LOGIN

If you know me by now, you know that I like to revisit analytical topics covered in the past to see if the findings carry forward.  I’ve written on pitcher values a number of times, mostly during draft season.  In those cases, I looked at projections for what are considered by many as the most predictive analytical categories for pitcher success.  My original article on this particular topic dates back to February 2023.  I HIGHLY suggest you check this one out HERE.  Trust me, you won’t be disappointed!

For today’s effort, we’ll revisit those three pitching categories and see how they align with the current points leaders.

Before we got to that, a short one-sentence summary to set the mood lighting:

“The top fantasy pitchers almost always have top 10 finishes in IP, K-BB% and SIERA rates.”

So, how do I apply this?

  • IP (Innings Pitched) is rather simple. The more IP, the higher your rank.  For obvious reasons, I separate out SPs from RPs.
  • K-BB% speaks for itself, too. We like high K% and low BB%.  For points leagues, this goes beyond just the scoring for each category, it also plays into categories like ER, ERA/WHIP, etc. if your league scores those too.
  • SIERA (Skill-Interactive ERA), like FIP (Field Independent Pitching), attempts to determine the underlying skill level of the pitcher by more accurately modeling what makes a pitcher successful.

When you put all three together, historically we find many of the top fantasy pitchers.  For short, I’ll call this cumulative ranking my “SHU” (Scoville Heat Units) rankings – because I expect some of these findings to be as hot as a Capsaician pepper.

From my earlier work, I note this analysis was done for your traditional Roto leagues, not Points leagues.  For today, we’re going to see how it translates to my “hypothetical” Points league.  Of course, you know the scoring format I use:

 

Now I give you the top 100 SHU-ranked SPs and their current points rankings.  For kicks, I also included their respective rankings (out of 182) in each of the three categories:  

Name Team SHU Rank Points Rank IP Rank SIERA Rank K-BB% Rank
Zack Wheeler PHI 1 2 2 8 7
Tarik Skubal DET 2 4 16 2 2
MacKenzie Gore WSN 3 18 18 4 4
Logan Webb SFG 4 12 6 7 15
Nathan Eovaldi TEX 5 6 14 12 11
Carlos Rodón NYY 6 1 8 17 14
Hunter Brown HOU 7 4 21 11 9
Garrett Crochet BOS 7 7 4 19 18
Chris Sale ATL 9 21 21 16 12
Paul Skenes PIT 10 8 3 23 26
Joe Ryan MIN 11 10 40 14 6
Jesús Luzardo PHI 12 14 23 20 21
Bryan Woo SEA 13 16 10 39 27
Max Fried NYY 14 3 4 33 42
Nick Pivetta SDP 15 15 44 27 20
Kris Bubic KCR 16 9 18 40 35
Framber Valdez HOU 17 11 1 36 57
Chris Bassitt TOR 18 38 25 37 34
Yoshinobu Yamamoto LAD 19 13 71 13 13
Sonny Gray STL 20 35 49 28 24
Kevin Gausman TOR 21 23 26 47 29
Spencer Schwellenbach ATL 22 31 18 41 44
Jacob deGrom TEX 23 20 38 38 28
Jack Flaherty DET 24 41 69 22 17
Hunter Greene CIN 25 24 89 15 8
Dylan Cease SDP 26 70 71 25 22
Merrill Kelly ARI 27 25 15 55 49
Matthew Liberatore STL 28 34 32 48 41
Cole Ragans KCR 28 74 115 3 3
Cristopher Sánchez PHI 30 40 65 24 33
Matthew Boyd CHC 31 30 52 46 31
Michael King SDP 32 26 81 29 23
Pablo López MIN 33 32 81 30 25
Will Warren NYY 34 60 101 21 19
Robbie Ray SFG 35 17 38 63 51
Nick Lodolo CIN 36 39 35 64 56
Max Meyer MIA 37 76 65 45 46
Ben Casparius LAD 37 79 141 5 10
Logan Gilbert SEA 39 98 155 1 1
Tylor Megill NYM 40 48 91 44 32
David Peterson NYM 41 32 35 60 78
Freddy Peralta MIL 42 22 29 80 65
Ben Brown CHC 42 123 109 35 30
Jameson Taillon CHC 44 46 40 74 62
Grant Holmes ATL 45 45 32 78 72
Dustin May LAD 46 72 81 52 53
Logan Henderson MIL 47 117 176 6 5
Drew Rasmussen TBR 48 27 74 56 60
Mitch Keller PIT 49 59 11 88 93
José Berríos TOR 50 50 11 95 91
Brandon Eisert CHW 51 144 173 9 16
Ryan Pepiot TBR 52 36 11 99 89
Huascar Brazobán NYM 53 73 146 18 40
Clay Holmes NYM 54 37 59 68 81
Andrew Abbott CIN 55 29 112 62 36
Steven Matz STL 56 90 147 26 38
Brad Keller CHC 57 131 163 10 39
Aaron Nola PHI 58 143 103 58 52
Brandon Pfaadt ARI 59 42 44 89 82
Landen Roupp SFG 60 75 80 72 67
Reese Olson DET 61 55 106 59 58
Casey Mize DET 62 46 98 67 59
Nick Martinez CIN 63 51 30 105 93
Kyle Freeland COL 63 156 52 83 93
Corbin Burnes ARI 65 43 65 81 83
Shane Baz TBR 66 80 59 85 86
Ryan Yarbrough NYY 67 107 141 49 45
Luis L. Ortiz CLE 68 80 69 87 80
Michael Soroka WSN 68 165 168 31 37
Brant Hurter DET 70 94 158 32 47
Zack Littell TBR 71 53 28 115 96
Cade Povich BAL 72 129 98 76 66
Eduardo Rodriguez ARI 73 163 116 71 55
Zac Gallen ARI 74 86 24 111 108
Hayden Birdsong SFG 75 116 148 51 50
Hayden Wesneski HOU 75 141 149 57 43
Ryne Nelson ARI 77 104 137 50 64
Michael Lorenzen KCR 78 83 44 106 102
Jack Dreyer LAD 79 119 158 42 53
Ranger Suárez PHI 80 111 155 54 48
Edward Cabrera MIA 80 133 130 66 61
Shane Smith CHW 82 54 79 91 88
Chad Patrick MIL 82 62 76 107 75
Luis Severino ATH 84 63 9 123 130
Taj Bradley TBR 85 60 35 109 120
Ronel Blanco HOU 86 83 107 92 70
Hunter Dobbins BOS 87 134 134 69 69
Tanner Bibee CLE 88 56 40 119 117
Yariel Rodríguez TOR 88 138 160 53 63
Seth Lugo KCR 90 57 62 108 107
Bailey Ober MIN 91 65 74 125 79
Jordan Hicks SFG 91 157 107 65 106
Walker Buehler BOS 93 100 126 79 76
JP Sears ATH 94 99 77 122 83
Tyler Holton DET 95 154 172 43 68
José Soriano LAA 96 67 16 97 172
Luis Castillo SEA 97 52 44 121 122
Andre Pallante STL 98 86 50 77 161
Colin Rea CHC 99 89 96 100 99
Jake Irvin WSN 100 44 6 149 141

Overall on the SHU scale, these SP results are Habanero or Red Sabrina HOT!  In fact, I might even give you Bhut Jolokia for the first 35 SPs in the list.  You’ll note the SHU ranks align pretty well with the Points ranks for the first 35 SPs in the list.  With a few exceptions (Chris Bassitt, Dylan Cease and Cole Ragans), there really aren’t any surprises.

From #36 (Nick Lodolo) on, there are plenty in the Serrano (F*ck You, Jobu, I do it myself!) to Cayenne range.  You can really tell who is pitching above their skills and which SPs may be in line for positive corrections.

For instance, Ben Brown’s stat line (5.72 ERA and 1.46 WHIP) corroborates the 123rd Points ranking.  A closer look, though, suggests you may want to take a flyer.  Having top 35 SP rankings in SIERA and K%-BB% means he may net you positive points moving forward.

There are a number of other examples here, such as Logan Henderson (when he returns from AAA), Kyle Freeland (will the Rockies win 10 games?), and Ryan Yarbrough.

On the flip side, SPs like Freddy Peralta (SHU #42), Drew Rasmussen (SHU #48), and Andrew Abbott (SHU #55) are slipping into Chile Verde territory.

Now, here is the same table for the top 50 RPs (of 128):

Name Team SHU Rank Points Rank IP Rank SIERA Rank K-BB% Rank
Jeremiah Estrada SDP 1 31 36 4 3
Randy Rodríguez SFG 2 25 45 1 1
Griffin Jax MIN 3 73 45 2 2
Tyler Rogers SFG 4 39 32 7 23
Steven Okert HOU 5 29 32 24 8
Cade Smith CLE 5 28 36 15 13
Brendon Little TOR 7 29 32 16 17
Bryan Baker BAL 8 42 42 13 11
Abner Uribe MIL 9 31 18 25 25
Jeff Hoffman TOR 10 7 57 6 6
Josh Hader HOU 11 3 62 8 4
Tanner Banks PHI 12 51 42 18 16
Andrés Muñoz SEA 13 1 45 12 22
Mark Leiter Jr. NYY 14 26 69 5 7
Tanner Scott LAD 15 19 45 17 21
Jhoan Duran MIN 16 7 26 22 37
Fernando Cruz NYY 17 36 69 9 8
Jake Bird COL 18 35 3 46 40
Will Vest DET 18 10 23 28 38
Emilio Pagán CIN 20 6 32 34 24
Louis Varland MIN 20 50 36 26 28
Ronny Henriquez MIA 22 27 18 44 31
Alex Vesia LAD 23 47 62 20 12
Garrett Whitlock BOS 24 41 6 49 41
Joey Cantillo CLE 25 57 9 48 42
Graham Ashcraft CIN 26 67 18 32 50
Manuel Rodríguez TBR 27 71 26 27 55
Edwin Díaz NYM 28 5 74 23 17
Tommy Kahnle DET 29 18 45 36 39
Gabe Speier SEA 30 54 114 3 5
Aroldis Chapman BOS 31 12 86 21 17
Garrett Cleavinger TBR 32 64 105 11 10
Bryan King HOU 33 51 62 35 30
Greg Weissert BOS 34 67 36 47 46
Robert Suarez SDP 35 2 57 42 32
Jose A. Ferrer WSN 36 102 8 50 75
Matt Strahm PHI 37 66 74 33 27
Hunter Gaddis CLE 37 72 100 19 15
Phil Maton STL 39 59 112 10 14
Dennis Santana PIT 40 24 74 38 35
Jason Adam SDP 41 23 13 71 66
José Alvarado PHI 42 17 120 14 17
Jalen Beeks ARI 43 62 9 65 78
Grant Anderson MIL 44 67 9 75 69
Max Kranick NYM 45 43 3 87 68
Mitch Spence ATH 45 59 1 78 79
Dylan Lee ATL 47 61 62 51 48
Emmanuel Clase CLE 48 11 86 41 36
Luke Weaver NYY 48 15 45 74 44
Adrian Morejon SDP 50 62 74 39 53
Lucas Erceg KCR 50 47 86 37 43

This one is kinda all over the place.  The top in SHU rank (Jeremiah Estrada) is “only” 31st in points rank.  Similarly, the top Points leader (Andres Munoz) comes in at just #13th in SHU rank.

There may be a few nuggets to mine here, but for the most part, I’m going to categorize these as “sweet bell” peppers and use other analyses for RPs.

In general, the cumulative analysis of IP, K-BB% and SIERA ranks seem to work well for SPs and not so well for RPs.  SPs are a tough nut to crack this season (well, pretty much every season) so I’ll take the wins when I can get them.

Another interesting (and useful) analysis in the books.  As I always say, if your format differs, you really SHOULD run the numbers yourself.  Having an accurate Points league player ranking is key to this whole analysis.

Let me know what you think in the comments below.

As always, you can find me on Twitter/X (@Derek_Favret) and on BlueSky (@dfavret.bsky.social).

Until next time, my friends!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

9 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Oriole33
Oriole33
10 days ago

The MLB scoreboard abbreviation for Pittsburgh is PGH, not PIT

Chucky
Chucky
22 days ago

Points redraft. Swap out Bibbe for Roup or am I just rearranging deck chairs?

mudhen11
mudhen11
23 days ago

Great article TLB — I like the idea of a single factor (SHU) to easily sort pitchers (great for next year’s draft). I will of course re-run the data for my own points leagues.

As an aside, I always find it surprising how difficult it can be to find SIERA data. I finally had to make a custom report in FG…

martin rostoker
martin rostoker
23 days ago

I always enjoy our discussions:

I thought it would make sense to list my SPs as a frame of reference:

Rodan
Fried
Valdez
Peterson
Mize
Wacha
Liberatore
Warren
Lugo
Baz
Gavin Williams
Kelly
Reese Olson IL
McClanahan IL slot

1. Would you pick up Eduardo Cabrera whose next four starts are at TB,at Wash, home vs Phil and then at SFG. If yes, who would you cut?

2. Make an offer of Rice plus Mize plus Wacha to get Mackenzie Gore?

3. Make an offer of Rice plus Lugo for Gore?

4. Would you offer a different pitcher plus Rice to get Gore?

5. Don’t make any of these trades.

Another interesting streamer is to pick up Cade Horton whose next two starts are at Wash and at Detroit? Would you pick him up or pass?

If yes, would you drop Warren or look elsewhere?

Thanks!!!

Thanks!!

martin rostoker
martin rostoker
Reply to  The Lineup Builder
22 days ago

Thanks!!!

johnnyhobbes
johnnyhobbes
23 days ago

Great article thank you