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

Power Hitting Risers & Fallers for Week 16 - Buy or Sell?

Home run risers and fallers for Week 16 of fantasy baseball. Nate Green evaluates power increases or decreases, and players who could be buy or sell candidates.

Welcome to the All-Star Break edition of Power Hitting Risers & Fallers. All stats are full season through Monday, July 15 (unless otherwise noted). It's only been a few days since the All-Star Break concluded, but some hitters have already heated up. Others were starting before the hiatus and have continued to. And some have been bad. Nothing unusual.

Weekly reminders: EVAB (pronounced ee-vab or ev-ab) is simply exit velocity on "air balls" - meaning fly balls and line drives, as shown on Statcast. Isolated power -- ISO -- is slugging percentage minus batting average, and so xISO is xSLG minus xBA. The Statcast Search feature is used to obtain partial season Statcast numbers. The league-wide ratio of barrels to home runs is historically around 67-70%.

Now, for the players at hand.

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

 

Power Risers

Nathaniel Lowe (1B, TB)

Nate Lowe, 6'4" 245 lb. Nate Lowe, he of five home runs since Independence Day, can barrel a baseball. That will happen when your average contact is 93 mph at 18.7 degrees, with a 97.1 mph EVAB. In just 75 plate appearances this season, he now has nine barrels. It's still not a large sample for Lowe, but his first stints featured just 42 PA when he hit .263/.310/.316, so we have more than that at least. It's still too early to get caught up in the top line numbers (.299/.360/.567), but the foundation has been set for continued success.

We already knew Lowe could hit thanks to a 2018 minor league slash line of .330/.416/.568 across three levels. Now we know he can hit at the major league level. He has yet to play too much of the adjustment game, but it's good to know the talent level is there for real power.

 

Yuli Gurriel (1B, HOU)

Gurriel is tied with Mike Trout with eight home runs in the last 14 days and no one else has more than six. Go back even further to June 23, and Gurriel has 11 home runs in the last 16 games, and he's hit .394/.444/.939 in that time.

Unsurprisingly, this hot a run has involved some luck. Gurriel would be expected to slug .561 based on his contact since June 23, nearly 400 points below his actual mark. And that is so much better than his .359 xSLG prior to that date, or his .428 SLG/.366 xSLG last season.

Is it a hot streak or has something changed? With an 88 mph average EV during this run and an 18.2 degree launch angle, not much has changed significantly. Nonetheless, given the xSLG, it's the best Gurriel has hit a baseball in a long time. But that much is obvious just from the home runs as well.

It's easy enough to say enjoy the ride but don't expect Gurriel to be nearly this good going forward, but that's about all you can say about his insanely hot run.

 

Ramon Laureano (OF, OAK)

Since the calendar flipped to June, it's been a new Ramon Laureano statistically, one who is hitting .277/.338/.600 with 12 home runs in 148 plate appearances after starting the year with two months of .259/.303/.405 and six HR in 221 PA.

The difference by Statcast hasn't been as dramatic, given a .477 xSLG since June 1 after a .421 xSLG before that. He's upped his launch angle from 13.6 to 16.4 degrees, but the exit velocity has actually been lower, going from 90.5 to 88.4 mph.

Laureano's true power hitting ability is still a bit murky, as he just turned 25 and only has parts of two seasons under his belt, but he clearly has at least a decent amount of it. He hasn't necessarily unlocked an unforeseen amount of it yet, however.

 

Brandon Crawford (SS, SF)

Coors.

Okay, it will take more than that to write Crawford off. He also homered at Miller Park on June 12, giving him four home runs since the All-Star Break. Of the four, three were crushed (all hit between 103.5 and 104.8 mph at 22-27 degrees) and one (hit 95.6 mph at 31 degrees) was not.

But that kind of parsing is kind of a silly game to play with someone who has overall in 2019 been the same usual uninspiring hitter, averaging 87.7 mph at 9.4 degrees for a .392 xSLG. It will take more than a hot half-week to justify a major reevaluation of Crawford's batted ball profile. Once he heads back to AT&T's number-depressing hitting environment, instead of enjoying Miller Park and Coors Field, expect more of the pre-ASB Crawford.

 

Jeimer Candelario (3B, DET)

Candelario's 2019 performance has the clear demarcation line of his demotion. When he went down, he was hitting .179/.277/.269. Since returning on June 26 (a day he hit 2-for-3), he's hit .321/.387/.661 with five homers, all of which have come in July.

Pre-demotion, Candelario was hitting the ball 87.1 mph at 16.9 degrees on average -- not enough exit velocity to justify the launch angle. Since his return, we're looking at an average of 90.1 mph at 13.6 degrees. From that alone, it would appear Candelario is doing a better job of driving the ball instead of hitting it high and hoping it goes far.

It's produced competent power, with a .491 xSLG. That's not quite .661, but much better than .269 or the corresponding .297 xSLG of before his demotion. It will be interesting to see how Candelario's season develops from here on out and whether he can set himself up for a strong 2020, or whether pitchers adjust and he regresses back to the pre-June 2019 version of himself. That's more than could have been said prior to his demotion.

 

Power Fallers

Trey Mancini (1B/OF, BAL)

Mancini only has one home run in his last 19 games. In his last 14 games, Mancini has hit .161/.217/.179. Forget home runs, he's even lost doubles power, with just one extra base hit in that time frame. And on a larger time scale, a huge April is still carrying Mancini's numbers, as he's hit .246/.310/.443 since May 1. That has come with 11 home runs over 2 1/2 months after he hit six in the first month.

The difference for Mancini in March/April was launch angle, as he averaged 11.0 degrees then compared to 6.2 degrees since. But his exit velocity has actually been higher since May began, at 90.1 mph instead of 88.5 mph. During this most recent 14-game slump, however...not much has actually changed, with an average of 91.5 mph at 6.4 degrees.

That sounds like good news, but it's not really, as Mancini only has a .275 expected slugging rate in those 14 games. One problem is a stat we haven't looked at too much in this column, sweet spot percentage. That's just the percentage of batted balls hit between eight and 32 degrees, regardless of exit velocity. Of Mancini's 38 batted balls in our sample, only nine have been in the sweet spot. That 23.7% would rank 382nd out of 391 over the full season.

Until Mancini finds a more consistent launch angle, his struggles could continue.

 

Anthony Rizzo (1B, CHC)

Rizzo is still having a great season overall, but oddly, he has gone over a month now without a single home run. A .364 BABIP and his keen batter's eye has helped him keep up a .286/.390/.405 line in those 100 plate appearances. Rizzo's eye should always lead to confidence that he can work his way through a power slump, but maybe there's more going on here.

There is. Both Rizzo's exit velocity and launch angle have tanked during his power outage. After his most recent home run on June 15, Rizzo was averaging 90.7 mph at 14.2 degrees when he made contact. Since June 16, he's averaging just 87.1 mph at 6.1 degrees.

Someone as talented as Rizzo is probably just one adjustment away from fixing the launch angle, but the loss of exit velocity is a little more concerning. For now, trust the track record, plate discipline, and overall season line here more than a bad month, but know that the bad month hasn't been about bad luck.

 

Joc Pederson (OF, LAD)

Since June 3, Pederson has been working on 116 plate appearances of just two home runs, which came close together on June 18 and 20. He's only hit .190/.267/.286 in that time frame. The Dodgers have not lapsed in their platooning, giving Pederson only eight PA against lefties since June 3, so what's going on?

Pederson's average contact since June 3 is a respectable combination of 90.5 mph at 18 degrees. It's produced only a .331 xSLG, however. Like Mancini, Pederson has had trouble finding the sweet spot, with a 24.7% rate in this sample.

Pederson does have a couple possible advantages over Mancini, however. One, as a platoon bat, he will get more favorable matchups going forward, even if the playing time hit dings counting stats. Two, with the much higher average launch angle, his misses still lean towards too much lift rather than too little. It might be a little easier to fix an issue of hitting the ball too high in the air than to need to work on getting lift in the first place.

 

Khris Davis (DH, OAK)

Davis had that lingering hip issue that finally put him on the IL for a minimum stay starting May 24. It hasn't helped. Since returning on June 1, he's hit .219/.291/.336, with four home runs that came in a mini-burst from June 9-18.

But his overall season line, .235/.306/.425, is not Khris Davis-esque at all either. And the Statcast reflects it: his barrel rate (11.2% of batted balls), 89.5 mph exit velocity, 12.8 launch angle, and .463 xSLG are all down significantly from the 2017-18 version of Davis.

While the 38-point gap between SLG and xSLG shows some bad luck, we are also clearly seeing a diminished version of Davis this season. Whether or not it's related to the hip, it's concerning. And the fact that it's been worse since June is no consolation, obviously. Perhaps he'll come back strong in 2020.

 

Robinson Chirinos (C, HOU)

Chirinos was a riser in Week 10, but not an impressive one given his .360 xSLG at the time. Chirinos continued to provide power, however, homering four more times from June 4-14. And on Flag Day, he drove in six and was hitting .243/.367/.521 on the year.

Since then, his unimpressive contact has caught up with him: Chirinos has only hit .143/.286/.175 with no home runs in those 77 PA. And now, his overall season xSLG -- before during and after that June 4-14 period -- is .368. In just the slump, it's .284.

More regression could be expected here, but Chirinos is already pretty much at his 2018 power level, with a .211 ISO this season compared to .197 last year. Chirinos has pretty much always outperformed what his Statcast metrics have said he should be doing, but this current slump is a reminder that such good luck can give out at any time. At 35 years old, who knows if Chirinos will regain it, even with such short notice.

 

Last Week's Risers

Player Last Week Update
Josh Bell Slow, insignificant .133/.188/.200 start to the second half
Brett Gardner .333 .375 .533 without a HR even with Yankees starting second half at home
Willson Contreras Homered in only post-ASB game as he's unfortunately headed to the IL
Jason Heyward .471 .471 .765 and also another HR as surprising renaissance continues
Orlando Arcia 0-for-12 is not a shocking beginning of the back end of the year

 

Last Week's Fallers

Player Last Week Update
Jose Ramirez .375/.375/.688 with HR #8 is some life
Mookie Betts Early second half success without homers, .375/.421/.563
Mike Zunino Just 1-for-6, but of course it was a home run
Stephen Piscotty Still out
Jesus Aguilar Appeared in all four games, but just two starts; incidentally, .333/.333/.417 and no HR

More 2019 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

De'Von Achane

Making Good Progress
Jaylen Wright

Considered "Week-to-Week"
Jackson Merrill

Heads to 10-Day Injured List
Jordan Love

Says He'll Play in Week 1
Brice Turang

Absent on Saturday, "Touch-and-Go" With Wrist Injury
Chase Elliott

Despite Being Winless at Daytona, Chase Elliott is Probably the Best DFS Option
Ryan Blaney

Will Likely Lead a Lot at Daytona
Kyle Larson

a Poor DFS Option at Daytona
Christopher Bell

Consistent Enough to Consider for DFS
Chris Buescher

Now Must Win His Way Into Playoffs
Ryan Preece

Being One of the Slowest-Starting Fords Makes Ryan Preece a Strong DFS Option
Ross Chastain

Leads a Lot on Drafting Tracks
Daniel Suarez

Now in Desperation Mode With his Career on the Line
Chase Briscoe

Tendency to Finish Better Than He Runs May Reap Dividends at Daytona
Lamar Jackson

