Top 100 Starting Pitchers: Let’s Marvel At Logan As He Wades Through The SP (Dead)Pool

Happy Monday, Razzball faithful!

I mentioned this last week, but it bears repeating especially since the Mariners’ starting pitcher group has been lights out for most of the season.

Oh, you don’t believe me? Well, let’s go to the cherry tree and pick some juicy numbers that should pop your eyeballs out a bit more.

TEAM STATISTIC TEAM TOTAL MLB RANKING
Earned Run Average 3.53 1st
Hits Allowed 1038 1st
Runs Allowed 538 1st
Walks allowed 325 1st
Strikeouts 1241 9th
WHIP 1.08 1st
Batting Average Against .221 1st

Oh. So you’re saying they’re good?

Thanks, Wade. 

The most impressive part of this whole thing is that ALL of Seattle’s SP group has been contributing at a high level.

I’m sure the next question is one that more than a few of our fantasy enthusiasts have asked themselves already. And because mid-September is the final trip down the water slide, (both figuratively and likely literally), it’s never too early to think of 2025 while we Marvel at what this group of starting pitchers can do down the home stretch.

How do we rank the Top 5 rotation for the Seattle Mariners in spring 2025?

Luis Castillo is the ace, no? I mean, they did give up Noelvi Marte and three other prospects to land him at the 2022 trade deadline.

Luis Castillo…you know…the SP with the worst WHIP and ERA of that M’s starting five?!

I think I said it last week, so I won’t go too far with it again. But the fact of the matter is you cannot go wrong with any of these arms. Drafting the 5th best Mariners’ starter is akin to dating the 5th place winner of a beauty pageant.

“If you’re a star among stars, it doesn’t matter how brightly you’re shining just as long as you’re doing your part to illuminate the sky…”

<Barf emoji>

That sounds like a bad fortune cookie message or a poorly executed wooden sign sold in a home decor store. 

When your worst starting pitcher has an ERA of 3.64 and a 1.17 WHIP? Ya, your squad should be sitting pretty…uh…pretty.

For this week’s lede, I wanted to write a bit about Logan. 

No, not Hugh Jackman’s Marvel character. But this Logan can carve up hitters just as well as the aforementioned X-Man can.

One has lethal hands that can execute an adversary with razor-sharp control.

And the other is Wolverine.

Although Logan Gilbert’s ERA has taken a bit of a hit in the second half, this SP is about as good as it gets.

He’s the leader in WHIP among all MLB starters (0.88). He has the third-lowest BAA among qualified SPs (.194). 

HA! But that strikeout rate must be terrible if the team ranks 9th overall! 

You tell ‘em, Hugh.

Logan Gilbert’s 9.26 K/9 ranks 18th. Overall. Yep, that’s better than Shota Imanaga, Framber Valdez, and his Emerald City colleague, Luis Castillo.

At the risk of making this one big long love-fest for the Seattle Starters, I’ll re-post a screenshot that I used a few weeks ago (updated as of yesterday, of course). 

In the paraphrased words of Logan’s BFF, Deadpool…“You may be wondering what’s with all the red? Well, that’s so you can’t see when this starting pitcher makes the bad guys bleed”.

There’s only one more question that we haven’t answered yet. Which spot does Logan Gilbert occupy on the Seattle Mariners’ 2025 Starting Pitcher depth chart? 

Is he a #1? An SP3? Do the two guys at the back end build enough stamina over the winter to push Gilbert to the SP5 spot?

It’s doubtful that Mariners fans care what their rotation depth chart looks like in 2025. As long as it has all five of these solid starting pitchers healthy and ready to throw a lot of innings, fans will be ecstatic. 

But I did say that Gilbert has had a rough few starts muttered throughout his second half. How does that affect his Top 100 Stating Pitchers ranking this week?

Well, as always, before we get to the list, I need to plug a couple of things for y’all first. If you want to check the spot I usually have open when flipping through my information on Sunday afternoons, you’re looking for that Player Rater leaderboard. This is always a great resource to use if you’re doing research. A bit of this, and a splash of that goes into the prep work for our weekly Top 100 Starting Pitchers list.

Of course, if you’re one of those doubting-your-own-gut-instinct fantasy managers, or simply want to use a great resource that will point you in the right direction every week, The Streamonator is here to help you answer those burning questions. 

If you haven’t signed up for it, this should be your go-to reference for the entire season. It will save you a lot of time researching and often includes those “Oh, I never thought about that” solutions. The Razzball subscriptions are well worth the price of admission. If you’re serious about improving throughout the season, check the link, yo.

ONE MORE THING before we get to the list!

Remember that at this point in the season, lots of things can change from day to day or even hour to hour. I’ll do my best to write these last few weeks up with the information that I have available when I write it, but remember to ALWAYS check for any news on your starters just in case they get pushed back, miss a start, or are told by a manager that they have a mysterious injury that shuts them down for a few days to manage their innings the rest of the way.

 

RANK

(LAST WEEK)

Name TEAM NOTES
1 Tarik Skubal Tigers 5.2 IP, 9 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K. He got smacked around a bit by OAK. *eyes emoji* Yes, that Oakland. He’s still one of the best in the biz. The 96 pitches make me wonder about that “load management” nonsense too.
2 Zack Wheeler Phillies Two straight wins and he hasn’t given up more than two earned runs since July 29th. Elite.
3 Chris Sale Braves More below.
4 (5) Paul Skenes Pirates 5 IP, 0 ER, 8 baserunners, 6 Ks, ERA at 2.13. Please wrap this guy up in 700 layers of bubble wrap and styrofoam peanuts and have Livvy feed him Primantis and Heinz ketchup through a rubber straw until Spring Training.
5 (6) Jack Flaherty Dodgers 5.2  IP, 1 ER, 8 baserunners, 7 Ks. E.R.A. at 3.01. Just keeps chugging along piecing together that work experience for his Top 10 resume. At the time of writing, he was mowing down the Guardians through 5.
6 (9) George Kirby Mariners A nice bounce back at OAK. 6 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 9 Ks. Guess how many walks. I’ll give you a hint. The number is less than one.
7 (10) Logan Gilbert Mariners 6 IP, 4 ER, 5 baserunners, 9 Ks, ERA at 3.19. He was going to be the lede this week no matter what…and the ‘what’ turned out to be this janky start. The strikeouts are a nice cushion for the 4 ER, though. He’s #3 on the SP Player Rater.
8 (12) Gerrit Cole Yankees 6 IP, 1 ER, 5 baserunners, 9 Ks, ERA at 3.65. Choo choo! All aboard the Cole train!
9 (12) Shota Imanaga Cubs More below.
10 (8) Blake Snell Giants Oh no, he’s hurt! Oh, he isn’t? No! He’s on the load management list! Wait, he isn’t even under contract next year. Do they need to shut him down to save him for the playoffs? Guy…the Giants are 8 games out of a playoff spot. Ride this pony right to free agency (2026).
11 (4) Dylan Cease Padres Two losses in his last four starts and the strikeout totals are starting to dip. He’s still great, but with those ER and BBs, he’s not going to challenge anyone for the top spot anytime soon.
12 (11) Cole Ragans Royals Like Kirby above him, Ragans had a great bounce back from a rough previous start. 6 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 7 Ks.
13 Pablo Lopez  Twins 6.2 IP, 3 ER, 8 baserunners, 9 Ks, 4.05 ERA. He gave up earned runs for the first time in three starts. Solid.
14 Michael King Padres 6.0 IP, 6 hits, 1 ER, 1 BB, 8 K. Are we ready to crown this King a top 10 SP for 2025 yet? Top 15?
15 Corbin Burnes Orioles 5 IP, 1 ER, 7 baserunners, 4 Ks, ERA at 3.19. If you fail to strike out a half dozen CWS hitters, does that negate the win?
16 Luis Castillo Mariners He left his start early yesterday because of a tight hamstring. MRI is scheduled for today.
17 (18) Framber Valdez  Astros 7.0 IP, 2 hits, 3 BB, 7 K. The slow thaw of Framber is now complete. First half? 3.66 ERA, .260 BAA, .368 SLG. The second half? 1.83 ERA, .141 BAA, .216 SLG.
18 (17) Tyler Glasnow  Dodgers Threw a bullpen (25 pitches) on Saturday. He’s not due back until September 15th, but one setback could mean he ‘takes it slowly’ so he doesn’t hurt himself before a deep playoff run.
19 Bailey Ober Twins 11th on the Player Rater.
20 (21) Freddy Peralta Brewers 5.1 IP, 3 ER, 8 baserunners, 3 Ks, ERA at 3.75. The 3 Ks aren’t great but he’s sneaking back up towards the Top 20.
21 (26) Reynaldo Lopez Braves 6 IP, 2 ER, 5 H, 0 BB, 11 Ks, ERA at 2.04. We’ve waited all year for this guy to fall apart and … well, it’s not happening.
22 (28) Bryce Miller Mariners 6.0 IP, 3 H, 2 BB, 4 K. Ok, maybe I’m getting caught up in the SEA excitement here. But come on. Ratios? Do you want ratios? Look up at the first 15 paragraphs! Oh, and the Player Rater has him at #10.
