Pitcher injuries are nothing new, but for some reason the number of hurlers, especially high-end players, seems to be dropping like flies this season. Heck, 132 pitchers were on the injured list by Opening Day.
Tommy John surgery has already killed starters like Cleveland’s Shane Bieber, who got off to a monster start, Miami’s Yuri Perez and Orioles closer Felix Bautista. Atlanta’s Spencer Strider underwent UCL surgery on his right elbow on Friday and will be out for the rest of the year. A number of players, including Gerrit Cole, Kodai Chiga and Framber Valdez, are dealing with elbow and shoulder issues.
Whether it’s pitchers being forced to throw harder with a higher turnover rate on every pitch or a faster pitching clock, fantasy managers are being forced to fill big holes in their rotations (and I hope that the person chosen to fill it will not fall next)). Take a look at the options widely available to your team:
young gun
Cutter Crawford is winless in his first three starts, but he has a 0.57 ERA, a 28.1 percent strikeout rate, a 0.127 strikeout rate against opponents, and a 10.8 percent strikeout rate. His walk rate (12.5 percent) is too high, and his xERA (1.62), FIP (2.64), and xFIP (4.01) all show some luck, but this is a pitcher who should be in the top 59 percent of rosters. in the ESPN League.
Tanner Hawk (58.7 percent) has allowed four earned runs (2.04 ERA) in his first three starts, with a strikeout rate of 25 percent, a walk rate of 2.6 percent, and a strikeout rate of 10 percent. He relies heavily on his slider (.207 opponent average) and sinker, and none of his fundamental numbers indicate he’s crumbling (even after getting hit and losing against the Angels on Friday). ). He should be on the roster.
Cody Bradford (46.9 percent), after posting a 3-0 record, 1.40 ERA, 0.62 WHIP, 17-2 strikeout/walk rate, and 0.145 opponent average in his first three starts, (Michael He will likely remain in the Rangers’ rotation even after Lorenzen returns. .
big east
In his final four starts for the Giants last year, he posted a 2-1 record with a 2.25 ERA and a 0.222 opponents average, but Sean Manaea (33%) was 1-0 with an ERA in his first start. 0.82, WHIP 0.73, opponent average 0.118. He started two games for the Mets before pitching on Saturday. He whiffs and whiffs (12.2 percent whiff-strikeout rate) and his velocity has improved, posting a career-best 11.45 strikeouts per nine. The underlying numbers don’t show anything that would scare fantasy managers.
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Philadelphia’s Spencer Turnbull (20.3%) walked only one batter in the first 11 innings, gave up no runs, and struck out 31.7% of the batters he faced. His strikeout rate was 11.4 percent and his opponents batted average was .128. Boasting a 2.26 xERA, 1.39 FIP, and 2.17 xFIP, he should be on more rosters and is in a great position to succeed.
Rays
It seems like every year at least one fantasy option comes out of Tampa Bay, and 2024 will be no different. Zach Littell (23.4 percent) is 1-0 with a 1.17 ERA and 1.304 WHIP while striking out 23.4 percent of the batters he faces. His xERA (1.78), FIP (2.23), and xFIP (3.63) all show regression, but he should still be a viable option.
Aaron Civale (56 percent) has been widely active despite going 2-0 with a 2.12 ERA, 0.94 WHIP, and 9.53 strikeouts per nine at-bats.
frequently injured veterans
Cincinnati’s Frankie Montas (38.4 percent) is 2-1 with a 2.16 ERA, 1.140 WHIP, and a .234 opponent average. He has just 2.2 walks per nine innings, which is his career high, while striking out nearly 20 percent of the batters he faces. If he can stay healthy, he would be a solid addition with some positives.
It would also be a good idea to try out veteran pitchers like James Paxton (13.9 percent), Michael Wacha (18.6 percent), and Tyler Anderson (15.3 percent) before their bodies give in.
former reliever
So far, Jordan Hicks’ transition to starter (47.6 percent) is going well. Despite having a career-low 6.5 strikeouts per nine games, he has walked just 4.5 percent of the batters he has faced and is holding opponents to a .194 batting average in his first three games as a starter. He has a 2-0 record with a 1.00 ERA and 0.83 WHIP.
big hit
Brady Singer SP, Royals
Not only is he batting .156 against opponents, but he has allowed just two earned runs, 18 strikeouts, and just four walks in his first three starts. His ERA of 0.98 as of Friday ranked seventh in the majors.
Spencer Steer 1B/3B/OF, Reds
He is tied for the most RBIs in the majors (15). In his first 12 games, he hit .372 with three home runs and a 1.192 OPS.
Nathan Eovaldi SP, Rangers
In his first three games, he was 1-0 with a 1.45 ERA, but in his past two games he has posted a 0.71 ERA, an 18-3 strikeout rate, and a .163 opponent average.
MJ Melendez OF, Royals
This weekend, he recorded an eight-game hitting streak, with nine hits in 27 at bats (.333 batting average), three home runs, seven RBIs, six RBIs, and an OPS of 1.215.
big whiff
Zach Eflin SP, Rays
He started the first three games, allowing four home runs and 12 runs, with a 1-2 record and a 6.35 ERA. His opponents are batting .282 against him.
Nolan Jones 1B/OF, Rockies
In his first 51 at-bats, he had just eight hits (.157 batting average), no home runs, four RBIs, 23 strikeouts, and a .481 OPS.
Luis Castillo SP, Mariners
He started the season with three consecutive losses, an ERA of 6.89, an opponent average of .352, and a career-worst strikeout rate of 8.2. His xERA (3.51), FIP (3.34), and xFIP (3.14) all point to bad luck. He’s okay.
Dalton Varsho OF, Blue Jays
In his first 38 at-bats, he had only six hits (one extra-base hit, one double), no home runs or RBIs, a strikeout rate of 23.8 percent, and an OPS of .422.
check the swing
– After batting .108 (4-for-37) with no home runs, no RBIs, and a .322 OPS in his first 10 games, Royals’ Vinny Pasquantino went 6-for-8 (.750) with one home run. , had 8 RBIs. He had a 2.075 OPS in the two games leading up to Friday.
– Jason Foley (40 percent registered) appears to be the favorite of the Tigers’ ninth-inning batters, going 3-of-3 on save chances and recording 11.8 strikeouts per nine innings, starting the first He has not conceded a goal in six appearances.
– Finding Nemo: After going 1-for-21 (.048) with a .333 OPS in his first six games, Brandon Nimmo went 9-for-22 (.409) with two home runs, 10 RBIs, five RBIs and a .344 batting average. was recorded. OPS in next 5 games. He’s issuing walks in 15.1 percent of his at-bats, his highest mark since 2019.
– Dodgers’ Teoscar Hernandez joins Spencer Steer and Loto Rage favorite Jake Berger in the majors on Friday despite striking out in 38.7 percent of his at-bats (fourth-highest mark in the majors) Obtained the most RBIs (15 RBIs). He had a batting average of .298, four home runs, and an OPS of .916.
– Milwaukee backstop William Contreras snapped a seven-game hitting streak Friday, going 12-for-29 (.414) with two home runs, nine RBIs, eight RBIs and a 1.175 OPS.
– The story is over: Since signing a six-year, $140 million contract with the Red Sox in 2022, Trevor Story has appeared in less than 30 percent of Boston’s regular season games, batting .227 with an OPS. 681 was recorded. He would again miss the season due to needing surgery on his left shoulder.
– Former Yankees hurler Fritz Peterson died Friday at the age of 82. Unfortunately, the swinging strike rate didn’t matter when he pitched, because it obviously would have been quite high.
This week’s team name
Skubal Divers





