The Starting Pitcher Barometer is Nathan Dokken’s bi-weekly look at the Top 100 Starting Pitcher Rankings for 2021 Fantasy Baseball.
“No-no” is something I’ve been told a lot in my life. From being a wee lad getting caught trying to eat a whole package of bacon, to a college student trying to get a date, I’m familiar with the phrase. Well, no longer shall that phrase strike fear into my heart! Now I’m an adult and I can eat a whole package of bacon whenever I want. Also, we got a no-no from a new Friar, Joe Musgrove!
More on him in a bit. This is (mostly) a fun week for pitching, as we are getting back about as many starters as we lost. There’s not a ton of movement just yet, as I try not to overreact to just one or two starts. The primary factors that are going to alter my perception this early in the season are increased velocity and changes in pitch mix. Carlos Rodon, for example, has altered his mechanics and picked up some velo. Lance McCullers has a fancy new slider. That said, a few performances have caught my eye, either good or bad. We’ll check those guys out in this week’s Risers, Fallers, and Newcomers.
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The Starting Pitcher Barometer
The Risers
Joe Musgrove, SD (+3)
The biggest headline of the week on the pitching side was Joe Musgrove tossing the first no-hitter in Padres team history. Musgrove looks to be the latest in a long string of former Pirates starters who find immediate success with a new ballclub. The Pirates love their fastballs, while the rest of the league moves towards more breaking pitches. Getting away from the fastball is exactly what has been the key to Musgrove’s early success.
He has cut his fastball usage in half while upping his cutter usage from just 6% last year to nearly 25%. He is also throwing more sliders – something we’re seeing a lot of across the league. I already had Musgrove fairly high, so he hasn’t actually jumped much this week. Even with slightly increased velocity this year, I don’t see a true ace here or anything. That said, you should be happy if you drafted him. He should easily be a solid #3 fantasy starter this season.
Matt Shoemaker, MIN (+17)
The Cobbler is back, and he’s out for vengeance! For too long, the Shoe Destroyer and his evil henchmen have been blowing up shoes across the nation. It’s time to put their evil shenanigans to an end! The Cobbler 2: Electric Boogaloo, starring a CGI Arnold Schwarzenneger in his 30’s, coming to a theater near you this summer. With a lot of shoe explosions. Hopefully, everyone knows that a cobbler is someone who mends shoes and not a walking fruit dessert.
Anyway, most who have been playing fantasy for years know the deal with Shoemaker. He’s an effective starter…while he’s healthy. Unfortunately, a healthy Cobbler is a rare sight. He hasn’t thrown more than 77.2 IP in a single season since 2016. For the time being, he’s healthy, and he’s faring well in the Twins rotation.
He’s been throwing more sliders than ever, with over 25% usage. The pitch even earned a shiny 43% CSW in his latest start against the Mariners. He’s very much worth streaming while he’s healthy. Just don’t expect that to last long, or for him to pitch too deep into games.
Johnny Cueto, SF (+28)
Cueto came one out shy of a complete game in his latest effort at home against the Rockies. He gave up just one run on four hits and a walk with seven strikeouts. It’s just two starts, but so far he’s been utilizing his slider more than ever at 22%. Does this mean he’s in for some sort of 35-year old breakout season? No. He’s never posted a K/9 north of nine, and a few more sliders this year isn’t going to make this year his first. That said, he gets a big bump on the list this week. He goes from a risky borderline-top 100 guy to a preferable streamer. In a fantasy world full of five-and-dives, roll the dice on a guy who can pitch deep into games consistently.
The Fallers
Chris Paddack, SD (-11)
2020 was a massive disappointment for Paddack, and 2021 has been more of the same. He has yet to eclipse four innings through two starts, and his command hasn’t been what it usually is. Without his typical pinpoint command (1.9 BB/9 in ’19-’20), he can’t get away with a limited two-pitch arsenal. He has essentially scrapped his cutter and curve he dabbled with last year. Whereas other former two-pitch starters such as Tyler Glasnow and Lance McCullers are adding pitches to their arsenal and rising, Paddack heads the other way. The command should rebound so that he is still useful, but he’s no longer a starter you can throw into your lineup 100% of the time without a second thought.
Tarik Skubal, DET (-33)
I was tempted to go Skubal diving after Tarik put up a 10.41 K/9 in his 2020 rookie campaign. Sure, he got torched with a 5.63 ERA, but the stuff looked very good. If he could just limit the long ball (9 HR in 32 IP in ’20), we might just have something here. Right? Woof. As with Paddack, 2021 has been more of the same for Skubal. Not only has he given up three homers in nine innings already this year, his K-BB% has cratered. It sat at 19.4% in 2020, but through two 2021 starts, is a nearly nonexistent 4.9%.
He’s made some changes to his pitch mix, but they sure haven’t worked out. He has swapped out his changeup for a splitter and doubled his slider usage.
As you can see, he hasn’t been able to control the splitter. He’s only tossed 15 of them so far, but it has allowed a .662 wOBA, which isn’t exactly encouraging. Until he gets himself straightened out, I wouldn’t be starting him. He may be off the list by next week.
The Newcomers
Bruce Zimmermann, BAL (SP86)
With Jordan Zimmermann on his way out of the league, I was getting really worried that there wouldn’t be enough Zimmermann’s in the league with multiple n’s. Thankfully, we have Bruce almighty entering the league. The 26-year old lefty has been solid through two starts for the O’s, although not exactly electric. He has a solid four-pitch mix (FB/CH/CB/SL) which has earned a 31.6% CSW through 12 IP. As long as his control remains above-average, he can be a solid spot-starter for you streaming enthusiasts out there.
Jeff Hoffman, CIN (SP95)
Nothing cures what’s ailing you like getting off the Rockies roster. This goes double for pitchers. Hoffman has only tossed 9.1 IP through two starts but has an intriguing arsenal. He has brought back a previously scrapped slider to use against righties with curves and changeups to lefties. He’s earned an 11.9% SwStr% but just a 26.4% CSW, so we can’t really expect more than a K/IP. A flyball heavy starter in Great American Small Park also feels a bit like juggling chainsaws, which is not something I like to do too often. Mostly just on weekends.
Top 100 Starting Pitcher Rankings
Rnk | Name | Prev. Rank |
---|---|---|
1 | Jacob deGrom | 1 |
2 | Gerrit Cole | 2 |
3 | Shane Bieber | 3 |
4 | Aaron Nola | 4 |
5 | Trevor Bauer | 7 |
6 | Clayton Kershaw | 6 |
7 | Lucas Giolito | 5 |
8 | Yu Darvish | 8 |
9 | Walker Buehler | 10 |
10 | Tyler Glasnow | 11 |
11 | Max Scherzer | 9 |
12 | Lance Lynn | 12 |
13 | Luis Castillo | 16 |
14 | Corbin Burnes | 17 |
15 | Kenta Maeda | 14 |
16 | Brandon Woodruff | 15 |
17 | Jack Flaherty | 13 |
18 | Blake Snell | 18 |
19 | Zack Wheeler | 19 |
20 | Jose Berrios | 20 |
21 | Sandy Alcantara | 21 |
22 | Zac Gallen | NA |
23 | Sonny Gray | NA |
24 | Max Fried | 22 |
25 | Hyun Jin Ryu | 24 |
26 | Zack Greinke | 25 |
27 | Lance McCullers | 26 |
28 | Aaron Civale | 28 |
29 | Joe Musgrove | 32 |
30 | Zach Plesac | 36 |
31 | Charlie Morton | 29 |
32 | Dylan Bundy | 30 |
33 | Kyle Hendricks | 23 |
34 | Patrick Corbin | 31 |
35 | Frankie Montas | 34 |
36 | Julio Urias | 39 |
37 | Marcus Stroman | 37 |
38 | Ian Anderson | 38 |
39 | Jesus Luzardo | 35 |
40 | Stephen Strasburg | 40 |
41 | Pablo Lopez | 27 |
42 | Yusei Kikuchi | 44 |
43 | Michael Pineda | 46 |
44 | Chris Paddack | 33 |
45 | Trevor Rogers | 54 |
46 | Freddy Peralta | 45 |
47 | Shohei Ohtani | 42 |
48 | Mike Minor | 49 |
49 | German Marquez | 47 |
50 | Tyler Mahle | 41 |
51 | Ryan Yarbrough | 50 |
52 | John Means | 51 |
53 | Carlos Martinez | 52 |
54 | Kevin Gausman | 62 |
55 | Dustin May | 53 |
56 | Matthew Boyd | 60 |
57 | Carlos Rodon | 61 |
58 | Zach Eflin | 58 |
59 | Jameson Taillon | 56 |
60 | Eduardo Rodriguez | NA |
61 | Nathan Eovaldi | 59 |
62 | Jordan Montgomery | 65 |
63 | Triston McKenzie | 48 |
64 | Dallas Keuchel | 55 |
65 | Robbie Ray | 63 |
66 | Matt Shoemaker | 83 |
67 | Andrew Heaney | 72 |
68 | Corey Kluber | 68 |
69 | Johnny Cueto | 97 |
70 | Logan Webb | 64 |
71 | JT Brubaker | 73 |
72 | Garrett Richards | 71 |
73 | Dylan Cease | 70 |
74 | Zach Davies | 57 |
75 | Brady Singer | 67 |
76 | Marco Gonzales | 74 |
77 | Mitch Keller | 75 |
78 | Jose Urquidy | 76 |
79 | Sean Manaea | 77 |
80 | Drew Smyly | 78 |
81 | Luke Weaver | 89 |
82 | Adbert Alzolay | 79 |
83 | Chris Bassitt | 80 |
84 | Justus Sheffield | 81 |
85 | Taijuan Walker | 82 |
86 | Bruce Zimmermann | NA |
87 | Dane Dunning | 85 |
88 | Jordan Lyles | NA |
89 | Griffin Canning | 87 |
90 | Alex Cobb | 88 |
91 | Casey Mize | 86 |
92 | Christian Javier | 90 |
93 | Adrian Houser | 91 |
94 | Taylor Widener | 99 |
95 | Jeff Hoffman | NA |
96 | JA Happ | 93 |
97 | Aaron Sanchez | 98 |
98 | Adrian Morejon | 96 |
99 | Tarik Skubal | 66 |
100 | Steven Matz | NA |
Fell Off The List:
James Paxton (Injury), Domingo German (Optioned), Tanner Houck (Optioned), David Peterson (Performance), Brad Keller (Performance), Chris Flexen (Performance), Daniel Ponce de Leon (Performance).
For more help in keeping your roster fine-tuned head on over and check out Eric Cross’s Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire!
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