Request Player/Topic For Me to Discuss
It’s Sunday, and here’s what I’m looking at
My grass is more attractive than baby Trea, I know. Poor guy has thinning red hair. Which is too bad because his older sister and brother are just absolute stunners. The guy has been waking up mad early the last few days so I guess we’re on our way through one of those “phases”. Or “sleep regressions”, as the women like to say.
Regression is a word I like, of course. As a Master of Science™ it’s a very important concept to understand. And about 90% of the time people talk about it, they’re talking about it wrong. “Sleep regression” makes no sense as a term, and it’s not even like the bigger explanation of it is right either. Sometimes you just slap a label on something and then the label isn’t perfect but the concept is sound - that’s not the case here. When doctors and Instagram moms (but I repeat myself) talk about sleep regression, it’s just a crutch for them to say “Yeah you’re baby isn’t going to sleep well for long spurts and we don’t really know why or have any way to help you”. But it’s amazing, just putting the label on it makes a lot of women feel better about it. As long as they know their baby isn’t doing something unheard of, they’re fine.
We’ve learned in these pages that there is comfort in the known, and now we find out that there is comfort in knowing that other people have gone through the same tough thing as you.
But anyways, Trea baby has a 60-grade mom, and man I’m lucky, she’s amazing. And I’m saying this seven days ahead of schedule, what an amazing freaking husband and father I am.
Baseball!
Dustin May got it going last night throwing six scoreless against the Padres with three hits, six strikeouts, and one walk. I love that man, and I even watched four innings of it before I so graciously turned it off because I know my aforementioned wife didn’t care too much about a May Dodgers vs. Padres game.
Here’s the bad news though, and maybe it’s more funny news than bad news. He had a 3.0% SwStr%, three!
That’s only the fourth time this year someone has thrown more than 90 pitches and gotten fewer than four whiffs, and it came on May’s best start of the year.
The hell do we do with that? Dustin May is truly one of these enigmas, if such a thing exists, where they just play the game so differently that the normal stats and rules don’t apply to them, but this is extremely weird.
It looks like, for whatever reason, he went to his sinker hard:
The red line is the curveball, above. Maybe he just didn’t have the feel for the breaking stuff and just had the sinker going so he just stuck with it. That certainly explains a lot of the low SwStr%, you’re not going to get many whiffs with a sinker, but at least it’s good to know that his sinker is good enough to put up a good start while throwing it that much.
Overall, it beats me, dude. I think if you have May you just start him every time out and try to enjoy the ride.
J.P. France became the latest rookie to pitch extremely well in his Major League debut. He put up a 15.5% SwStr% with a 33.3% CSW% on 84 pitches:
Five strikeouts to one walk, but that was a bit surprising because in the minors he had a walk rate north of 12%. We’ll have to wait and see how he looks with a few more starts, but it was an encouraging beginning if nothing else.
SCENE CHANGE, I’m now writing this from my church! I run the live stream and help with the tech stuff every once in awhile so this is one of those mornings and I’m here early with nothing to really do. Did you need to know that? Of course not, but it does give me some extra time to keep talking here on a Sunday where you usually don’t get much in the notes.
Spencer Strider pitched, which means I can show the K% vs. BB% scatter plot:
He’s really pushing the K% thing to a ridiculous level. I remember that Gerrit Cole 2019 season where he went for a 40% K% and I like hardly thought that was even possible. Strider is at 39% since last season, five points above Shohei Ohtani who is in second for pitchers with at least 25 starts. Insane stuff, if he stays healthy enough to get to 150 innings, I think you’re looking at him being the SP1 in drafts next year.
MacKenzie Gore went for a 9:1 K:BB yesterday which is really, really good to see for him. He’s now been under three walks in his last three starts, a 23:5 K:BB. Good stuff, I suppose you can just start him moving forward, but don’t be surprised when he walks a handful of batters and crushes you a few times throughout the year.
Let’s take a few of the requests that came in this week.
Zach submitted
Ryan McMahon - underlying metrics seem to like his batted ball data but he hasn't done much of anything. Curious if he's a hold or cut bait
Yeah, McMahon is hitting the ball quite well when he’s hitting it, but that age-old problem is here with him a horrible strikeout rate.
But we have seen enough of McMahon to not really think a 38% K% is going to keep up. I could believe a 26-28% mark, and at that point yeah he’s still fringey since the Rockies are so awful and he’s hard to start on the road, but in a league of any kind of depth you’re not going to replace him with anybody that’s actually better. The strikeouts will get better and he’ll hit his homers this year, so I would hold in most situations.
Will says
Eury Perez - The Marlins really need this guy to pan out and everything looks legit in person the two games I watched in Pensacola. Tell me everything is real with zero concerns.
You all should know by now that I have trouble talking about minor leaguers, because talking about minor leagues is basically just akin to lying. There’s so little we can actually predict with these guys, and in this case Perez is in AA so we don’t even have the StatCast data.
A 34.7% K% and a 7.4% BB% works for me though:
I’m sure the other prospect bros have a ton to say about him, I recommend Chris Clegg’s substack:
You’ll have to pay him for his work, but it’s quite extensive from what I’ve seen so if you like prospect stuff I’m sure it’ll be worth your money.
What Chris probably won’t do for you, Eury, is what I’ll do. I’m going to, right now, tell you, from the bottom of my heart - everything is real and there are zero concerns.
Matthew says
Why is Kevin Gausman so good then so bad his last few starts?
Oohhhh I know the answer to this one!
Life and baseball are sequences of events in which randomness has some say. Randomness has a greater or lesser influence depending on what you’re talking about. If you’re playing craps, randomness has a strong hold. If you’re running a 5K, it has much less influence on your time - but it still has some.
Think of it like this. There’s a bag full of lottery balls numbered 1-5. Every pitcher has a bag, and their bags are different based on how actually good they are. Pulling a five is an elite start, pulling a four is a very good start, a three is a fine start, a two is a bad start, and a one is a disaster.
Kevin Gausman has a whole bunch of 4’s in his bag, a good amount of 5’s, and very few 1’s. But there are some 1’s in there.
You can do the exact reverse with a guy like Luis Cessa, his bag is mostly 2’s and 1’s, but yeah there are some 4’s and 5’s in there.
Gausman pulled a 1 on Thursday, and that was the second time he pulled a 1 this season:
The question is, does the bag change? Are there suddenly now more 1’s and 2’s in his bag than a week ago? My answer is, no way man. He’s still awesome, and I’d rather have his bag than most other bags.
Really, I think, that’s a much better answer than me going in and investigating his pitch mix and all the granular statistics of a given start. Other people would do that, but I don’t think it’s right. If you get too granular, you end up with sand in your ass.
“If you get too granular, you end up with sand in your ass”
~ Jon Anderson, 2023
One more! TODD says:
Jarren Duran: Sell Hight??
Not great typing, TODD! But I forgive you.
The thing about Duran is the underlying stuff looks good. His K% is down, Contact% is up, and the barrels are there:
But it’s still too early for me to weigh 2023 over 2021-2022, so yeah I think he’s an awesome sell-high. This is just a good general rule, if you can sell a guy for a way higher return than you could have two weeks ago, in most situations - you should do it.
And don’t fall victim to the fear of being wrong and losing a trade. There’s this psychological thing we all fall into where a loss hurts more than a win feels good. That’s been studied and proven, people are quite risk-averse. Being risk-averse with your health and your children and important things is great, but in fantasy sports it’s kinda dumb. If you trade Duran for like Nate Lowe and Duran goes on to win the MVP this year, then yeah that sucks - but you still have two legs and an Internet connection so it’s not like your life is destroyed. And TODD, I’m very sorry if you don’t currently have two legs.
It’s FAAB Sunday, so here are some names to look into bidding on just off the top of my freaking dome
Matt Mervis
Alex Kirilloff
Max Kepler
Nick Senzel (ride it out while he’s healthy)
Luis Garcia (the one that still has two elbows
Nick Gordon
Edward Olivares
Ryan Noda (only if you really need power, guy has a huge K% problem)
LaMonte Wade Jr. (probably better in daily leagues since he won’t play against lefties)
Kerry Carpenter (IL stash)
Ezequiel Tovar (looking better lately, he may have been dropped in your leagues)
Chris Taylor (position eligibility and he’s still at least hitting dingers)
Pitchers:
Domingo German
Griffin Canning
JP Sears
Brayan Bello
Alright, I’m sitting here with my head in my computer at church like a jerk while everybody else is working on stuff. Thanks for being here, happy Sunday!
1. Nathan Eovaldi (vs. LAA): 27.8 Points
2. Dustin May (vs. SD): 27.10 Points
3. Alex Cobb (vs. MIL): 25.55 Points
4. Spencer Strider (vs. BAL): 24.85 Points
5. Jose Berrios (vs. PIT): 24.6425 Points
6. Drew Rasmussen (vs. NYY): 22.3575 Points
7. MacKenzie Gore (vs. ARI): 22.10 Points
8. Blake Snell (vs. LAD): 19.10 Points
9. J.P. France (vs. SEA): 18.85 Points
10. Mike Clevinger (vs. CIN): 15.3 Points
1. Spencer Strider (ATL): 21 Whiffs (95 Pitches)
2. Kyle Bradish (BAL): 15 Whiffs (86 Pitches)
3. Spencer Turnbull (DET): 14 Whiffs (92 Pitches)
4. Blake Snell (SD): 13 Whiffs (97 Pitches)
5. Ken Waldichuk (OAK): 13 Whiffs (114 Pitches)
6. J.P. France (HOU): 13 Whiffs (84 Pitches)
7. MacKenzie Gore (WSH): 12 Whiffs (95 Pitches)
8. Reid Detmers (LAA): 12 Whiffs (94 Pitches)
9. Mike Clevinger (CWS): 12 Whiffs (97 Pitches)
10. Domingo German (NYY): 11 Whiffs (81 Pitches)
1. Spencer Strider (ATL): 22.1 SwStr%, 34.7 CSW%
2. J.P. France (HOU): 15.5 SwStr%, 33.3 CSW%
3. Spencer Turnbull (DET): 15.2 SwStr%, 32.6 CSW%
4. Drew Rasmussen (TB): 10.3 SwStr%, 32.2 CSW%
5. Alex Cobb (SF): 8.4 SwStr%, 31.8 CSW%
6. Kyle Bradish (BAL): 17.4 SwStr%, 31.4 CSW%
7. Brady Singer (KC): 9.4 SwStr%, 31.2 CSW%
8. Sonny Gray (MIN): 10.0 SwStr%, 31.1 CSW%
9. Corey Kluber (BOS): 9.9 SwStr%, 30.8 CSW%
10. Adam Wainwright (STL): 8.9 SwStr%, 30.0 CSW%
1. Alex Cobb - 7.0 IP - 154.5 JA Points
2. Corey Kluber - 5.0 IP - 133.0 JA Points
3. Spencer Strider - 5.0 IP - 129.0 JA Points
4. Nathan Eovaldi - 8.0 IP - 126.0 JA Points
5. Drew Rasmussen - 5.67 IP - 123.0 JA Points
6. Colin Rea - 6.0 IP - 121.5 JA Points
7. Adam Wainwright - 5.0 IP - 115.0 JA Points
8. Spencer Turnbull - 4.67 IP - 115.0 JA Points
9. Sonny Gray - 5.0 IP - 111.0 JA Points
10. Tommy Henry - 5.33 IP - 107.5 JA Points
1. Jacob deGrom (TEX) - 6.0 GS - 125.08 JA Points
2. Nick Lodolo (CIN) - 7.0 GS - 119.12 JA Points
3. Shane McClanahan (TB) - 7.0 GS - 118.31 JA Points
4. Spencer Strider (ATL) - 7.0 GS - 117.06 JA Points
5. Trevor Rogers (MIA) - 4.0 GS - 114.76 JA Points
6. Zack Wheeler (PHI) - 7.0 GS - 110.83 JA Points
7. Jesus Luzardo (MIA) - 7.0 GS - 110.2 JA Points
8. Taylor Clarke (KC) - 1.0 GS - 110.0 JA Points
9. Hunter Greene (CIN) - 7.0 GS - 109.05 JA Points
10. Josiah Gray (WSH) - 7.0 GS - 107.96 JA Points
Spencer Turnbull's SL velo (19 pitches) UP 1.9mph to 85.4
MacKenzie Gore's SL velo (16 pitches) UP 1.8mph to 89.9
Nick Lodolo's CU velo (21 pitches) UP 1.8mph to 81.3
Dustin May's CU velo (14 pitches) UP 1.6mph to 87.6
Reid Detmers's CU velo (15 pitches) UP 1.5mph to 77.2
Tommy Henry's SL velo (10 pitches) DOWN -1.7mph to 82.4
Drew Rasmussen's ST velo (20 pitches) DOWN -1.7mph to 83.3
Bailey Falter's SL usage (23.2%) up 13.6 points
Dustin May's SI usage (52.5%) up 22.7 points
Johan Oviedo's FF usage (48.3%) up 16.3 points
Ken Waldichuk's ST usage (36.0%) up 12.5 points
Kyle Bradish's SL usage (36.0%) up 19.9 points
Logan Allen's FF usage (81.4%) up 24.0 points
Mike Clevinger's FC usage (21.6%) up 17.9 points
Sonny Gray's FF usage (30.0%) up 16.2 points
Spencer Turnbull's SI usage (29.3%) up 12.2 points
Shane McClanahan - 93 TBF, 38.9% CSW%
Spencer Strider - 92 TBF, 38.2% CSW%
Shohei Ohtani - 78 TBF, 35.6% CSW%
Yu Darvish - 99 TBF, 35.1% CSW%
Clayton Kershaw - 96 TBF, 33.7% CSW%
Julio Urias - 94 TBF, 33.4% CSW%
Charlie Morton - 75 TBF, 33.3% CSW%
David Peterson - 71 TBF, 33.2% CSW%
Luke Weaver - 73 TBF, 33.2% CSW%
Domingo German - 99 TBF, 32.8% CSW%
Shohei Ohtani - 78 TBF, 44.9% K%
Spencer Strider - 92 TBF, 43.5% K%
Zac Gallen - 90 TBF, 40.0% K%
Edward Cabrera - 91 TBF, 37.4% K%
Kevin Gausman - 96 TBF, 34.4% K%
Yu Darvish - 99 TBF, 32.3% K%
Clayton Kershaw - 96 TBF, 32.3% K%
Shane McClanahan - 93 TBF, 32.3% K%
Grayson Rodriguez - 81 TBF, 32.1% K%
MacKenzie Gore - 95 TBF, 31.6% K%
Zac Gallen - 90 TBF, 40.0% K-BB%
Shohei Ohtani - 78 TBF, 37.2% K-BB%
Spencer Strider - 92 TBF, 37.0% K-BB%
Kevin Gausman - 96 TBF, 30.2% K-BB%
Eduardo Rodriguez - 97 TBF, 27.8% K-BB%
Clayton Kershaw - 96 TBF, 26.0% K-BB%
David Peterson - 71 TBF, 25.4% K-BB%
Yu Darvish - 99 TBF, 25.3% K-BB%
Logan Gilbert - 68 TBF, 25.0% K-BB%
Shane McClanahan - 93 TBF, 24.7% K-BB%
Max Fried - 90 TBF, 67.2% GB%
Framber Valdez - 104 TBF, 65.8% GB%
Bryce Elder - 70 TBF, 64.7% GB%
Alex Cobb - 105 TBF, 64.5% GB%
Logan Webb - 108 TBF, 62.3% GB%
Sonny Gray - 94 TBF, 60.3% GB%
Kyle Wright - 74 TBF, 58.8% GB%
Patrick Sandoval - 71 TBF, 57.4% GB%
Brayan Bello - 82 TBF, 57.1% GB%
Brad Keller - 89 TBF, 56.7% GB%
Brandon Belt (TOR) 5 PA, 4 Swings, 2 Barrels, 0 HR
Brandon Drury (LAA) 4 PA, 4 Swings, 3 Barrels, 1 HR
Bryce Harper (PHI) 5 PA, 12 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Dylan Carlson (STL) 4 PA, 10 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Ezequiel Tovar (COL) 4 PA, 8 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Jack Suwinski (PIT) 4 PA, 4 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Keibert Ruiz (WSH) 4 PA, 9 Swings, 2 Barrels, 1 HR
Jose Miranda, Yesterday: 111.0 Previous High: 109.4
Miguel Vargas, Yesterday: 109.0 Previous High: 108.1
1. Brandon Drury - 4.0 PA - 53.5 JA Points
2. Jack Suwinski - 4.0 PA - 41.0 JA Points
3. Ezequiel Tovar - 4.0 PA - 37.5 JA Points
4. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. - 5.0 PA - 37.0 JA Points
5. Keibert Ruiz - 4.0 PA - 34.5 JA Points
6. Bo Bichette - 5.0 PA - 33.0 JA Points
7. Dylan Carlson - 4.0 PA - 28.0 JA Points
8. Kyle Tucker - 4.0 PA - 26.5 JA Points
9. Carlos Correa - 4.0 PA - 26.0 JA Points
10. Nolan Arenado - 5.0 PA - 24.0 JA Points
1. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (TOR) - 148.0 PA - 37.03 JA Points
2. Matt Chapman (TOR) - 139.0 PA - 27.63 JA Points
3. Bo Bichette (TOR) - 154.0 PA - 18.83 JA Points
4. Ronald Acuna Jr. (ATL) - 153.0 PA - 14.12 JA Points
5. Vinnie Pasquantino (KC) - 143.0 PA - 13.71 JA Points
6. Yandy Diaz (TB) - 133.0 PA - 10.68 JA Points
7. Will Smith (LAD) - 85.0 PA - 4.24 JA Points
8. Randy Arozarena (TB) - 141.0 PA - 3.97 JA Points
9. Bryan Reynolds (PIT) - 137.0 PA - 1.02 JA Points
10. Kyle Tucker (HOU) - 136.0 PA - 0.74 JA Points
Julio Rodriguez (SEA) - 115.5mph - field_out
Ryan Noda (OAK) - 113.9mph - triple
Bryce Harper (PHI) - 113.7mph - single
C.J. Cron (COL) - 112.7mph - nan
Byron Buxton (MIN) - 111.5mph - nan
Jose Caballero (SEA) - 111.2mph - nan
Jose Miranda (MIN) - 111.0mph - single
Jorge Soler (MIA) - 110.8mph - nan
Rafael Devers (BOS) - 110.6mph - single
Stone Garrett (WSH) - 110.6mph - nan
Matt Chapman - 79 PA, 47 BIP, 14 Brls, 29.8 Brl%
Randy Arozarena - 75 PA, 47 BIP, 12 Brls, 25.5 Brl%
Jack Suwinski - 69 PA, 34 BIP, 8 Brls, 23.5 Brl%
Patrick Wisdom - 74 PA, 36 BIP, 8 Brls, 22.2 Brl%
Sean Murphy - 75 PA, 46 BIP, 10 Brls, 21.7 Brl%
Trevor Larnach - 60 PA, 29 BIP, 6 Brls, 20.7 Brl%
Brandon Drury - 71 PA, 46 BIP, 9 Brls, 19.6 Brl%
Mike Trout - 77 PA, 51 BIP, 10 Brls, 19.6 Brl%
Brent Rooker - 75 PA, 41 BIP, 8 Brls, 19.5 Brl%
Max Muncy - 64 PA, 36 BIP, 7 Brls, 19.4 Brl%
Jonah Heim - 68 PA, 0.466 xwOBA
Sean Murphy - 75 PA, 0.46 xwOBA
Masataka Yoshida - 80 PA, 0.449 xwOBA
Max Muncy - 64 PA, 0.448 xwOBA
Ronald Acuna Jr. - 80 PA, 0.443 xwOBA
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. - 78 PA, 0.433 xwOBA
Randy Arozarena - 75 PA, 0.432 xwOBA
Matt Chapman - 79 PA, 0.426 xwOBA
Nick Castellanos - 78 PA, 0.425 xwOBA
Vinnie Pasquantino - 85 PA, 0.422 xwOBA
Luis Arraez - 64 PA, 128 Swings, 93.8 Cont%
Myles Straw - 63 PA, 104 Swings, 92.3 Cont%
Alec Burleson - 51 PA, 82 Swings, 91.5 Cont%
Keibert Ruiz - 64 PA, 107 Swings, 90.7 Cont%
Alejandro Kirk - 56 PA, 89 Swings, 89.9 Cont%
Bryson Stott - 82 PA, 164 Swings, 89.6 Cont%
Steven Kwan - 78 PA, 137 Swings, 89.1 Cont%
Geraldo Perdomo - 52 PA, 91 Swings, 89.0 Cont%
Nico Hoerner - 95 PA, 170 Swings, 88.8 Cont%
Isaac Paredes - 62 PA, 113 Swings, 88.5 Cont%
Esteury Ruiz - 8 Attempts (7 steals)
Ji Hwan Bae - 5 Attempts (4 steals)
Jazz Chisholm Jr. - 5 Attempts (4 steals)
Adam Frazier - 4 Attempts (3 steals)
Raimel Tapia - 4 Attempts (4 steals)
Bobby Witt Jr. - 4 Attempts (3 steals)
Jonathan India - 4 Attempts (3 steals)
Jorge Mateo - 4 Attempts (3 steals)
Thairo Estrada - 4 Attempts (2 steals)
Taylor Walls - 4 Attempts (4 steals)
Esteury Ruiz - 17 Attempts (16 steals)
Ronald Acuna Jr. - 14 Attempts (13 steals)
Ji Hwan Bae - 14 Attempts (12 steals)
Nico Hoerner - 12 Attempts (10 steals)
Jazz Chisholm Jr. - 12 Attempts (11 steals)
Corbin Carroll - 9 Attempts (7 steals)
Victor Robles - 9 Attempts (8 steals)
Jorge Mateo - 9 Attempts (7 steals)
Thairo Estrada - 9 Attempts (7 steals)
Bobby Witt Jr. - 9 Attempts (7 steals)
Anthony Volpe - 8 Attempts (8 steals)
Starling Marte - 8 Attempts (6 steals)
Wander Franco - 8 Attempts (5 steals)
Cody Bellinger - 8 Attempts (7 steals)
Shohei Ohtani - 8 Attempts (5 steals)
Whit Merrifield - 8 Attempts (7 steals)
Luis Garcia - +10.1% Contact%, +3.2 mph exit velo, -10.4 Chase%
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. - +8.8% Contact%, +4.1 mph exit velo, -5.9 Chase%
Taylor Walls - +5.3% Contact%, +5.3 mph exit velo, -4.8 Chase%
Ian Happ - 0.414 xwOBA, 12.5% Brl%, 77.0% Contact%, 16.5% Chase%, 17.3% K%
Masataka Yoshida - 0.531 xwOBA, 16.7% Brl%, 90.1% Contact%, 17.3% Chase%, 6.9% K%
Max Kepler - 0.397 xwOBA, 14.7% Brl%, 81.2% Contact%, 21.7% Chase%, 22.2% K%
Ronald Acuna Jr. - 0.493 xwOBA, 17.5% Brl%, 79.3% Contact%, 18.9% Chase%, 14.0% K%
Joey Gallo - 38.7% Whiff%, 76.2% Weak%, 0.964 Cold Rating
Nick Maton - 36.8% Whiff%, 72.7% Weak%, 0.929 Cold Rating
Andres Gimenez - 32.2% Whiff%, 78.6% Weak%, 0.9 Cold Rating
Andrew McCutchen - 39.2% Whiff%, 68.0% Weak%, 0.884 Cold Rating
Michael Conforto - 34.0% Whiff%, 70.4% Weak%, 0.87 Cold Rating
Alek Thomas - 31.0% Whiff%, 75.0% Weak%, 0.866 Cold Rating
Nolan Gorman - 34.1% Whiff%, 69.6% Weak%, 0.865 Cold Rating
Brian Anderson - 31.2% Whiff%, 72.0% Weak%, 0.847 Cold Rating
James Outman - 49.4% Whiff%, 65.2% Weak%, 0.841 Cold Rating
Kris Bryant - 34.3% Whiff%, 67.9% Weak%, 0.839 Cold Rating
Zac Veen (COL): 3/5, 2R, 0HR, 6RBI, 1SB, 39FPts
Moises Gomez - 664332 (STL): 4/6, 2R, 2HR, 2RBI, 0SB, 36FPts
Ronaldo Hernandez (BOS): 2/4, 2R, 2HR, 4RBI, 0SB, 32FPts
Dominic Canzone (ARI): 2/4, 2R, 2HR, 4RBI, 0SB, 32FPts
Matt Kroon (PHI): 3/4, 2R, 1HR, 5RBI, 0SB, 32FPts
Justin Dirden (HOU): 3/4, 2R, 1HR, 3RBI, 0SB, 31FPts
Andruw Monasterio (MIL): 1/2, 2R, 1HR, 3RBI, 1SB, 31FPts
Nolan Jones (COL): 4/5, 1R, 0HR, 3RBI, 1SB, 30FPts
Johnathan Rodriguez (CLE): 2/3, 1R, 1HR, 4RBI, 0SB, 29FPts
Johan Rojas (PHI): 2/4, 4R, 1HR, 2RBI, 0SB, 29FPts
Dax Fulton (MIA): 5IP, 1H, 0ER, 8K, 4BB, 28FPts
Zach Plesac (CLE): 7IP, 3H, 1ER, 6K, 2BB, 26FPts
Blayne Enlow (MIN): 6IP, 4H, 1ER, 9K, 1BB, 26FPts
Robert Dugger (TEX): 6IP, 3H, 2ER, 8K, 2BB, 26FPts
Anthony Veneziano (KC): 6IP, 5H, 0ER, 6K, 0BB, 26FPts
Sem Robberse (TOR): 6IP, 1H, 0ER, 7K, 1BB, 26FPts
Alex Troop (WSH): 6IP, 3H, 0ER, 7K, 1BB, 25FPts
Edgar Escobar (STL): 4IP, 1H, 0ER, 6K, 1BB, 24FPts
Tommy Milone (SEA): 7IP, 5H, 0ER, 6K, 1BB, 24FPts
Gray Fenter (NYY): 5IP, 2H, 1ER, 6K, 1BB, 23FPts
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