Should Practice on Monday
Carson Hocevar

Hard to Forecast Since He's Rarely Given 100 Percent at Daytona
Michael McDowell

has a Solid Drafting Record
AJ Allmendinger

A.J. Allmendinger Arguably Starting Too Well for Place-Differential Points
Austin Dillon

Will Likely Be Too Conservative for DFS Consideration
Noah Gragson

Has Place-Differential Potential as One of the Lowest-Starting Fords
Todd Gilliland

Poor Starting Position and Ford's Drafting Speed Make Todd Gilliland a Viable Option
Zane Smith

Probably Starting Too Well for DFS Play
Justin Haley

has Strong Pass-Differential Potential
Cole Custer

Daytona 500 Speed Makes Him a Solid Play
Austin Hill

Qualifies Poorly Enough for DFS Consideration
Matt Chapman

Activated and Starting on Saturday
Moses Moody

Warriors Not Interested in Trading Moses Moody
Kevin Durant

Rockets Expected to Agree on New Contract
Trey Murphy III

Warriors, Spurs Interested in Trey Murphy III
Zack Wheeler

to Undergo Season-Ending Surgery
Kyle Busch

Facing a Must-Win Situation at Daytona
Ricky Stenhouse Jr

. Could Be a Risky Pick at Daytona
Yoán Moncada

Yoan Moncada Hits a Pair of Home Runs on Friday
Willy Adames

Belts Two Solo Home Runs on Friday
CAR

Luke Kunin Joins Panthers on One-Year Deal
Auston Matthews

Says His Health is "Good" Before Start of Season
Roope Hintz

"Feeling Good" Ahead of New Season
Matthew Tkachuk

Recovering From Surgery
Marco Rossi

Wild Re-Sign Marco Rossi to Three-Year Deal
Bubba Chandler

Records Four-Inning Save in Debut
Walker Buehler

Officially Moving to Bullpen
Adolis García

Adolis Garcia to be Activated on Saturday
Tanner Scott

Activated on Friday
NBA

Malik Beasley Now Drawing Interest from Teams
Jacob Wilson

Reintated and Starting on Friday
Marcus Semien

Could be Out All Weekend, IL Stint Possible
Evan Carter

Could Miss Rest of Season With Fractured Wrist
Brian Robinson Jr.

Traded to 49ers
Samuel Basallo

Inks an Eight-Year Extension With the Orioles
Zhang Mingyang

Set For UFC Shanghai Main Event
Johnny Walker

In Dire Need Of Victory
Brian Ortega

An Underdog At UFC Shanghai
Aljamain Sterling

Set For UFC Shanghai Co-Main Event
Waldo Cortes-Acosta

Looks To Extend His Win Streak
Sergei Pavlovich

A Favorite At UFC Shanghai
Kevin Borjas

Set for UFC Shanghai Main-Card Bout
Sumudaerji

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Kiefer Crosbie

Set To Open Up UFC Shanghai Main Card
Taiyilake Nueraji

Set For His UFC Debut
Jesús Sánchez

Jesus Sanchez Tallies Five Hits
Yandy Díaz

Yandy Diaz Dealing With Low-Grade Hamstring Strain
Marcus Semien

Leaves Thursday With Foot Contusion
Connor Ingram

Clears Player Assistance Program
Frank Nazar

Inks Seven-Year Extension With Blackhawks
Adley Rutschman

Going on Injured List With Strained Oblique
COL

Victor Olofsson Signs One-Year Deal With Avalanche
Austin Riley

Done for the Season After Having Core Surgery
Wilyer Abreu

Goes on Injured List With Calf Injury
Tee Higgins

has Injury Scare on Thursday
Jhostynxon Garcia

Headed to the Big Leagues
Dallas Cowboys

Micah Parsons Expected to Play in Week 1
Chris Godwin

Expected to be Activated from the PUP List
Dru Smith

Aims to Be Healthy for Training Camp
Jayson Tatum

Provides Injury Update
RJ Barrett

Considered a Trade Candidate
Golden State Warriors

Warriors "Remain Very Confident" About Signing Al Horford
Jahmir Young

Agrees to Deal With Heat
Devaughn Vele

Traded to Saints
Demarcus Robinson

Issued Three-Game Suspension
Lamar Jackson

Dealing With Minor Foot Injury
Lamar Jackson

Suffers Apparent Hand Injury
Hideki Matsuyama

Looks to Bounce Back at Tour Championship
Corey Conners

Looking to Reverse Struggles at East Lake
Joe Mixon

Could Begin Season on PUP List
Cameron Young

Stays Hot Ahead of Tour Championship
Harris English

Aims for Complete Game at East Lake
Sepp Straka

Back in Action at East Lake
Ben Griffin

a Strong Value Play at East Lake
Rory McIlroy

Chasing Another Win at East Lake
Patrick Cantlay

Finishes Tied for 30th at BMW Championship
Ludvig Aberg

Finishes Tied For Seventh at BMW Championship
Collin Morikawa

Finishes Tied for 33rd at BMW Championship
Keegan Bradley

Finishes Tied for 17th at BMW Championship
Robert MacIntyre

Finishes Second at BMW Championship
J.J. Spaun

Finishes Tied for 23rd at BMW Championship
Scottie Scheffler

Wins BMW Championship
Brian Robinson Jr.

Not Expected to Play for Commanders This Year
Rashee Rice

Could be Facing 4-6 Game Suspension?
Harry Hall

Hot at the Right Time for Tour Championship
PGA

Sungjae Im Wants to Rebound at Tour Championship
Jacob Bridgeman

has One Weakness Heading to Atlanta
Nikola Vučević

Nikola Vucevic Not Expecting to Be Moved Before the Season
Nick Taylor

a Long Shot to Win Tour Championship
Josh Giddey

Bulls Not Interested in Sign-and-Trade Deal Involving Josh Giddey
Brian Harman

Trying to Crack Top 20 at Tour Championship
Andrew Novak

Attempts to Bounce Back in Atlanta
Oscar Tshiebwe

Signs New Two-Way Deal With Jazz
Justin Rose

Seeks Even More Success at Tour Championship
Washington Wizards

Alondes Williams Joins Wizards for Training Camp
Washington Wizards

Wizards Add Skal Labissiere for Training Camp
A.J. Brown

on Track to Play in Week 1
CBJ

Brendan Smith Joins Blue Jackets on Tryout Deal
STL

Milan Lucic Joins Blues for Tryout
DET

Red Wings Pick Up Travis Hamonic
Jalen McMillan

Could be Out Through Week 9 Bye
Indiana Pacers

Pacers Coach Rick Carlisle Agrees to a Multiyear Contract Extension on Tuesday
Washington Wizards

John Wall Retires After 11 NBA Seasons
Daniel Jones

Named as Colts Starting Quarterback
Jalen McMillan

Will Not Be Ready for Season Opener
Collin Sexton

Hornets Have High Hopes for Collin Sexton
Rui Hachimura

Likely to Start Season Without Contract Extension
Jaime Jaquez Jr.

Hopes to Bounce Back in 2025-26
Stephen Curry

Ready to Go for New Season
Orlando Magic

Lester Quinones Agrees to Deal With Magic
Joe Mixon

Could Start Season on NFI List
De'Von Achane

Unlikely to Practice This Week
Khamzat Chimaev

Is The New UFC Middleweight Champion
Dricus Du Plessis

Gets Dominated At UFC 319
Aaron Pico

Suffers Knockout Loss In His UFC Debut
Lerone Murphy

Scores Stunning First-Round Knockout
Geoff Neal

Suffers First-Round Knockout Loss
Carlos Prates

Gets Back In The Win Column
Michael Page

Dominates At UFC 319
Jared Cannonier

Gets Outclassed
Tim Elliott

Gets Submission Win
Kai Asakura

Still Winless In The UFC

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP