Jake McGee records another save for Rays, Mets struggle without Familia

June 14, 2015

Tampa Bay Rays — Jake McGee recorded his third save of the season on Saturday after Brad Boxberger pitched the 8th inning.  Boxberger replaced starter Chris Archer after he gave up a leadoff walk to start the 8th.  After giving up the tying homerun to the first batter he faced, Boxberger was able to get out of the inning without anymore runs.  Kevin Cash had good things to say about him since he went through the heart of the White Sox order to finish the 8th and helped them win the game.  This looks like a full committee right now, with the Rays using Boxberger in big spots before the 9th if they need to.  We will leave Boxberger as head of the committee for now, but if McGee gets the next save opportunity, he would likely move to the top.

Hierarchy remains: *Boxberger | McGee | Jepsen.

New York Mets — With Jeurys Familia away from the team on paternity leave, the Mets were unable to hold a late inning lead.  Manager Terry Collins mentioned Bobby Parnell as an option to close while Familia is away, but instead used the righty to get the last out of the 8th inning.  Collins went with rookie Hansel Robles to start the 9th inning.   He got two outs but also gave up a run and left two runners on.  Lefty Alex Torres came on to try and get Freddie Freeman to end the game but instead gave up the game tying run.  Familia is clearly the closer when he comes back, but we will see if Collins actually gives Parnell a chance or if he goes back to Robles when Familia is not available.

Updated hierarchy: Familia | Parnell | Robles.

Atlanta Braves — Williams Perez picked up his first career save in extra innings last night.  Jim Johnson and Jason Grilli each pitched a scoreless inning earlier in the game, and Grilli ended up with the win.

Hierarchy remains: Grilli | Johnson | Cunniff.

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Joe Smith, Los Angeles Angels – Huston Street has pitched in three straight
2. Bobby Parnell/Hansel Robles, New York Mets – Jeurys Familia is on paternity leave so Terry Collins could use former closer Bobby Parnell or give rookie Hansel Robles another chance on Sunday.
3. Roberto Osuna, Toronto Blue Jays – Brett Cecil has pitched in two straight, including a 30 pitch outing on Friday.

A farewell to (both) arms: Pat Venditte hits the DL

June 13, 2015

Oakland Athletics — Nothing (green and) gold can stay. Switch-pitching Pat Venditte, who started his career with 5.2 scoreless innings, became the latest Oakland player to hit the disabled list, with a frayed right labrum. And no, everyone, he can’t just pitch with his left arm, not if he wants his shoulder to heal right. We’ll toss Eric O’Flaherty in the hierarchy for now, based solely on his history as an above-average reliever, but Billy Beane is probably taking applications if you’re interested.

Updated hierarchy: Clippard | Scribner | O’Flaherty.

New York Mets — Terry Collins apparently bought Bobby Parnell’s explanation for minor league hitters teeing off on him at Binghamton and St. Lucie (.373 average against, one walk per inning); he plans to use Parnell if a save situation arises while Jeurys tends to his Familia on paternity leave.

Updated hierarchy: Familia | Parnell | C.Torres.

New York Yankees — Joe Girardi clarified that lefthander Justin Wilson will move into the primary set-up role now that Dellin Betances has become the Yankees’ closer. Chris Martin could get an occasional look in the eighth too, depending on matchups. Brian Cashman has said that Andrew Miller could be out for a month.

Updated hierarchy: Betances | Wilson | Martin.

Cleveland Indians — Nick Hagadone’s recent usage puts him back behind Bryan Shaw in the Indians’ hierarchy.

Updated hierarchy: Allen | McAllister | Shaw.

Tampa Bay Rays — As foretold by the Vulture Save Watch, Jake McGee was summoned for the save on Friday night, allowing Brad Boxberger to take a night off.

Hierarchy remains: *Boxberger | McGee | Jepsen.

Boston Red Sox — Matt Barnes and Junichi Tazawa had a Friday evening to forget. The Red Sox were up four runs when Barnes began the seventh. He gave up three straight hits, Tazawa yielded four hits and a baserunner via error, and Tommy Layne finished up by surrendering a home run, giving Toronto a seventh-inning cycle and nine straight runs scored. It’s unlikely that this debacle will change Boston’s late-innings approach, but we couldn’t let it pass without comment.

Hierarchy remains: Uehara | Tazawa | Barnes.

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Bobby Parnell, New York Mets — As noted above, the Mets are ready to toss Parnell back into a save situation if needed. Jeurys Familia threw 25 pitches on Friday and could become a father any day.
2. Joe Smith, Los Angeles Angels — Huston Street has pitched back-to-back (45 total pitches).
3. Jason Motte/Pedro Strop, Chicago Cubs — Hector Rondon took an extra-inning loss on Friday and needed 25 pitches to do it. Rondon has pitched in two straight games, and his position isn’t secure right now.
4. Aaron Loup/Roberto Osuna, Toronto Blue Jays — It took the Jays 34 games to get Friday’s save, and it took Brett Cecil 30 pitches to earn it. Osuna threw 24 pitches himself, and Loup has pitched in three of four games, so the Jays are probably hoping lightning doesn’t strike in two straight games.
5. Tony Cingrani, Cincinnati Reds — Aroldis Chapman (who has been linked to a possible trade to Washington) has pitched in two of three, and four of six. J.J. Hoover pitched two innings (30 pitches) on Friday.
6. Yimi Garcia, Los Angeles Dodgers — Kenley Jansen has pitched in three of four games. So has Garcia, but he threw only seven pitches on Friday; Jansen needed almost thrice as many.

Weekly Hot Seat Update: June 12, 2015

A few quick lists this week, comprising all 30 of the top guys in our depth chart:

Top three closers at the moment — Zach BrittonDavid RobertsonDrew Storen
These guys have high strikeout rates, low walk rates, and there’s nothing in their advanced stats to suggest trouble ahead. Britton‘s GB% is second among all qualified relievers (69.8%).

Knocking on that door — Dellin BetancesKenley Jansen
With Andrew Miller out for what could be an extended period of timeBetances will get the chance to prove that his impressive skills can play in the ninth inning. Jansen has looked good in his nine appearances, but the .071 BABIP is, er, unsustainable.

Pitching worse than their numbers — John AxfordTyler ClippardGreg HollandBrad Ziegler
These four guys have combined for 37 saves with pretty decent ERAs, but each of them have worrying low K rates (mitigated some for Ziegler and Axford due to their high groundout rates) and are letting too many guys get on base. As we told you a few weeks agoHolland‘s surface success is not supported by his underlying metrics, and we don’t recommend waiting until the two reach an equilibrium.

Probably better than you think — Luke GregersonJason GrilliCody AllenHector RondonBrett CecilBrad Boxberger
The first three guys are raking in saves pretty well, and though their ERAs are higher than you’d like, the fundamentals look pretty solid. Rondon isn’t pitching lights-out or anything, but he doesn’t deserve to be ousted for a committee either. He and Clippard are nearly twins (same IP, same K rate), but Rondon has a much lower walk rate and has given up hits 5% more often on batted balls. And it’s not the fault of Cecil or Boxberger that they’re not getting any save opportunities lately (or, in Cecil‘s case, at all, ever); they’re doing most of what they’re being asked to do.

Guys with 13+ saves who are likely to regress — Joakim SoriaMark MelanconSantiago Casilla; Trevor Rosenthal; Francisco RodriguezKoji Uehara
If you have a strong bullpen, you might consider moving any of these guys in a trade. Play up those gaudy save numbers and don’t mention that Rosenthal and Soria have astronomically high strand rates that are keeping their ERAs artificially low, that K-Rod is boasting a sub-.220 BABIP for the second straight year, or that Koji Uehara is two months older than Allen Iverson. Sell high, friends.

Big names pitching well (enough) — Glen PerkinsJonathan PapelbonAroldis ChapmanCraig KimbrelHuston Street
Some exposure to age and regression here — and there’s no telling where Papelbon might end up — but overall, these guys are getting it done.

Why you don’t have to pay for saves — Carson Smith; Shawn TollesonA.J. RamosJeurys Familia
None of these guys were their team’s top choice coming into spring training, but through combinations of injuries and ineffectiveness, they’re closers now — and paying dividends for the owners fortunate enough to grab them first. We’ll be sure to keep you ahead of the curve on the next guys to make this list — maybe Evan ScribnerWade Davis, or Tony Watson.

Bobby Parnell returns; Jonathan Papelbon trade rumors heat up

June 12, 2015

Tampa Bay Rays — It was a bad seventh inning for the Rays bullpen Thursday night. Up 2-1, manager Kevin Cash went with Kevin Jepsen, who allowed the tying run before getting yanked. Brad Boxberger came into the game with men on first and third with one out and the 1-2-3 hitters due up for the Angels — arguably the highest leverage spot in the game, which is how Kevin Cash has said he’d handle Boxberger’s use in the past. Boxberger allowed an RBI groundout and an RBI double, allowing two inherited runs to score before he was pulled. Jepsen and Boxberger each recorded only one out, and the Rays went on to lose 6-2. With Boxberger’s recent ineffectiveness (6.1 IP, 5 ER since May 26) and his use in non-save situations, we’re going to slap the closer-by-committee tag back on Tampa for the time being.

Updated hierarchy: *Boxberger | McGee | Jepsen.

Chicago Cubs — Speaking of committees, manager Joe Maddon has employed one lately. Thursday night it was Hector Rondon’s turn again, as the righty picked up his 11th save. Pedro Strop pitched the eighth inning and Jason Motte was seen warming up and was ready to go if Rondon faltered in any way. Also of note, Maddon said newly signed reliever Rafael Soriano won’t get called up until after the All-Star break.

Hierarchy remains: *Rondon | Strop | Motte.

New York Mets — 14 months removed from Tommy John surgery, Bobby Parnell is finally back in the big leagues, albeit with diminished velocity. Parnell had been rehabbing for 30 days in the minors and, as a player with five years of major league experience, he had the right to veto an extended stay there. The Mets apparently didn’t ask him to stay on the farm, where he was torched for an 11.57 ERA in 14 innings between A and AA — an outcome he claims was the result of focusing on perfecting individual pitches during his outings. He’ll have to prove he can recapture his old form before he gets many high-leverage looks for the big club.

Hierarchy remains: Familia | C.Torres | Robles.

New York Yankees — Everything’s Not Lost in the Yankees bullpen after all with the Thursday return of righty Chris Martin. Martin had been sent to Triple-A late last month after his DL return so he could get “back on a roll,” according to manager Joe Girardi. Martin has one save and a 3.55 ERA in 12.2 innings for the Yankees this season.

Updated hierarchy: Betances | Shreve | Martin.

Philadelphia Phillies — You may notice a few dozen pickups of setup man Ken Giles on your preferred fantasy platform. That’s because the Phillies are ramping up trade discussions involving closer Jonathan Papelbon. Papelbon is due to make $8 million more this season, with a $13 million option for 2016 that will vest if he finishes 26 more games this year. The Phillies are reportedly calling contenders to let them know the team will eat some of Papelbon’s salary for this season and next in order to get a better return. The Blue Jays and Cubs reportedly have talked to the Phillies this month, with the Mariners, Rays, and Marlins possibly interested as well.

Hierarchy remains: Papelbon | Giles | Garcia.

Washington Nationals — Aaron Barrett had a tough outing and was saddled with the loss. Pitching in a tie game in the seventh inning, Barrett gave up a home run and threw a wild pitch before being pulled from the game during an at-bat with an apparent injury. After the game, manager Matt Williams said Barrett was “uncomfortable” on the mound and will need to be evaluated on Friday. We assume Barrett will be unavailable for at least the next game or two, so Blake Treinen moves into his role in the Nationals hierarchy. With Washington’s bullpen in disarray, the team also recently traded for Yankee washout David Carpenter.

Updated hierarchy: Storen | Janssen | Treinen.

Colorado Rockies — LaTroy Hawkins was activated from the disabled list and immediately pitched against the Marlins Thursday, allowing two hits and picking up a strikeout in a scoreless inning with the Rockies down six. Let’s see Hawkins get some work when the Rockies have the lead before we bring him back into the hierarchy.

Hierarchy remains: Axford | Oberg | Brown.

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Jake McGee, Tampa Bay Rays — Brad Boxberger has pitched in two straight games and has had a rough time of it the last few weeks. Look for McGee to get the next save opportunity if Boxberger (a) needs rest or (b) enters in a high-leverage spot earlier in the game.
2. Pedro Strop/Jason Motte, Chicago Cubs — Hector Rondon got the save chance Thursday night, but Motte was warming in the 9th just in case. The closer situation is still kind of murky, so keep an eye on Motte and Strop.
3. Jonathan Broxton, Milwaukee Brewers — Francisco Rodriguez has pitched in four of the last six games for the Brewers, who are suddenly winning games. If K-Rod needs a break Friday, look for Jonathan Broxton to get the opportunity.

Andrew Miller hits DL; Jake McGee gets first save

June 11, 2015

New York Yankees — As indicated in an alert on Wednesday, Andrew Miller has been placed on the disabled list with a strained forearm. Dellin Betances will close in his place, while Chasen Shreve and Jacob Lindgren move up to the 8th and 7th inning roles.

Updated hierarchy: Betances | Shreve | Lindgren.

Tampa Bay Rays — Jake McGee finally earned that elusive first save of 2015, allowing one hit and striking out two in an uneventful 9th inning. Brad Boxberger pitched the 8th, facing the 2-3-4 hitters in the Angels’ lineup. It was Boxberger’s first appearance in a week after a battle with triceps soreness, and he arguably pitched in a higher-leverage spot given whom he faced. Since a blown save on May 26, McGee has allowed just one hit and lowered his ERA from 8.10 to 3.00. He slides ahead of Kevin Jepsen for now, but those two may be used interchangeably.

Updated hierarchy: Boxberger | McGee | Jepsen.

Atlanta Braves –As predicted in the Vulture Save Watch, Jim Johnson picked up the save for the Braves as Jason Grilli got a night off following two straight appearances totaling 50 pitches.

Hierarchy remains: Grilli | Johnson | Cunniff.

Baltimore Orioles — Speaking of correct VSW predictions, Darren O’Day shut down the Red Sox over two innings to earn his second save of the season. Zach Britton was needed for a five-out save the previous night.

Hierarchy remains: Britton | O’Day | Hunter.

VULTURE SAVE WATCH
1. Pedro Strop/Jason Motte, Chicago Cubs — The Cubs are still in a committee, so Hector Rondon may not get the 9th.