Request Player/Topic For Me to Discuss
We have talked about JP Sears on these pages before, although that time was mostly just making fun of that goofy-looking comedian. But today, the real JP has earned a respectful look.
Above-average Stuff+ and Pitching+, double-digit whiffs in five of his six starts, a K-BB% above 19%, the boxes are being checked!
Here is what he has done over the last three seasons:
That 33%-5% K-BB% in AAA really stood out to me last year and I remember hyping the guy up a little bit. Obviously, it hasn’t been a good time in the Majors yet, but there have been some real improvements this season:
All of the screenshots you see here are right from my various dashboards that subscribers have access to, by the way.
So that’s a vote of confidence for Sears, and he is a guy that is certainly available even in the very deep leagues - so don’t say I never gave any high-stakes leagues recommendations here!
Yesterday was the day of the rookie pitcher, and it did not go well.
Brandon Pfaadt started the day off by throwing 4.2 innings, giving up seven earned runs on nine hits with three strikeouts and a walk.
The criticism on Pfaadt is that he’s always been a guy to give up a ton of fly balls, and that happened yesterday. The 8% SwStr% is also really not what we want to see, but the slider did work well, at least. The four-seamer just really didn’t fool anybody. I hope they give him another shot next time through because it’s tough to judge a guy on one start against a good offense especially when it’s their first start in the big leagues.
Gavin Stone was even worse
The 20.8% CSW% sheesh! To get an idea about that, I’ve plotted every single CSW% output this season in a histogram:
We usually see values between 25% and 33% here as you can tell, with the best outings being above 40% and the worst being below 20%. So Stone had one of the worst performances in that regard.
The other thing with Stone is that I don’t think he’s staying in the rotation, and I don’t think he would have even if he had pitched well. The Dodgers just don’t need another starter right now, so I imagine he’s back in AAA today or tomorrow.
The last guy was Louie Varland, who actually pitched well and you’ll see his name a few times below showcasing that.
He had a 17.2% SwStr% and a 40.2% CSW%, so yeah that was actually one of the best CSW performances of the entire season. Pretty wild! The updated pitch arsenal breakdown:
So he’s getting at least average SwStr% on all four of his pitches, and the changeup is elite (27 pitches though chill out). I don’t see how this guy doesn’t end up pitching very well moving forward, so I’m still holding and starting him next week.
Let’s take a look at the magic formula pitcher qualifiers. This is in the notes daily below the paywall, but we’ll show it here today:
Clarke Schmidt - 87 TBF, 28.7 K%, 4.6 BB%, 44.6% GB%
David Peterson - 71 TBF, 28.2 K%, 2.8 BB%, 53.1% GB%
Eduardo Rodriguez - 71 TBF, 29.6 K%, 2.8 BB%, 52.1% GB%
Gerrit Cole - 106 TBF, 28.3 K%, 6.6 BB%, 44.8% GB%
Jake Bird - 57 TBF, 31.6 K%, 5.3 BB%, 57.1% GB%
Joe Ryan - 97 TBF, 27.8 K%, 3.1 BB%, 45.5% GB%
Logan Allen - 45 TBF, 35.6 K%, 6.7 BB%, 50.0% GB%
Logan Gilbert - 68 TBF, 29.4 K%, 4.4 BB%, 44.4% GB%
Louie Varland - 47 TBF, 29.8 K%, 6.4 BB%, 43.3% GB%
Shane McClanahan - 93 TBF, 32.3 K%, 7.5 BB%, 44.6% GB%
Sonny Gray - 72 TBF, 30.6 K%, 6.9 BB%, 57.8% GB%
Zac Gallen - 90 TBF, 40.0 K%, 0.0 BB%, 47.2% GB%
Hey look it’s Louie-V! Other interesting names here are Schmidt, E-Rod, and Logan Allen. Schmidt hasn’t had a good outing yet despite the solid numbers here, and the Yankees are limiting his pitch counts most times. It’s been a frustrating year for him so far but it does seem like some good outings may be in the future. What do you do with that? I don’t know, I guess you could stream him next time if you really need a start, you just might be surprised with what you get - but I wouldn’t be excited to add him in most situations - although that could change if things come together.
Josh Lowe hit the hardest ball of his career last night just annihilating a homer run. His numbers are great right now:
» 87 PA
» .338/.391/.650
» 13.1% Brl%
» 22% K%
» 8% BB%
He’s benefiting from a .382 BABIP, but you probably already knew that after seeing the .338 batting average. He’s looking really, really good and the K% and Contact% improvements are really important and good to see. IF he’s still hanging around the waiver wire, he shouldn’t be.
Ozzie Albies has also been going nuclear this year. He and Brandon Lowe were downgraded in drafts because of health, and that has proven to be pretty freaking stupid. Nine dingers on a great 15% K%, 15 runs, 26 RBI, just really swinging it well. However, no steal attempts yet. Not something we expected to see from a month of Albies, and it’s at least possible that this was something the Braves and him decided on given his health situation, but it’s too early to say. Either way, it doesn’t matter, you’re starting Albies for way more than just steals, and he’s been producing a ton of runs lately so good for you for taking the discount this year if you did.
One of my most-drafted players this year was Nick Gordon. He’s off to a miserable start slashing .153/.164/.322, but wait, hold on! He has the largest gap between his batting average and expected batting average in the whole league:
He also has a strikeout rate under 7% this year. That’s really impressive.
Only nine players have single-digit strikeout rates (although rates are actually decimals so they aren’t truly single-digit, but you get it…)
Of those hitters, Gordon has the fourth-best barrel rate, and the hard-hit rate is at least over 40% so he’s just not slapping the ball into play like Luis Arraez does. Hold strong on Gordon, there should be better days ahead.
Lots of talk today about the Wander Franco ball flip. He fielded a ground ball, flipped it up in the air, caught it, and threw on to first for the out. The population quickly divided into two sides on the matter.
Side A: The Integrity of the Game Bros
Side B: The Let The Kids Play Bros
Allow me to make both arguments as best as I can.
Side A.
The game of baseball is bigger than the individual. It’s more than just a silly game. The team is bigger than the individual, the game is bigger than the individual. Any individual calling attention to himself with over-the-top flash and showmanship is acting out of line, and it’s really not a good example for kids watching. You’re also subjecting your team to extra risk (of not recording the out) just for the benefit of making yourself look good.
Side B.
This actually is a sport meant primarily for money-making and entertainment (those two things go hand-in-hand). There is no actual baseball god who will spite the whole thing if the players don’t act in a moral way (the baseball god would have his own morality, obviously - that’s kind of a criterion of being a god). Baseball can be boring and the game has lost a lot of fans because of it, so a little bit of excitement and razzle-dazzle is good for the game, and it’s fun to watch the game’s best players do new and exciting things.
Both are reasonable arguments. Once my sons are playing the game and watching MLB games with me at night (by will or by force), I think I will be tugged a bit further into Side A because of that part of the argument.
In an ideal world, this stuff could happen in the professionals (bat flips, end zone dances, hockey fights, etc.) without that affecting the amateurs (kids, basically). The professionals are just entertainers at the end of the day, and they’ve obviously earned their place on the field. Kids aren’t entertainers, and the primary purpose of kids’ sports is to help mold them into good adults. Having showmanship and the like in Little League is not good, and it should not be allowed. So in the perfect world, this would exist in the pros but nowhere else.
But this is not a perfect world, and kids want to do what the people they look up to do. There is no doubt that some kid will try a baseball flip like this in Little League this year, and whether he’s successful or not - it’s a bad thing. Hopefully, there’s a good coach there to take advantage of that moment and to teach the team a good lesson, but you see my point.
Like most good arguments, both sides have good points and both sides have bad points, and it’s really hard for me to come down on one side. But maybe this has been thought-provoking if nothing else. Don’t let your kids show off, it’s bad for them.
Now that that’s over, we can proceed to your normal programming
1. Shane McClanahan (vs. PIT): 29.3 Points
2. Shohei Ohtani (vs. STL): 25.65 Points
3. JP Sears (vs. SEA): 23.9 Points
4. Kyle Freeland (vs. MIL): 23.45 Points
5. Logan Webb (vs. HOU): 23.0575 Points
6. Mitch Keller (vs. TB): 21.65 Points
7. Framber Valdez (vs. SF): 21.3 Points
8. Seth Lugo (vs. CIN): 20.1 Points
9. Nick Pivetta (vs. TOR): 19.9 Points
10. Zack Greinke (vs. BAL): 19.45 Points
1. Shohei Ohtani (LAA): 19 Whiffs (97 Pitches)
2. JP Sears (OAK): 17 Whiffs (97 Pitches)
3. Shane McClanahan (TB): 17 Whiffs (93 Pitches)
4. Louie Varland (MIN): 15 Whiffs (87 Pitches)
5. Dylan Cease (CWS): 14 Whiffs (98 Pitches)
6. Nick Pivetta (BOS): 14 Whiffs (94 Pitches)
7. Eric Lauer (MIL): 13 Whiffs (84 Pitches)
8. Max Scherzer (NYM): 11 Whiffs (75 Pitches)
9. Clarke Schmidt (NYY): 11 Whiffs (79 Pitches)
10. Logan Gilbert (SEA): 11 Whiffs (89 Pitches)
1. Shohei Ohtani (LAA): 19.6 SwStr%, 41.2 CSW%
2. Louie Varland (MIN): 17.2 SwStr%, 40.2 CSW%
3. Shane McClanahan (TB): 18.3 SwStr%, 38.7 CSW%
4. Framber Valdez (HOU): 11.1 SwStr%, 35.6 CSW%
5. Jake Irvin (WSH): 4.9 SwStr%, 32.1 CSW%
6. Aaron Nola (PHI): 9.2 SwStr%, 31.6 CSW%
7. Clarke Schmidt (NYY): 13.9 SwStr%, 31.6 CSW%
8. Max Scherzer (NYM): 14.7 SwStr%, 29.3 CSW%
9. Michael Lorenzen (DET): 6.2 SwStr%, 29.2 CSW%
10. Mitch Keller (PIT): 10.0 SwStr%, 29.0 CSW%
1. Shane McClanahan - 6.0 IP - 144.0 JA Points
2. Aaron Nola - 6.33 IP - 136.5 JA Points
3. Shohei Ohtani - 4.67 IP - 132.0 JA Points
4. Michael Lorenzen - 6.67 IP - 126.0 JA Points
5. JP Sears - 5.67 IP - 126.0 JA Points
6. Framber Valdez - 6.0 IP - 124.5 JA Points
7. Louie Varland - 4.33 IP - 119.5 JA Points
8. Logan Webb - 7.67 IP - 112.5 JA Points
9. Mitch Keller - 5.0 IP - 112.5 JA Points
10. Clarke Schmidt - 4.33 IP - 110.5 JA Points
1. Jacob deGrom (TEX) - 6.0 GS - 125.08 JA Points
2. Nick Lodolo (CIN) - 6.0 GS - 121.15 JA Points
3. Shane McClanahan (TB) - 7.0 GS - 118.31 JA Points
4. Spencer Strider (ATL) - 6.0 GS - 115.36 JA Points
5. Trevor Rogers (MIA) - 4.0 GS - 114.76 JA Points
6. Josiah Gray (WSH) - 6.0 GS - 112.95 JA Points
7. Jesus Luzardo (MIA) - 6.0 GS - 112.35 JA Points
8. Zack Wheeler (PHI) - 6.0 GS - 111.57 JA Points
9. Johan Oviedo (PIT) - 6.0 GS - 108.2 JA Points
10. Taylor Clarke (KC) - 1.0 GS - 108.14 JA Points
Seth Lugo's SL velo (14 pitches) UP 1.9mph to 85.5
Nick Pivetta's FF velo (29 pitches) DOWN -1.5mph to 92.5
Michael Lorenzen's SL velo (30 pitches) DOWN -1.6mph to 84.5
Nick Pivetta's CU velo (31 pitches) DOWN -1.6mph to 77.2
Louie Varland's FF velo (34 pitches) DOWN -1.7mph to 94.5
Louie Varland's FC velo (30 pitches) DOWN -2.8mph to 88.7
Louie Varland's SL velo (10 pitches) DOWN -3.4mph to 82.3
Aaron Nola's SI usage (25.5%) up 11.3 points
Braxton Garrett's SI usage (44.0%) up 14.5 points
Braxton Garrett's CH usage (20.0%) up 14.7 points
Clarke Schmidt's CU usage (30.4%) up 11.5 points
Dylan Cease's FF usage (52.0%) up 16.4 points
Kyle Gibson's FF usage (29.7%) up 17.6 points
Kyle Wright's FF usage (21.8%) up 11.5 points
Logan Gilbert's CU usage (31.5%) up 14.4 points
Louie Varland's FF usage (39.1%) up 10.2 points
Luis Cessa's FF usage (35.2%) up 13.6 points
Michael Lorenzen's SL usage (31.2%) up 19.6 points
Miles Mikolas's SI usage (40.8%) up 16.0 points
Nick Pivetta's SL usage (34.0%) up 22.6 points
Shane Bieber's SL usage (47.3%) up 21.8 points
Spencer Strider - 73 TBF, 39.2% CSW%
Shane McClanahan - 93 TBF, 38.9% CSW%
Domingo German - 100 TBF, 36.4% CSW%
Shohei Ohtani - 78 TBF, 35.6% CSW%
Yu Darvish - 75 TBF, 35.1% CSW%
Clayton Kershaw - 71 TBF, 33.9% CSW%
Julio Urias - 94 TBF, 33.4% CSW%
Jack Flaherty - 72 TBF, 33.2% CSW%
David Peterson - 71 TBF, 33.2% CSW%
Kevin Gausman - 75 TBF, 33.2% CSW%
Shohei Ohtani - 78 TBF, 44.9% K%
Spencer Strider - 73 TBF, 41.1% K%
Zac Gallen - 90 TBF, 40.0% K%
Matt Strahm - 69 TBF, 39.1% K%
Kevin Gausman - 75 TBF, 38.7% K%
Edward Cabrera - 69 TBF, 37.7% K%
Yu Darvish - 75 TBF, 34.7% K%
Clayton Kershaw - 71 TBF, 33.8% K%
Shane McClanahan - 93 TBF, 32.3% K%
Zack Wheeler - 72 TBF, 31.9% K%
Zac Gallen - 90 TBF, 40.0% K-BB%
Shohei Ohtani - 78 TBF, 37.2% K-BB%
Kevin Gausman - 75 TBF, 34.7% K-BB%
Spencer Strider - 73 TBF, 32.9% K-BB%
Clayton Kershaw - 71 TBF, 32.4% K-BB%
Matt Strahm - 69 TBF, 30.4% K-BB%
Eduardo Rodriguez - 71 TBF, 26.8% K-BB%
Yu Darvish - 75 TBF, 26.7% K-BB%
Zack Wheeler - 72 TBF, 26.4% K-BB%
Domingo German - 100 TBF, 26.0% K-BB%
Framber Valdez - 104 TBF, 65.8% GB%
Jake Woodford - 85 TBF, 62.7% GB%
Logan Webb - 108 TBF, 62.3% GB%
Alex Cobb - 78 TBF, 60.7% GB%
Bryce Elder - 96 TBF, 60.6% GB%
Edward Cabrera - 69 TBF, 59.4% GB%
Kyle Wright - 74 TBF, 58.8% GB%
Nick Martinez - 78 TBF, 58.2% GB%
Sonny Gray - 72 TBF, 57.8% GB%
Marcus Stroman - 92 TBF, 56.1% GB%
Christian Walker (ARI) 5 PA, 11 Swings, 2 Barrels, 2 HR
Eric Haase (DET) 8 PA, 13 Swings, 2 Barrels, 2 HR
Francisco Lindor (NYM) 8 PA, 15 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Jake Bauers (NYY) 4 PA, 7 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Jesus Sanchez (MIA) 4 PA, 7 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Josh Jung (TEX) 5 PA, 8 Swings, 2 Barrels, 2 HR
Ozzie Albies (ATL) 5 PA, 5 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Vaughn Grissom (ATL) 5 PA, 10 Swings, 2 Barrels, 0 HR
Josh Lowe, Yesterday: 111.8 Previous High: 109.4
Vaughn Grissom, Yesterday: 107.7 Previous High: 107.1
1. Ozzie Albies - 5.0 PA - 53.5 JA Points
2. Maikel Garcia - 4.0 PA - 42.5 JA Points
3. Jesus Sanchez - 4.0 PA - 41.5 JA Points
4. Willie Calhoun - 4.0 PA - 39.5 JA Points
5. Josh Jung - 5.0 PA - 38.0 JA Points
6. Jake Bauers - 4.0 PA - 36.0 JA Points
7. Vinnie Pasquantino - 4.0 PA - 35.0 JA Points
8. Tim Anderson - 5.0 PA - 34.5 JA Points
9. Leody Taveras - 4.0 PA - 29.5 JA Points
10. Salvador Perez - 4.0 PA - 29.5 JA Points
1. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (TOR) - 139.0 PA - 32.09 JA Points
2. Matt Chapman (TOR) - 126.0 PA - 31.75 JA Points
3. Ronald Acuna Jr. (ATL) - 141.0 PA - 22.13 JA Points
4. Vinnie Pasquantino (KC) - 128.0 PA - 21.88 JA Points
5. Bryan Reynolds (PIT) - 125.0 PA - 14.88 JA Points
6. Bo Bichette (TOR) - 140.0 PA - 12.71 JA Points
7. Yandy Diaz (TB) - 121.0 PA - 4.96 JA Points
8. Jarred Kelenic (SEA) - 108.0 PA - 2.96 JA Points
9. Will Smith (LAD) - 77.0 PA - 2.6 JA Points
10. Ryan Mountcastle (BAL) - 135.0 PA - -0.44 JA Points
Ronald Acuna Jr. (ATL) - 116.7mph - grounded_into_double_play
Ronald Acuna Jr. (ATL) - 114.2mph - home_run
Francisco Alvarez (NYM) - 113.6mph - field_out
Pete Alonso (NYM) - 113.4mph - single
Rafael Devers (BOS) - 112.5mph - single
Christian Walker (ARI) - 112.4mph - home_run
Jesus Sanchez (MIA) - 112.0mph - single
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (TOR) - 111.9mph - single
Willson Contreras (STL) - 111.9mph - single
Josh Lowe (TB) - 111.8mph - home_run
Matt Chapman - 74 PA, 44 BIP, 13 Brls, 29.5 Brl%
Sean Murphy - 72 PA, 41 BIP, 11 Brls, 26.8 Brl%
Aaron Judge - 55 PA, 31 BIP, 8 Brls, 25.8 Brl%
Patrick Wisdom - 75 PA, 42 BIP, 10 Brls, 23.8 Brl%
Randy Arozarena - 75 PA, 47 BIP, 11 Brls, 23.4 Brl%
Max Muncy - 65 PA, 36 BIP, 8 Brls, 22.2 Brl%
Brent Rooker - 74 PA, 41 BIP, 9 Brls, 22.0 Brl%
Zach McKinstry - 49 PA, 33 BIP, 7 Brls, 21.2 Brl%
Jake Burger - 65 PA, 38 BIP, 8 Brls, 21.1 Brl%
Mike Trout - 79 PA, 49 BIP, 10 Brls, 20.4 Brl%
Sean Murphy - 72 PA, 0.49 xwOBA
Jonah Heim - 67 PA, 0.485 xwOBA
Ronald Acuna Jr. - 79 PA, 0.471 xwOBA
Max Muncy - 65 PA, 0.462 xwOBA
Masataka Yoshida - 70 PA, 0.452 xwOBA
Ian Happ - 77 PA, 0.439 xwOBA
Zach McKinstry - 49 PA, 0.431 xwOBA
Brent Rooker - 74 PA, 0.418 xwOBA
Vinnie Pasquantino - 79 PA, 0.417 xwOBA
Aaron Judge - 55 PA, 0.417 xwOBA
Luis Arraez - 53 PA, 103 Swings, 95.1 Cont%
Keibert Ruiz - 64 PA, 102 Swings, 91.2 Cont%
Steven Kwan - 80 PA, 137 Swings, 90.5 Cont%
Alec Burleson - 57 PA, 92 Swings, 90.2 Cont%
Myles Straw - 65 PA, 110 Swings, 90.0 Cont%
Nico Hoerner - 91 PA, 152 Swings, 89.5 Cont%
Brendan Donovan - 48 PA, 93 Swings, 89.2 Cont%
Bryson Stott - 91 PA, 184 Swings, 89.1 Cont%
Geraldo Perdomo - 48 PA, 87 Swings, 88.5 Cont%
Jeff McNeil - 76 PA, 137 Swings, 88.3 Cont%
Esteury Ruiz - 9 Attempts (8 steals)
Ji Hwan Bae - 8 Attempts (8 steals)
Shohei Ohtani - 6 Attempts (4 steals)
Thairo Estrada - 6 Attempts (4 steals)
Victor Robles - 5 Attempts (5 steals)
Jazz Chisholm Jr. - 5 Attempts (4 steals)
Manuel Margot - 4 Attempts (3 steals)
Corbin Carroll - 4 Attempts (2 steals)
Jack Suwinski - 4 Attempts (3 steals)
Bobby Witt Jr. - 4 Attempts (3 steals)
Ha-Seong Kim - 4 Attempts (4 steals)
Ronald Acuna Jr. - 14 Attempts (13 steals)
Esteury Ruiz - 14 Attempts (13 steals)
Jazz Chisholm Jr. - 13 Attempts (11 steals)
Ji Hwan Bae - 12 Attempts (11 steals)
Nico Hoerner - 12 Attempts (10 steals)
Starling Marte - 9 Attempts (7 steals)
Corbin Carroll - 9 Attempts (7 steals)
Thairo Estrada - 9 Attempts (7 steals)
Steven Kwan - 9 Attempts (8 steals)
Wander Franco - 8 Attempts (5 steals)
Bobby Witt Jr. - 8 Attempts (7 steals)
Shohei Ohtani - 8 Attempts (5 steals)
Jorge Mateo - 8 Attempts (6 steals)
Victor Robles - 8 Attempts (8 steals)
Ian Happ - +4.3% Contact%, +3.7 mph exit velo, -4.2 Chase%
Wander Franco - +5.3% Contact%, +3.3 mph exit velo, -4.6 Chase%
Ronald Acuna Jr. - +6.0% Contact%, +3.6 mph exit velo, -4.6 Chase%
Ezequiel Duran - +6.7% Contact%, +4.6 mph exit velo, -8.0 Chase%
C.J. Cron - +6.0% Contact%, +5.6 mph exit velo, -5.1 Chase%
Charlie Blackmon - 0.385 xwOBA, 10.8% Brl%, 80.2% Contact%, 17.5% Chase%, 11.8% K%
Christian Walker - 0.385 xwOBA, 13.2% Brl%, 75.2% Contact%, 24.7% Chase%, 17.6% K%
Jonah Heim - 0.497 xwOBA, 18.9% Brl%, 80.0% Contact%, 24.5% Chase%, 14.0% K%
Masataka Yoshida - 0.51 xwOBA, 17.4% Brl%, 87.2% Contact%, 20.9% Chase%, 10.5% K%
Paul Goldschmidt - 0.379 xwOBA, 14.3% Brl%, 78.6% Contact%, 24.1% Chase%, 16.1% K%
Ronald Acuna Jr. - 0.498 xwOBA, 18.4% Brl%, 80.5% Contact%, 18.4% Chase%, 14.8% K%
Wander Franco - 0.376 xwOBA, 10.8% Brl%, 88.5% Contact%, 22.1% Chase%, 16.3% K%
Nick Maton - 39.7% Whiff%, 81.8% Weak%, 0.98 Cold Rating
Joey Gallo - 38.7% Whiff%, 72.7% Weak%, 0.927 Cold Rating
Luis Robert - 39.5% Whiff%, 69.6% Weak%, 0.92 Cold Rating
Andrew McCutchen - 36.7% Whiff%, 71.4% Weak%, 0.907 Cold Rating
Rodolfo Castro - 35.6% Whiff%, 72.0% Weak%, 0.903 Cold Rating
Jorge Soler - 32.1% Whiff%, 78.6% Weak%, 0.886 Cold Rating
Andres Gimenez - 29.4% Whiff%, 82.1% Weak%, 0.854 Cold Rating
Trea Turner - 29.9% Whiff%, 78.4% Weak%, 0.854 Cold Rating
Triston Casas - 28.6% Whiff%, 80.0% Weak%, 0.828 Cold Rating
Spencer Steer - 33.3% Whiff%, 65.7% Weak%, 0.821 Cold Rating
Aaron Schunk (COL): 3/4, 4R, 1HR, 5RBI, 0SB, 42FPts
Chris Roller (CLE): 2/3, 2R, 2HR, 7RBI, 0SB, 38FPts
Coco Montes (COL): 3/5, 2R, 1HR, 4RBI, 1SB, 37FPts
Julio E. Rodriguez (DET): 2/5, 2R, 2HR, 6RBI, 0SB, 36FPts
Hunter Goodman (COL): 2/2, 2R, 2HR, 5RBI, 0SB, 36FPts
Preston Tucker (SD): 2/3, 3R, 2HR, 3RBI, 0SB, 34FPts
Dillon Dingler (DET): 2/4, 3R, 1HR, 4RBI, 0SB, 31FPts
Hunter Stovall (COL): 2/2, 3R, 1HR, 2RBI, 0SB, 31FPts
Sam Huff (TEX): 2/4, 2R, 2HR, 3RBI, 0SB, 30FPts
Kyren Paris (LAA): 2/5, 2R, 1HR, 3RBI, 1SB, 28FPts
Joey Cantillo (CLE): 5IP, 1H, 0ER, 13K, 2BB, 39FPts
Drew Rom (BAL): 6IP, 2H, 0ER, 11K, 3BB, 36FPts
Carlos Rodriguez (MIL): 5IP, 3H, 1ER, 10K, 1BB, 28FPts
Caleb Smith (PIT): 7IP, 3H, 0ER, 5K, 0BB, 27FPts
Jackson Rutledge (WSH): 6IP, 4H, 0ER, 7K, 2BB, 27FPts
Dominic Hamel (NYM): 5IP, 5H, 1ER, 8K, 0BB, 26FPts
Ryan Cusick (OAK): 6IP, 1H, 0ER, 5K, 3BB, 25FPts
Rhett Kouba (HOU): 6IP, 5H, 1ER, 7K, 0BB, 22FPts
Cesar Valdez (LAA): 7IP, 6H, 2ER, 5K, 1BB, 21FPts
Phillips Valdez (COL): 6IP, 4H, 2ER, 5K, 1BB, 20FPts
All of the really good stuff in the notes has been moved behind the paywall. For $7/month or $70/year, you will receive more detailed notes along with custom reports, dashboards, projections, and a ton more. 10% of your membership fees go directly to Samaritan’s Purse Charity.
Free samples