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

Analyzing Pitcher Fly Ball Data for Fantasy Baseball 2023

martin perez fantasy baseball rankings draft sleepers MLB injury news waiver wire pitchers

Jon Anderson looks into the data to see which fantasy baseball pitchers benefited most from good and bad fly-ball luck to get a feel for who is set up for regression in either direction in 2023.

Pitchers don't have much of a say about what happens after a pitch they throw is put into play. There is a ton of randomness that occurs after a hitter makes contact with a ball, and that makes a lot of pitching statistics hard to trust.

Getting ahead of this gives us an advantage. We can have a pretty good feeling about which pitchers were lucky and unlucky, and therefore what direction their future statistics are more likely to go in.

Today, I want to zoom in on fly-balls allowed. We will go over the category, look at some numbers and correlations, and then dig up some applicable takeaways for the 2023 fantasy season.

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

 

League Data

Here is a breakdown of what happened when a fly ball was hit in 2022.

Outcome %
Out 74%
HR 15%
2B 5%
1B 5%
3B 1%

So you are mainly looking at a flyout or a home run. The event with the biggest impact on the stats is the home run. Here's how that rate has changed over the last five years:

We see the spike in 2019 with the juiced ball, and then a 2020 season that was so short it should just be ignored - and then a decline in this category over the last two seasons.

Note that I am using Baseball Savant's classification model for this, not FanGraphs. You will get a number closer to 10% if you use FanGraphs because they count infield fly balls as fly balls while Savant does not.

 

What Do Pitchers Control?

The next question to ask is do the rules apply to everyone evenly? Should we expect a 15% HR/FB for every pitcher, or are some pitchers better or worse than others at this? Let's just take a look at the top 10 highest HR/FB rates from 2021 and see how they followed up in 2022:

Player 2021 HR/FB 2022 HR/FB
JT Brubaker 31.1% 15.7%
Patrick Corbin 27.7% 18.9%
Wil Crowe 25.5% 13.7%
Yusei Kikuchi 25.0% 36.5%
Josiah Gray 24.6% 26.2%
Erick Fedde 24.2% 17.8%
Tarik Skubal 24.0% 11.1%
Dylan Bundy 23.8% 13.7%
Kris Bubic 23.8% 16.8%
Vince Velasquez 23.8% 12.8%

Of the top 10, only Gray and Kikuchi got worse, and most of them saw significantly lower numbers the following year. If we cluster them together, we find that pitchers that went above 20% in 2021 average 16% in 2022. The pitchers who were under 10% in 2021 averaged 17% in 2022. The correlation coefficient here is 0.17 - which means the two lists are not related.

This means that a pitcher has very little to nothing to say about what HR/FB they allow - and it's best to just assume 15% for everybody in the future.

 

Park Data

The one thing that does stay constant year-to-year is park factors (unless they change the dimensions of parks in the offseason, which is becoming more and more common). The worst place to allow a fly ball over the last two seasons has been Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati. 20% of the fly balls there have gone for homers. At the bottom of the list is Comerica Park in Detroit where only 11.2% of fly balls have gone for a homer (note: Comerica is changing their dimensions in a hitter-friendly way this offseason).

Here is the full data on that:


You can see steady domination by Cincinnati. You can also see what a big difference park changes can make, as Camden Yards went from 22% (second-highest) to 12.5% (sixth-lowest) with that left field wall change.

This should lead us to project a rate above 15% for Hunter Greene and a much lower than 15% for Brady Singer - just to take a quick example there.

 

Pitcher Standouts

Since we know that we should be regressing the extremes toward the mean, now we can look for these extremes and upgrade or downgrade them accordingly. It's important to note that the rate of allowing fly balls is something a pitcher controls. K% is very steady year-to-year (correlation around 0.7) and so is FB% allowed (correlation around 0.65). If you're striking out 30% of the hitters you face and earning a 50% ground-ball rate, there is very little difference that can be made by the HR/FB because you're just not allowing many balls in play. We will take this into account moving forward.

What I did now is basically replay the 2022 season using a regressed HR/FB for each pitcher. I did include park factors here, so we are still penalizing or rewarded pitchers for where they pitched.

