3 Tuesday w/analysis

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Atlanta +113 over MIAM
I
The Rays may contend in the AL East and if they do it’ll be because of their starting pitching staff that figures to keep them in most games. With Alex Cobb out with forearm tendonitis and with Alex Colome recently released from the hospital after suffering from pneumonia, and already running behind due to a visa problem, Nathan Karns moves up the pecking order. Karns, a big-bodied and aggressive hurler, was obtained from the Nationals organization in February 2014. He steadily rose through the Nats minor league system and reached Washington for three starts in 2013. He wasn’t effective in any of those starts. Karns spent most of last year in the minors and when he did get the opportunity at the big league level, he went 1-1 with a 4.50 ERA in 12 IP for the Rays. Karns has some lofty minor-league strikeout totals but cannot maintain it at this level because he cannot throw strikes consistently with his secondary offerings. That has hitters sitting on his 90-95 MPH fastball. Karns is now a 27-year-old career minor-leaguer with just 24 innings at this level. His 6.00 ERA over those 24 innings to go along with 10 walks tells the story of a career minor-leaguer with promise that can’t throw strikes and that is running out of time. We all know how that usually works out.

By contrast, Wei-Yin Chen throws nothing but strikes and he locates them well. The Orioles had their most successful season in years in 2014 with one of the major contributors being Chen, who went 16-6 for the division-winning team. With free agency looming at the end of the year, Chen is poised for a repeat and maybe more. Chen’s skills were nearly identical in both halves of last year and thus highlighted the effect hr/f can have on one’s ERA. His career-high win total propped up his return on investment and his control and groundball gains suggest his new approach (more two-seamers) worked well. A mediocre strikeout rate limits Chen’s upside but he's a stable cog who's getting better. In 18 innings this past spring, Chen walked one batter. In the end, we certainly trust Chen more than Karns and we trust Baltimore’s offense more as well. The Orioles plate discipline will force Karns to throw strikes when he’s inevitably behind in the count, which is a recipe for disaster. Cheap price to pay on the O’s.

Colorado +125 over MILWAUKEE
The Brewers made Kyle Kendrick look like Greg Maddux yesterday. Normally we wouldn’t put too much weight on one game but perhaps we should pay a little more attention to fading the Brewers often right now. This is a team that suffered an epic collapse last year and the hangover might still be lingering. Milwaukee shot out to a 20-7 record that nobody saw coming and they held the division lead for 150 days. The Brewers stumbled to a 9-24 finish, becoming only the fifth team since divisional play began in 1969 to lead its division for at least 150 days and fail to make the playoffs. Just like that, a season of great promise turned into one of great disappointment. That is what occurs when you have a free-swinging or an all or nothing lineup. Opponents began exploiting the Brewers' lack of plate discipline and dependence on the home run, and the runs dried up. With a playoff berth on the line, the offense completely disappeared in September, averaging a meager 2.73 runs per game. This is still a free-swinging lineup that the opposition will continue to exploit. You're not going to transform Carlos Gomez, Aramis Ramirez, Jean Segura, Scooter Gennett and Khris Davis into work-the-count hitters by waving a magic wand. These guys have never seen a pitch they didn’t like. Furthermore, Ryan Braun is not healthy and may end up missing significant time. Much of the good work achieved during the 150 days in first place was wiped out by the epic meltdown and it might not be over. A 10-0 loss to open the season doesn’t exactly instill confidence or help matters either. The Brewers will now turn to Matt Garza in game two. Garza continues to be viable mid-rotation starter but that may be short-lived, as there are plenty of chinks in the armor. First, he missed time again, as an oblique strain cost him a month. His velocity, strikeout rate and swing and miss rate have dropped three years in row. Garza’s xERA trend hints that his string of eight straight sub-4.00 ERA's may soon come to an end. Garza's K rate, which was once a major strength, continued its descent in 2014. His poor swing and miss rate trend doesn't bode well for a big rebound, either. His overall skills were a far cry from 2011's peak and the xERA trend confirms there's no growth taking place under the hood. On the surface, Garza's 2014 numbers were pretty much in line with previous seasons. However, three-year declines in strikeout rate, xERA and line-drive rate all say that he's skating on thin ice as he enters his age-31 season. Sprinkle in the team he pitches for and the park he pitches half of his games at and Garza becomes instant fade material when favored.

Jordan Lyles is a pitcher that won’t attract much attention right now. However, he continues to possess some hidden upside. Check out his skills against RH bats: 7.8 K’s/9, 2.6 BB/9, 59% groundball rate. He continues to struggle against lefties but has been working on that exclusively. Lyles is still very young, as he turns 24 years old in October. With a tweak against lefties, he could show some nice profits in 2015. Remember, a broken left hand cost him two months and his first-pass BPI scan is unimpressive. But if you squint, there are some rays. Lyles is a heavy groundballer, which keeps his team in the game and adds to his declining disaster start chart. He has youth, pedigree and now some added confidence on his side after a brilliant spring in which he allowed just eight hits in 21 innings and posted an ERA of 0.86. The Rockies offense is among the best in the game with 1 through 6 being as tough as any group in baseball. The Rockies were projected to finish last by just every publication and expert out there. You think they are not aware of that? Of course they are and because of it they bring a huge chip on their shoulder into the season to prove everyone wrong. The bases for those predictions are all centered on a weak starting pitching staff but Jordan Lyles has upside and this offense will continue to go off often. This is perhaps the best value on today’s board and one we surely are not going to miss.

Baltimore -113 over TAMPA BAY
The Rays may contend in the AL Easy and if they do it’ll be because of their starting pitching staff that figures to keep them in most games. With Alex Cobb out with forearm tendonitis and with Alex Colome recently released from the hospital after suffering from pneumonia, and already running behind due to a visa problem, Nathan Karns moves up the pecking order. Karns, a big-bodied and aggressive hurler, was obtained from the Nationals organization in February 2014. He steadily rose through the Nats minor league system and reached Washington for three starts in 2013. He wasn’t effective in any of those starts. Karns spent most of last year in the minors and when he did get the opportunity at the big league level, he went 1-1 with a 4.50 ERA in 12 IP for the Rays. Karns has some lofty minor-league strikeout totals but cannot maintain it at this level because he cannot throw strikes consistently with his secondary offerings. That has hitters sitting on his 90-95 MPH fastball. Karns is now a 27-year-old career minor-leaguer with just 24 innings at this level. His 6.00 ERA over those 24 innings to go along with 10 walks, tells the story of a career minor-leaguer with promise that can’t throw strikes and that is running out of time. We all know how that usually works out.

By contrast, Wei-Yin Chen throws nothing but strikes and he locates them well. The Orioles had their most successful season in years in 2014 with one of the major contributors being Chen, who went 16-6 for the division-winning team. With free agency looming at the end of the year, Chen is poised for a repeat and maybe more. Chen’s skills were nearly identical in both halves, and thus highlighted the effect hr/f can have on one’s ERA. His career-high win total propped up his return on investment and his control and groundball gains suggest his new approach (more two-seamers) worked well. A mediocre strikeout rate limits Chen’s upside but he's a stable cog who's getting better. In 18 innings this past spring, Chen walked one batter. In the end, we certainly trust Chen more than Karns and we trust Baltimore’s offense more as well. The Orioles plate discipline will force Karns to throw strikes when he’s inevitably behind in the count, which is a recipe for disaster. Cheap price to pay on the O’s.
 

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Sorry guys, the MIA/Atl game should read as follows, as I copied and pasted incorrectly.
What's even more interesting is that nobody said anything, which makes me wonder if anyone actually reads this stuff.

Atlanta +115 over MIAMI
We often like to come back on the winning team in the series opener in the second game because that first win now gets a little tougher for the team that is 0-1. One win or loss means little in such a long season but no team wants to get off to a bad start and hitters from these opening day losing teams may press a little too. The play gets a little bit stronger when we have an advantage on the hill and we trust we have that here. Mat Latos missed a good chunk of the 2014 campaign due to elbow and knee injuries, but managed to own a 3.25 in 102 innings pitched. One wouldn’t know it from the shiny ERA, but there are some pretty serious concerns about the 27-year-old. Latos’s 4.02 xERA gives a much better measure of his effectiveness. It’s also worth noting that his skills took quite a nosedive as well. The decrease in strikeout rate is very troubling considering the significant drop in swing and miss % from 11% in ’13 to a run-of-the-mill 8% in ’14. Perhaps even more concerning is that his velocity fell 2 mph to 91 mph. Though Latos’s control improved to just 2.3 walks/9, his first pitch strike % suggests it could creep closer to 3. Additional free passes are never a good thing, especially when combined with a shrinking swing and miss rate. After boasting a groundball % of 43-46% over the previous four seasons, Latos allowed far more fly-balls in 2014. Luckily, he wasn’t hurt badly by the longball (7% hr/f), but that’s certainly something to watch going forward. While it’s fair to assume injuries played a role in Latos’s 2014 performance, there is still some reason for worry. He underwent offseason stem cell surgery on his right elbow hoping to regrow tissue and cartilage. According to reports, he is now healthy, but his velocity remains down. While that’s certainly subject to change given we’re just at the beginning of April, it’s not exactly an encouraging sign. If Latos is unable to regain his typical strikeout rate, and nothing points to that happening, his value would take quite a hit. There are enough concerns here that make him a very risky wager.

Alex Wood had an excellent follow-up to his 2013 debut, despite being shuffled in and out of the rotation and back-and-forth to the minors (though he never got a start there) in the 1st half. Metrics are elite across-the-board, though his first pitch strike was a little soft in the 2nd half. Is he legit? We say yes. Wood finished his sophomore campaign with the 15th best ERA of all qualified starting pitchers in the majors. After breaking into the majors in 2013 as a reliever, Wood has made a smooth transition to the starting rotation and his performance was backed by elite skills. His first pitch strike % and swing and miss % support slight gains in his strikeout rate and control. Wood’s dominant start/disaster start splits show how remarkably consistent he was last year and his xERA was a little higher than his ERA, but still strong at 3.20. The Braves have been gradually building up Wood’s workload since selecting him in the second round of the 2012 amateur draft. One big contributor to his success has been the increase in his swing and miss stuff on his knuckle curve—a pitch he learned during spring training 2013 from Craig Kimbrel and Jonny Venters—to 19% in the second half of 2014 from 10% in 2013 and 12% in the first half of 2014. He was also nearly equally effective against both left-handed and right-handed batters en route to a .651 opponent OPS. Wood just keeps getting better and is a much better option as a dog than Latos is as the chalk.
 

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I caught it but was in a rush at the time. Probably like you! Lot of us silent types around here too. Have enjoyed your write ups for years.
 

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I very rarely post, but I always enjoy and look for your write ups Sherwood!
 

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Thank you guys. Best of luck all to you all as well. Always nice see some familiar names checking in like Coldwater, Camy and Power. Also great to see some less familiar guys checking in and wishing me well so thanks for taking the time Blotto and R.Stu.
 

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great job my fellow torontonian!! Your writeups are always pleasure to read. thanks for your hard effort!
 

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Oh we read & take notes! Thanks for your insightful precision, Sherwood!!
 

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