Fantasy Baseball Notes: April 23, 2013

Bartolo Colon has made four starts since returning from a 50 game suspension he received last year and he’s looks like the same he pitcher he did last year. The average velocity of his fastball, the walk rate, strikeout rate and batting average against are all eerily similar to last year. Last year he had a 3.43 ERA, 1.21 WHIP and a strikeout rate of 14%. A pitcher who pitches in pitcher friendly ballpark and who provides those numbers should be owned in all leagues.

Carlos Marmol blew another save, but he was put in a difficult position of having to pitch to Joey Votto with zero outs and runner on second base. He looked awful at times, but he pitched two innings the night before (26 pitches) and most importantly, got out of the inning without allowing an additional run. Kevin Gregg got the save, but I believe Marmol gets the next shot, assuming there’s not a save opportunity today; Marmol is probably not available today.

Tony Cingrani had a great game last night going seven innings, five hits, nine strikeouts and zero walks. He utilized his slider/curveball more, throwing it 18% of the time; in his last start he threw his fastball 91% of the time. If you own him you’re starting him, but his success will not last because relies too much on deception and the fastball too often to get outs consistently over a long period of time. If you’re in a dynasty league I would sell high right now.

J.J. Putz blew his third save of the year. If Putz were to falter in his next save chance Heath Bell would be the next pitcher to get the next save chance. Even though David Hernandez is the best pitcher in the bullpen, Bell makes more money and has “done it before,” which will most likely curry favor with an old school manager like Kirk Gibson.

R.A. Dickey had another “rough” (by his standards) outing allowing four runs, five walks, six hits over six innings. Prior to the game he was bothered by a sore neck and back; the injury started during the Kansas City start. His next start, on Sunday, at the Yankees, is a game I’m not starting him because this is a type of injury that could linger for an extended period of time without any resolution date.

David Price looked pretty good, but he still doesn’t look like the same pitcher we’re accustomed to seeing. His fastball velocity averaged 93 mph and topped out 94.7 mph. Last year his fastball averaged 95.4 mph. It’s too reductive to blame the decline in fastball velocity as the reason for his poor start, but the quality of his stuff doesn’t look as crisp. His swing and miss rate is 17 percent and last year it was 21 percent. One pitch isn’t accounting for the decrease, but all his pitches have a lower swing and miss rate compared to last year (table below). I’m not panicking, but I’m definitely worried if I’m a Price owner.

Pitch Type

2012

2013

Fastball

16.07%

13.16%

Change Up

25.82%

20.00%

Curveball

39.47%

31.58%

Slider

20.00%

11.11%

Cutter

22.73%

12.50%

Totals

21.17%

17.33%

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