The long and short of it is I found how many fly balls each player allowed and then came up with an expected home run total based on that 15% HR/FB, adjusted for the home ballpark (I only took half the overall effect since pitchers pitch about half their games at home). First, I'll show you the biggest differentials in the negative frame - these are pitchers that allowed fewer homers than they were expected to.

Pitcher K% FB% HR/FB HR xHR Diff
Martin Perez 20.6% 21.4% 6.5% 8 19 11
Max Fried 23.3% 21.6% 8.8% 10 19 9
Alek Manoah 22.9% 27.1% 10.3% 15 24 9
Kevin Gausman 28.3% 26.3% 10.1% 13 21 8
Ross Stripling 20.7% 24.1% 8.2% 8 16 8
Adam Wainwright 17.8% 25.2% 9.3% 14 22 8
Tyler Anderson 19.5% 27.4% 9.7% 14 22 8
Chris Flexen 16.2% 32.6% 9.7% 14 22 8
Patrick Sandoval 23.7% 22.1% 8.6% 8 15 7
Nick Nelson 22.5% 25.4% 2.0% 1 8 7
Justin Verlander 27.8% 28.5% 9.4% 12 19 7
Johnny Cueto 15.7% 27.6% 9.9% 14 21 7

Holy cow on Martin Perez! Giving up 11 extra homers would mean something like 15-20 extra earned runs. If we add 15 earned runs onto his total, it takes his ERA from 2.89 to 3.57.

At this point, I realize that I'm basically just talking about xFIP. Perez's xFIP was 3.80 - so yeah, it checks out.

Fried and Manoah are also super notable here as pitchers who had elite ERA marks with lower strikeout rates. Fried has been doing this long enough that maybe we just have to admit that he's solved the puzzle of soft contact, but that hasn't really been true in HR/FB for him as he allowed a 16% mark in 2021, a 27% mark in 2019, and a 27% mark in 2018 - so he's been all over the place there.

Manoah put up a 15% HR/FB in 2021 and then brought that down in 2022 to what you see above. More potential bad news for him is that the Rogers Centre is changing a bit this offseason, and if it makes any difference, it will likely be in the hitters' favor. Manoah is young and skilled enough to cancel out this regression with a higher strikeout rate - and maybe we should just expect that to happen, but it's a bit alarming to see him pop up this high on the list.

Now, let us look at the other end of the spectrum - the bad-luck pitchers:

Pitcher K% FB% HR/FB HR xHR Diff
Josiah Gray 23.8 33.6 26.2 37 23 -14
Yusei Kikuchi 27.4 24.0 36.5 23 10 -13
Robbie Ray 27.4 28.9 21.7 31 22 -9
Bruce Zimmermann 15.3 27.6 26.8 19 10 -9
Charlie Morton 28.2 28.1 22.6 28 20 -8
Elvin Rodriguez 17.6 32.4 36.4 12 4 -8
Mike Mayers 20.2 32.3 29.4 15 8 -7
German Marquez 19.3 24.7 20.9 29 22 -7
Mike Minor 16.9 29.2 23.7 23 16 -7
Gerrit Cole 32.4 28.6 21.7 30 23 -7
Adrian Martinez 20.5 26.1 25.0 12 6 -6
Kirk McCarty 16.5 29.4 31.4 11 5 -6
Joe Musgrove 24.9 22.8 19.3 22 16 -6
Elieser Hernandez 21.7 35.4 23.5 16 10 -6
Zach Thompson 16.6 21.8 21.6 19 13 -6

The top two players here also gave up a ton of homers on fly balls last season, and we saw them both in the first table we cited here. Maybe that means that something these guys are doing is making their pitches much easier to square up, that's certainly possible. Figuring that out right now doesn't seem very important in these two cases since neither of these guys is being drafted in most leagues right now - although Gray does still pique some interest with his former prospect pedigree and the good whiff rates he's posted in his young career.

Ray, Morton, Cole, and Musgrove are the only obviously fantasy-relevant pitchers on this list, and it's likely they all benefit from regression in 2023.

Do you want the full data? Of course, you do! Here it is, all 429 pitchers that allowed at least 25 fly-balls last year along with the rest of the numbers we've cited above. The "FBHR" column is how many homers they allowed on fly balls. It might not exactly match their HR-allowed totals since you can allow a home run on a line drive as well. Check it out, enjoy it, and send me your thoughts and takeaways - and I'll talk to you later on!

 



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

Mikal Bridges

Signs Extension with Knicks
Jackson Chourio

Expected to Go on Injured List With Hamstring Strain
Jonathan Aranda

Rays Hope Jonathan Aranda Can Return in September
Justin Herbert

Wants to Run More This Season?
KaVontae Turpin

Becoming a Focal Point in the Cowboys' Offense?
Terry McLaurin

Requests a Trade
Shelby Miller

Brewers Acquire Shelby Miller
José Caballero

Jose Caballero Shipped to the Bronx
Bailey Falter

Traded to Royals
Andy Isabella

Signs with San Francisco
Charlie Morton

Headed to Detroit
Camilo Doval

Yankees Acquire Camilo Doval
Trey Palmer

Dealing with Hamstring Injury
Griffin Jax

Traded to Tampa Bay
Connor McDavid

Oilers Hope to Finalize Connor McDavid's Contract Extension Soon
Jordan James

Misses Practice With "Knee Issues"
Willi Castro

Joining Cubs
BUF

Devon Levi Re-Signs With Sabres for Two Years
Merrill Kelly

Rangers to Acquire Merrill Kelly
Martin Pospisil

Signs Three-Year Extension
Braelon Allen

Dealing With Knee Soreness
Miles Sanders

Misses Practice With Slight Knee Bruise
Jaydon Blue

Continues to Impress
Ramón Laureano

Ramon Laureano Heading to San Diego
Cam Skattebo

Out With Undisclosed Injury
Ryan O'Hearn

Padres Acquire Ryan O'Hearn From Orioles
Jesús Sánchez

Jesus Sanchez Traded to the Astros
Carlos Correa

Astros Acquire Carlos Correa From the Twins
Marvin Harrison Jr.

Sitting Out of Thursday's Practice
Andrei Iosivas

"Dazzling" at Training Camp
Cedric Mullins

Mets Acquiring Cedric Mullins
Jauan Jennings

Sidelined for Third Straight Day
Jonathan Aranda

Exits Thursday With Apparent Wrist Injury
Tyler Johnson

Showing Out at Jets Camp
Mason Taylor

the Clear TE1 for Jets
Jakobi Meyers

to Sign Contract Extension this Offseason?
Andy Isabella

Marquez Callaway Sign With San Francisco
David Bednar

Yankees to Acquire David Bednar
Ameer Abdullah

49ers Sign Ameer Abdullah
Quinnen Williams

Leaves Practice with Calf Injury
Yandy Díaz

Yandy Diaz Exits After Hit by Pitch Against Yankees
Juwan Johnson

Returns to Practice in Limited Capacity
Dawson Knox

Returns to Bills Practice
Chandler Simpson

Leaves Early With Injury on Thursday
Luis Robert Jr.

More Likely to Stay With White Sox
Brock Stewart

Gets Traded to the Dodgers
Dario Šarić

Dario Saric Hoping to Have Meaningful Role with Kings
Donte DiVincenzo

to Skip EuroBasket Due to Injury
Ayo Dosunmu

Set to Remain in Chicago
Malevy Leons

Signs Exhibit 10 Deal With Thunder
Daeqwon Plowden

Kings Pick Up Daeqwon Plowden on Two-Way Deal
Bryce McGowens

Signs Two-Way Deal with Pelicans
Jonathan Kuminga

Declines Latest Offers from Golden State
Gary Woodland

Eyeing Strong Finish to Reach Playoffs
Max McGreevy

Chasing a Miracle at Wyndham
Stephan Jaeger

a Solid Value Play at Wyndham Championship
Max Homa

Fighting to Salvage Disappointing Season
Nicolai Hojgaard

a Sleeper at Wyndham Championship
Rickie Fowler

Riding Quiet Momentum Into Wyndham
Brian Campbell

a Wild Card at Wyndham Championship
Akshay Bhatia

Looking to Flip the Script at Wyndham Championship
Aaron Rai

Finishes Tied For 34th at Open Championship
Andrew Novak

Finishes Tied For 63rd at Open Championship
Hideki Matsuyama

Finishes Tied For 16th at Open Championship
Kurt Kitayama

Wins 3M Open
Tom Kim

Finishes Tied For 28th at 3M Open
PGA

Sungjae Im Misses Cut at 3M Open
Max Greyserman

Misses Cut at 3M Open
Jordan Spieth

Looks to End Regular Season on a High Note at Wyndham Championship
Matt Fitzpatrick

Finishes Tied For Fourth at Open Championship
Eric Cole

Misses Cut at 3M Open
Keith Mitchell

Needs a Big Week at Wyndham Championship
Robert MacIntyre

is the Perfect Kind of Ball-Striker for Wyndham Championship
Charlie McAvoy

Ready to Go for Next Season
Dylan Samberg

Agrees to Three-Year Contract with Jets
Michael Kim

Needs More Solid Finishes
NBA

Thanasis Antetokounmpo Added to Greece Training Camp Roster for EuroBasket 2025
Los Angeles Clippers

Patrick Baldwin Jr. Waived by Clippers
Josh Green

May Not be Ready for Start of Hornets Training Camp
NBA

Thomas Bryant Set to Move to Greece
Cam Thomas

Nets Far Apart in Contract Talks
Kristaps Porzingis

Feeling "Great" Ahead of New Season
Chris Paul

Hints He Could Extend His Career Beyond the 2025-26 Season
Brandon Miller

Close to 100 Percent
Jayden Struble

Canadiens Lock Up Jayden Struble for Two Years
Robert Whittaker

Loses Back-To-Back Fights
Reinier de Ridder

Gets Split-Decision Win
Conor Timmins

Avoids Salary Arbitration with Two-Year Deal
Marcus McGhee

Drops Decision At UFC Abu Dhabi
Toronto Raptors

Colin Castleton Waived by Raptors on Monday
Petr Yan

Extends Win Streak
Marc-Andre Barriault

Suffers Decision Loss
Shara Magomedov

Gets Back In The Win Column
Jose Ochoa

Dominated At UFC Abu Dhabi
MMA

Asu Almbayev Dominates At UFC Abu Dhabi
Nikita Krylov

Suffers First-Round Knockout Loss
Bogdan Guskov

Scores Knockout Win
Kyle Larson

Falls Short of Back-To-Back Victories at Indianapolis
Denny Hamlin

Rallies Into Third Place At Indianapolis
Chase Briscoe

Pit Strategies End up Failing Chase Briscoe at Indianapolis
Ty Gibbs

Wins NASCAR's Inaugural In-Season Challenge Tournament
Ryan Preece

Finishes Fourth but Loses Ground to Playoff Cutline
Brad Keselowski

Has Good Strategy, but Not Enough to Win
Ryan Blaney

Bails from Hail Mary Strategy Attempt but Recovers to Finish Seventh
Tyler Reddick

Eliminated from Brickyard 400 in Crash After Top Five Run
Chicago Bulls

Billy Donovan Agrees to Contract Extension with Chicago
Erik Jones

Is Erik Jones Worth Rostering At Indianapolis This Week?
Carson Hocevar

Is Carson Hocevar Worth Rostering For Indianapolis DFS Lineups?
NASCAR

Could A.J. Allmendinger be A Solid Tournament DFS Option?
Zane Smith

Is a Respectable Value Option for Indianapolis Despite Low Experience
Cole Custer

Is A Solid Value Option for Indianapolis DFS Lineups
Riley Herbst

Is an Unfavorable DFS Option for Indianapolis Lineups
Zeev Buium

Aims for Big Role Next Season
NHL

Conor Sheary Signs Tryout Deal with Rangers
Denny Hamlin

an Easy DFS Target After Wreck in Qualifying
Arvid Soderblom

Agrees to Two-Year Deal with Blackhawks
Kyle Larson

Will Start 13th to Defend Brickyard 400 Crown
Chase Briscoe

on Pole for Brickyard as Momentum Continues to Build
Ryan Blaney

Learned a Lot in Practice at Indianapolis
Brad Keselowski

Should Be Very Strong at Indianapolis
NASCAR

Could Bubba Wallace Challenge for a Brickyard 400 Win on Sunday?
Ryan Preece

Don't Forget About Ryan Preece at Indianapolis
Philadelphia 76ers

Ricky Council IV Waived by Philadelphia
Jonathan Kuminga

Warriors "Haven't Gained Any Traction" on Sign-and-Trade Deal for Jonathan Kuminga
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF