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

Valuable Long Relievers of 2020 and the Lingering Impact (Part 2)

Brady Grove discusses the unusual fantasy baseball value of long relievers in the 2020 MLB season and if it will remain a viable strategic option down the road to draft these RP.

In part one, we examined the bullpens in Toronto and Cincinnati.

The circumstantial insanity of the 2020 MLB season necessitated some adjustments in strategy, both for big-league managers and fantasy baseball GMs. One of these adjustments, prompted by frequent doubleheaders and the three-batter minimum rule, was the greater use of long-relievers and a generally reduced workload for rotation pitchers.

The question remains: will long-relief remain a relevant approach for racking up IP, wins, saves + holds, and tolerable strikeout numbers for 2021 and years to come? With uncertainty looming as to the parameters of the upcoming year, let's look at some of the more prominent long-relievers from 2020 and assess their situations to project whether they should be on Fantasy Baseball GM radars for the 2021 season. For convenience, let's view the field in descending order by teams that made particularly potent use of long-relievers and the staff members they deployed.

Featured Promo: Get any Props Premium Pass for 30% off using code NEW. Win more with our two new Props Optimizer tools -- one for PrizePicks Props, and one for Sportsbook Betting Props. Find optimal prop bets and get our recommended picks daily! Go Premium, Win More!

 

Tampa Bay Rays

The Tampa Bay Rays squeezed every drop of production out of their bullpen this season en route to a World Series birth, possibly more than any team in history, evidenced by the fact that they recorded saves by 13 different pitchers. While Nick Anderson and Diego Castillo had the highest-leverage innings on lock, the long-relief duties fell to John Curtiss and Aaron Slegers.

The Rays have one of the most versatile bullpen repertoires in the ball and they match it with astounding creativity, whether it's using openers, three-headed knockout punches, or simply blurring the line between starters and relievers; however, what Curtiss and Slegers showed they are capable of this past season presents an alluring strategic path, both on the field and for Fantasy Baseball GMs. Now, I wouldn't feel right if I made it through this portion without mentioning the contributions in this department last year by Jalen Beeks and Trevor Richards. Unfortunately, Beeks is on the long-haul recovery from Tommy John surgery, and while Richards' versatility was necessary, he struggled for the majority of 2020 (even worse as a reliever), and he is currently penciled in as the fifth man in the Rays rotation.

Let's start with Aaron Slegers, the now 28-year-old former Hoosier who came crashing on to the MLB scene after tossing just 3.0 innings with Tampa in 2019 following a downtrodden two seasons with Minnesota. The 6'10, 260-lb. righty limited opposing batters by insane proportions; although he finished with a 3.46 ERA and just 6.6 K/9 (actually a milestone for him), he stifled the opposition to the tune of a 0.89 WHIP, and rounded his FIP out to 3.04 with his 0.3 HR/9 and 1.7 BB/9 in 26.0 IP over just 11 appearances (one start, 2.36 innings per outing). He wasn't able to enter the win column, but he did tally two saves and two holds. That's a high-leverage score in over one-third of his appearances on the year, accomplishing the feat by throwing 3.0+ innings four times and only failing to hit 2.0 IP on two instances which occurred back to back in mid-August. His .230 BABIP would cause concern, but when you reduce your hard-hit rate by 8.4% and allow just 24% hard contact on batted balls, it's hard to see how a batted ball ever falls for a hit. At 30.2% frequency at 85 MPH, he is throwing his slider more often than ever and faster than ever, and his lanky frame seems to be working with that combination.

The lack of whiffs is a bummer, but that won't keep him from the mound when he has exponentially limited batters' odds of a free trip to first or cracking a homer. Given the unique nature of Slegers' contribution to the defending AL Pennant winners, his role remains concrete and probable to expand, making him an excellent option at long-relief for wins, holds, and ERA and WHIP since he is staying in games long enough to create a significant difference in your pitching staff's weekly average. In the case of 27-year-old Texan John Curtiss, he emerged in 2020 from similar circumstances, and while Curtiss may lack in certain areas when compared to Slegers, he more than makes up for those deficiencies in other ways that help him to not get lost in the fold.

He too, is a large person, standing at 6'5, 220-lb., and he entered 2020 without a touted prospect pedigree or any stint of MLB success to his name, struggling mightily with walks and allowed hits with the Twins and Angels. Something must have clicked, because Curtiss went off for a 1.80 ERA, 0.96 WHIP, three wins, two saves, and while he did permit 1.1 HR/9, he balanced out nicely with just 1.1 BB/9 and 9.0 K/9 in 25.0 IP over 17 games (three starts, 1.47 innings per appearance). Curtiss stuck with a 56.5%/43.5% split between his fastball and slider, and unlike Slegers, he launches both with a bit of gas, clocking in at 94 and 85.2 MPH on average, respectively. However, in contrast to Slegers, Curtiss got by on a .273 BABIP despite allowing 43.5% hard contact and just 5.8% soft contact. What saves the day in analysis of John Curtiss's phenomenal season is his time-tested grounder propensity, producing a 1.26 GB/FB ratio in 2020 on 42% ground balls. When his 22.2% K-BB% enters the fold, he makes for a seriously challenging at-bat for anyone stepping into the box.

Curtiss doesn't stretch appearances as far as Slegers does, and for that reason he is a more traditional RP for high-leverage situations and thus the more likely of the two to earn saves as opposed to holds. Of course, when you pitch as good as these guys did last season for more than an inning every game, you're both in the mix for entering the win column, particularly on a championship-caliber team like Tampa. Nick Anderson is so good that it's downright silly, and Diego Castillo/Peter Fairbanks turned in heroic seasons at the backend of the pen in their own right, but Aaron Slegers and John Curtiss convincingly displayed how vital their execution in long-relief can be to a deep postseason run for the Rays. It's anyone's guess how the Blake Snell trade might shake up the lineup, but I'd guess that Kevin Cash will keep us engaged. Even with several other talented pitchers awaiting their opportunity, with Aaron Loup hitting free agency, John Curtiss projects as a savvy play for scoring in ERA, WHIP, wins, saves, and strikeout efficiency; while Aaron Sleger is an even more under-the-radar addition for safe scoring in ERA/WHIP with his minimization of offensive opportunity, wins, holds, and some extra padding in the IP department.

 

Detroit Tigers

Special attention must be paid to Daniel Norris, the man I turned to in desperation near the season's end after frustrating issues with my pitching staff while down to my last few acquisitions. It's been a topsy-turvy ride for the former highly-touted prospect, some years looking like all the scouts thought he would, some years appearing to be unsalvageable. After putting together a decent 2019 spent mostly in Detroit's rotation, he transitioned to the long-relief role in 2020, completing 27.2 IP over 14 games (one start, 1.98 IP per game).

It might be his true calling in the big leagues, because he turned in a 3.25 ERA, 1.16 WHIP, and three wins, off of air-tight results for K-rate (24.1%), BB-rate (6.0%), and HR-rate (1.7%), cumulating in a 2.87 FIP. He might have gotten off a bit easy with his 75.3% LOB-rate, but that concern is neutralized by the fact that he held a .291 BABIP despite perpetuating just 28.7% hard contact on batted balls. While forcing just 12.5% soft contact on batted balls leaves the door open for plenty of lower-damage hits, Norris packs an additional insurance policy in his recently developed talent for producing ground balls, which he did at a 55.7% clip in 2020, ultimately netting an earth-heavy 2.10 GB/FB ratio.

It might be the case that Norris had a pitching epiphany for minimizing the opposition's lift-off, as he chose to deploy his fastball, slider, and curve with less frequency and instead bumped up his changeup usage by 11.5% (30.6%), and reached a career-high average velocity on that pitch at a clip of 87.7 MPH. With the struggles that were rampant throughout the Detroit bullpen in 2020, particularly with younger players with long-relief skill-sets like Rony Garcia and Kyle Funkhouser, Norris is primed to step right back into his new universe for a team looking to ascend off the back of the elite talent they have gradually assembled. If you find yourself in a serious starting pitcher bind come 2021, the persistent production from Daniel Norris could be your life preserver, as his workload amongst a very mixed bag in the Tigers' relief core could translate into effective scoring for ERA, WHIP, wins, holds, and the strikeout totals that catch you by surprise.

 

Just Missed the Cut (But Worth Attention)

Matt Wisler (SF)

Jonathan Loaisiga (NYY)

Cal Quantrill (CLE)



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 2021 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

San Francisco 49ers

49ers Waive Drake Jackson
Andre Dillard

49ers Sign Andre Dillard
Jaylon Smith

Trying Out With Raiders
Kelvin Banks

Jr. Signs Four-Year Rookie Deal
Jalon Walker

Signs Rookie Deal With Falcons
Kaleb Johnson

Steelers Sign Kaleb Johnson To Four-Year Rookie Deal
Lil'Jordan Humphrey

Giants Cut Lil'Jordan Humphrey
Rashod Bateman

Cowboys Looked Into Trading For Rashod Bateman
Colston Loveland

Unavailable For Rookie Minicamp While Rehabbing Shoulder
Tarik Skubal

Records 12 Strikeouts In Win
Jorge Soler

Scratched On Friday With Groin Tightness
De'Andre Hunter

Ready To Play Friday
Evan Mobley

Returns Friday
Darius Garland

Officially Available Friday
Sam Hauser

Likely To Remain Out On Saturday
K'Andre Miller

Working His Way Back From Surgery
Mark Jankowski

May Return To Hurricanes Lineup Saturday
Charlie Lindgren

Returns To Practice Friday
Pavel Dorofeyev

Traveling With Team For Game 3
Chase Petty

Reds Calling Up Chase Petty
Miro Heiskanen

Still Out On Friday
Austin Hays

Activated And Starting On Friday
Josh Morrissey

Set To Return For Game 2 Against Stars
Hunter Greene

Placed On 15-Day Injured List With Groin Strain
Tai Felton

Minnesota Signs Tai Felton Among Four Rookies
Belal Muhammad

Set For His First Title Defense
Jaylin Noel

Signs With Houston
Jack Della Maddalena

Has A Chance To Become UFC Champion
Manon Fiorot

Looks To Become The New Champion
Kyle Williams

Patriots Signs Kyle Williams To Rookie Deal
Valentina Shevchenko

Set For UFC 315 Co-Main Event
Aiemann Zahabi

Looks For His Sixth Win In A Row
José Aldo

Jose Aldo Set For Featherweight Bout
Nick Chubb

Unlikely To Return To Cleveland
Natalia Silva

Looks To Extend Her Win Streak
Alexa Grasso

Returns At UFC 315
Iván Herrera

Ivan Herrera Activated Off 10-Day Injured List, Starting On Friday
Kyle Prepolec

Set For UFC 315 Main-Card Opener
Benoît Saint Denis

Benoit Saint Denis Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Donovan Peoples-Jones

Saints Invite Donovan Peoples-Jones To Camp
Kenneth Grant

Signs Four-Year Rookie Deal With Dolphins
Armand Membou

Signs Rookie Deal
Tyler Warren

Colts Sign Tyler Warren To Four-Year Rookie Deal
Emeka Egbuka

Buccaneers Sign Emeka Egbuka To Four-Year Rookie Deal
Gabe Davis

Released With Failed-Physical Designation
Christian McCaffrey

49ers To Try To Get Christian McCaffrey The Ball As Much As Possible
Travis Hunter

To Prioritize Offense During Rookie Minicamp
Shayne Gostisbehere

Nets A Power-Play Goal In Game 2
Tom Wilson

Collects Two Points In Thursday's Win
Victor Olofsson

Bags Three Points In Game 2 Loss
Jack Eichel

Delivers Three Assists In Losing Effort
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins

Extends Point Streak With Couple Of Assists
Leon Draisaitl

Nets Game-Winner In Overtime
Brayden McNabb

Suffers Upper-Body Injury Thursday
Kris Bubic

Throws Seven Scoreless Innings
Bobby Witt Jr.

Posts Four-Hit Game
Stephen Curry

Unsure When He Can Return From Injury
De'Andre Hunter

Iffy For Friday
Evan Mobley

May Miss Another Game
Darius Garland

Questionable For Game 3
Adin Hill

Looks To Return To Winning Ways Thursday
Johnathan Kovacevic

Won't Be Ready For Training Camp Following Surgery
Anthony Stolarz

Not Traveling With Maple Leafs For Game 3
Logan Stanley

Could Return To Action Friday
Josh Morrissey

Will Be A Game-Time Decision Friday
Alex Pietrangelo

A Game-Time Decision Thursday
Pavel Dorofeyev

Won't Play In Game 2
Hunter Greene

Diagnosed With Grade 1 Groin Strain
Cade Horton

Joining MLB Roster This Weekend
Pittsburgh Pirates

Pirates Fire Derek Shelton
Nikola Jokić

Nikola Jokic Held In Check Wednesday
Chet Holmgren

Logs Double-Double In Game 2 Win
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Leads Thunder To Blowout Win
Derrick White

Close To Another Double-Double In Game 2
Jaylen Brown

Struggles In Second Half Wednesday Night
Josh Hart

Leads All Scorers With 23 Points In Game 2 Against Celtics
Mikal Bridges

Makes Late Impact Again
Eetu Luostarinen

Stretches Point Streak To Four Games
Max Fried

Keeps Rolling With Seven Strong Innings On Wednesday
Framber Valdez

Shuts Down Brewers On Wednesday
Sonny Gray

Tosses Gem Against Pirates
Joe Ryan

Scratched From Thursday's Start With Illness
TJ Friedl

Blasts Two Home Runs
Wilyer Abreu

Launches Two Home Runs
Dylan Cease

Dealing With Forearm Cramp
Karl-Anthony Towns

Turns It Around In Game 2
Jalen Brunson

Leads The Knicks To Another Win
Kristaps Porzingis

Logs Only 14 Minutes In Game 2
Jayson Tatum

Has Another Rough Shooting Night
Dylan Cease

Makes Early Exit On Wednesday
J.T. Realmuto

Exits Early On Wednesday With Foot Injury
Juan Soto

Smacks Two Homers
Rob Dillingham

Remains Out For Game 2 Against Warriors
Al Horford

Starts Game 2 Against Knicks
Will Zalatoris

Looking To Find Consistency Heading Into Philadelphia
Justin Rose

In Solid Form Ahead Of Truist Championship
Russell Henley

Looks To Keep Building Momentum At Truist Championship
Brian Harman

In Great Form Heading Into Philadelphia
Corey Conners

Red-Hot Heading Into Truist Championship
Daniel Berger

In Great Form Ahead Of Truist Championship
Sahith Theegala

Struggles Continue Ahead Of Truist Championship
Xander Schauffele

Eyeing Strong Finish At Truist Championship
Collin Morikawa

Poised To Rebound At The Truist Championship
Tony Finau

Trying To Find Form In Philadelphia
Justin Thomas

Looking To Keep Winning Ways Going Art Truist Championship
Maverick McNealy

In Great Form Ahead Of Truist Championship
Michael Kim

Looking To Recapture Elite Form In Philadelphia
Rory McIlroy

The Headlining Favorite At Truist Championship
Tommy Fleetwood

Eyeing First Victory At Truist Championship
Patrick Cantlay

Looking To Stay Hot In Philadelphia
Andrew Novak

Looking To Keep Hot Stretch Of Play Going In Philadelphia
Shane Lowry

Still Having An Amazing Season Ahead Of Truist Championship
Stephan Jaeger

Trying For Top-10 Result In Philadelphia
Aaron Rai

Heads To Philadelphia Playing Well
Lucas Glover

Hot And Cold Heading To Truist Championship
Deiveson Figueiredo

Loses Back-To-Back Fights
Cory Sandhagen

Gets Back In The Win Column
Reinier de Ridder

Extends His Win Streak To Four
Bo Nickal

Suffers His First Loss At UFC Des Moines
Santiago Ponzinibbio

Suffers TKO Loss At UFC Des Moines
Daniel Rodriguez

Wins Back-To-Back Fights
Daniel Marcos

Undefeated No More
Montel Jackson

Extends His Win Streak
Serhiy Sidey

Gets Decision Win At UFC Des Moines
Jeremy Stephens

Unsuccessful In His UFC Return
Mason Jones

Wins Decision At UFC Des Moines
Joey Logano

Steals The Victory At Texas On Sunday
Kyle Larson

Strong Performance Ends With A Top-Five Finish At Texas
Ricky Stenhouse Jr

. Quietly Obtains A New Career-Best Finish At Texas
Josh Berry

Spins His Way To A Poor Result At Texas
Ross Chastain

Picks Up Second-Place Finish
Carson Hocevar

Bad Pit Strategy And Late-Race Crash Spoil Carson Hocevar's Top-10 Run
Erik Jones

Improbably Finishes Fifth Despite Speeding Penalty
Michael McDowell

Despite Crashing Out At Texas, Michael McDowell Surprisingly Fights For The Win
John Hunter Nemechek

Brilliant Pit Strategy Lifts John Hunter Nemechek To Eighth Place
Ryan Blaney

Frustrated After Fumbling Away Potential Win At Texas
Brad Keselowski

Woeful Season Continues With Wreck At Texas
Kyle Larson

Has One Of The Best Cars In The Field At Texas
William Byron

Will Be Tough To Beat At Texas
Chase Elliott

A Slam-Dunk DFS Pick At Texas
Austin Cindric

Could Austin Cindric Legitimately Contend At Texas This Weekend?
Ryan Blaney

Is Worth Rostering For Texas DFS Lineups On Sunday
Joey Logano

Struggling To Find Speed At Texas
Tyler Reddick

Should Be Highly Considered For DFS At Texas This Week
Daniel Suarez

Has Been One Of The Best At Texas In Next Gen Car
Denny Hamlin

Might Have Another Quality Texas Start This Week
AJ Allmendinger

Has Shown Speed At Texas This Weekend
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF