael Pineda – Sure, the Rangers lead the league in K rate but the scary hitters tend to be on the left side and Pineda struggles with that side. They’ve gotten to him for a .313 wOBA, .720+ OPS, 2.31 HR/9, and a 5.25/4.97 FIP/xFIP combo. That’s not what I’m chasing today, although I admit it wouldn’t shock me if Pineda had more than six strikeouts. 

Drew Smyly – The Nationals can hammer lefties and they stand out as one of, if not the best stacks on the slate. Smyly has a 4.26 HR/9, 8.05 ERA, 8.48 FIP, 1.53 WHIP, a 54.1% fly-ball rate, and a hard-hit rate approaching 40%. Hello Washington Nationals. 

John Gant – He’s getting worked by lefties with a .357 wOBA, .782 OPS, and a 6.09 xFIP. The Mets have been tilting this year but I have zero interest in Gant for the Starting Rotation 5.6. 

Spencer Turnbull – He has a toolkit that could frustrate Boston, but the 17.9% K rate really isn’t worth the risk. What worries me about playing Boston is the 51.1% ground ball rate for Turnbull and the 18.4% hard-hit rate. Having said those things, his 6.9% (yeeeeeesh) K rate to righties and 5.28 xFIP will likely come back to bite him against a good Boston offense. 

Jon Lester – Brian is going to HATE this, but I have to say it. 

whispers, barely audible

The Braves have been absolute trash to lefties this season. 

There, I said it. They got no-hit by the husk of Madison Bumgarner, guys. Come. On. As a team, they have the sixth-highest K rate (irrelevant with Lester) and sit 29th in average, OBP, slugging, OPS, wOBA, and wRC+. The highest rank is ISO, but they are only 20th in that metric. Through his first five IP, Lester had a 4.98 xFIP and 5.75 xERA even though he didn’t give up a run. That’s absolutely the Lester line, and I am NOT playing him. I’m just saying that while I will have an Atlanta stack because I play Picks and Pivots, this has Lester getting the last laugh on us written all over it. Man, I want to be wrong here. 

Mike Fiers – He’s only pitched six innings this year, but the last two years his K rate has been 16.7%, 14.4%, and then 12% in his first start. I want much higher potential if I pick on the Blue Jays lineup. Fiers also emerged from that first start with a FIP over 7.00 and a 15% barrel rate. 

Jordan Lyles – He’s up to a 2.57 HR/9, 6.14 FIP, 11.5% barrel rate, and just an 18% K rate. The fly ball rate and hard-hit rate are both over 40% which is a very poor combo. Lastly, righties have a .451 wOBA, 1.091 OPS, .343 average, and a massive 3.71 HR/9. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.6 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 5.5

We have another double-digit slate ahead of us with 11 games on the docket and another evening where there is a clear-cut stud to anchor our cash lineups with. Hopefully, we get to play him tonight. Tuesday saw Jacob deGrom scratched with right lat tightness, something we certainly don’t want to see. Let’s dig into the Starting Rotation 5.5 and figure out who we want to play after the ace to round out our lineups for green screens! 

Starting Rotation 5.5 – Main Targets

Shane Bieber ($10,400 DK/$12,200 FD)

Royals Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 5th CB – 18th SL – 12th

With mortal pitchers, the data would be a concern since the Royals are 12th or better against two pitchers. That’s not something I sweat with pitchers like Bieber. He is fourth in K rate at 39.7% and the Royals whiff 22.5% of the time. That’s top-five but again, it’s Bieber so I’m not nearly as worried about it. The righty is difficult to square up with a 25.8% hard-hit rate and the swinging-strike rate of 19.1% is third in the majors. The slider has been his best-rated pitch as it is second in the league in FanGraphs ratings and we can understand why, and it doesn’t matter which side of the plate you’re on –

Bieber has really increased the usage this season from 11% last year and it has also given up the lowest average, slug, and wOBA so far with a 54.3% whiff rate. That’s the highest mark of his three main pitches and it’s interesting to see Whit Merrifield is the worst hitter against the slider on the Royals. The top three are Carlos Santana, Nicky Lopez, and Salvador Perez. With Bieber dominating the right side of the plate with a .207 wOBA, .159 average, and a 2.08 FIP those concerns really lessen. To my eyes, there really isn’t a strong argument he’s not the best option on the slate. 

Yu Darvish ($10,200 DK/$11,800 FD)

Pirates Ranks vs Pitch Types – CT – 14th SL – 4th FB – 30th CB – 29th

Darvish throws a veritable cornucopia of pitches, so the data as far as the slider and cutter don’t give me much pause in pitching him. Even the Pitching Ninja can’t name some of his pitches (I’d just label this as “evil” myself) –

After Opening Day, Darvish has been as sharp as ever and virtually everything is in line with last season. The xFIP at 3.53 compared to the ERA at 2.13 says he might have a little recession but it’s nothing that’s too scary. That’s especially true when the K rate is 32.9%, the WHIP is 0.89, and the opponent whiffs 23.2% of the time. My Buccos are also no higher than 20th in slugging, OPS, ISO, wOBA, and wRC+ so far this season (with little reason to expect it to get better). 

The good news is even if you’re slightly worried about the slider, Darvish has the highest-rated one in the majors. It leads his strikeout totals with 12 and he’s allowed exactly one hit off it across 23 batted ball events. Neither side of the plate has a wOBA over .275 and both sides are striking out over 30% of the time. Just like last night, it’s pretty easy to build a strong case for double aces in any format. 

Martin Perez ($6,600 DK/$6,700 FD)

Tigers Ranks vs Pitch Types – CT – 29th CH – 23rd FB – 29th CB – 26th

Perez has had a relatively shaky year but did just prove he can take advantage of a good matchup. They don’t get better for lefty pitching than the Detroit Tigers. They whiff at an absurd 37.7% rate so far this season to lefty pitching. When they make contact, it’s not going well then either and that’s being kind. They are dead last in every single offensive category we value. This is the best matchup in baseball, even if a pitcher like Perez isn’t always on our radar. He’s suffering through a .348 BABIP right now but the K rate is 20.8% which would be the first time he’s been over 20% in his career. Perez isn’t getting hit hard either with a 4.3% barrel rate and a 21.4% hard-hit rate. The splits are very even across the board and Perez should be able to get through six innings with 5-6 strikeouts. It’s hard not to attack the Tigers anytime they face a southpaw. 

Brady Singer ($5,500 DK)

Cleveland’s Ranks vs Pitch Types – FB – 25th SL – 22nd

I’m at a loss here because Singer is wildly cheap and I can’t particularly understand why. Sure, the last start resulted in 0.9 DK points but he left that one after two innings with a slight injury. There seem to be no concerns about anything tonight, and the price went from $7,000 to $5,500. In the previous three starts, Singer accumulated 18 innings, gave up two earned runs, and racked up 20 strikeouts.

That fits with his 26.3% K rate, 51.6% ground ball rate, and a 27.4% hard-hit rate. The FIP/xFIP combo are both under 3.60, while he’s generating a 9.2% swinging-strike rate. There is some small concern that lefties hit him better with a .293 wOBA but it’s not like that mark is all that bad. Cleveland is striking out a ton against righties at 25.6%, eighth-most in baseball. Singer should not be this cheap and if you decide to not go with the double ace approach, he could be an elite salary-saver. 

J.T. Brubaker ($6,900 DK/$7,500 FD)

Padres Ranks vs Pitch Types – SL – 6th FB – 27th CB – 6th CH – 22nd

This is likely only in very deep GPP, but Brubaker has started the year extremely well. The xFIP of 3.24 isn’t terribly far off the 2.63 ERA and even the 3.91 FIP isn’t poor. The Padres don’t strike out much at 21.3% and that is the second-best mark but Brubaker is over 26% himself. When he’s not striking hitters out, the ground ball rate is 54.2% and the Padres have the fifth-highest ground ball rate in baseball to righty pitching. This is from 2020, but you can get an idea of what that slider does when it’s working –

One aspect that has been very impressive so far is the 13.6% swinging-strike rate, which I did not expect. There is a fair concern with the .374 wOBA and .869 OPS to righty hitting, especially with Fernando Tatis, Manny Machado, and Wil Myers likely in the lineup. Even then, it feels like the .324 BABIP to the side is high and Brubaker has face two righty-heavy lineups in his last two starts. 

Starting Rotation 5.5 – In Play 

Walker Buehler – This portion and the next pitcher were stolen from previous articles. With the scheduling issues in Chicago, both starters have already been written up. 

Buehler is always in play and he’s always one of my least favorites to actually use. With Bieber and Darvish on the mound, he will not be a primary target for me. I can’t explain it but he always burns me no matter my decision. He’s really talented, with a 25.4% K rate and both the FIP/xFIP are 3.30 or under. The barrel rate isn’t exceptional at over 12% but the Cubs are whiffing almost 29% of the time, fourth-most in MLB. They should also have five RHH and the pitcher’s spot, and Buehler is holding righties to a .200 wOBA and .194 average. Lefties are getting him for a .371 wOBA and a 2.08 HR/9. I’m likely to stay clear of this spot and perhaps use a Cubs lefty as a one-off, like Anthony Rizzo. 

Adbert Alzolay – On paper, I’d likely pass but he could be breaking out to some extent. Azlolay has had a solid 21 IP so far with a 3.78/3.51 FIP/xFIP combo. The K rate is very interesting at 28.4% with a 0.90 WHIP, not to mention a hard-hit rate under 28% and a swinging-strike rate of 14.3%. He’s using the slider 47.2% of the time which is a massive jump from 2020. It was only thrown 6.7% of the time last year but in 2021, it has 17 of 23 strikeouts, a .146 wOBA, and a 40.5% whiff rate. The Dodgers are not ideal, but I’m leaving Azlolay on the table. 

Freddy Peralta – When you’re one of five pitchers who has a K rate over 40%, you’re going to be in play every single slate. Philly is 26th against the fastball and 19th against the slider, which Peralta throws about 90% of the time. They also have a top 10 K rate to righty pitching, so there is upside for Peralta. The 12.5% walk rate is super high but he’s got the WHIP right at 1.00 and the hard-hit rate under 30%. With a 14.7% swinging-strike rate, he can make up for some mistakes but the fear is always he’s too wild to have a big game. The 51.8% K rate to righty pitching could really sync up well against the Phillies since they normally have four. The lefties like Brad Miller and Odubel Herrera aren’t exactly reasons to avoid Peralta. 

Johan Oviedo

*NOTE* Oviedo is scheduled to start Game 2 of the double-header and I’m still fine using pitchers in the short seven inning games.

The 23-year old has been impressive so far through just 9.2 IP, with a 29.7% K rate, a 3.42 FIP/3.17 xFIP combo, and a 0.93 WHIP. The ground ball rate is 50% and the hard-hit rate is 27.3%, a great thing to see with strikeout upside. The swinging-strike rate is an eye-popping 17.9% which would be fourth in the majors over a larger sample size. The righty sits at 96 MPH on his fastball but the strikeout star to this point is the slider with six of 11 strikeouts. It possesses a 54.2% whiff rate and just a .225 wOBA. The Mets are just 20th against that pitch and Oviedo whiffs both sides of the plate at least 27.3%. Color me intrigued. 

Andrew Heaney – He did us wrong last time out but that doesn’t change the matchup for this spot. Tampa is over 31% in the K rate to lefty pitching, which speaks to the upside for Heaney. The Rays are average against the curveball and Heaney has a 43.8% whiff rate on the said pitch. Heaney has a 3.00 xFIP and 3.69 FIP, which sport a big gap between the 5.25 ERA. The K rate is a massive 35.1% and that is 10th in the league among starters with at least 20 IP. There’s really no reason why we can’t use Heaney tonight, even if there is never that trust factor with him. 

Starting Rotation 5.5 – Out of Play 

Chris Bassitt – The game log watcher might be tempted as he’s exceeded 21 DK for three straight starts. However, the Tigers, Orioles, and Rays aren’t exactly a gauntlet for opposing pitchers. Bassitt is a totally solid pitcher with a 24.4% K rate and 45.8% ground ball rate but I’m not in love with the price. The 12.1% swinging-strike rate promises potential as well, but perhaps we wait until he faces a better matchup. 

Jordan Montgomery – It’s funny to see his price stay relatively stagnant after we talked about Singer. Montgomery has a 22% K rate but the FIP of 4.87 isn’t totally encouraging. Houston is slightly above average against the main pitch for Montgomery in the changeup and he’s giving up a .340 wOBA, .791 OPS, and a 2.25 HR/9 to the right side of the plate. 

Marcus Stroman – I’m out at this price tag. I love Stro as a pitcher but when the absolute ceiling strikeout game (eight last time out) generates 24.9 DK, that’s not exactly great. Even if Stroman keeps up the 20.4% K rate he has going right now, the salary is high. I’m not chasing a ceiling game from a ground ball pitcher. 

Luis Garcia – I generally won’t run to play pitchers with under 35 IP in the majors in Yankee Stadium, as the Yanks are heating up. To his credit, the wOBA to RHH is just .223 but the fly ball of 55.2% is scary as all get out. The 14.8% swinging-strike rate and 24.7% K rate leave me interested….in a different spot. 

Ryan Yarbrough – I don’t have anything all that bad to say about Yarbrough as he carries a 4.32 xFIP and 18.1% K rate. We talked last night about why the Angels aren’t that scary of a matchup to lefties but there’s not much to sink our teeth into here. I’d rather just slide down further in salary. 

Chase Anderson – Milwaukee is whiffing at a top 10 rate to lefties, but they also are top-eight in wOBA, wRC+, ISO, OPS, and OBP. The K rate is under 20% while the walk rate is over 10% and I can’t find much reason to go here. It’s not like he’s a ground ball machine at 36.4% either. 

Robbie Ray – I’d love to play him as he’s been much better this season but it’s just too scary. The ERA is 2.78 but the FIP and the xFIP are both over 4.30 and he’s sporting a strand rate of 93.5%. The K rate is under 22% which is a fairly big shift from him. His slider has seen a major shift as it had 33 strikeouts last year and just one this year. His four-seam has gained 2 MPH on it and is generating a .260 wOBA but only a 22% whiff rate. I’m not exactly buy-in the upside against the A’s with more limited K upside than we’re used to with Ray. 

Erick Fedde – I’m not playing him but I’m approaching the Braves with some slight caution. His cutter has been a good weapon for him and he’s using it almost 29% of the time. On 17 BBE, it’s only given up a .110 wOBA and a .125 slug. It’s the fourth-ranked cutter in the majors right now. His career K rate is 16.4% but this season it’s 25.8%, which is wildly out of character. Fedde has also been better to RHH this year with a .260 wOBA and a 30.6% K rate. It’s interesting to note that he has distinct home/road splits. His IP have been almost evenly split but through 116 at home, the ERA is 5.97. On the road throughout 100.1 IP, the EA is 3.95. 

Max Fried – There has been a three-week layoff due to injury and Fried is sporting a 6.29 FIP and 4.19 xFIP. The HR/9 is 2.45 and the ground ball rate went from 53% last year to 41.5% this year in 11 IP. I truly believe we need to see something before we can trot him out there, especially against a Nationals lineup that can smack lefties. 

Casey Mize – The FIP is 5.51, the K rate is under 18%, the barrel rate is 11%, and both sides are over a .310 wOBA. Lefties are crushing him for a .423 mark, a .992 OP, and a 2.38 HR/9. I’m not rolling him out against the Red Sox. 

Hyeon-Jong Yang – We have a 33-year old pitcher with only 8.2 IP under his belt. So far, the K rate is 15.2% but the hard-hit rate is under 15%. He’s held 24 righties faced to a .196 wOBA but we’re not sure if he can throw more than 75 pitches and the Twins can maul lefty pitchers. 

Lewis Thorpe – Another lefty with virtually no experience, Thorpe has 49 IP with a 5.88 ERA. The xFIP is 4.91 so I don’t think he’s been totally unlucky either. Sure, the Rangers represent a solid matchup for lefty pitchers but Thorpe has both sides of the plate over a .380 wOBA across his career. 

Thank you for reading my Starting Rotation 5.5 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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