Saturday’s slate provided plenty of intrigue for the Wild Card races, but only four wins by relievers and four saves. However, Andrés Muñoz picked up his third win on a walk-off rally, keeping his team on the periphery of the playoffs. Seattle and Detroit sit two-and-a-half games behind Minnesota entering gameplay today:
In the National League, the Mets fell back into a tie with Atlanta, and there are three spots left between four teams in the playoffs with two weeks remaining:
It’s tough to discern the teams in the chart, but in order of the odds, San Diego, Arizona, Atlanta, and the Mets are entering Sunday’s contests.
Next, our condensed game recaps cover Saturday’s high-leverage events of interest.
Closer CliffsNotes
Seranthony Domínguez (BAL) had an eventful non-save outing in Detroit. He allowed Parker Meadows’ lead-off home run, Colt Keith’s single, and induced two long flyouts. With two outs, Wenceel Pérez reached despite striking out on a wild pitch resulting from a cross-up on location, followed by Spencer Torkelson’s RBI single, before a game-ending groundout. Domínguez finished with three hits and two earned runs while striking out one. He’s converted all nine save chances since his acquisition but has given up six home runs across his 19.1 innings.
- Hierarchy remains: Seranthony Domínguez | Yennier Cano | Cionel Pérez
Drew Smyly (CHC) suffered his eighth loss after taking over a tied game at the bottom of the tenth. He induced a groundout, issued an intentional walk, and gave up Brenton Doyle’s walk-off RBI single. Porter Hodge retired his first two batters in the ninth via strikeout, then issued a walk, followed by Sam Hilliard’s game-tying, pinch-hit home run. This resulted in Hodge’s third blown save, the first since August 3, and only his second home run allowed all season. He finished with a hit, two earned runs, and a walk while striking out two.
- Hierarchy remains: Porter Hodge | Nate Pearson | Tyson Miller
Gus Varland (CHW) took over with two runners on and no outs at the top of the ninth. He allowed one of two inherited runners to score on Zack Gelof’s single against a drawn-in infield but benefited from the second runner being thrown out at home. Varland induced a groundout and an inning-ending pop-out, keeping the game tied. He collected his first win and a blown save on a walk-off home run in the bottom of the frame. Justin Anderson faced three batters, allowing a hit, three runs (two earned), and two walks at the top of the ninth.
- Updated Hierarchy: *Justin Anderson | *Gus Varland | Prelander Berroa
Tyler Kinley (COL) carved up the Cubs’ 5-6-7 lineup pocket at the top of the tenth, retiring the side and striking out two, then collected his sixth win on a walk-off rally in the bottom of the frame. He threw 11 pitches (72.7 Strike%) and produced two whiffs (18.2 SwStr%). This extended his scoreless streak to six games, during which he’s converted five saves and this win while recording ten strikeouts against three walks.
- Hierarchy remains: Tyler Kinley | Victor Vodnik | Angel Chivilli
Ryan Pressly (HOU) inherited a bases-loaded situation with one out at the bottom of the eighth. He allowed Logan O’Hoppe’s RBI single, but a runner was thrown out at home, followed by an inning-ending groundout. Pressly returned for the ninth and worked around a one-out single with a game-ending double play groundout, securing his fourth save. He threw 12 pitches (83.3 Strike%) and induced one whiff. This marked his first save since August 31 and his first multiple-inning save since May 6, 2021.
- Hierarchy remains: Josh Hader | Ryan Pressly | Bryan Abreu
Lucas Erceg (KC) tossed a scoreless bottom of the ninth, giving up Andrew McCutchen’s two-out double and recording two strikeouts. He threw 16 pitches (11 strikes – 68.8 Strike%) and generated five whiffs (31.3 SwStr%). He extended his scoreless streak to five games but last secured a save on September 8.
- Hierarchy remains: Lucas Erceg | John Schreiber | Kris Bubic
Danny Young (NYM) suffered his first loss and was credited with his seventh hold, giving up two hits and two earned runs over one-third of the bottom of the seventh. His only out recorded was a sacrifice bunt, and he was removed with runners on second and third. Reed Garrett took over and was tagged with his fifth blown save, allowing Cal Stevenson’s go-ahead two-RBI double during his two-thirds of the seventh.
- Hierarchy remains: Edwin Díaz | Phil Maton | Reed Garrett
Hogan Harris (OAK) took over a tied game at the bottom of the ninth and suffered his fourth loss. He allowed Andrew Benintendi’s walk-off home run leading off the inning.
- Hierarchy remains: Mason Miller | Tyler Ferguson | Michel Otañez
Carlos Estévez (PHI) gave up a lead-off single, then bore down, retiring the next three batters and securing his 26th save while preserving a two-run win over the Mets. He threw 19 pitches (14 strikes – 73.3 Strike%) and induced one whiff against the 9-1-2-3 hitters. He’s been scoreless in eight of nine appearances since August 21 with two wins and converted five of six save chances. Orion Kerkering collected his fifth win, firing a clean seventh and striking out one on 12 pitches (66.7 Strike%) with two whiffs (16.7 SwStr%).
