Site icon Prospects 365

Ray’s Ramblings: April 21st

Written by: Ray Butler

Follow us on Twitter! @Prospects365

You’re likely well-aware that @Prospects365 often doubles as a Julio Urias fan account, and it’s pretty surreal that the southpaw actually made a full recovery from brutal shoulder surgery and is ready to make an impact in the big leagues once again. Strahm’s long-term outlook has been quite the enigma for awhile as well, but a strong spring (in which he proved durability as a starter) has landed him in the Padres’ Opening Day rotation. Both are going to be impact arms in 2019, and we’ll look back at how similar their final regular season numbers are. I’m thinking 120 IP, 130 K, 3.5 BB/9, 3.75 ERA apiece.

The duo has been far from perfect throughout the first month of the regular season; Urias has struggled at times with his command, and Strahm hasn’t missed the abundance of bats he was expected to miss. Despite this, the southpaws have still posted impressive (albeit dissimilar) statlines thru their first few outings:

Urias: 19.2 IP, 14 H, 8 ER, 7 BB, 22 K. 3.66 ERA, .240 BABIP, 26.5 K%
Strahm: 20.2 IP, 19 H, 7 ER, 5 BB, 13 K. 3.05 ERA, .266 BABIP, 15.3 K%

With Clayton Kershaw, Hyun-Jin Ryu and Rich Hill having returned (or due to return), Urias—after making four starts—has been moved to the bullpen in Los Angeles. He’ll serve as a multi-inning, left-handed fireman in the hopeful mold of Josh Hader; the transition will also help limit Urias’s workload while retaining his value in the fantasy world. SPARPs can help you win fantasy championships.

Strahm’s best outing of the season happened Friday, when he struck out five and allowed only one run in 8 IP versus the Reds. I don’t think it’s a coincidence the left-hander found this success while throwing his fastball far less than in any other outing so far this season. See the difference?

We should see more-of-the-same from Strahm moving forward. As long as we do, the strikeouts and innings pitched should continue to become more linear. You can check out my other bold predictions for the 2019 season here.

Chapman was the topic of one of my bold predictions for the 2019 season, and I’m also a proud rosterer of the the third baseman after acquiring him in my home league in a mind-blowing, blockbuster trade this offseason. Projection systems weren’t overly in love with the 25-year-old heading into 2019 thanks to perceived luck in the batted balls arena last season. Instead, Chapman has found a way to outperform his projections thanks to a new approach that’s led to a drastic cut in strikeouts and increase in contact (the defense, as always, has been elite too).

As the @MLBRandomStats tweet above suggests, it’s time to include Matt Chapman when we discuss baseball’s superstars. Because that’s what he is.

In a lot of ways, Vogelbach and Santana fit the same archetype: they’re low AVG/high OBP players with good plate discipline. Where the latter was capable of stealing a handful of bases in season’s past, the former probably possesses more raw power (and thru 214 plate appearances at the big league level, Vogelbach has shown a greater propensity to strikeout). A .240/.350/.480 player is plenty valuable (especially in OBP formats, which are objectively better than AVG formats), and I believe that’s the direction we’re heading with the 26-year-old. Just remember: as a big leaguer, Vogelbach has batted .100 versus left-handed pitching (36 wRC+ and 37.1 K% in 30 plate appearances), so there’s platoon risk here. There’s also risk Vogelbach enters the 2020 season as a Utility-only player; in his 18 games played so far this season, he’s yet to start a game at anything other than designated hitter. The 26-year-old won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, but he can still be a valuable asset on your fantasy team moving forward.

BUY A SHIRT!

Follow us on Twitter! @Prospects365

Featured image courtesy of Bob Levey and Getty Images

Exit mobile version