👉 TAP TO SAVE 30% WITH CODE NEW
X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

#1 Expert Projections
Save 30% Now
Import Your Leagues
Top-Rated Accuracy
Draft Simulator
Enter League Settings
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

Flopping Aces - Finding Value in Slow-Starting Pitching Performances

Jon Denzler examines slow starts by top starting pitchers and recommends which SP to hold and who to trade based on their unusual metrics so far this 2018 fantasy baseball season.

Growing up, the baseball mantra from my father was “wait until 40 games and then you can know how a team will play.”  Perhaps this was just a way for a Cleveland fan growing up in the 80s to keep hope, or maybe there is some truth to that saying.  

Small sample sizes do matter. Some players take a few weeks to get going, and all the other baseball truisms apply. Overreactions kill teams, and so too with fantasy rosters. 

Still, if you have Yu Darvish and others on your roster, waiting for 40 games might be torture. Perhaps even watching his first four starts have been torture. What to do what with that flopping ace?  This article will offer some context and reactions to slow starts from some of the name brands in The Show. NFBC average draft positions for drafts post-February 1st are included for context.

Be sure to check all of our fantasy baseball draft tools and resources:

 

Time to Deal Your Aces?

Yu Darvish, Chicago Cubs (ADP: 45)

So far, Darvish’s Chicago career has been a major dud. Through four games he has failed to win a game, is averaging less than five innings a start, is walking 5.03 per nine, and has an ERA over six. Any reason for optimism here? Sure, pitchers with this track record have earned a longer leash, and in roto leagues, the damage can only get better. If Darvish is this bad, the season is perhaps already over, so no reason to not stay the course. Even more, Darvish has faced some good teams and played the Rockies at Coors. The Braves, for example, were top of the league in offense when they met Darvish, so small sample and hot teams could indeed be the primary factor here. The most promising note is that Darvish is still averaging more than a strikeout an inning, meaning the stuff has not fallen off a cliff. The most significant marker hinting at a turnaround is a BABIP almost 40 points higher than Darvish’s career average. He might be getting “bad-lucked” to death.

BALLER MOVE: Hang tight, do not sell when his value is this low. If the right trade offer emerges, be willing to pull the trigger, but do not sell for pennies on the dollar. There is still a ton of value in this profile.

 

Jon Gray, Colorado Rockies (ADP: 163)

Gray owners know the roller coaster that is a season behind this Colorado pitcher. Not only does he pitch in the pitcher wasteland that is Coors field, but also plays in front of the streaky Rockies who can never really seem to figure out who they are offensively. Pitching at Coors, Gray has posted a career ERA of 4.76 with a WHIP of 1.311. On the road? Gray has posted an ERA of 4.32 and WHIP of 1.354. While not a noticeable difference in ERA based on the home/road splits, Gray seems to give up a similar amount of base runners no matter the park, which should serve as a significant warning flag for fantasy owners. Back to this year, the biggest change for Gray has been an increase in home runs allowed. His career average has been 0.92 HR/9, but this year that has surged to 1.10 HR/9. Compared to some other power pitchers this number is not all that high, but with that WHIP the HR do more damage. Still, the K% and BB% are stable with career numbers, and even an xFIP of 3.38 shows that this package will improve.  

BALLER MOVE: Trade for Gray where possible, as he is starting to be dropped in some leagues, and should be cheap where still owned.  As the start versus the Padres on April 25th showed, he is still a legitimate SP2 in most formats, but the HR needs to come down to be reliable.  

 

Marcus Stroman, Toronto Blue Jays (ADP: 151)

What do owners do with a pitcher that is striking out more batters this year, inducing more ground balls, and still seeing a surge in ERA?  That is the question for Marcus Stroman owners. To say the metrics are weird is an understatement since he is seemingly taking the “right” steps for a fantasy pitcher.  The major red flag is walk rate. So far this year Stroman is walking 6.30 BB/9. Connect that with a slightly higher HR/FB rate (20%) and owners can see where the damage is coming from.

Where is the good news? Even with the increase in HR, Stoman is giving up fewer fly balls than ever before with a drop to 16.1%. Even with the surge in HARD% to 50%, the likelihood of the HR continuing is not high.  The other weird outlier? 0% IFFB%. Storman is losing cheap outs and giving up more hard contact which seems unsustainable to continue, if, and the big if, he can get that BB% down.

BALLER MOVE: If the HR numbers continue this is going to be a tough year for Stroman with Judge, Stanton, Betts, etc.  If the name still has value in a league, this seems to be a sell-low option. With the emergence of players like Happ in that Toronto rotation, there seem to be fillers with less implosion potential.      

 

Robbie Ray, Arizona Diamondbacks (ADP: 46)

Perhaps not an ace per se, Ray does hold a special place in the fantasy community for that K rate, and other attractive stats that can boost a roster.  This year through five games he has two wins, 5.81 BB/9, and an era of 5.13. The good news? The strikeouts! Right now 14.7 K/9 should excite owners who can look past the first few numbers.  A few other things to consider when looking to Ray. Through his first five starts, he has hit one batter and thrown two wild pitches. Once every 8.6 innings he has hit or advanced a runner via the wild pitch.  How does this compare to career numbers? In both 2016 and 2017, this stat set at 12.4 innings. Apparently, the control is not there so far this season, but perhaps a wild Ray has even better stuff.

BALLER MOVE: Ray has always been a bit of an outlier with the K profile, and should have been expected to benefit from the humidor at Chase Field.  No reason to be alarmed yet, and even if there is a concern, compared to others on this list Ray is still offering value where he was expected to.

 

Dallas Keuchel, Houston Astros (ADP: 73)

Dallas Keuchel entered the year as a consensus bounce back pitcher who has seen injuries derail still quality seasons since winning the Cy Young in 2015. So far this year, Keuchel might be the worst starter in Houston. Not like that is saying much as pitching behind Verlander, Cole, Morton, and McCullers means that even the worst might be the best elsewhere. A 25.4 Soft% coming into this season was the calling card and helped avoid the issues with a soft-tossing pitcher. This season that number is even better with a rise to 29.2%. So then what gives? Three losses through the first few weeks with only one win shows that even a small change in the profile has long-term effects.  The BB/9 has jumped to 3.72, and GB% has dropped from 66.8% to 57.3% this season. The other concern? While the ERA sits at 3.10 Keuchel’s xFIP sits at 3.98. Not bad compared to other pitchers, but alarming when the ERA is the one thing making him a top fantasy pitcher at this point.

BALLER MOVE: Too early to sound the alarm, but a Keuchel owner might consider shopping the starter while most of the concern is more rooted in the profile.  The ERA still sells, but who knows for how long. Flipping for a penalty of one or two rounds seems worth it in case this is the season that Keuchel falls off the cliff.  

 

Chris Archer, Tampa Bay Rays (ADP: 54)

The final name on the list might be the most concerning.  Through five games only one win, an ERA of 6.29, and 1.65 HR/9 do not bode well for this “ace.” The main concern? His fastball. So far this season, Archer has thrown the four-seamer 45% of the time, and yet as a pitch, the fastball has been worth -5.3 runs above average.  Archer, in only 27.1 innings has given up five additional runs compared to the norm, just looking to his primary pitch. The good news? With an xFIP at 3.80 means that some of the damage can be blamed on the defense behind him or luck to some extent.  The downside? Without Kevin Kiermaier patrolling center there is no way that the defense gets better in the short term. At least with a pitcher like Ray, there was value in the K rate, but with Archer, this is also down this year. Finally, Archer is getting opposing hitters to chase less. An O-Swing % is barely lower than career average but a full point lower than last year. On the flipside, opposing hitters are swinging at pitches in the zone nine percent more than last year. Archer is not deceptive, and batters are teeing off.

BALLER MOVE: Of all the pitchers on this list, Archer is the closest to a recommendation to drop in shallow and 10-team leagues. No trade value means even a sell-low option is off the table. Bench him and hope for a rebound.     

 

More 2018 MLB Advice and Analysis




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

#1 Expert Projections
Save 30% Now
Import Your Leagues
Top-Rated Accuracy
Draft Simulator
Enter League Settings
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Paul George

Ready to Rock Saturday
Bruce Brown

Suffers Leg Injury Saturday
Shedeur Sanders

the Favorite to Win Browns QB Job?
Kirk Cousins

Could Make Starts for Raiders in 2026
Austin Reaves

Out for Remainder of Regular Season
Travon Walker

Jaguars Sign Travon Walker to Four-Year Extension
Nick Lardis

Available Against Kraken
Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Won't Play Saturday
MLB

Cubs-Guardians Game Postponed on Saturday
Mookie Betts

Leaves Early With Back Injury
Tyler Kleven

Out Week-to-Week
Mason Marchment

Expected to Return Saturday
Aliaksei Protas

Returns on Saturday
Zach Hyman

Could Miss Two Weeks
Damon Severson

Undergoes Season-Ending Surgery
Jalen Duren

Added to Injury Report Saturday
Paul George

Probable Saturday
Tyler Herro

a Late Scratch Saturday, Simone Fontecchio Starts
Joel Embiid

Will Sit Out Saturday's Game
George Holani

Time as Seahawks RB1 Looks to Be Short-Lived
Justin Champagnie

Active Saturday
Bilal Coulibaly

Tre Johnson Available Against Heat
Harold Fannin Jr.

Is Harold Fannin Jr. a Top-Five Dynasty Tight End?
Tristan Vukcevic

Alexandre Sarr, Tristan Vukcevic Won't Play Saturday
Tim Hardaway Jr.

Upgraded to Available Saturday
Brenton Strange

Easily Overlooked Among Jacksonville Pass Catchers
Tyler Herro

Cleared to Play Saturday
Kendre Miller

a Dynasty Cut Candidate
Marvin Harrison Jr.

Can Marvin Harrison Jr. Deliver on Pre-Draft Hype in Year 3?
Marquise Brown

Outlook Dependent on Teammate's Trade Rumors
Darnell Mooney

Looking for a Fresh Start in New York?
Alejandro Kirk

Placed on 10-Day Injured List With Thumb Fracture
Kansas City Chiefs

Makai Lemon Meets with Chiefs on Top-30 Visit
Christian Kirk

Could Still Produce in WR3 Role
Brashard Smith

Still Third on the Depth Chart?
Jalen Hurts

Eagles Aware of Mounting Pressure from Contract
Juan Soto

Mets Concerned About Juan Soto's Calf Injury
Joel Embiid

Records Double-Double Friday
CJ McCollum

Drops 25 Points in Blowout Win
Mitchell Robinson

Posts Double-Double as Starter
Wendell Carter Jr.

Posts Season-High 28 Points
Desmond Bane

Delivers Strong All-Around Line
Cooper Flagg

Explodes for 51 Points
Andrew Wiggins

Available Vs. Wizards
Marcus Sasser

Probable to Face 76ers Saturday
Justin Champagnie

Questionable Saturday
Juan Soto

Removed with Calf Tightness
PHI

Daniel Vladar Defeats the Islanders
Matvei Michkov

Has Three-Point Game on Friday
Byron Buxton

is Day-to-Day with Forearm Contusion
Byron Buxton

Leaves on Friday After Being Hit by a Pitch
Rashee Rice

Won't Face Discipline From NFL
Cade Horton

Headed for Injured List Stint
Isaac Paredes

Placed on Bereavement List
Jordan Lawlar

Suffers Fractured Wrist, Set to Miss 6-8 Weeks
Alejandro Kirk

Having X-Rays on his Thumb
Cade Horton

Exits Friday's Start with Forearm Tightness
Kyren Williams

a Value RB1 in Dynasty Leagues?
Ben Sinnott

Breakout Might Not Happen in Washington
Sam Darnold

Worth Holding in Dynasty Leagues?
Jerry Jeudy

Dynasty Managers Losing Patience Ahead of Year 7
Justin Fields

a Short-Term Option in Kansas City
Chase DeLauter

Returns to Lineup on Friday After Injury Scare
Chris Duncan

Set For UFC Vegas 115 Main Event
Renato Moicano

An Underdog At UFC Vegas 115
Tabatha Ricci

Set For UFC Vegas 115 Co-Main Event
Virna Jandiroba

Looks To Bounce Back
Brendson Ribeiro

In Desperate Need Of Win
Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev

Looks To Remain Unbeaten
Ethyn Ewing

Set For His Second UFC Bout
Rafael Estevam

Looks To Remain Undefeated
Kayshon Boutte

an Offseason Riser in Dynasty Leagues
Patrick Kane

Becomes NHL's Highest-Scoring American
Elias Salomonsson

Lands in Concussion Protocol
Nick Lardis

Injures Left Hand Thursday
Jack McBain

Exits With Lower-Body Injury Thursday
Tyler Kleven

Exits Early Versus Sabres
Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Injured in Thursday's Loss
Justin Faulk

Suffers Lower-Body Injury Thursday
Anthony Cirelli

Earns a Hat Trick
Konnor Griffin

Secures $140M Deal; Pittsburgh Building Around Young Star
Carter Yakemchuk

in Concussion Protocol
NJ

Arseni Gritsyuk Done for the Season
Tyson Foerster

Available Against Red Wings
Zach Hyman

a Game-Time Decision Thursday
Konnor Griffin

Being Promoted to MLB Roster Ahead of Friday's Contest
Konnor Griffin

Pirates in "Deep" Negotiations for Long-Term Contract
Carlos Estévez

Royals Place Carlos Estevez on 15-Day Injured List
CFB

Gunner Stockton Looking "Great" After Offseason Injury
CFB

Sam Leavitt Showing "Encouraging Signs" at LSU Practice
J.J. Spaun

Needs the Putter to Cooperate in San Antonio
Thorbjorn Olesen

Trending Up in San Antonio
Denny McCarthy

Carrying Momentum into San Antonio
Jose Fernandez

Launches Two Home Runs in Historic MLB Debut
Chase DeLauter

Exits Tuesday's Game with Foot Injury, X-Rays Come Back Negative
Chris Kirk

Has Course History on His Side in San Antonio
Billy Horschel

a Volatile Option at the Valero Texas Open
Joe Highsmith

Still Searching for Form in San Antonio
Christiaan Bezuidenhout

Looks to Find Form at the Valero Texas Open
Seiya Suzuki

to Begin a Rehab Assignment Soon
Jordan Spieth

a Horse for Course History at TPC San Antonio
Robert MacIntyre

Has One Flaw to Overcome at Valero Texas Open to be a Must-Play
Maverick McNealy

In Exceptional Form This Season
Michael Thorbjornsen

Playing Well But Still Searching For A Win
Hideki Matsuyama

Playing Well Heading to the Valero Texas Open
Si Woo Kim

Heads to Valero Texas Open For Final Tune-Up Before Masters
Cody Ponce

Diagnosed With ACL Sprain, to Miss "Significant Time"
Collin Morikawa

Withdraws From Valero Texas Open
PGA

Stephan Jaegar Still Looking For Consistency at Valero Texas Open
Nicolai Hojgaard

is Red-Hot Coming to TPC San Antonio
Tony Finau

a Risky Proposition at Valero Texas Open
Ludvig Aberg

Looks to Shake Off Collapse at Valero Texas Open
Patrick Rodgers

Needs to Make More Birdies in San Antonio
Sepp Straka

Seeks Opportunity in San Antonio This Weekend
Nick Taylor

Could Again Struggle at the Valero Texas Open
Chase Elliott

Takes Advantage of Pit Strategies for Second Career Martinsville Win
Denny Hamlin

Dominates but Finishes Second at Martinsville
Joey Logano

Bounces Back with Third-Place Finish at Martinsville
Ty Gibbs

Gains his Fourth Top-Five Finish of the Season at Martinsville
William Byron

Scores Another Top-Five Finish at Martinsville
Joe Pyfer

Extends His Winning Streak
Israel Adesanya

Loses Fourth Consecutive Fight
Maycee Barber

Suffers Her First Knockout Loss
Alexa Grasso

Scores Highlight-Reel Knockout
Niko Price

Retires After UFC Seattle Loss
Michael Chiesa

Victorious In His Retirement Fight
Julian Erosa

Suffers First-Round Knockout Loss
Lerryan Douglas

Scores First-Round Knockout Win In His UFC Debut
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF