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Ray’s Ramblings: August 8th

LAKELAND, FL. APRIL 04: Tampa Tarpons pitcher Clarke Schmidt (32) during the Florida State League game between the Tampa Tarpons (Yankees) and Lakeland Flying Tigers (Tigers) on April 04, 2019 at Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium in Lakeland, FL. (Mark LoMoglio/ Tampa Tarpons)

Written by: Ray Butler

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Despite #MidseasonProspectListSZN being in the rearview mirror, last week was one of the most traffic-filled weeks for the site this year. Why? Quality and quantity. The Ramblings covered everything from Bo Bichette’s big league debut to Kristian Robinson to Tucker Davidson. Staff writer Shelly Verougstraete published her July prospect team of the month. Staff writer Trevor Powers published a piece on the mechanics and analytics of new age hitting. Staff contributor Will Scharnagl published a piece on pitch usage and spotlighted a few relievers who could become elite with a small adjustment. I promise these are well worth your time if you haven’t already checked them out.

I love the uniqueness of Lynn’s profile. Pitching at the big league level is slowly trending towards throwing your best pitch more than your other pitches (what a weird concept), and that almost always means throwing your fastball less. That’s not the case for Lynn, though, who’s utilized an elite spin rate fastball (plus a cutter and sinker variation) for a whopping 83.4% of his pitches this season. Opposing batters are hitting .215 versus the fastball and .208 versus the cutter, which has helped propel Lynn to the top-tier of several indicative and predictive metrics (including fWAR and pCRA, to name a couple). It’s also fun that the right-hander’s fastball has accrued a pitch value of 16.9 (making it the 4th-best fastball amongst qualified pitchers in the majors) despite an average velocity of 94.0 mph (which is 20th best amongst qualified pitchers in the majors). He’s doing it rather quietly (and while pitching at a launch pad of a home park), but Lance Lynn is one of the best starting pitchers in the MLB. This isn’t debatable. A valid case can be made that Lynn is deserving of the 2019 AL Cy Young. If the decrease in BB% is here to stay (5.7% this season, 8.8% career), this certainly seems sustainable. Barring injury, I’ll be happily keeping Lynn this offseason and expecting positive returns next season. You should too.

Both the stance and swing are noticeably different, and the stance especially makes me think his vision and pitch recognition has probably improved from last season to this season. Aquino suddenly possessing an MLB-average hit tool would mean the skill progressed from a 30 to a 50 in less than a season, which is an awfully hard sell until we accrue a much larger sample. It’s much easier to wrap your head around the 25-year-old now boasting 40-hit and 60 (or 65) raw power tools, which would give him a chance to profile as an everyday corner outfielder for a Cincinnati team that can suddenly afford to give everyday at-bats to the Dominican Republic native (especially since there are reports floating around that Aquino has clocked triple-digits on throws from the outfield). From a fantasy standpoint, I think an upside outlook is something like a right-handed Joc Pederson. Maybe Franmil Reyes with a better AVG and better defense? Make sure you let the noisy sample quiet down a little bit before you do something drastic in order to acquire him, but buy-up those ground level shares while you still can.

 

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Featured image courtesy of photographer Mark LoMoglio and the Tampa Tarpons

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