Robbie Ray Walks Six Batters In Losing Effort
Robbie Ray struggled with his control during Sunday's 2-0 loss to the Kansas City Royals. The lefty walked six batters and allowed five hits in five innings of work. But he kept the Royals scoreless and struck out five batters. Ray was making just his second start of the season after missing the beginning of the year due to an elbow bruise. The 29-year-old hurler has now walked nine batters in 10 innings of work after showing much-improved control during the spring. Last season Ray issued 45 free passes in 51 2/3 innings. If he regains his control after the long layoff, he's worth a flier in most fantasy leagues due to his ability to rack up strikeouts.
Source: MLB.com
Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Source: MLB.com
Robbie Ray Works Five Innings In No-Decision
Robbie Ray gave up a two-run home run to rookie Caleb Durbin but was able to limit the damage to just those two runs allowed over his five innings on Tuesday night. He was not efficient with his pitch count and needed 92 pitches to get through five frames while striking out four, walking three, and giving up five hits. The 33-year-old lefty has issued at least three free passes in each of his last four starts and has a 6.7 BB/9 rate on the year. He'll need to improve his control and efficiency to work deeper into games, but he has battled to maintain a 9.3 K/9 and 4.07 ERA despite a 5.87 FIP and 1.56 WHIP. The Giants ultimately won Monday's game, and they'll hope to get a better outing from Ray in his next scheduled start on Saturday against the Rangers.
Source: ESPN.com
San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Source: ESPN.com
Robbie Ray Finishes Strong Spring
Robbie Ray pitched five strong innings on Tuesday to pick up a win in the Giants' 6-4 victory over the Tigers. Ray has only been available for eight starts over the last two seasons but showed good potential in his seven starts last season, going 3-2 with a 4.70 ERA and 4.96 FIP but posting an impressive 12.6 K/9. The 2021 AL Cy Young winner has also looked sharp this spring, allowing just four earned runs in five starts for a 1.86 ERA. He racked up 23 strikeouts in 19 1/3 innings, highlighted by an eight-strikeout performance against the Rangers. Ray has shown he can be good enough when healthy to be a mixed-league option coming into the season. He'll face the Reds on the road in a less-than-ideal matchup next week, but he's definitely someone to watch early in the season.
Source: ESPN.com
San Franciso Giants starting pitcher Source: ESPN.com
Robbie Ray Adds Changeup To Pitch Mix, Strikes Out Three On Tuesday
Robbie Ray is reportedly adding a changeup to his repertoire. The lefty is said to have borrowed the grip from last year's AL Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal after communicating with him this offseason and results so far have been promising. The 33-year-old pitched two innings in Tuesday's 7-5 Cactus League loss to the Athletics, allowing no runs on one hit and zero walks while striking out three, including getting some whiffs on the new changeup. Ray made his way back from Tommy John surgery in July of last season, making seven starts before missing the rest of the year due to a hamstring strain. Although the 4.70 ERA and the 11.6 percent walk rate weren't good, the veteran still demonstrated strong strikeout stuff, posting a 33.3 percent K% with 43 strikeouts in 30 2/3 IP. Fully healthy and armed with a new pitch, the former Cy Young winner has a chance to be a sneaky value pick with an NFBC ADP of 165, as RotoBaller ranks him at 150 overall.
Source: Shayna Rubin
San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Source: Shayna Rubin
Robbie Ray Throws Bullpen On Thursday
Robbie Ray (hamstring) was seen throwing a bullpen session at camp on Thursday. Ray recovered from Tommy John surgery last year and returned to make seven starts in his first year with the Giants, going 3-2 with a 4.70 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, 43 strikeouts and 15 walks in 30 2/3 frames. However, the 33-year-old veteran southpaw ended the year on the injured list after straining his hamstring on Aug. 27. By all accounts, he's fully healthy for spring training and is fully expected to be locked into a starting rotation spot for San Fran in 2025. Ray's 4.70 ERA upon his return last year was not impressive, but his stuff was. The former American League Cy Young winner is injury-prone and can get wild at times, but he proved last year that he still has plenty of swing-and-miss stuff. At a low cost on draft day, Ray is absolutely worth rostering as fantasy starting pitching depth.
Source: San Jose Mercury News - Justice delos Santos
San Francisco Giants left-hander Source: San Jose Mercury News - Justice delos Santos
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