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

Starting Pitcher "Stuff" Improvers - The Biggest In-Season Risers

Trevor Rogers - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, MLB DFS Picks, Betting Picks

Jon Anderson looks into the pitchers that most improved the quality of their stuff as the 2022 season went on.

I wrote a post concerning "stuff" metrics a few weeks back. In that post, which you can read here, I went over in short detail what exactly we're talking about. You should read that post first before continuing to get what we're talking about. These are newer metrics and not everybody is familiar, but they are very useful and I think you'll start hearing a lot more about them this season. Today, I want to look at which pitchers improved on these metrics in-season last year. I usually do not write posts like this! I don't like splitting the season into halves and then upgrading pitchers that looked better in the second half than the first. That is because by splitting the data, you are just relying on a shorter sample rather than the bigger one, and the bigger sample will always have more truth to it than the smaller one.

However, with these stuff metrics, that isn't nearly as true. Stuff+ type metrics normalize much more quickly than things like strikeout rate and walk rate. That is because of the granular nature of the metrics. The input data are all single pitches rather than start-level or plate appearance level. This vastly expands the data we're using, because all of a sudden you have 90 or so (one per pitch thrown) data points in a single pitcher start as compared to just one.

Think of it like this: If a pitcher comes up to the Major Leagues and throws one fastball, we can immediately know something significant about that fastball. The next 100 fastballs he throws will almost surely be very similar to the first one. You don't come up and throw a 97-mile-per-hour fastball on pitch one and then a 92-mile-per-hour one on the next. After we see a pitch a couple of dozen times, we can know pretty well about the pitch. That helps Stuff+ stabilize quickly. Before we go further, I have to once again shout out Drew Haugen for developing this model and sharing the data with me, give him a follow ASAP!

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

 

Biggest Starting Pitcher "Stuff" Improvers

A couple more important notes.

First, I did use the traditional "first half" and "second half". Many people will draw a line down on the All-Star Break and compare. I didn't do that. I took each pitcher (15 total starts minimum) and divided their halves individually. So if you made 20 starts, I'm comparing your first 10 with your second 10. It's better!

Second, I am ignoring some of the names at the top of the list because they just aren't interesting. The top three names are actually Drew Smyly, James Kaprielian, and Patrick Corbin. None of those three put up above-average Stuff+ marks even in the second half, so most of their improvement was just because they were so ridiculously bad in their first half. I want to focus only on pitchers I can reasonably recommend taking in standard fantasy baseball leagues. Now, to the names!

Joe Ryan, Minnesota Twins

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
27 72.6 90.9 18.3

It still wasn't a great second half from Ryan according to the stuff marks. The 91 mark there isn't great, that's nine points worse than the league average. However, it was good to see Ryan get better late in the year after dealing with some injuries.

In his second half, he threw the four-seamer 61.8% of the time, a really, really high number. The good news was that it racked up a sweet 15.3% SwStr%. He has long been known for getting a bunch of whiffs on his four-seamer, so it seems like something that will stick around. Now we have some reports about Ryan retooling his arsenal for 2023, which could be big for him.

Anything to add on to his solid four-seamer is great, and it was nice to see him take a step forward overall at the end of last year – I think it's a good idea to buy in on Ryan this year, the upside is pretty big even with the discouraging stuff numbers we saw a season ago.

Shane Bieber, Cleveland Guardians

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
27 72.4 90.0 17.6

Bieber lost a couple of miles per hour on the fastball last year and that knocked his strikeout rate down to 25% after showing us 30%+ from 2020-2021. He had a quite good season last year even with the lower strikeouts, but you can see that these "stuff" models don't really love how his pitches move.

The good news for Bieber is that his locations and pitch mix are spectacular. He knows how to pitch, he can locate all of his pitches well, and he has several different ways to attack both righties and lefties. Late in the season, he threw more cutters and that seemed to help him. The pitch, for the year, had a strong 13% SwStr% and a great 56% GB%. Bieber is a veteran at this point, but still at the fresh age of 27. He should have a bunch of great seasons ahead, and it was nice to see him be willing to tweak his arsenal and benefit from it.

Blake Snell, San Diego Padres

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
24 124.9 141.5 16.6

Snell has never been short for stuff. His four-seamer was strong again, and his slider remained one of the league's best pitches (25% SwStr%). He took it all to a new level in the second half by backing off on the curveball a bit and going four-seamer and slider-heavy. Those two pitches are good enough to make him an ace all by themselves, so as long as Snell is healthy and throwing those two offerings, he's going to have a ton of success.

We saw his ceiling in 2018 when he won the Cy Young. Injuries and command have kept him away from those heights ever since, but last year he reminded us what he's capable of. With a fully healthy season, he has a good chance to earn some Cy Young votes again - and he really doesn't get drafted like that's the case.

Jon Gray, Texas Rangers

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
24 93.1 108.3 15.2

Gray had an up-and-down season. He wasn't fully healthy early on and struggled in his first several starts, giving up 14 earned runs in his first four. After that, he got right and pitched very well for his new team.

From May 1st to July 31st, he put up a strong 3.29 ERA with a 1.15 WHIP and ramped the strikeout rate up to 28%. An injury cost him a bunch of time from August 1st to September 12th, and his finish to the year wasn't all that great in the box score (gave up 0, 2, 0, 6, and 3 earned runs in his final five starts).

What we saw with his stuff, however, was great. He was seven points below the average with his stuff in his first 12 starts, and then eight points above the average in his final 12. From July 1st on, he put up a sweet 22% SwStr% with his slider and hitters put up just a .188 xwOBA off of the pitch. All he needs is a decent fastball to go with that great slider, and he's really cooking. The four-seamer wasn't fantastic last year with an 8.5% SwStr% and a 61 Stuff+. He will have to improve on that to really be an ace, but we have seen better stuff from him in the past, and it's exciting to think about what he can do another year removed from Coors Field.

Drew Rasmussen, Tampa Bay Rays

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
28 110.4 124.6 14.2

Rasmussen had an impressive year in 2022 with a 2.84 ERA and a 1.04 WHIP. The problem is that the 21.4% K% doesn't really make us believe too vehemently in those numbers. Sure, he had a low 5.3% BB%, but it's hard to put up great numbers with a strikeout rate two points below the league average.

The good news is that the models love his "stuff". He had stuff marks above the league average on all five of his offerings, with the high point being his cutter which he threw 33% of the time and earned a 112 stuff+ with it. The SwStr% on that pitch was 17%, quite high for a fastball, so Rasmussen definitely has something to work with here.

His next most commonly thrown pitch was the four-seamer which earned a 123 stuff+. All of his pitches have merit, and Rasmussen has a lot of weapons to use. The numbers suggest he'll take a step forward in strikeout rate this year, so he's a pretty great pitcher to buy in on while he's still cheap.

Trevor Rogers, Miami Marlins

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
23 104.9 118.1 13.2

Rogers was one of the year's biggest busts, but he pitched well at the end of the year and that is going to drag a lot of us back to the table for 2023.

His SwStr% for the year was 12.6%, but over the last two months, it ticked up to 14%. His changeup got right and earned a 20% SwStr% with a 146 Stuff+, and his slider wasn't bad at all either with the same 20% SwStr% and a still good 108 Stuff+. He has the tools, we just have concerns about the command and whether or not he can hold up for another year.

It's hard to feel super excited about Rogers given the inconsistencies we've seen, but there is merit to buying low on him right now.

Bailey Falter, Philadelphia Phillies

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
16 98.0 110.5 12.5

Falter was primarily a pitcher that relied on his fielders last season as he threw his (very good) sinker 33% of the time. As with most sinkers, it did not earn many whiffs with a 9.8% SwStr%. A lot of balls were in play off of Falter. In the second half of his year, however, he got more whiffs by prioritizing the four-seamer more. From July 25th on, he threw the four-seamer 46.4% of the time and reduced the sinker to 21%. That resulted in a 12.6% SwStr%, an above-average mark, and the stuff+ model liked the change a lot.

We have to note that Falter might not make the Phillies rotation out of camp, as top prospect Andrew Painter is allegedly being given the chance to take the job. I think Falter gets the first crack at it, but some things are going to happen in his favor for him to stay in the rotation all year. Regardless, he's free in most leagues, so I would be looking to get my hands on him if he is in the rotation on opening week.

Lance Lynn, Chicago White Sox

GS 1H Stuff 2H Stuff Diff
21 98.1 108.8 10.6

Lynn has very good stuff. That first half reading was just about him getting back from injury and having a slow start. For the year, he had a 3.99 ERA and a 1.13 WHIP in 21 starts. If we look at his final 11 starts, however, we see a 2.51 ERA, a 1.01 WHIP, and a nice 24% K% to a 3.2% BB%.

His stuff improved as he felt more and more healthy, and we saw that he's still capable of acedom even at the age of 35. He's very cheap this year, and I can't make a good case to not draft him at the current cost.

And that's it. I'm not drafting these guys just because of the stuff improvements as the year went on, but I previously liked them all for other reasons (mostly as buy-low pitchers), so it was good to see them improving late last year in the marks that we can most believe in over short samples. Thanks for checking out the post, come back for more every day!



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 Year In Review




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

Kris Letang

Considered Day-to-Day
Carson Soucy

Lands on Injured Reserve
Tyler Kleven

Ready for Season Debut Monday
Evgenii Dadonov

Moved to Long-Term Injured Reserve
Drake Batherson

Aims to Return Wednesday
Pierre-Luc Dubois

Exits Win Early
CFB

UAB Fires Head Coach Trent Dilfer After 2.5 Seasons In Birmingham
CFB

Penn State Fires Head Coach James Franklin After 10.5 Seasons
CFB

Penn State QB Drew Allar Will Miss The Rest Of 2025 Season With Ankle Injury
CFB

Texas RB CJ Baxter Will Miss Today's Game Against No. 6 Oklahoma In Dallas
CFB

Texas RB CJ Baxter Will Miss Today's Game Against No. 6 Oklahoma In Dallas
Marquise Brown

Scores Twice in SNF Victory
Patrick Mahomes

Explodes for Four Touchdowns on SNF
Tetairoa McMillan

Scores his First Two Touchdowns in Win Over Dallas
Ja'Marr Chase

Posts Double-Digit Catches in First Game With New Quarterback
Kendrick Bourne

Records 142 Receiving Yards for Second Straight Week
Kimani Vidal

Dominates Backfield Touches, has Huge Game in Week 6
Ladd McConkey

Explodes for 100 Yards and Touchdown in Win
Jonathan Taylor

Has Another Enormous Showing Against Arizona
Josh Jacobs

Scores Two Touchdowns in Victory Over Cincinnati
Brandon Woodruff

Will Not be on NLCS Roster
Jauan Jennings

Playing Through Five Broken Ribs, Multiple Ankle Sprains
Fred Warner

Likely Done for the Season
George Pickens

Explosive Again While Filling in for Teammate
De'Von Achane

Scores Twice in Best Rushing Performance of the Season
Fred Warner

Dislocates his Ankle in Week 6
Emeka Egbuka

Downgraded to Out on Sunday
Trey Hendrickson

Won't Return in Week 6
Emeka Egbuka

is Doubtful to Return with Hamstring Injury
Rico Dowdle

has Another Huge Performance in Revenge Game
Calvin Ridley

Won't Return in Week 6
Trey Hendrickson

Questionable to Return With Back Injury
Kayshon Boutte

Scores Two Big Touchdowns in Return to Louisiana
Keegan Murray

to Undergo Surgery
Max Scherzer

Added to ALCS Roster
Bryan Woo

Makes ALCS Roster
Bo Bichette

Won't Make ALCS Roster
Sacramento Kings

Russell Westbrook, Kings Have "Strong Mutual Interest"
Christopher Bell

the Favorite to Win at Las Vegas
Denny Hamlin

on the Pole at Las Vegas
Joey Logano

Can Joey Logano Get Lucky in Las Vegas Again?
William Byron

has the Fastest Car in Practice at Las Vegas
Ty Gibbs

Speed of Ty Gibbs a Good Sign for Toyota at Las Vegas
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Should Contend at Las Vegas
Ross Chastain

Scrapes Wall in Practice But Qualifies 15th at Las Vegas
Chris Buescher

Looking for Improvement at Las Vegas
Austin Cindric

It Has Been Hit or Miss for Austin Cindric at Las Vegas
Steven Lorentz

Exits With Injury Saturday
Carson Soucy

Suffers Upper-Body Injury Versus Penguins
Erik Gudbranson

Sustains Upper-Body Injury Saturday
Sean Durzi

Hurt Against Predators
Jaccob Slavin

Suffers Injury Saturday
Kris Letang

Under Evaluation for Undisclosed Injury
Josh Norris

Will Miss "a Significant Amount of Time"
Chase Elliott

Should Run Well at Las Vegas
Kyle Larson

Conservatism May Keep him from Replicating Previous Las Vegas Drive
Josh Berry

After Josh Berry's Las Vegas Win, Ryan Blaney Should be a Top Contender
Chase Briscoe

has Definitely Improved on Intermediate Tracks
Tyler Reddick

An Excellent DFS Option on Paper
Alex Bowman

May Not Get the Attention he Needs at Las Vegas
Brad Keselowski

34th-Place Qualifying Run Makes Him a Must-Start in DFS
Shane Van Gisbergen

Still Not Really Viable for DFS Play
Josh Berry

Chance for a Las Vegas Sweep Looks Unbelievably Remote
Carson Hocevar

a Top-Tier DFS Option at Las Vegas
Ryan Preece

Probably Won't Finish Third Again at Las Vegas
Michael McDowell

Las Vegas is One of Michael McDowell's Worst Tracks
Haydn Fleury

Injures Kneecap Saturday
Pyotr Kochetkov

Out for at Least One Week
Samuel Girard

Labeled as Week-to-Week
Jonas Brodin

Available Saturday
Evgenii Dadonov

to Miss at Least Two Games
Hampus Lindholm

Misses Saturday's Game
Vincent Trocheck

Out Week-to-Week
Bryan Rust

Ready for Season Debut Saturday
Gleyber Torres

Will Undergo Surgery to Repair Sports Hernia
Bryan Woo

Expected to be on Mariners' ALCS Roster
CFB

CJ Baxter to Miss Saturday's Game Against No. 6 Oklahoma
CFB

Syracuse QB Steve Angeli Will Miss Significant Time
Cody Bellinger

Plans to Opt Out of Contract
MLB

Munetaka Murakami Will be Posted This Winter
Nathan Eovaldi

has Hernia Surgery, Should be Ready for Spring Training
Mateusz Gamrot

Set For UFC Rio Main Event
Charles Oliveira

Returns At UFC Rio
Montel Jackson

Set For UFC Rio Co-Main Event
Deiveson Figueiredo

Returns At UFC Rio
Joel Álvarez

Joel Alvarez Set for his Welterweight Debut
Vicente Luque

A Huge Underdog
Deandre Ayton

Still Waiting to Build Chemistry With Lakers Stars
Mario Pinto

Looks To Remain Undefeated
Jhonata Diniz

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Kaan Ofli

Looks To Secure His First Octagon Win
Ricardo Ramos

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Michael Aswell

Looks For His First UFC Win
Lucas Almeida

Set To Open Up UFC Rio Main Card
VJ Edgecombe

Will Not Play on Friday
T.J. McConnell

Expected to Miss at Least a Month
Ben Sheppard

Unlikely to Play in Next Two Preseason Games
Dylan Harper

in Line to Play in First Preseason Game
CFB

North Carolina's Caleb Hood Retiring from College Football
CFB

Jeff Sims Likely to Start Against Utah
CFB

Syracuse QB Steve Angeli Will Miss Remainder of 2025 Season With Torn Achilles
CFB

Sam Leavitt Not Expected to Play for Arizona State on Saturday
CFB

John Mateer Upgraded to Probable Ahead of Saturday's Red-River Shootout
VJ Edgecombe

Misses Practice Thursday
Jaylen Wells

To Have an Expanded Role in the Offense?
Drake Powell

Appears Ready for His Exhibition Debut
Egor Demin

Will Miss Friday's Exhibition Game
Joe Ingles

Shut Down for a Week
LeBron James

Will Miss at Least 3-4 Weeks
Tanner Scott

Removed From NLDS Roster After Lower-Body Procedure
CFB

Ryan Williams Will Be Available Against No. 14 Missouri On Saturday
Matisse Thybulle

Nursing Knee Soreness
Seth Curry

"Still Ramping Up" and Not Ready for Action
Jalen Suggs

Still Hasn't Been Cleared for Contact
Stephon Castle

Battling Knee Issue
Scottie Barnes

Dealing With Knee Problem
Jaylen Brown

Looks Sharp in Preseason Opener
CFB

John Mateer Officially Questionable Ahead of Saturday's Game vs. Texas
Will Smith

Catching in Game 3 of NLDS
CFB

North Carolina Discussing Buyout Option Of Coach Bill Belichick
Trendon Watford

Held Out of Practice on Wednesday
Joel Embiid

Takes Part in Practice on Wednesday
Jackson Chourio

Back in Lineup for NLDS Game 3
Roki Sasaki

"Definitely the Primary Option" in Save Situations for Dodgers
Sahith Theegala

Still Uneven Heading to Japan
Nicolai Hojgaard

Trying to Pick Up Pieces After Last Three Efforts
Vince Whaley

Tries to Add on From Sanderson Farms Performance
Adam Scott

Struggling Some Heading to Baycurrent Classic
PGA

Chris Gotterup Expects to Contend at Baycurrent Classic
Si Woo Kim

Primed for Baycurrent Classic
Garrick Higgo

Finishes Second at Sanderson Farms Championship
Max Homa

Finishes Tied for 18th at Sanderson Farms Championship
Wyndham Clark

Misses The Cut at Omega European Masters
Rasmus Hojgaard

Finishes Tied For Third at Sanderson Farms Championship
Hideki Matsuyama

Finishes Tied for 13th at BMW PGA Championship
Xander Schauffele

Returns To Action After Ryder Cup
Jackson Chourio

Day-to-Day Heading into Game 3 of NLDS
Josh Naylor

Starting for Mariners in Game 3 of ALDS
CFB

John Mateer Likely to Play Against Texas?

RANKINGS

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