Top 100 Starting Pitchers For 2025 Fantasy Baseball: Week 16 – 7/16

Updated Top 100 Fantasy Baseball Starting Pitcher Rankings for 2025

Want these rankings early? Join PL+ or PL Pro and you’ll get these rankings hours before publication inside our Discord.

Have questions? My “office hours” are on Playback 10:00 am – 12:00 pm ET Monday – Friday + I stream the creation of this article LIVE at 1:00pm ET Monday afternoons.

For each edition of The List, I have a set of rules to outline my thought process and how to best use these rankings. Please take note:

  1. This is 5×5, 12-teamer, H2H format focused. It generally is the same as roto as well, but make sure you adjust accordingly.
  2. Before the notes and rankings, an injury table outlines where players would be relatively ranked if they were fully healthy. It’s the best way to tackle how to value players on the IL.
  3. If a player is on the IL or not confirmed inside the rotation, they aren’t on the List. That includes injuries and guys in the minors, but there are exceptions for players who are expected to be in the rotation but are being skipped this week.
  4. Since this is a 12-teamer, I heavily weigh upside in the back-half of the rankings. The HIPSTER players are likely going to underperform those labeled as a Toby across a full season, but it’s in your best interest to chase ceiling vs. floor in many cases. Pick the one that you need most in your situation, of course.
  5. I’ve made a decision to limit labels to just two labels per player, with few exceptions for a second. It streamlines the process much better and hopefully gives you a more targeted understanding of the player.
  6. The notes outline oh-so-much to help your team. Please read the notes if you can instead of just scrolling to the bottom.

 

Let’s get to the tables. First are all of our injured compatriots. Injuries are so strange and instead of shoving them at random moments on The List, I’ve elected to throw all of them into one table here for you, the wise fantasy manager, to determine if it’s worthwhile to take the injury discount and when.

Injured Pitchers Who Could Be Fantasy Relevant When Healthy

I made a decision last year: I removed the “Preseason tiers” and changed “tiers” to “Relative Rank” as it’ll be more consistent week-to-week — Tiers change while their relative rank does not.

Please understand that “70-80” does not guarantee the player will be exactly in that range when they return. Rankings are 100% relative to the landscape and while this table reflects where they would sit in a vacuum, it’s a fluid creature. Sometimes there are oh-so-many options, sometimes I want to see them healthy and stretched out again, and others we’re starving for pitchers and they jump higher than “70-80”. It’s a loose reference point and why it’s called “relative ranking.” It’s difficult to update this week-to-week and I apologize if the ranking is different when the player actually returns from the IL. I hope it helps!

One last point about that – pitchers often need an extra week or two to ramp up once they do return to the majors. It’s why Still ILL exists and the “relative rank” you see is when those guys have shaken off their rust. Will they be back to normal in their first start or will they need a few? I have no idea! Those ranks are to show what I’d expect once they are fully back to normal.

I added something new to The List last season. It’s a small table of the prospects I’m personally excited about who would jump up The List quickly if they were confirmed in the rotation. Please don’t read too much into these, there are far better prospect analysts out there than me, and this rank will likely conflict with our weekly SP To Stash article from John Villavicencio, though we will be conferring each week. Still, I think this table will help you quickly stay on top of who should be on your radar.

They are ordered by my general preference/focus on those guys right now. If any of these are called up, they should be added to your 12-teamers as spec adds at the very least. Some guys aren’t here and that’s due to my own belief they aren’t as pressing as the ones below. I could be very wrong there.

Colors: Green = Worthy of a stash right now in 12-teamers.

 

Nick’s SPs To Consider Stashing In 12-teamer Redraft Leagues

 

As I do my rankings, I thought it would be helpful to showcase a table of how we’re ranking offenses, granted by our PLV powered Projections (in alphabetical order by tier):

PLV Projections Team Offense Ranking (7/14 Update)

Remember, these offensive rankings are based on each offense’s Process+ so far this year and how we project their lineups moving forward. It means you’re going to see a little different offensive rankings than you may see elsewhere and there will always be some surprises. This is based on skills, not purely results! If you have questions about these offense ranks, reach out to Kyle Bland (@blandalytics).

Lastly, I heavily recommend you follow my daily SP Roundup that outlines all pitcher performances through the season, as each week’s update will reflect the comments and findings from those daily articles. If you’re unfamiliar with some of the players listed, I highly recommend reading my 75,000+ word Top 400 Starting Pitchers from February. Many things will have changed, but the root of my perception of these players is outlined there.

Let’s get to it.

 

Ranking Notes

 

  • This is your reminder to please read these notes as they’ll tell you plenty about why “someone moved up” or “why is he at #X?!”
  • Seriously. Read the notes.
  • I know there are going to be a ton of comments about I hate how much these rankings change each week and I’m going to get out ahead of them here.
  • These rankings mostly change in the back half of The List as that’s your waiver wire. Those aren’t the players you hold onto throughout the year like your SPs 1-4, which means we’re going to be a bit more chaotic and roll with the waves more aggressively. If I see elements that suggest a pitcher could be a Top 40 arm, I’m going to move up a ton from the 80s to the 60s. Shazam, there we go.

 

New note: If you would like more detail about a specific pitcher, you can view all my thoughts of their previous starts on their player page. Just click their name, head to the game log, and tap on any row. You’ll see my thoughts on that start and extra pitch details.

 

As is tradition, I need to tell you about the guys who were removed and added from the Top ~60, so you have context for the ranking shifts.

Please understand how this affects movement across The List.

 

Tier 1 – The True Aces

These pitchers are dope and make us feel dope.

 

1. Tarik Skubal – These

2. Zack Wheeler – Guys

3. Garrett Crochet – Are

4. Paul Skenes – So

5. Jacob deGrom – Dope. All are absurd ratio + high strikeout arms and save for Skenes, should grant you Wins. I kinda feel like deGrom should be ahead of Skenes for that reason (over 100 IP for deGrom y’all! HE HAS THE HEALTHY ELBOW) but I’m not going to push it.

 

Tier 2 – AGA With Something To Prove

They have the AGA tag, though they don’t have the complete elite package of ratios, volume, and strikeouts of the top tier.

 

6. Max Fried – He’s back in the second tier since it’s clear he’s not going to flirt with a 30% strikeout rate. And that’s totally fine.

7. Yoshinobu Yamamoto – The volume is a touch lower given he goes just once a week, but that’s alright with us.

8. Bryan Woo – He’s as consistent as any arm for 6+ frames and his four-seamer is one of the best in baseball.

9. Joe Ryan – Like Woo, Ryan’s four-seamer is phenomenal. No reason to change the course.

10. Hunter Brown – Hunter has had a pair of rough outings lately while the secondaries haven’t been as sharp. Doesn’t mean a whole lot given the scope of the season – he’s had poor secondaries before with a little better luck – and it’s not ringing massive alarm bells for me. Yet.

11. Robbie Ray – The changeup hasn’t been as stellar, but the slider and curve have stepped up.

12. Carlos Rodón – Oh hey, there’s eight innings of dopeness from Rodón. No slowing down here.

13. Framber Valdez – The curveball is still filthy and we’re all good.

14. Logan Webb – I lowered Webb due to his wide arsenal shrinking a bit over the last few weeks with more of a changeup/sinker approach than the sweeper and cutter of the first two months. There was a larger lean toward sweepers in his most recent outing, but it wasn’t as effective as it had been. I’m giving him the benefit of the doubt that he’ll recover in time given the track record, though he may turn into a lovely Holly without the remarkable AGA outings more often than not.

 

Tier 3 – We Expect Success Every Night

They have to earn the AGA tag but are just a few starts away from it.

 

15. Tyler GlasnowThree outings that look like Glasnow and he’ll be in the second tier, hinting at the first. He has two more games to go.

16. Logan GilbertWe know he should be given the AGA tag, but he hasn’t done enough yet to deserve it since coming off the IL. Dems the rules.

17. Jacob Misiorowski – He had one game that he almost escaped unscathed and has otherwise been one of the best pitchers in baseball. You’re not benching him. The biggest concern at this point is his longevity – How long will they let him pitch into the season?

18. Ranger Suárez – He’s been pitching like an ace, though it’s more precarious than the rest of the tier that he’ll hold it through the full season. He goes through these peaks and valleys constantly.

19. MacKenzie Gore – Gore has been on the verge of Tier 2 for a while, but he’s fanned seven batters just once in his last six games with his fastball/curve/change approach to RHB lacking the same juice of old. It’s still great, just futzing around. Come on, ascend already.

 

Tier 4 – Ole Reliable

These are premier Holly types, but they aren’t as exciting as the ones above. You should be fine with them, there’s just a little more risk.

 

20. Nathan Eovaldi – Eovaldi has been stupid good and I’m tired of acting like his four-pitch mix hasn’t turned him into the best Holly in town.

21. Shota Imanaga – Imanaga’s strikeouts may not flirt with 30% and there are sure to be HRs to ruin his ERA here and there, but his splitter and fastball are both fantastic and the sweeper is helping plenty.

22. George Kirby – I absolutely adore that he’s going after a BSB approach. I’m annoyed that he hasn’t been able to execute it consistently. But it’s there! It’ll happen!

23. Cristopher Sánchez – The sinker allows too many hits for Sánchez to be anything more than a Holly. It’s just what it is an be grateful.

24. Freddy Peralta – If Holly equates to “Start and don’t think about it”, then that’s Peralta, even if Professor Chaos appears every so often.

25. Nick Pivetta – Pivetta has been absurd. He’s been able to hold off HRs better than any other season and it could spell his first year under a 4.00 ERA. He’s at the point of Holly land with less Cherry Bomb tendencies and it felt wrong placing him under the rest of this tier.

26. Seth LugoGood ole underappreciated Lugo. I was out on him entering 2024 (whoops) and despite not loving him, I’m still a little surprised he was draftable as an SP #4 or even #5 this March. He’s literally having the same season. Okay fine, with unlucky HRs and lucky BABIP and LOB rate. Those cancel each other out, right?

27. Kodai SengaSenga’s approach is solid, though without the old velocity, the hopes for a strikeout explosion across the second half shouldn’t be entertained.

28. Sonny GrayMost days it’s Sonny, on some it’s Gray. Set and forget the fella.

29. Kris BubicI may be too high on Bubic due to possible workload restrictions in the second half. That said, I try not to commit to what we think managers will do with their players and even when they tell us what they plan to do, it’s not always what actually happens. Bubic’s skills have been great – effective high heaters with changeups and breakers underneath – and we keep riding it until they force us to move on.

 

Tier 5 – So Dang Close To Greatness

I trust all these pitchers to produce this season while they also have heightened nightmare potential on a given night.

 

30. Spencer Strider – I wish Strider’s four-seamer was what it used to be. It’s not just down a tick and carrying less vertical ride, but he’s failing to overwhelm batters upstairs. Fortunately, the slider feel has been immaculate and kept his strikeouts flowing.

31. Andrew AbbottDoes it make complete sense to me? Nope. Has he been incredibly consistent save for his most recent start? Yep. Despite feeling as though Abbott will fall off in the second half, I cannot sit here and suggest moving on from him over the questionable arms below.

32. Dylan Cease – Fantasy Baseball has two hearts. One is the hardened Analyst that spends ours in the laboratory, mixing concoctions inside beakers to determine answers and test hypotheses to make sense of it all. The other is the Filthy Casual, who doesn’t care about what a pitcher just did and says “Well, yeah, but he’ll pitch differently, so the results don’t matter. It’ll all work out.” Sometimes it’s best just to listen to the filthy casual. Give me more than this. Fine. He’s had a stupid high home run rate and he still misses a ton of bats. He’s the same guy, just in a weird rough patch. You really shouldn’t give up.

33. Eury Pérez – His four-seamer is dominating and it’s awesome. The breakers haven’t been consistent support, though, and creates a touch of haze swirling Eury’s second half.

34. Jesús Luzardo – He’s fixed! He’s not! He’s hurting my teams! He’s the best! Luzardo was a Cherry Bomb in previous seasons, and has suddenly reverted to his volatile self…except he had been volatile earlier in the year and was able to lessen the damage more than usual. Jesús looked like his prime self in his last outing and it should quell any suggestions that he’s cooked. More ups-and-downs than before? Sure, but definitely not donezo.

35. Chase Burns – He’s four-seamer + slider like Strider and Cease. The Shag Rug makes it a little worse than the others, but clearly in the same tier.

 

 

Tier 6 – You’re Helping. I Think. Yeah.

These are arms who are either trending in the right direction or aren’t fading enough for me to be heavily concerned about dropping them far down the list in the upcoming weeks.

 

36. Nick Lodolo – He’s a reliable Holly who could turn into something more if he can figure out his curveball against RHB in two-strike counts. We’ve seen a large drop in Putaway Rate on the hook this year and it’s the catalyst for his dip in strikeouts.

37. Matthew Boyd – He’s an All Star and done a phenomenal job of limiting HRs despite failing to find a stellar #3 pitch against RHB. We ride and hope it sticks through the second half.

38. Noah Cameron – I’m loving Cameron’s command that allows him to hold back the four-seamer to roughly 20% usage, letting the change, curve, cutter, and slider do the rest. He may have some workload concerns down the road, though.

39. Merrill Kelly – Kelly has done everything you could hope for and will likely pitch in a better situation once the trade deadline comes to a close.

 

Tier 7 – I Guess We’re Doing This

Some of the more controversial rankings are found here and it comes down to skills vs. results. I completely understand if you feel differently. In most cases, I’m weighing what I think their arsenal and ability dictate rather than what their results have been thus far.

 

40. Brandon Woodruff – It’s hard not to be impressed by his first two outings, even if the four-seamer velocity fell to 92+ mph instead of my expectation of 94 mph (the velo dip in a second start is normal, however, we saw Woodruff increase his velocity across his latter frames in his season debut. I was hoping it meant he had more in the tank he was holding back). Woodruff looks like a complete pitcher who benefited from the extra rehab starts (thanks ankle…?), though I elected to move him to Tier 7 simply due to the small sample thus far.

41. Jack Flaherty – Flaherty is the guy you want him to be. Probably. The breakers are still whiffable and he’s doing a decent job of avoiding balls in play off his four-seamer, and I’m making a rare exception to label his two-game-15-ER stretch as “Tipping Problems”. Save for those two games, he’s been the dude we know.

42. Ryan Pepiot – He has all the pieces, just get that dang four-seamer upstairs, okay?

43. Shane Baz – He also now has all the pieces, just get that dang curveball down, okay?

44. Lucas Giolito – He’s allowed 4 ER combined in eight of his nine eight starts (with one 7 ER disaster, yikes) and just 3 ER in his last six, and I wish I were more confident that Giolito would excel in the second half. His three-pitch mix of four-seamer + changeup + slider has yet to fire on all cylinders in tandem, with his fastball missing over the plate a bit, the changeup failing to earn plenty of whiffs, and his slider command fluctuating. That said, he’s clearly been exceptional for over a month and it’s likely a situation where we set and forget until he gives us a major reason not to.

45. Yu Darvish – Darvish hasn’t found his old groove on the bump for his first two starts of the season, though the arsenal certainly appears to be what it used to be. I don’t think we drop Darvish the rest of the way.

46. Will Warren – Sooooo, when are those secondary whiffs coming back? Warren had a legit sweeper, changeup, and curve all doing damage as his sinker and four-seamer stole strikes. Now it’s all FASTBALL THIS, FASTBALL THAT. And hey, I like those heaters! It’s awfully hard to have a 25%+ strikeout rate without the sweeper and changeup doing their part.

47. Cam Schlittler – His debut was awesome. Don’t expect the 100 mph heaters again, but 96/97 mph with a mix of secondaries he can control is a rarity. It’s difficult to discern his future in the rotation – What happens to Stroman? Gil? Is Fried’s blister a problem? Will there be a SP acquired at the deadline? Or two?! Will Does Warren have the runway in the rotation the rest of the year or will he need to be skipped? With many paths toward an open spot in the rotation, I’m electing to hold Schlittler now and bank on something making it easy for him to stick through August, if not September. After all, he tossed 120 frames last season.

48. Grant Holmes – The slider is still awesome, and we’ve generally seen the cutter and curve step up lately. Keep on keepin’ on as I erase the memory of his last outing.

49. Sean Manaea – Manaea was fantastic in his season debut and the question is how he’ll be used moving forward. I’m guessing the Mets feature him before Holmes moving forward after tossing over 60 pitches in his first outing (and would have completed the inning if not for a walkoff).

50. Luis Castillo – He’s holding on tight, but it’s a sub 21% strikeout rate and 1.24 WHIP thus far without the changeup and slider looking pretty. I’m scared a major decline is on the horizon.

51. Emmet Sheehan – The Dodgers are still stretching out Ohtani and Sheehan looks to either be the follower (good Win chance!) or his own starter (more volume!) moving forward. Either way, we get Sheehan and his great command with legit offerings. Sign me up.

 

Tier 8 – At The Edge Of The Cliff

The Cliff is around here where there is another tier of “safe” arms that you can’t see yourself dropping, but who knows what will happen.

 

52. Drew Rasmussen – The news came out that the expectation is five innings from Rasmussen moving forward. WELL THEN. Guess he’s back on the menu given his production per inning is great, even at five frames + a decent Win chance.

53. Landen Roupp The changeup is helping against LHB, the sinker is located up, and the curve…isn’t getting whiffs but should get it back soon. He’s oddly stable these days.

54. Reese Olson – We haven’t seen a start post-IL stint of sliders + changeups leading the charge, and I hope the fastballs pull back when they do.

55. David Peterson – The WHIP can hurt, but the extension makes him viable with four pitches he can throw for strikes on a winning team that lets him go six frames constantly.

56. Trevor Rogers – This has been a lovely surprise, eh? It may be a flash in the pan, but Rogers has been sitting 94 mph with heaters up + changeups and sliders down. We need to roll with this and hope it sticks.

 

Tier 9 – Riding The Magic Bus

Here are your Frizzle arms who could be something more than what they are right now. Some of these will rise, others will disappear. Take chances, make mistakes, get messy.

 

57. Edward Cabrera – He gave us a scare with a possible elbow injury, and I’m worried even sticking in the rotation that they’ll have a shorter leash + this could be a disruption that breaks his rhythm.

58. Ryne Nelson – I love that he’s leaning into his cutter over 20% of the time in an effort to find a proper #2 pitch. I hate that his four-seamer leaked down a ton in his last start. You’re so close.

59. Richard Fitts – Fitts is throwing 97 mph (not 95 mph) in his two games back from the IL and with an open spot in the rotation, Fitts will get at least one more outing, if not more. Who knows what the Red Sox situation will be in a few weeks and if Fitts is holding that velocity with his wide array of weapons, I don’t see Boston pushing him out of the rotation.

 

 

Tier 10 – Fine, You Need Innings

I expect them to be rostered in your 12-teamers in the short term, but don’t feel like you have to hold them.

 

60. Casey Mize – He’s been a steady arm despite his last hiccup. I don’t expect a huge strikeout rate ahead and his stuff isn’t overwhelming, but he’s a solid Toby.

61. Brayan Bello – Since reducing his windup, adding the cutter, and shifting his mentality into “ATTACK MODE,” Bello has performed well over the last month. I’m a little concerned the his changeup feel goes in-and-out, while he lacks a fierce weapon as a devastating out pitch. His track record of volatility is something we can’t ignore, too.

62. Matthew Liberatore – Liberatore is fine. Nothing screams elite, but he has a wide arsenal from the left side and if he can keep his fastball flirting with 95 mph on a given day, he should be able to go six frames with a good defense behind him. I wonder if the Cardinals will let him go every five days throughout the end of the year, though – he pitched 80 frames last year, mostly in relief, and has already eclipsed 100 innings this season.

63. Cade Horton – You can see how it all works if the pieces come together. His changeup has had games of brilliance, the breakers can miss bats, and the cut-fastball can be spotted. I’m curious how the second half looks for Horton and if he can stave off rookie fatigue to showcase a step forward in his overall command.

64. Michael Soroka – The curveball is great. The fastballs are fine. The changeup is…hopefully not needed much. I wish another pitch carried venom outside of his hook. You may see him on another team at the deadline to elevate his Win chance, though it may come with a slightly shorter leash.

65. Michael Wacha – He is who he is. A good changeup with a hefty supporting cast that hopes to avoid punishment.

66. Chris Paddack – The four-seamer and split-change are solid, though they don’t dominate enough to mask a developing slider and curve.

67. Brady Singer – The sweeper and slider are finally getting whiffs again. Phew. Let’s hope it lasts.

 

Tier 11 – I Need A Purpose

I can see how they jump up to the other Toby tier or better in the future, but they need to do a little more to get there.

 

68. Gavin Williams – It’s right there in front of you Gavin. Just get the heater up, dangit! It’s frustrating and he may just be a PEAS at the end of the day.

69. Clay Holmes – Soooooo, what are the Mets doing here? The way I see it, The Adobe is likely to come with a short leash for the nest few weeks (if not more) and his general production isn’t so great that he deserves holding onto as you endure the HIPSTER situation.

70. Yusei KikuchiKikuchi has stumbled in his last two outings and I’m worried we may have seen the last of his fun run. He’s an arm who goes hot and cold quickly.

71. Max Scherzer – We saw a great outing without his thumb injury kicking him out early. It’s unclear how much is left in the tank for the future Hall of Famer, but it seems like a decent play for now, right?

72. Joey Cantillo – The extension is elite and the changeup is destined to earn all the whiffs. If he’s starting regularly with Ortiz on the shelf, he’ll be your new favorite crafty southpaw in a week or two.

73. Joe Boyle – Sooooo, what happens to Boyle now that Rasmussen should be going five frames?

74. Janson Junk – I’m not buying in completely here, but I recognize that he’s becoming a Junkballer with a heavy focus on his breakers and saving the four-seamer more than before. With excellent slider, sweeper, and curve command, he can go Dancing With The Disco against mid offenses and suceed. I’d hate to lean heavily into this, though.

75. Jacob Lopez – He does the Fratty Pirate approach with a bit more velocity and a little less consistent command. If he’s able to live on the edges, J Lo can be a strikeout producer. If he’s leaking the cutter over the plate without getting the changeup and sweeper down, then it’s going to be pain.

 

Tier 12 – They Will Drive You Up The Wall

I’m willing to bet this tier will upset people the most. I see them as HIPSTER arms who could potentially smooth out into stable arms or make you wish in August that you never drafted them. Who knows when they’ll perform at their potential?

 

76. José Soriano – He either has his sinker working or he doesn’t. Good luck figuring out what you’re going to get on a given night.

77. Tanner Bibee – He finally got cutter and changeup whiffs in a game! And he’s also really inconsistent with his command! I hope you see Bibee shooting up the ranks in the next few weeks.

78. Kevin Gausman – Gausman doesn’t have the command of old and his heater is getting pummeled. On a given night, he can have it, though, so I understand those who are still holding on.

79. José Berríos – He’s The Great Undulator. You know the deal.

80. Charlie Morton – Since returning the rotation, Morton has been far more helpful than harmful with his signature curveball. However, he was delayed recently by elbow tendonitis and we may have just a handful of productive outings left, if any. Welcome to the Vargas Rule section of The List.

81. Mitch Keller – I get it. Keller has had a lovely stretch with many Quality Starts. I hate the fastballs and hope he’s able to throw more breakers in the future, but this isn’t destined to last through the next three months.

82. Adrian Houser – Houser has a stupid low ERA rooted in above-average extension and 94+ mph velocity on a sinker that has churned far more outs than you’d expect. This Vargas Rule could end overnight.

83. Slade Cecconi – The Slade Brigade forced me, y’all. I don’t like his arsenal and I believe he’s getting away with a lot, but fine. Let him ride until it’s over.

84. Zack Littell – He goes Dancing With The Disco and arguably just lost his Vargas Rule status, but I recognize that he may deserve one more chance. His slider + splitter combo should not return the results it has.

 

Tier 13 – The Babbling Brooks

These are streaming options this week who could be off The List next week. I believe you’re better off streaming than hoarding low ceiling six-inning arms or deep fliers who don’t provide value now.

 

85. Eduardo Rodriguez – His changeup is still a legit pitch to silence RHB and he gets the Cardinals + Pirates ahead.

86. JP Sears – The changeup emphasis is a good thing for Sears and it may work against the Guardians.

87. Chris Bassitt – It’s the Giants up next for Bassitt, who has shown he can go six frames for a Win.

88. Colin Rea – He’ll host the Red Sox and he’s a decent streamer for matchups like these.

89. Andrew Heaney – You never quite know what Heaney will have on a given night, but at least it’s the White Sox next.

90. Dean Kremer – He’s Dean Werewolf and while I don’t love a start against the Rays, I recognize Kremer has had a higher ceiling lately.

91. Clayton Kershaw – He’ll have another start against the Brewers and that may be good enough for a Win.

92. Jeffrey Springs – The changeup could create sunshine and rainbows against the Guardians.

93. Brandon Pfaadt – With the Astros up next, it may force Pfaadt to find his sweeper again with many RHB in his path.

94. Logan Allen – Baltimore + Kansas City are on the horizon and it may be tools time for Allen.

 

Tier 14 – Patience Is A Virtue

These arms have tested your patience. It’s up to you to decide what you want to do.

 

95. Zac Gallen – We saw two fantastic games followed by a massive dud. He’ll likely get traded at the deadline and it could be the shift he needs.

96. David Festa – He gets the Dodgers next and with Festa’s questionable command (it has been better lately!), I don’t think you need to hold onto him over a streamer in the short term.

97. Lance McCullers Jr. – He’s a desperate strikeout play with a very low floor.

98. Brandon Walter – I see Walter as a good streamer with a tough outing against the Sneks ahead that I’d prefer not to touch.

99. Kumar Rocker – Rocker’s cutter is awesome. The rest…needs work.

100. Sandy Alcantara – We haven’t seen Alcantara lead with his changeup, nor jam his heaters inside to RHB. I can’t endorse him until we see both in action.

 

Honorable Mentions

Here is every pitcher who is not on The List and currently has a rotation spot. If I’m missing someone, it’s likely because I removed them from The List last week and forgot to add them here, or I meant to add them to The List and I got crossed up somewhere. Let me know if I’m missing someone, please, just understand it’s never a slight to their ability! EVERYONE SHOULD BE HERE.

 

J.T. Ginn (ATH) – Whenever we do see Ginn inside the rotation again, he better have a whole lot of sink and velo to go with a whiffable slider. Without that, I’m out.

Jack Perkins (ATH) – He’s gotten some attention lately and I’m not seeing a legit SP to chase. There isn’t enough juice here.

Luis Severino (ATH) – He’s not worth the risk regularly, especially with his home park of Sacré Verde.

Mitch Spence (ATH) – I’m not sure how long he goes and if it’s worth your time.

Bryce Elder (ATL) – Absolutely not.

Davis Daniel (ATL) – He had a spot start and is not an arm to trust.

Didier Fuentes (ATL) – He was sent to the minors after his 8 ER affair. He’ll be back in time and there’s legit talent in the 20-year-old’s arm.

Hurston Waldrep (ATL) – If he does get the call, I’d worry he doesn’t have a whole lot outside of a splitter. He’s not the absurd SP prospect you want him to be.

Brandon Young (BAL) – With Morton needing a little extra rest, Young will step in. You don’t want to start Young. Should we start Old instead? I wish it worked that way. After all, youth is wasted on the Young. How dare you say that about Brandon. No no no, just…don’t start him okay?

Tomoyuki Sugano (BAL) – His RHB approach simply isn’t good enough.

Zach Eflin (BAL) – I’m not sure when Eflin starts next (It’s possible next Monday) and he’d be in the Toby tier with Wacha when that time comes.

Kyle Harrison (BOS) – He was traded to the Red Sox and instantly sent to the minors. I wouldn’t consider him a major stash at the moment (I think they want to work on some things with him there) and when he does get the call, make sure it’s not in Fenway. I’m awfully curious to see if he’ll have a cutter when he does return.

Walker Buehler (BOS) – I’m not saying he’s doomed. All I’m saying is he shouldn’t be rostered as he figures it out. He’s been broken down, now let’s watch him build back up.

Ben Brown (CHC) – They sent him back to the minors. I’m actually a bit shocked as he should be sent to the pen. That curve and heater combo works so much better there.

Chris Flexen (CHC) – It is so hard for Flexen to find a beach these days.

Aaron Civale (CHW) – The breakers are not as good as they’ve been in the past. I’ll wait until then.

Davis Martin (CHW) – Martin could return soon from his forearm strain and I’d like to wait and see if there’s value to chase in 12-teamers.

Jonathan Cannon (CHW) – Off the IL and far from getting the orchestra ready for the overture.

Sean Burke (CHW) – His fastball velocity is still down and he’s working on putting it all together again.

Shane Smith (CHW) – Not only has the overall performance dipped, but the White Sox are slowing him down in his first year as a starter. It’s not worth it.

Tyler Alexander (CHW) – T-Lex doesn’t go long like his buddy the brontosaurus. Those don’t actually exist. YOU DON’T ACTUALLY EXIST.

Rhett Lowder (CIN) – Hurt and we’ll take a look when he returns.

Nick Martinez (CIN) – He’s a decent streamer, nothing more.

Wade Miley (CIN) – He’s back! And only worthwhile in a perfect streaming scenario in the future. If he looks okay. And he’s hurt again!

Luis L. Ortiz (CLE) – MLB is investigating if he participated in sports betting and it’s unknown if he’ll return in the near future. Even if he does, his production is highly questionable.

Antonio Senzatela (COL) – Senz-A does what Senz-A does.

Austin Gomber (COL) – Coors + 89 mph heaters = Nooooope.

Bradley Blalock (COL) – A BB in Coors? No thanks.

Carson Palmquist (COL) – Another Rockies arm who we don’t care for in fantasy because he’s on the Rockies.

Chase Dollander (COL) – Sent to the minors.

Germán Márquez (COL) – COL

Kyle Freeland (COL) – Story

Tanner Gordon (COL) – Brooooo. Oh hey, another Colorado pitcher, this time with two first names. DOUBLE WHAMMY.

Keider Montero (DET) – The slider can miss bats, but the overall package is too meh and comes without security in the rotation.

Michael Lorenzen (KCR) – Lorenzen was placed on the IL with an oblique strain. I wonder if the Royals will have another SP solidified in his spot when he returns (probably not).

Colton Gordon (HOU) – Consider Gordon as a cheap Win arm, but he may be replaced soon with the trade deadline approaching.

Ryan Gusto (HOU) – Gusto has a touch of intrigue, but hasn’t been used confidently by the Astros and carries the Shag Rug.

Carson Fulmer (LAA) – If he actually gets a chance to start, make sure to avoid Fulmer. This isn’t exciting.

Jack Kochanowicz (LAA) – The Jack of One Trade is now the Jack of NO Trade with the sinker feel disappearing. No thanks.

Kyle Hendricks (LAA) – He’s not the worst AL-Only streamer. At least he’s able to go six.

Tyler Anderson (LAA) – We stream Anderson when he has good matchups. Now is not that time.

Bobby Miller (LAD) – His velocity has been down in the minors without good command or whiffs. Sigh. ONE DAY.

Dustin May (LAD) – You can’t trust him. Incredibly strange to watch May run away from a 19″ run sinker at 96/97 mph to a mediocre heater (even if it has good HAVAA), while no secondary has come together aside from the sweeper.

Justin Wrobleski (LAD) – He was sent to the minors and could be back soon (the Dodgers do what they do). Keep an eye on it.

Matt Sauer (LAD) – Sent back to the minors.

Roki Sasaki (LAD) – He’s not on the IL table for the same reason he wasn’t on The List before he hit the IL. Sasaki doesn’t have a third pitch, his splitter doesn’t get enough strikes, and his heater is under 95 mph. He isn’t a hold for 12-teamers and his timeline to return is unknown.

Shohei Ohtani (LAD) – He’s capped as an opener until…who knows? August? And if you’re in a two-Ohtani league where he takes his own roster spot, he’s essentially a minor league stash play for a month or so.

Cal Quantrill (MIA) – It’s possible the splitter is cooking on a given night. I guess.

Freddy Tarnok (MIA) – Remember the deal that sent Sean Murphy to Atlanta? I talked with a few scouts and they mentioned Tarnok as the actual big get of that deal. Wasn’t that ages ago? Sure was. I’m curious what he looks like now…on a completely different squad. There’s a huge reason he wasn’t kept on the Athletics, y’all.

Jose Quintana (MIL) – Quintana is a decent streamer option and not the kind of guy to go for against good lineups.

Logan Henderson (MIL) – He’s back in Triple-A. Womp womp. Not a bad play when he gets the chance again with his four-seamer + changeup combo.

Nestor Cortes (MIL) – We may see Cortes soon and you shouldn’t expect excellence out of the gate.

Quinn Priester (MIL) – It’s not a good enough schedule to roll with Priester, even if you want to Vargas Rule it.

Bailey Ober (MIN) – Hit the IL finally with a hip impingement. Hopefully it means he can be healthy and productive when he returns.

Simeon Woods Richardson (MIN) – He’s back on the squad with Zebby hitting the IL and I’d prefer to chase something else.

Zebby Matthews (MIN) – I hope we see Zebby back on the mound soon. He wasn’t a finished product before the injury, though, and be careful throwing him out there before we get a good look.

Frankie Montas Jr. (NYM) – The ceiling isn’t high enough to justify a roll of the dice against good offenses.

Paul Blackburn (NYM) – Are the Mets actually giving Blackburn innings? That doesn’t mean you have to.

Marcus Stroman (NYY) – He returned and while you got a sneaky Win, Stroman made it abundantly clear that he’s not a shiny waiver add.

Ryan Yarbrough (NYY) – He’s on the IL now and we shouldn’t expect the magic to return when he’s healthy.

Andrew Painter (PHI) – He won’t be up until post-ASB. At least his last start was better than the previous disasters. You may want to stash him now…He’d be around #50 if he got the call today.

Taijuan Walker (PHI) – He’s in the bullpen now. FOR GOOD. Finally. Walker lone, Ranger starting.

Bailey Falter (PIT) – Falter hasn’t been traded to the Rays yet.

Bubba Chandler (PIT) – Is now the time to start stashing Bubba? I’d say so. It feels about two weeks away and given everything we’ve seen and read, he’ll be a Top 60ish starter with potential for much more.

Mike Burrows (PIT) – The changeup is cool when it works. The four-seamer is cool when it’s up and the changeup is there to help. And even with both of those, he still needs a little help.

Emerson Hancock (SEA) – Sent to the minors.

Logan Evans (SEA) – He’s in for Hancock and doesn’t do enough for us to chase.

Hayden Birdsong (SFG) – His NC Rate is absolutely horrendous. You can’t trust him.

Justin Verlander (SFG) – Verlander did the thing! And now it’s a tough matchup. Let’s wait a start to see if the velocity and command stick.

Andre Pallante (STL) – He doesn’t do enough with a cut-fastball and unreliable breakers.

Erick Fedde (STL) – Remember kids, Don’t Trust The Feddes. He’s not confirmed to keep his rotation spot.

Michael McGreevy (STL) – There’s a chance McGreevy returns to replace Fedde…? I wouldn’t start him outside decent matchups, though.

Miles Mikolas (STL) – His four-seamer was one of the worst pitches in baseball last year and is now two ticks slower.

Kyle Hart (SDP) – We may see Hart in the rotation among the second half and we haven’t seen a reliable streamer yet.

Randy Vásquez (SDP) – I don’t dig his overall approach. There’s nothing that speaks to production in 12-teamers.

Ryan Bergert (SDP) – I kinda dig his high heater and slider combo, but we have to play the matchups he gets.

Stephen Kolek (SDP) – Sent to the minors.

Taj Bradley (TBR) – I just can’t take his volatility any more. Maybe he belonged in the bottom tier, I’m not sure. I see him as more of a detriment than and addition to your fantasy teams.

Jacob Latz (TEX) – I wonder if we’ll see more Latz in the second half. There’s a great fastball/change approach here if he can throw the latter for strikes.

Jack Leiter (TEX) – Leiter is someone to consider as a potential breakout in the future, but he looks too far away for now. Even if he succeeds once, you won’t trust it.

Patrick Corbin (TEX) – Corbin is still a decent shot for 3 ER or fewer on a given night and that’s about all I can give him.

Bowden Francis (TOR) – On the IL with a shoulder injury. We’ll wait until he’s healthy and see how he looks.

Eric Lauer (TOR) – He’s not worth your time unless he gets a shot against the bottom tier offenses, and even then, it’s a gamble.

Brad Lord (WSN) – You’ve forgotten who he is and that’s fine.

Jake Irvin (WSN) – He’s not in the groove you remember from last seaon.

Mitchell Parker (WSN) – Parker actually did something really fun in one start – he did the BSB with four-seamers and curveballs. Thing is, he hasn’t done that before nor after and it was clearly an exception, not the rule.

Shinnosuke Ogasawara (WSN) – I didn’t see enough to get us interested as a crafty southpaw streamer for the future and was demoted by the Nationals.

Trevor Williams (WSN) – #NeverTrevor. He also has a sprained elbow now.

 

 

SCROLL BACK UP AND READ THE NOTES

 

RankPitcherTeamBadgesChange
1Tarik SkubalT1DET
Aces Gonna Ace
Quality Starts
-
2Zack WheelerPHI
Aces Gonna Ace
Quality Starts
-
3Garrett CrochetBOS
Aces Gonna Ace
Strikeout Upside
-
4Paul SkenesPIT
Aces Gonna Ace
Strikeout Upside
-
5Jacob deGromTEX
Aces Gonna Ace
Strikeout Upside
Injury Risk
-
6Max Fried
T2
NYY
Aces Gonna Ace
Wins Bonus
Injury Risk
-
7Yoshinobu YamamotoLAD
Aces Gonna Ace
Wins Bonus
-
8Bryan WooSEA
Aces Gonna Ace
Ratio Focused
+2
9Joe RyanMIN
Aces Gonna Ace
Strikeout Upside
-1
10Hunter BrownHOU
Aces Gonna Ace
Wins Bonus
-1
11Robbie RaySF
Aces Gonna Ace
Strikeout Upside
+1
12Carlos RodónNYY
Aces Gonna Ace
Strikeout Upside
+1
13Framber ValdezDET
Aces Gonna Ace
Quality Starts
+1
14Logan WebbSF
Aces Gonna Ace
Quality Starts
-3
15Tyler Glasnow
T3
LAD
Ace Potential
Strikeout Upside
Playing Time Question
+UR
16Logan GilbertSEA
Ace Potential
Strikeout Upside
Injury Risk
-
17Jacob MisiorowskiMIL
Ace Potential
Strikeout Upside
Playing Time Question
+1
18Ranger SuarezBOS
Ace Potential
Wins Bonus
-3
19MacKenzie GoreTEX
Ace Potential
Strikeout Upside
-2
20Nathan Eovaldi
T4
TEX
Holly
Injury Risk
+5
21Shota ImanagaCHC
Holly
Injury Risk
-1
22George KirbySEA
Holly
Quality Starts
Injury Risk
-3
23Cristopher SánchezPHI
Holly
Wins Bonus
Injury Risk
-2
24Freddy PeraltaNYM
Holly
Strikeout Upside
+2
25Nick PivettaSD
Holly
Strikeout Upside
+6
26Seth LugoKC
Holly
Quality Starts
-3
27Kodai SengaNYM
Holly
Wins Bonus
+UR
28Sonny GrayBOS
Holly
Strikeout Upside
-4
29Kris BubicKC
Holly
Strikeout Upside
-7
30Spencer Strider
T5
ATL
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
Injury Risk
-2
31Andrew AbbottCIN
Holly
Strikeout Upside
-1
32Dylan CeaseTOR
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
-5
33Eury PérezMIA
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
Injury Risk
+10
34Jesús LuzardoPHI
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
+1
35Chase BurnsCIN
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
Playing Time Question
-2
36Nick Lodolo
T6
CIN
Holly
Strikeout Upside
+1
37Matthew BoydCHC
Holly
Quality Starts
+1
38Noah CameronKC
Holly
Quality Starts
+4
39Merrill KellyARI
Holly
Quality Starts
+13
40Brandon Woodruff
T7
MIL
Cherry Bomb
Quality Starts
+5
41Jack FlahertyDET
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
-5
42Ryan PepiotTB
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
-13
43Shane BazBAL
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
-11
44Lucas GiolitoSD
Cherry Bomb
Quality Starts
Injury Risk
-5
45Yu DarvishSD
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
+1
46Will WarrenNYY
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
-12
47Cam SchlittlerNYY
Cherry Bomb
Team Context Effect
+10
48Grant HolmesATL
Holly
Strikeout Upside
-8
49Sean ManaeaNYM
Cherry Bomb
Strikeout Upside
Playing Time Question
+UR
50Luis CastilloSEA
Cherry Bomb
Quality Starts
-6
51Emmet SheehanLAD
Cherry Bomb
Wins Bonus
Playing Time Question
+8
52Drew Rasmussen
T8
TB
Toby
Ratio Focused
Playing Time Question
+48
53Landen RouppSF
Toby
Strikeout Upside
-2
54Reese OlsonDET
Toby
Wins Bonus
+2
55David PetersonNYM
Toby
Wins Bonus
+12
56Trevor RogersBAL
Toby
Quality Starts
+5
57Edward Cabrera
T9
CHC
Frizzle
Strikeout Upside
Playing Time Question
-8
58Ryne NelsonARI
Frizzle
Ratio Focused
-10
59Richard FittsSTL
Frizzle
Rotation Spot Bonus
+4
60Casey Mize
T10
DET
Toby
Wins Bonus
-5
61Brayan BelloBOS
Toby
Wins Bonus
+17
62Matthew LiberatoreSTL
Toby
Quality Starts
-9
63Cade HortonCHC
Toby
Wins Bonus
-9
64Michael SorokaARI
Toby
Quality Starts
+1
65Michael WachaKC
Toby
Quality Starts
+1
66Chris PaddackMIA
Toby
Quality Starts
-2
67Brady SingerCIN
Toby
Quality Starts
+18
68Gavin Williams
T11
CLE
Hipster
Quality Starts
-18
69Clay HolmesNYM
Hipster
Wins Bonus
-28
70Yusei KikuchiLAA
Frizzle
Strikeout Upside
-23
71Max ScherzerTOR
Frizzle
+UR
72Joey CantilloCLE
Frizzle
Quality Starts
+7
73Joe BoyleTB
Frizzle
Strikeout Upside
Playing Time Question
-13
74Janson JunkMIA
Frizzle
Quality Starts
+16
75Jacob Lopez
Frizzle
Strikeout Upside
Playing Time Question
-
76José Soriano
T12
LAA
Hipster
Quality Starts
-18
77Tanner BibeeCLE
Hipster
Quality Starts
-8
78Kevin GausmanTOR
Hipster
Strikeout Upside
-10
79José BerríosTOR
Hipster
Quality Starts
-7
80Charlie MortonSD
Vargas Rule
Strikeout Upside
+UR
81Mitch KellerPIT
Vargas Rule
Quality Starts
+6
82Adrian HouserSF
Vargas Rule
Ratio Focused
+UR
83Slade CecconiCLE
Vargas Rule
Ratio Focused
+15
84Zack LittellWSH
Vargas Rule
Ratio Focused
Injury Risk
-13
85Eduardo Rodriguez
T13
ARI
Streaming Option
Wins Bonus
-4
86JP SearsSD
Streaming Option
Quality Starts
+UR
87Chris BassittBAL
Streaming Option
Quality Starts
-4
88Colin ReaCHC
Streaming Option
Wins Bonus
+UR
89Andrew Heaney
Streaming Option
Ratio Focused
+10
90Dean KremerBAL
Streaming Option
Wins Bonus
+UR
91Clayton KershawSD
Streaming Option
Wins Bonus
-9
92Jeffrey Springs
Streaming Option
Quality Starts
+1
93Brandon PfaadtARI
Streaming Option
Quality Starts
-9
94Logan AllenLAD
Streaming Option
Wins Bonus
-5
95Zac Gallen
T14
ARI
Hipster
Quality Starts
-21
96David FestaMIN
Hipster
Strikeout Upside
-26
97Lance McCullers Jr.HOU
Hipster
Strikeout Upside
-
98Brandon WalterHOU
Hipster
Wins Bonus
-22
99Kumar RockerTEX
Hipster
Rotation Spot Bonus
-37
100Sandy AlcantaraMIA
Hipster
Ratio Focused
Playing Time Question
-27

Labels Legend

Aces Gonna Ace
Ace Potential
Holly
Toby
Cherry Bomb
Hipster
Vargas Rule
Frizzle
Streaming Option
QS Bonus
Wins Bonus
Strikeouts Bonus
Ratios Bonus
Rotation Spot Bonus
Team Context Effect
Stash Option
Injury Risk
Playing Time Question

 

Photo by Ric Tapia/Icon Sportswire | Adapted by Justin Paradis (@JustParaDesigns on Twitter)

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Nick Pollack

Founder of Pitcher List. Creator of CSW, The List, and SP Roundup. Worked with MSG, FanGraphs, CBS Sports, and Washington Post. Former college pitcher, travel coach, pitching coach, and Brandeis alum. Wants every pitcher to be dope.

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