23 (25) Ranger Suarez Phillies 5 IP, 0 ER, 5 baserunners, 4 Ks, ERA at 2.90. Another one who has avoided the regression fairies and lands in the Top 20 on the Player Rater (19).
24 (22) Zach Eflin Rays Looked a lot more ordinary against TB than he usually is, but it wasn’t a bad start.
25 (20) Aaron Nola Phillies Gave up more than two ERs in a start for the first time in four GS. A 5 spot drop is probably too much but is more about the success of the guys around him than anything else.
26 Logan Webb Giants 10 hits allowed (6 IP) but still managed to pick up a win despite only having 3 strikeouts.
27 Zac Gallen Diamondbacks 6 IP, 0 ER, 0 H, 4 BB, 8 Ks, ERA at 3.69. No no-hitter here, just a solid start!
28 (38) Seth Lugo  Royals 7 IP, 1 ER, 7 baserunners, 7 baserunners, 4 Ks, ERA at 3.05. Magic Lugo keeps spinning his way out of the inevitable regression. He’s like a costumed ninja flitting back and forth among the regression fairies.
29 Jose Berrios Blue Jays His 15th win on the season and just two earned runs in his last 12 IP means no Blues for this Jay.
30 (31) Max Fried Braves 7.0 IP, 5 hits, 0 ER, BB, 8 K. Braves one game out of wild card. Do you want your favorite team to face these guys in a best-of-three knockout?
31 Ronel Blanco Astros More below.
32 (23) Tanner Houck Red Sox 4 ERs in 5 IPs last week and was told he’s getting his next start pushed back to give him extra rest. The second half has not been kind to Houck, and his career high in IP (169 and counting) may be the culprit.
33 Sonny Gray Cardinals 7 IP, 1 ER, 5 baserunners, 7 Ks, ERA at 3.84. He really doesn’t like getting pushed out of the Top 25.
34 Tanner Bibee Guardians 6 IP, 1 ER, 5 baserunners, 6 Ks, ERA at 3.56. I guess all it took was for me to yell fire in the Cleveland kitchen. Both Bibee and Williams had good starts last week.
35 Luis Gil Yankees 6 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 7 Ks. This was a big moment of reassurance after being shelved for a couple of weeks. 
36 Bryan Woo Mariners 5 IP, 2 ER, 8 hits, zero walks, 6 Ks, ERA at 2.36. One of the Fantastic Five mentioned above.
37 (39) Kevin Gausman Blue Jays He’s not the ace that we expected when we drafted him in March, but his second half has been much better than his first.
38 (45)  Christopher Sanchez  Phillies 7 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 Ks. SP38 may be a bit too aggressive, but Sanchez keeps San-chugging along.
39 (32) Justin Steele Cubs Scratched from his start with elbow soreness. Shut him down and put some rubber and plastic in there! Justin time. Edit: 15-day IL until September 20.
40 Grayson Rodriguez  Orioles He threw a bullpen session last week but is still a couple of weeks away from returning. Monitor for setbacks or any news.
41 (37) Spencer Schwellenbach Braves I told a few people last week that I didn’t trust Schwellenbach in his next two starts against PHI and TOR. The Phillies offense is great and the Jays have been sneaky good for the past 4-5 weeks too. I don’t know if I’m starting him against LAD or at CIN next week either.
42 (46) Jared Jones Pirates 6.1 IP, 3 ER, 7 baserunners, 4 Ks, ERA at 3.91. Grey said that he was out on Mr. Jones ROS. I am not. But I’ve also said that I tend to hold on to my players for far too long because it’s tough to reset a keeper league mentality that’s been present for 30+ years.
43 Nick Pivetta Red Sox His last two were against DET and CWS but I’ll still take the 12 Ks in 12 IP.
44 (49) Nathan Eovaldi Rangers 7 IP, 2 ER, 6 baserunners, 6 Ks, ERA at 3.55. I’m not sure what else to say other than he’s been good and he’s not hurt again…yet.
45 (50) Bowden Francis Blue Jays 6 IP, 3 ER, 6 hits, zero walks, 6 Ks, ERA at 3.72. I started him in my deep 12-team mixed league because you start pretty much everyone in that one (big rosters). I also told a few people I’d avoid the Phillies if I could. Is this kind of line against a powerhouse lineup another step toward fantasy greatness? Let’s not get too carried away. But Grey mentioned it in his comment section last week. Francis has gone from intriguing, to ‘good for streaming’, to a must-start in a little over a month and a half.
46 (44) Robbie Ray Giants He threw his second simulated game and should be ready to go on September 15th. He may need a minor league game to shake off some rust this week.
47 Spencer Arrighetti Astros More below.
48 (42) Justin Verlander Astros 4.2 IP, 5 ER, ERA at 4.52. Oh JV. It’s starting to feel like JV stands for “Just Vacation”…to Florida to find a condo for your retirement. Or something like that. Edit: We can add another 3 IP, 8 ER, 0 K to this one this morning too.
49 (41) Clayton Kershaw  Dodgers He’s out for at least another week with a toe ouchie. Serious question: How many adult men with a big toe injury (a) need it to be scanned and (b) need to wear a walking boot for it?
50 (48) Garrett Crochet White Sox More below.
51 Sean Manaea Mets 6.2 IP, 3 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 9 K. The cracks in Manaea’s armor are much longer and more dangerous than some others, but he’s still giving us a lot of strikeouts and some solid outings. TOR next seems Ok, but be careful. The Jays have been much more dangerous for the last month than they were in the first half.
52 (57) Carlos Rodon Yankees 6 IP, 1 ER, 1 hit, 2 BBs, 11 Ks, ERA at 4.19. Rodon made the Rangers’ offense look Rodonculous. He’s slated for two starts this week too.
53 (58) Hunter Brown Astros 6 IP, 0 ER, 5 baserunners, 6 Ks, ERA at 3.41. He’s going to have a ton of helium again in the 2025 draft season, isn’t he?
54 Shane Baz Rays Lost a tough one at home to Dean Kremer and BAL. Three straight starts with fewer than 3 ER in each…but he’s at PHI this week.
55 (56) Yusei Kikuchi Astros Smacked around for 4 ER on 6 H against ARI last week but he’s still racking up the strikeouts. This was his worst start for the Astros (7 GS).
56 (54) Mitch Keller Pirates 6 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 8 Ks. And somehow he didn’t get the W against WSH.
57 (80) Ryne Nelson Arizona More below. This much of a boost may be an overcorrection after seeing how Houstn treated him last night, but in reality, it’s only an 8-spot jump from two weeks ago.
58 (55) Nestor Cortes Yankees 4.1 IP and a win? With 3 Ks? Oh, Nasty Nestor.
59 (63) Tobias Myers Brewers A huge 11-strikeout game on Saturday moves him up again.
60 (67) Joe Musgrove Padres 6 IP, 0 ER, 5 baserunners, 8 Ks, ERA at 4.09. Yep. I think I said it last week, and I put him in the dumper section as a caveat for tough matchups, but it looks like Joe is back to being a Mus-Start. Early morning drive to work edit! Musgrove to a Giant stomping yesterday. 4.1 IP, 6 ER, 7 Ks. Maybe he’s more of a Mus-stream-in-good-matchups.
61 (59) Brady Singer Royals Sing me a song…about how you gave up 5 H, 2 ER, and 2 BBs and lost the game. Brady Singer: Featuring a terrible KC offense.
62 (60) Colin Rea Brewers True story alert! I started watching Cobra Kai with my eldest son and forgot that one character shared a nickname with this guy. With back-to-back 4 inning starts, I guess it could be for the same reason. Poop emoji.
63 (62) Brayan Bello Red Sox The good news is he’s flip-flopped the bad and good starts over his last four. And today’s start follows a bad one. The bad news? It’s against BAL.
64 (52) Gavin Stone Dodgers Dammit. Out for at least the next two weeks with shoulder inflammation. Talk about West Coast fires. Smh.
65 (66) Gavin Williams Guardians See Tanner Bibee above. Morning edit! Saturday was a lot less encouraging than his previous start was. 0.2 IP, 5 ER, 0 Ks. Cut the kid some slack though. CLE was at LAD.
66 (65) Michael Wacha Royals 7 shutout innings with 7 Ks for his 12th win? Just like the Beastie Boys said, “So Wacha Wacha Want?”
67 (71) Luis Severino Mets 7 IP, 1 ER, 8 baserunners, 5 Ks, ERA at 3.84. This one calls for a Grey quote: “At home, he is Cy Severino and in away games, he’s Sever-him-from-my-team-rino.” Pssst…he’s in PHI this week!
68 (78) Walker Buehler Dodgers 5 IP, 2 ER, 7 baserunners, 6 Ks, ERA at 5.67. Buehler Buehler Buehler? Yep! He showed up!
69 (77) Kutter Crawford Red Sox 6 IP, 2 ER, 1 hit, 2 walks, 8 Ks, ERA at 4.08. Don’t look now, but that’s 4 strong outings in a row for the CrawDaddy. I guess you could look to stream him in a pinch. His next two starts are supposed to be at home against BAL and at NYY though, so…
70 (61) Hunter Greene Reds Scheduled to throw two two-inning (stutter!) bullpens this week. He should be ready to return on September 17th.
71 (81) Matthew Boyd Guardians 6.0 IP, 3 hits, ER, 6 K. Sonofabench! Wait, you started him last week? At LAD? Gorilla pants grapes. This is what Robbie Ray was supposed to be in the second half.
72 Ryan Pepiot Rays Five scoreless innings against BAL before giving up an ER (Mullins HR) was enough to get him a win on Friday. 2025 sleeper alert.
73 (74) Yoshinobu Yamamoto Dodgers Yoshi is BACK! Starting tomorrow at home vs CHC. Hopefully, this is his last week out of the Top 50!
74 (70) Nick Lodolo Reds He’ll resume a throwing program and rejoin the Reds this week. Activation is Sept. 29 at the earliest.
75 (73)  Eduardo Rodriguez Diamondbacks 4 IP, 3 ER, ERA at 5.33. That year and a half rest must not have included shoulder strengthening exercises.
76 (83) Chris Bassitt  Blue Jays 5.1 IP, 3 ER, 12 baserunners, 7 Ks, ERA at 4.30. Bassitt is handing out freebies like he’s Oprah but still managing to provide strikeouts and less than 4 ER? At this point of the year, we’ll take it.
77 (64) Brandon Pfaadt Diamondbacks He’s been an earned run dispenser and his next two are against MLW and at COL. Woof.
78 (85)  Andrew Heaney Rangers 5 IP, 0 ER, 4 baserunners, 8 Ks, ERA at 3.81. The tightrope may be made of dental floss, but I’m shimmying across it and haven’t plummeted to my roto-death just yet. His next start is at SEA. 9.8 HR/FB% in that park? Yep, I’d stream him.
79 (68) Jeffrey Springs  Rays More below.
80 (69) Erick Fedde Cardinals Fedde lost again on Friday night and is now 1-6 as a Cardinal. Ouch.
81 (75) Taj Bradley Rays 7 IP, 4 ER, 7 baserunners, 10 Ks, ERA at 4.40. The strikeouts are nice. Ya, that’s about it.
82 (76) Albert Suarez Orioles 4.1 IP, 6 ER, ERA at 3.49. When Albert gives up a fat one to Nicky effing Lopez…well, they say that ain’t good, kids.
83 (79) JP Sears Athletics Another one who posts 1 ER starts in every other game. The pattern is nice since he got smoked by SEA last week. But I don’t know if I’m banking on that pattern to continue at HOU this week.
84 (81) MacKenzie Gore Nationals 6 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 9 Ks, ERA at 4.32. Well, that’s two in a row now and I should probably move him up again. Just so I can move him back down. FWIW he starts twice at home this week vs ATL and MIA.
85 (90) Cody Bradford Rangers 6 IP, 1 ER, 4 baserunners, 4 Ks, ERA at 3.05. Grey mentioned he hopes Bradford sneaks through as a sleeper for next season. I’m hoping for the same thing.
86 (92) Clarke Schmidt Yankees He needed 75 pitches to get through 4.2 innings in his first start back from the IL on Friday, but 4 H, 0 ER, and a couple of Ks was a pretty solid return.
87 (88) Osvaldo Bido Athletics 5.1 IP, 4 ER, 7 baserunners, 4 Ks, ERA at 3.52. This wasn’t as bad as it looked. He got blasted by the Raleigh dumper.
88 (100) Jacob deGrom Rangers Last week’s fourth rehab start was his longest and, arguably, his most successful. He got through 4 innings on a pitch count ceiling of 60. He managed to get there on just 49 pitches. Activation this week (Friday) is a real possibility.
89 (86) Charlie Morton Braves He’s allowed more than 2 ER just once in his last 5 starts. Gets CIN at home this week.
90 (96) David Peterson Mets 6 IP, 1 ER, 7 baserunners, 11 Ks, ERA at 2.75. Yep. I should have added this guy a few weeks ago for sure. This start solidifies it.
91 (NR) Reid Detmers Angels 6 IP, 2 ER, 5 baserunners, 10 Ks, ERA at 5.87. I started him in my AL-only league for his double dip this week and oh boy did the Roto-gods reward me for flashing my gorilla grapes on that one. Boom!
92 (82) Max Scherzer Rangers Eligible to return on Sept. 13th and he looks like a man possessed. 8 Ks in 4 IP on Saturday at AAA rehab start.
93 Merrill Kelly Diamondbacks 7 IP, 2 ER, 6 hits, zero walks, 8 Ks, ERA at 4.08. It was either add him this week or keep Edward Cabrera. So, which headache pounds the skull less?
94 Caden Dana Angels Wrote him up in the jumpers last week.
95 (NR) Yu Darvish Padres 2 2/3 IP, 3 ER, ERA at 3.51 as he was activated from the IL. At least he’s back? Starts tomorrow at SEA and I can see streaming him.
96 (95) Yariel Rodriguez Blue Jays He nearly slipped off the list but yesterday’s pitching duel with Chris Sale keeps him here for now.
97 David Festa Twins 5 IP, 2 ER, 6 baserunners, 7 Ks, ERA at 4.75. Grey did mention that he might get shut down soon (Festa, not Grey) and that’s a legitimate concern with these younger arms as we move through each week of September. 
98 (87) Jake Irvin Nationals 5 IP, 6 ER, ERA at 4.28. Got smoked by PIT and CHC in his last two starts. Uh, that’s not good kids.
99 (NR)  Jameson Taillon Cubs 7 IP, 0 ER, 4 baserunners, 3 Ks, ERA at 3.66. Taking him off the list was probably less of a biff than the Ryne Nelson oopsie, but still. P.S. I blame the 5-hour car ride for any mistakes last weekend!
100 (NR) Cade Povich Orioles More below.

 

BIGGEST JUMPERS: Who’s got hops? These are some of the biggest jumpers in value this week.

Chris Sale – 7 IP, 0 ER, 6 hits, zero walks, 9 Ks in his start last week. Yesterday’s game was a pitching duel against Yariel Rodriguez (because that’s what we expected to see written today) with another 6 scoreless innings and even fewer hits than he allowed in his Colorado start. 2 hits and 0 ER with 1 BB and 7 Ks is about as solid as it gets. I said it a few weeks ago, but I wouldn’t argue with someone who said that the top pitcher in baseball isn’t just a two-horse race (between Skubal and Wheeler). My note from this week – It makes me feel better about ranking him as #3…or 1 C. See? There is a C!

Shota Imanaga – Shout Out to Shota and his no-hitter…kind of. Grey mentioned this on Thursday and I agree. I’m all for guys getting credit for a no-hitter … if they go 9 innings and finish off the game. Shota’s 7 innings of shutout ball with no hits was just that. Well not JUST that, but I still don’t think we need to give guys credit for a no-hitter if there’s more than one guy who pitched during the game. Was this start awesome? Yes. Absolutely. Was it a no-hitter? No. It was 7 shutout innings of no-hit ball with two relievers who finished the game out for him with strong shutout innings. I suppose it’s easier to just type “no-hitter” though.

Ryne Nelson – 6 2/3 IP, 2 ER, 6 baserunners, 9 Ks, ERA at 4.15. Oh, man. I flubbed this one big time last week. As I said above, though, I blame the 5-hour drive back from my kid’s baseball tournament for that mind-mush moment. I could’ve sworn I read in multiple places that Nelson was going to be sacrificed for the worst Montgomery since Homer’s boss at the nuclear power plant. Apologies to the Nelson truthers who I offended last week. This guy is a beast and is NOT losing his rotation spot. The 2.01 BB/9 is filthy (13th overall) and he looks locked in. Now all we have to watch is how Montgomery burns in that long relief role. (Nailed it!)

Jeffrey Springs – 6 IP, 1 ER, 6 baserunners, 4 Ks, ERA at 3.27. The Fresh Prince’s butler has gone 5+ innings in five of his last six starts. I thought teams managed the innings of their less-than-reliable arms every Fall. For some reason, over the last few games, this guy has been Autumn-atic. Boom. Late-night edit: Disregard all of that. Springs was placed on the IL with elbow fatigue yesterday. See the “check the player news” note I wrote above the list today.

Cade Povich – Wtf. Cade Povich threw 7.1 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 0 BBs, and 10 Ks last week. Povich looking to run a paternity test to see if his DNA matches Mike Mussina or Jim Palmer after this one. Then again, I guess these days everyone is the White Sox’s daddy. Nothing to see here, but I wanted to add him in the write-up just in case you want to stream him at Fenway this week. I nearly added Alex Cobb instead but he ended up with a blister so that made the decision much easier. And I wasn’t opening another can of Patrick Corbin after this weekend.  Plus, Povich has two starts this week (at BOS and at NYY so tread carefully).

 

BIGGEST DUMPERS: With apologies to Cal Raleigh, these are some of the biggest dumpers (in value, not pants size).

Garrett Crochet – If you’re still hoping to get wins from him, I’ve got some bad news. But I did wonder if the optimistic side of all of this ‘load management’ nonsense is best suited for the fantasy managers who are approaching inning limits in their leagues. I’d love to roster a guy who pitches 3.1 innings and records 9 strikeouts if I’m in that situation. I guess that’s the silver lining in a very stormy White Sox season.

Spencer Arrighetti – 2/3 IP, 9 ER, ERA at 5.26. The Guardians said, “arrivederci” to Arrighetti before he could escape the bottom of the first. For what it’s worth I told someone to sit him for this matchup if they could. Pitching at Cleveland against that lineup has been a scary step to take lately. That said, I’d still start Arrighetti in good matchups, and his next two are vs OAK and at LAA.

Ronel Blanco – This is a great example of what I wrote just before the list. Last week, it sounded like Blanco was headed to the bullpen. He did come in as a reliever in this weekend’s ARI series and recorded 5 Ks in his 6 outs over 2 IP. Then, on Saturday, Houston announced that Blanco would return to the rotation next week and they’d be moving to a 6-man rotation the rest of the way.  Either way, it sounds like Blanco is on an innings watch. He’s getting his toes wet for playoff bullpen work so if you’re hoping for another complete-game no-hitter, I’d bet against it. Will he get enough innings in for his final starts to help those of you in quality start leagues? It sounds like the evidence points to a “No” there too.

Ben Lively – 4 IP, 4 ER, ERA at 4.07. It’s ironic that a guy named Lively has been dead for a month. I’d drop him in TGFBI if there were better options…and if I wasn’t still reeling from drafting the worst infield of all time.

WHEE! – The following players zoomed on to the list this week!

Merrill Kelly

Yu Darvish

Reid Detmers

Jameson Taillon – I should have left him alone last week.

Cade Povich

OOF! – The following players dropped off the list this week!

Edward Cabrera – The torture is over. For now. Early morning edit: Of course it’s not. Threw 7 IP, 3H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 6Ks…against the Phillies. Because of course he did. I’m reserving the right to use the Jim Carrey crazy gif from Liar Liar for next week.

Ben Lively – This could have happened a while ago, but even with 11 wins, it was time.

Jose Soriano – It was either him or Albert Suarez getting the axe this week.

Bobby Miller – Fool me thrice…

Jack Leiter – I still like him but he’s too volatile ROS.

 

That’s all for this week! I hope you enjoyed it! Next week, I’ll post the Top 100 Starting Pitchers with some write-ups on some of the arms that I think need a bit more attention than others or cherry-picking names to highlight as we progress through the last couple of months of the season.

Drop some comments in the chat if you’re feeling extra fired up about some of the names I do (or don’t) have here. Have a great week!

Follow me @marmosdad on Twitter/X and Bluesky @marmosdad.bsky.social

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