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

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

Carlos Rodon and Kevin Gausman Are Even Better in 2022 - So Much For Regression

Carlos Rodon - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, MLB Injury News, DFS Lineup Picks

Thunder Dan Palyo dives into the hot starts of starting pitchers Kevin Gausman and Carlos Rodon to prove their early-season success in 2022 is sustainable for fantasy baseball.

With six starts under their belts in the 2022 season, Kevin Gausman of the Toronto Blue Jays and Carlos Rodon of the San Francisco Giants have looked like the two best pitchers in baseball and thrust themselves onto the shortlist for the Cy Young Award in their respective leagues.

Despite having excellent 2021 seasons, both pitchers found themselves on new teams in 2022. Gausman left San Francisco in free agency and signed a fat five-year contract worth 110 million. The Jays had to replace Robbie Ray, who won the AL Cy Young, and Steven Matz who both got lucrative deals elsewhere. Meanwhile, Rodon wasn't offered a new deal by the White Sox despite a very productive 2021 season and then ended up signing a deal worth 20+ million a year for two years with the Giants.

So oddly enough, these two dominant pitchers' fates have been intertwined as the departure of Gausman from San Francisco actually led to the arrival of Rodon (and Alex Cobb, who has looked great and is also a splitter pitcher like Gausman, but that's another article for another day). These two pitchers are atop the pitching leaderboards in nearly every category, but I don't think their early returns are fluky by any means. I hope I can convince you to hold onto these aces if you have them because they have what it takes to keep pitching at a high level and I think both of them can turn in top-10 performances for the rest of the season.

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

 

From Gas Can to God Tier

I don't want to spend too much time on the backstory of how Gausman turned his career around, but I think it's somewhat important to understand how he has evolved as a pitcher in order to get you to have faith that he can continue his dominance.

Gausman was a first-round pick of the Orioles back in 2012 out of LSU. At age 21 he was already a pretty polished pitcher and for that reason (and because Baltimore so badly needed pitching help) he spent very little time in the minors before debuting at the big league level in 2013. By 2016, at the age of 25, he finally put in his first full MLB season, starting 30 games and finishing 9-12 with a 3.61 ERA.

Those numbers weren't bad by any means, but this version of Gausman wasn't really anything special either. He was an average pitcher at best, sporting a 22-23% strikeout rate and he had a real problem with the long ball as he allowed an average of 27 home runs per season from 2016-to 2018. Pitching for the Orioles, he was routinely facing the Yankees and Red Sox for a large chunk of starts and pitching half of his games at home in the extremely hitter-friendly venue of Camden Yards (before they moved the fences).

There was a time when he was with Baltimore that some of us in the DFS community even referred to him as "Kevin Gas-Can" and would routinely stack hitters against him, especially since guys like Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez had a boatload of success against him.

Finally, in 2018, Baltimore gave up on him and shipped him to Atlanta mid-season. He lasted only a year in Atlanta before being dealt to the Reds where he finished out 2019. At the age of 29, he signed in San Francisco and began the process of remaking himself as a pitcher.

In 1.5 seasons (with 2020 being a shortened season) with the Giants, Gausman posted a 17-9 record with a 3.00 ERA, 1.06 WHIP, and 10.9 K/9. There were a few key changes to his approach that helped him make such noticeable gains across the board.

By 2019, Gausman had pretty much ditched both his slider and changeup and was throwing his splitter more than ever before (37% of the time). But you'll notice that he brought them back in 2020 with the change-up being his preferred third pitch (14%) and it allowed him to throw fewer splitters and fewer fastballs.

The downward trend in four-seamers is one of the reasons Gausman continues to get better. His fastball clocks in around 94 MPH and is his worst pitch in terms of how hard it gets hit. His splitter is his best pitch, but he can't rely on it exclusively either, especially when he throws it outside the strike zone most of the time. The splitter was one of the best pitches in baseball in 2021, with a -23 Statcast run value, a 46% whiff rate, and a .156 xBA.

Gausman's splitter has always been a good pitch, but he picked up an extra inch of vertical movement on it in 2020 and it continues to be a nasty complement to a competent, but not usually overpowering fastball.

Gausman has shown improved command on all his pitches and it's no secret that Giants' pitching coach Andrew Bailey has had a major impact on Gausman and others in his relatively short tenure. Opposing hitters were making weaker contact and striking out more often against his retooled arsenal. And in 2021, he set career-highs in wins, innings pitched, and strikeouts. He clearly earned a big payday and rather than extend Gausman, the Giants let him walk, choosing several other reclamation projects (Alex Cobb, Jake Junis) and eventually bringing in Rodon when other teams were fearful of him for his health concerns.

 

Gausman 3.0?

So even if we got the 2021 version of Gausman this season, fantasy managers would likely have been happy with that level of his production for where he was being drafted. Some in the industry were concerned that a move back to the American League East was going to prove difficult for him and I think some people simply weren't sold on him being really, really good just yet since we had only a season and a half sample of the dominant version of Gausman in San Fran.

But he's been even better in Toronto and both Blue Jays fans and Gausman owners alike have to be thrilled with what they've seen from him so far this season. Through seven starts he's sporting a 2.40 ERA that is backed by a 2.51 xERA, 0.84 FIP, and 2.20 SIERA. There's simply nothing fluky about what you're getting from Gausman this season, he's the real deal.

He's striking out 30.9% of opposing hitters while walking only 1.1% of them at the same time. His 29.7% K-BB% is second only to Shane McClanahan, who is enjoying a massive breakout season of his own. I attribute a lot of his success this year to the pinpoint control of his pitches. He's getting ahead of hitters better than ever with an incredible 70.9% first-strike % and then forcing them to chase his splitter (still nastier than ever) and slider (he's ditched the change-up for increased slider usage to right-handers) out the zone.

He's burying the slider down and away from righties and giving hitters another offspeed pitch with a different spin and break than his splitter to worry about. The slider has a 25% SwStr% this year and a 32.5% CSW%. He's cut back on the changeup usage to just 4% and the increased usage and effectiveness of the slider have to be playing a big role in his success so far.

You can see from his Statcast slide that his chase rate is elite. He's getting hitters to swing at pitches out of the zone at an absurd 48.9% of the time which has been one of the real keys to his strikeout numbers. The plan is simple. Throw the fastball for strikes early in the count and then get hitters to chase the splitter or slider down out of the zone.

We saw Toronto's pitching coach Pete Walker turn Robbie Ray's career around last year and give Jose Berrios a boost. Gausman wasn't a reclamation project at all, he was already a really good pitcher. But he certainly looks like he could be a great one in 2022 and beyond. There's no reason to sell high or temper expectations here. Kevin Gausman looks like the truth and I expect him to continue dominating hitters the rest of the season like we have seen him do through the first month and a half.

 

King Carlos

I could talk about Kevin Gausman all day, but enough about him already. Let's talk about the king of the K, Mr. Carlos Rodon shall we? Rodon's 36.1% strikeout rate is currently third-best in the league behind McClanahan and Dylan Cease. If I had finished this article a few days sooner, he would have been near the top of the league in multiple other categories too, except that he had his worst outing of the season on Sunday when he gave up eight runs on 10 hits to the St. Louis Cardinals.

That outing blew up his ERA from under two to where it stands now at 3.49. But I'm not trying to read into one start all that much here early in the season. Nothing was really wrong in terms of his velocity and there were no signs of an injury, he just ran into a good Cardinals offense that had his number. His HardHit% slider dipped quite a bit as a result, but as you can see in his Statcast slider here, he's still doing a lot of things really well.

Rodon was one of the best stories in baseball last year when he took the American League by storm, piling up 130 strikeouts in 89 innings during the first half of the 2021 season. Rodon has always had good stuff but was in his sixth season with Chicago and had never pitched more than 165 innings, which he did all the way back in 2016 at age 23. He battled injuries on and off again for several years leading up to his 2021 breakout. He was limited to just 43 innings in the second half as the White Sox were cautious with him down the stretch and their efforts to preserve him for the postseason were all for nothing as he made just one start in the ALDS as the White Sox were bounced in the first round in four games by Houston.

Rodon still ended the season with fantastic numbers across the board, but with only 132.2 total innings pitched he didn't offer the same value as other "workhorse" pitchers to fantasy managers, or apparently to the White Sox who chose not to re-sign him.

One of the biggest keys to his rebirth in 2021 was the increase in velocity on his four-seamer. He was throwing 94 MPH as a 22-year-old when he came up but had dipped down into the 91-93 range during his injury-plagued seasons from 2017 to 2020. Then last year he averaged 95.4 on his heater and he absolutely pounded the zone with it. The extra velocity on his fastball gave him the confidence in it that he needed to increase his usage of it as it was effective at both missing bats and setting up his slider for strikeouts.

So far this season he's upped his velocity another tick to an average of 96.3 MPH and he's throwing it more than ever with a 63.6% usage. He's dropped the changeup entirely and has been working on incorporating a curveball as his third pitch. His slider has been even better this season with an increased SwStr% of 21.3% and 33.7% CSW%. His fastball and slider are good enough that he can continue to be really good with just throwing two pitches, but if he can throw the slower curveball (around 78 MPH) that has more vertical break then he could become even more unhittable.

He doesn't have the same control that Gausman does, but he has seen a modest increase in his first pitch strike % as he's up 2% to 60.6% so far this season and he's getting 5% more swings from hitters on pitches out of the zone. The velocity on his fastball allows him to get away with throwing in the heart of the zone more often and right now he's being ultra-aggressive with it in order to set up hitters for the breaking ball.

 

Keep Riding Rodon?

If you are someone who is risk-averse, then holding onto Rodon probably isn't the move for you. But how many risk-averse managers even drafted Rodon, right? There were lingering concerns about him coming into the season that prevented him from being drafted with other elite pitchers.

What we know is this. This version of Carlos Rodon is really, really good and is an excellent fantasy asset. What we don't know is how he will hold up for an entire season and if the increased fastball velocity is sustainable over 150 or more innings. I do think it's good, on one hand, that he's throwing the fastball more often as it's saving his arm from too many sliders. Pitchers who rely on breaking balls as their primary pitches have shown to wear down quicker over time.

If the fastball velocity does dip back into the 94 MPH range, he's going to have to be more careful with it and won't be able to challenge hitters up in the zone as often. So even though we are talking about a 29-year-old pitcher who is in his eighth season in the league, we are still in many ways in uncharted territory when it comes to Rodon.

I have optimism regarding Rodon based on the reputation that the Giants have for getting the most out of their pitchers. I mentioned earlier with Gausman and they clearly maximized his potential, but they're doing some great work with Alex Wood, Jake Junis, and Alex Cobb, too.

If you were bold enough to snag Rodon on draft day, sit back and enjoy watching him dominate! I think he can keep it going and if he is able to do so, the reward is well worth the risk. And if you want to know which match-ups to target Rodon for DFS or strikeout props, follow me @ThunderDanDFS on Twitter and I'll let you know!



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy baseball app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, sleepers, prospects & more. All free!



More Fantasy Baseball Advice




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Daily Stats & Leaders
All Pitcher Matchups
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
Rookies & Call-Ups
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

NFL

Dolphins Expected To Move On From Jalen Ramsey Soon
Shota Imanaga

Expected To Make His Next Start
Tennessee Titans

Chimere Dike Has "Flexibility" To Play All Wide Receiver Positions
Justin Martinez

Diamondbacks Place Justin Martinez On 15-Day Injured List With Shoulder Inflammation
Kyle Higashioka

Placed On 10-Day Injured List
Corey Seager

Targeting Saturday Return
Seattle Seahawks

Seahawks Exercise Charles Cross' Fifth-Year Option
Philadelphia Eagles

Eagles Decline Kenyon Green's Fifth-Year Option
Jacksonville Jaguars

Jaguars Not Picking Up Devin Lloyd's Fifth-Year Option
New York Giants

Jaxson Dart Expected To Sit And Learn In 2025
Arizona Cardinals

Jonathan Gannon Excited For Marvin Harrison Jr.'s Second Season
Alexis Díaz

Alexis Diaz Optioned To Triple-A
Amen Thompson

Fills Stat Sheet In Game 5 Victory
Stephen Curry

Held To 13 Points Wednesday Night
Anthony Edwards

Struggles To Score In Series-Clincher
Rudy Gobert

Comes Up Big In Game 5 Victory
Luka Dončić

Luka Doncic Battles Back Issue In Game 5 Loss
LeBron James

Undecided On Future
Derrick Jones Jr.

Fine For Thursday
Filip Gustavsson

On Track To Play Thursday
Sam Reinhart

Caps Off First Round With Multi-Point Effort
Eetu Luostarinen

Explodes For Four Points In Series-Clincher
Dylan Strome

Extends Point Streak With Two Assists
Alex Ovechkin

Pots 30th Playoff Power-Play Goal
Kyle Connor

Ties Jets Record With Fourth Three-Point Playoff Game
Mark Scheifele

Injured In Game 5
New York Giants

Evan Neal Moving To Offensive Guard
Chris Sale

Strikes Out 10
Dallas Cowboys

Cowboys Waive Malik Davis
Houston Texans

John Metchie III Could Be Odd-Man Out
Masyn Winn

Homers Twice In Game 1 Of Doubleheader
Kansas City Chiefs

Chiefs Release Anthony Firkser
New England Patriots

Patriots Not Picking Up Cole Strange's Fifth-Year Option
Justin Martinez

Could Land On Injured List
Tommy Edman

Dealing With Ankle Injury
Ranger Suárez

Ranger Suarez To Make Season Debut On Sunday
Kyle Stowers

Blasts Two Homers
Maxi Kleber

Available For Lakers Debut Wednesday
Buffalo Bills

Elijah Moore Signs With Bills On One-Year Deal
Mike Trout

Pulled As Precaution Due To Knee Soreness
Dylan Moore

Expected To Return From Injured List After Minimum Stay
Jonathan Kuminga

Out With An Illness
Max Scherzer

Completes Another Successful Bullpen Session
Jimmy Butler III

Ready To Play Wednesday
Jared Jones

Begins Throwing Progression
Isaiah Stewart

In Danger Of Missing Another Game Thursday
Alex Iafallo

Drops To Second Line Wednesday
Pavel Dorofeyev

To Be A Game-Time Call Thursday
Tyler Tucker

Ruled Out For Game 5
Chase Dollander

Leaves Early On Wednesday With Blister Issue
Nicolai Hojgaard

Looking To Build Off Last Week's Runner-Up Finish
Sam Montembeault

Remains Out For Game 5
Aliaksei Protas

Likely To Return Wednesday
Gary Woodland

Could See Success At CJ CUP
Alexandre Carrier

A Game-Time Call Wednesday
Patrik Laine

Out On Wednesday
Cam Davis

Making First Appearance At TPC Craig Ranch
Lance McCullers Jr.

To Make Season Debut On Sunday Against White Sox
Griffin Conine

Expected To Miss Rest Of The Season
Bryce Miller

Battles Through Back Injury On Tuesday
Green Bay Packers

Devonte Wyatt's Fifth-Year Option Exercised By Packers
New York Jets

Quarterback Jordan Travis Retires From Football
Taylor Ward

Sitting On Wednesday
Pittsburgh Steelers

Montravius Adams Released By Steelers
Sam Burns

Could Be Due For A Great Week At TPC Craig Ranch
Philadelphia Eagles

Eagles Picking Up Fifth-Year Option On Jordan Davis
Minnesota Vikings

Myles Price Lands With Vikings As UDFA
Cleveland Browns

NFL Hands Out Fines To Falcons, Jeff Ulbrich For Leak Of Shedeur Sanders' Phone Number
Tyler Glasnow

Shut Down For 10-14 Days
Cleveland Browns

Shedeur Sanders Has A Lot Of Work To Do
Pittsburgh Steelers

Calvin Austin III Has Inside Track On Slot Role
Patrick Rodgers

A Solid Value Play At TPC Craig Ranch
Jamal Murray

Explodes For 43 Points In Game 5
Carson Young

Looking To Recapture Form At CJ Cup
Jayson Tatum

Fires In 35 Points In Series-Clincher
Matt McCarty

An Intriguing Value Play At CJ Cup
Giannis Antetokounmpo

Logs Massive Triple-Double In Game 5
Maxi Kleber

Listed As Questionable For Game 5
Will Zalatoris

Searching For Putting Form At CJ Cup
Rob Dillingham

Out On Wednesday
Jae'Sean Tate

Still Out On Wednesday
Jimmy Butler III

Listed As Probable For Wednesday
Jack Eichel

Notches Two Assists In Game 5 Victory
Sam Stevens

A Risky Play With Upside At CJ Cup
PGA

Sungjae Im Riding Momentum Into CJ Cup
Sebastian Aho

Sends Hurricanes To Round 2
Ben Griffin

Looking To Stay Hot After First Career Win
Jake Knapp

Looking For More Success At TPC Craig Ranch
Linus Ullmark

Records Shutout In Elimination Game
Brady Tkachuk

Extends Point Streak To Four Games
Mackenzie Hughes

Is An Interesting Option At CJ Cup
Pavel Dorofeyev

Doesn't Finish Game 5
Filip Gustavsson

Exits Early Due To Illness
Aaron Ekblad

Slapped With Two-Game Suspension
Aldrich Potgieter

Trending Downward For CJ Cup
Taylor Pendrith

Plays Well In Houston Recently
PGA

Niklas Norgaard May Not Be Cut Out For Texas
Rasmus Hojgaard

Could Be Up Or Down In Texas
Scottie Scheffler

The Untouchable Favorite At CJ Cup
Tom Kim

A Popular Name To Avoid At TPC Craig Ranch
Austin Eckroat

Looking To Find Success Again At TPC Craig Ranch
Ben Kohles

Finishes Tied For 59th At Corales Puntacana Championship
Aaron Nesmith

Upgraded To Available
Bennedict Mathurin

Cleared For Game 5
Alperen Sengün

Alperen Sengun Records Third Consecutive Double-Double
William Byron

Ends With A Strong Top-Five Finish At Talladega
Ryan Blaney

Bad Luck Continues With Talladega Crash
Kyle Larson

Has A Career-Best Performance At Talladega
Ian Machado Garry

Gets Back On Track With UFC Kansas City Win
Brad Keselowski

Talladega Run Ends Early After Crashing
Carlos Prates

Suffers His First UFC Loss
Zhang Mingyang

Still Undefeated In The UFC
Anthony Smith

Retires After UFC Kansas City Loss
Giga Chikadze

Takes Unanimous Decision Loss
Giga Chikadze

Takes Unanimous-Decision Loss
David Onama

Extends Win Streak At UFC Kansas City
Michel Pereira

Drops Decision At UFC Kansas City
Abus Magomedov

Extends His Win Streak
Nicolas Dalby

Gets Finished For The First Time
Randy Brown

Gets Back In The Win Column
Ikram Aliskerov

Gets First-Round TKO Finish At UFC Kansas City
Andre Muniz

Gets TKO'd At UFC Kansas City
Chase Elliott

Recovers from Speeding Penalty to Finish Fifth
Joey Logano

Finishes Last at Talladega After Disqualification for Missing Spoiler Brace
Ryan Preece

Loses Talladega Race First in Photo Finish Then in Post-Race Inspection
NASCAR

Poor Toyota Strategy Arguably Cost Bubba Wallace Winning Chances at Talladega
Christopher Bell

Unhurt After Hard Contact with Inside Retaining Wall
Chase Elliott

Is One OF The Top Overall DFS Picks Of The Week
Joey Logano

Could Joey Logano Finish A Race With A Top Finish At Talladega?
NASCAR

DFS Players Should Like Bubba Wallace For Talladega This Week
Christopher Bell

Should DFS Players Roster Christopher Bell At Talladega?
Austin Cindric

Is Austin Cindric Worth Rostering For Talladega DFS Lineups?
Shane Van Gisbergen

Is A Solid, Safe, DFS Choice For Talladega Lineups
Austin Dillon

Is Austin Dillon A Viable DFS Play At Talladega This Week?
Josh Berry

Qualifies Too High At Talladega To Be Worth Rostering In DFS
Michael McDowell

Should DFS Players Take A Shot On Michael McDowell At Talladega?
Noah Gragson

Could Be A Sneaky DFS Play For Talladega
Denny Hamlin

Probably Qualified Too Well for DFS Consideration
Kyle Larson

Increasingly Undervalued Due to His Crashing, but Still a Great DFS Option
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF