Fantasy Baseball Notes: April 20, 2013

Roy Halladay had his best start of the year last night, throwing seven innings with six strikeouts, two walks and only giving up two earned runs (both home runs). His fastball sat between 89-90, but touched 92 three or four times. Other than the two home runs there were only one other instance a ball was hit hard. Even though only 54% of his pitches were strikes, he painted the corners consistently, especially with his cutter to right handed batters and curveball to left handed batters.

Stephen Strasburg’s night didn’t start out the way he would’ve hoped for; with an error by Ian Desmond on a fairly routine ground ball hit Jordany Valdespin to begin the game. For the first six, seven batters his fastball command was off, but he eventually settled down and retired 14 batters straight before allowing a home run to Ike Davis. His curveball wasn’t effective as a lot of the Mets batters laid off of it. Oh by the way, for all the fantasy owners who wanted to drop Davis because of his slow start should hopefully settle down. If you drafted him, like I did, you have give him at least 150 plate appearances before jumping ship.

Matt Harvey has looked great this year, but the hype surrounding him is growing out of control. He looked pretty good last night (and his career), but not to the level of Dwight Gooden, as he was constantly compared to on the Mets broadcast all last night. I have serious concerns about his secondary offerings, especially the changeup and curveball. Right now, those pitches are more “show me” pitches in order to not let hitters set dead red on his fastball. In order for him to maintain his effectiveness he’s going to refine these more because eventually hitter’s are going to layoff of the fastball up in the zone and he’ll have to rely on those pitches to get outs.

Quick Hits: Brett Anderson hurt himself again last night in Tampa. He sprained his ankle on a pitch to Yunel Escobar. Anderson is one of the least athletic pitchers in the game and I’m starting to believe this will lead to injuries like this all the time. If Anderson goes on the DL, Dan Straily will be called up…If you read my free agent pickups column about Lucas Duda last week you’re a very happy fantasy owner…I’m not buying Wandy Rodriguez. Despite the Braves record, they’re offense will be extremely susceptible to hot and cold streaks because their propensity to strikeout a lot and not walk at all.

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Fantasy Baseball Notes: April 19, 2013

Hisashi Iwakuma was only able to throw six innings despite only throwing 70 pitches. His day was finished earlier than expected because of a blister on his right middle finger, his throwing hand. The blister problem has been an issue since April 5 in Oakland. This has been an ongoing problem because he left the game early on April 12. The biggest change is the ground ball rate, last year it was 53 percent, but this year he’s only at 30 percent. However, his strikeout rate has increased three percentage points; his strikeout rate is 22.5 percent. I tend to avoid fly ball pitchers because they’re more susceptible to the home run and blow outings, but Iwakuma is a must start.

Tony Cingrani outpitched Jose Fernandez last night, but Cingrani had the luxury of playing with Major League caliber players. Cingrani’s box score of five innings, five hits, three walks, eight strikeouts and one earned run makes it sound like he was more dominating than he truly was. His changeup lacked good movement and depth. The command of the curveball/slider was loose; only about half of them were thrown near the strike zone. That said, there were one or two curveball’s that looked really good. Twice during the game runners were on 2nd and 3rd with one less outs with the 4th and 5th batting (Placido Polanco and Gregg Dobbs) and he was able to escape those innings without allowing a run. I have to imagine if he was facing any semblance of a quality lineup he would have given up three runs instead of one. Also, he was extremely inefficient as he was only to go five innings while throwing 102 pitches. So what’s Cingrani’s fantasy value? I’m sure he’s owned in every league that he’s available. In NFBC Leagues I bet he’ll go for around the same price as Jose Fernandez went for ($100-$400), which is to high for me. Todd Zola wrote a great article about how fantasy owners should deploy their FAAB. Basically he said you should try to spend as much of during the beginning of the season to get the most value. If Cingrani looked better I would be willing to bid $200, but I have doubts he’ll stay in the rotation and that he will be more effective than other free agent pitchers such as Chris Tillman and Felix Doubront.

Jose Fernandez looked mortal for the first time this year, giving up five earned runs, six hits, three walks in only four innings. For the first two innings he was dominant, striking out three and not allowing a ball out the infield. Starting in the 4th inning is when the wheels became to fall off; Reds hitters started swinging at the first pitch, which were all fastballs up in the strike zone. Basically he became predictable and when Major League notice a pitcher’s tendencies they’ll exploit them like they did last night.

Lastly, Justin Verlander is really really good before he fell victim to a couple of bloop hits.

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Fantasy Baseball Notes: April 18, 2013

Wade Davis pitched really well, throwing and mixing his pitches (fastball, cutter and curveball) throughout the entire game. He pitched inside to right handed batters. The cutter, thrown 88-90 mph, had good glove side run and reminded me of a plus slider. This was the first start where he really mixed his pitches really well, throwing the curveball and cutter more often.

Chris Tillman’s velocity increased after the second inning. Initially the fastball sat 89-91 mph, but starting in the third inning the fastball say 91-93 mph. Even though he didn’t have the desired results today, his mechanics looked good and repeated his delivery.

Matt Moore was more efficient in his outing, requiring only 104 pitches to pitch 6.67 innings. What made this a dominant outing was the consistent release point for the curveball and fastball. He pitched ahead in the count to the majority of the batters he faced. The curveball worked well to both right handed and left handed batters. He had three walks and it looks as though he’ll always be a high walk pitcher because no matter how well he’s pitching, he tends to lose command of his pitches randomly.

Bud Norris did not have a lot of movement on the slider and a lot of his pitches were elevated in the strike zone. It appears as though he was struggling gripping the ball because he kept licking his fingers after every throw.

Shelby Miller’s day started with a triple by Sterling Marte to right field that Carlos Beltran misplayed. Miller’s command was shaky in the first inning, but after that inning he settled down and didn’t allow a base runner for the next four innings. What I was most impressed with the last fastball he threw (pitch #98) was 95 mph. The biggest takeaway is the Cardinals defense isn’t very good anymore. Beltran has limited range, Daniel Descalso and Matt Carpenter are both below average defenders.

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