The Sporer Report: 9/28 — 10/4

Welcome to The Sporer Report. It is designed to set up the week from a pitching perspective. Once the season gets rolling, Mondays become one of the regularly scheduled off days, so the slates will often be lighter and that allows us some time to plan for the remaining six days of the week, five of which will have full slates (Thursday is the other regular off-day).

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Each week I will deep-dive the projected starters rundown identifying the best starts of the week, the potential value plays on the docket, and the starts where an otherwise strong asset may find some trouble. Additionally, I will rank my top 10 and bottom 10 bullpens. The importance here is two-fold: 1) you want to be careful betting on weak bullpens as it could cost you starter wins which is especially important if they are highly valued (like DraftDay where they are 10 points) and 2) if you’re stacking against some tomato can, you don’t really want him to be reinforced by a top bullpen because that could stunt your stack when the starter is lifted after two-plus innings and you didn’t get nearly the points you expected.

This is the outline for now as we start the season, but I’m certain I will be adding in-season as ideas pop up. In fact, if you have any pitching-related items you’d like to see included in the Weekly Report, please let me know in the comments or on Twitter. Also remember that anytime we are dealing with projected starters, the key is the projected part of it. They are subject to change, especially the ones later in the week.

TOP 35 STARTS (JUST THE BEST, REGARDLESS OF PRICE)

We’re just looking for the best potential payoff here. A lot of these guys will be the expensive arms atop the slate, but that investment will likely pay dividends. These are the guys you will be looking to in 50/50s and H2H matchups because there is just little chance of a total meltdown.

TOP 30 STARTS

RK PITCHER OPP DAY NOTE
1 Clayton Kershaw at SF Tue Not commenting on everyone in the final edition, do you really need reasons to roster Kershaw, Greinke, Arrieta, etc.?
2 Clayton Kershaw SD Sun
3 Jake Arrieta at MIL Fri He’s taking that Cy Young Award right out of Greinke’s hands w/an unreal second half (0.80 ERA in 101.3 IP)
4 Zack Greinke at SF Mon
5 Zack Greinke SD Sat
6 Madison Bumgarner LAD Tue
7 Madison Bumgarner COL Sun
8 Stephen Strasburg at ATL Thu Four straight 10+ K games; 2.09 ERA, 0.71 WHIP, 85 Ks, 7 BBs in 60.3 IP since returning
9 David Price at BAL Thu
10 Cole Hamels LAA Sun LAA has been poor v. LHP all year, but they’ve been especially bad of late, sitting 26th in runs the last month
11 Chris Sale KC Fri
12 Gerrit Cole STL Wed Hitting his peak form just before October: 2.30 ERA, 0.84 WHIP, and 32 Ks in 27.3 IP
13 Chris Archer TOR Sat
14 Jose Fernandez at TB Thu A poor first inning ruined him v. ATL; final start might only be 5 IP, but he avg’d 23 FPPG in his other 2 starts since returning
15 Dallas Keuchel at ARI Sat
16 Carlos Carrasco MIN Wed Carrasco’s 30% K rate is tied for third-best among SPs w/Scherzer; he’s at 33% for the 2H, second to only Kershaw
17 Justin Verlander at CWS Sun Posted a 7% SwStr rate in his F5 starts, he’s been below 7% just twice in his L13 starts (11% total)
18 Max Scherzer at NYM Sat Since the start of August, he still has 77 Ks and just 12 BBs in 61.7 IP, but the 14 HRs have killed him; risky, but still worth it
19 Danny Salazar BOS Fri
20 Felix Hernandez OAK Fri It might not be peak-Felix since the 10 ER outing, but it’s been damn good: 3.14 ERA, 1.08 WHIP, 23% K rate in 48.7 IP
21 Justin Verlander at TEX Mon
22 John Lackey at ATL Sat 8 of his last 9 road starts have been quality starts and 6 of those were better than the baseline (6 IP/3 ER)
23 Jaime Garcia at ATL Fri
24 Lance Lynn at ATL Sun He gets the Braves on the last game of the season, could he be on 89% of all rosters, even football ones?
25 Jon Lester at CIN Wed Billy Hamilton not playing makes this a better start for Lester given his holding runners issues
26 Tyson Ross MIL Tue One of only two starts to go at least 20 starts (and he’s gone 32) without a 5+ ER start
27 Corey Kluber MIN Mon
28 Marcus Stroman at BAL Tue It’s only three starts, but he looks fantastic; the 60% GB rate covers for the 14% K rate a bit; he’s ~20% K rate guy
29 Carlos Rodon KC Thu He’s his biggest enemy w/the walk because when he’s on, he’s very difficult to hit (6.3 H/9 in L8 w/a 1.81 ERA)
30 Jordan Zimmermann at ATL Wed Zimm’s 3.98 ERA over his L10 isn’t special, but I do like the 64 Ks in 61 IP; opponent tips the scale in favor of Zimm here

POTENTIAL VALUE STARTS (CHEAPER GUYS WORTH CONSIDERING)

These guys are very unlikely to be among the highest priced arms on the board, but obviously that juicy price point comes with risk. Just how much risk will vary depending on the slate, but there is almost always some value to be mined in the pitching pool. We swim in this pool understanding that they will bust at times and tank a lineup, but the potential upside is enough to incur that risk. These guys make great off-the-radar gambles for larger scale tournaments where you need some uniqueness to hit big.

POTENTIAL VALUE STARTS

RK PITCHER OPP DAY NOTE
1 Patrick Corbin COL Thu He’s been fantastic since coming back: 3.28 ERA, 1.122 WHIP, 73 Ks, and 16 BBs in 79.7 IP
2 Julio Teheran STL Fri Home is where you want to use Teheran (3.06 ERA, 1.07 WHIP in 103 IP)
3 J.A. Happ CIN Sun Honestly, I’d be fine using him today v. STL, too
4 Hisashi Iwakuma OAK Sat An out shy of six straight QS: 2.33 ERA, 1.09 WHIP, 35 Ks, and 7 BBs in 38.7 IP during that time
5 Luis Severino at BAL Sat He’s been bad just once in 10 starts and it was against the league’s best offense
6 Drew Smyly MIA Wed There hasn’t been much in between, he’s either been really good or really bad
7 Erasmo Ramirez MIA Thu He’s been great as a starter this year: 2.99 ERA, 1.04 WHIP in 138.7 IP
8 Mike Fiers at SEA Tue After allowing 6 ER in his first appearance w/HOU, he’s got a 2.44 ERA, 0.97 WHIP in 51.7 IP
9 Rich Hill at NYY Thu This isn’t Nick Martinez earlier this year; Hill is backing up this craziness in addition to some great luck
10 Aaron Nola MIA Fri Nevermind, he was shutdown after all

POTENTIAL LANDMINES (QUALITY ARMS WHO COULD STUMBLE)

Sometimes you think you’ve got a great option for the day. Maybe he’s an expensive guy who has the track record worth trusting or perhaps you’re speculating a bit further down the list and feel like the matchup merits a gamble. However, that stud might not be as sturdy as you think and maybe the team your gamble is facing can’t hit on the whole, but the one thing they do well is the exact weakness of your gamble play. Every week will have potential landmines, upper- and mid-tier arms in a presumed rosterable spot who might actually be in for an implosion.

I changed this up a little bit to listing the offenses that are scary first and then naming the pitchers who could be in trouble against them. I didn’t list all pitchers facing them, but just those who you’d actually consider using at any point, whether it’s a stud or more of a value play. Let me know what you think of this change.

POTENTIAL LANDMINES

RK TEAM PITCHERS IN DANGER COMMENT
1 TOR V. ALL Archer, Odorizzi, Tillman, Gausman Still fighting for the AL’s best record
2 CHC v. RHP DeSclafani, Ventura, some Brewers Only scored 6 v. PIT, but should light up CIN/MIL this week
3 LAD V. ALL Bumgarner, Shields, Peavy, Leake Should clinch the NLW quickly, but still battling for 2nd-best rec.
4 ARI v. RHP McCullers, McHugh, some Rockies Goldy, Peralta, Pollock, Inciarte, and Castillo all >120 wRC+ v. RH
5 TB V. LHP Conley, Buehrle Just one lefty in each series
6 SEA v. RHP McCullers, Fiers, Bassitt 3rd in wOBA v. RHP in the second half
7 DET v. LHP Sale, Hamels Weirdly still dominating lefties, but two good ones here
8 NYM v. ALL Scherzer, Gonzalez, Roark, some Phillies They’re still mashing: 3rd v. LH and RH in the last month
9 NYY V. ALL Rodriguez, Porcello, Hill, Tillman, Chen No stars you need to avoid, plenty of SPs worth picking on

About the Author

PSporer
PSporer

Paul has been writing about baseball for 15 years at various internet outlets and he’s been an avid fantasy baseballer for 21 of his 33 years on this planet, joining his first league at 12 years old which is still running today. He writes a comprehensive starting pitcher guide each year and it’s now available thespguide.com. When’s he’s not watching baseball, he is sleeping, because why would anyone waste time being awake if they weren’t going to watch baseball? He writes three times a week and has his own podcast at Fangraphs with co-hosts Eno Sarris & Jason Collette, contributes to Rotowire, and he has been a guest co-host with Matthew Berry on ESPN’s Fantasy Focus podcast.