- Hierarchy remains: Carlos Estévez | Jeff Hoffman | Matt Strahm
David Bednar (PIT) escaped with a scoreless top of the ninth versus the Royals, appearing in an eventual loss. He issued three walks, including an intentional one to Bobby Witt Jr., and recorded a strikeout. Bednar threw 24 pitches (10 strikes – 41.7 Strike%) and induced three whiffs. This marked his second game in his last four, allowing three walks in an outing.
- Hierarchy remains: Aroldis Chapman | Dennis Santana | David Bednar
Andrés Muñoz (SEA) retired the Rangers’ 6-7-8 hitters in order, keeping the game tied at the top of the ninth. He collected his third win courtesy of a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. He threw 11 pitches (63.6 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (27.3 SwStr%). He’s recorded three consecutive clean appearances with three strikeouts while converting two saves and this win.
- Hierarchy remains: Andrés Muñoz | Collin Snider | Austin Voth
José Leclerc (TEX) entered a tied contest at the bottom of the ninth, gave up Victor Robles’ one-out double, intentionally walked Julio Rodríguez, and walked Cal Raleigh, loading the bases. Leclerc suffered his fifth loss on a walk-off Randy Arozarena infield single.
- Hierarchy remains: Kirby Yates | David Robertson | José Leclerc
Kyle Finnegan (WSH) tossed a scoreless top of the ninth, yielding a lead-off single, inducing a double play groundout, and a game-ending strikeout for his 38th save. He closed out a three-run win over the Marlins, throwing 13 pitches (8 strikes – 61.5 Strike%) and getting two whiffs. He’s converted his last four save chances and been scoreless in his last four appearances.
- Hierarchy remains: Kyle Finnegan | Derek Law | Jose A. Ferrer
Vulture Save Options for Sunday, September 15
- JT Chargois (SEA): Muñoz has pitched in two straight and three of the previous four. Based on recent usage patterns, “Shaggy” could garner the save chance today.
- Derek Law (WSH): Finnegan has pitched in consecutive outings, three of the previous four. Law has also worked in three of the last four contests, which could result in Jose A. Ferrer getting the vulture save if provided.
- Prelander Berroa (CHW): Anderson and Varland have appeared in back-to-back games; De Los Santos logged 2.1 innings yesterday.
Vulture Save Stashes for Monday, September 16
- Ryan Pressly (HOU): If Hader and Abreu are used today, it will mark four appearances in six days.
- José Alvarado (PHI): If Estévez and Hoffman pitch this afternoon, it will be consecutive games. Rob Thomson said Alvarado has looked like his old self in recent appearances.
- Nate Pearson (CHC): If Hodge pitches today, it will be back-to-back outings.
- Angel Chivilli (COL): If Kinley appears today, it will be consecutive days and three in the last four.
Three Takeaways
Kinley anchors Rockies rebound: Although Colorado’s reliever team ERA will likely finish last in the majors this season, the leverage ladder has stabilized in the second half. It’s 12th in the majors in the category in September, entering gameplay today, though ERA hardly tells the whole story of a bullpen. Part of the recent success lies in Tyler Kinley taking over as the closer, but he’s benefited from solid bridge results by two rookies. Here are their results with underlying data included:
- Tyler Kinley: Scoreless in 18 of his last 20 appearances, two wins, seven-for-eight in save chances, seven holds, 20 IP, 26:7 K:BB (25.3 K-BB%), 0.75 WHIP, 2.64 SIERA, 63.6 strike percentage, 18.7 swinging strike percentage, 63.7 percent contact rate allowed.
- Angel Chivilli: Scoreless in ten of his last 12 games, with one win, one save in two chances, four holds, a 0.85 WHIP across 13 IP, a 13:4 K:BB (18 K-BB%), 3.34 SIERA, 66.5 strike percentage, 25.3 swinging strike percentage, 52.9 percent contact rate allowed.
- Seth Halvorsen: Through seven appearances, he’s allowed one unearned run with a win and two holds, a 0.30 WHIP across 6.2 innings, six strikeouts against zero walks (27.3 K-BB%), 2.17 SIERA, 65.6 strike percentage, 13.3 swinging strike percentage, 70 percent contact rate allowed.
Taylor’s role rising in Seattle: Rookie Troy Taylor has made a positive impression during his time with the Mariners this season. He’s recorded four holds in his last nine appearances and only allowed two runs on solo home runs, with a 0.60 WHIP and 3.39 SIERA across 8.1 innings. His 25.3 K-BB percentage since August 27 has increased his leverage opportunities, and he may be a key component in a postseason push. His slider has produced a 17.9 swinging strike percentage in his limited sample this year and a robust 42.2 whiff rate on pitches outside the zone.
Bednar’s struggles continue: Pitching in lower leveraged situations, and losses cannot get the juices flowing for David Bednar, but his command issues have persisted. He issued three walks for the second time in his last four appearances on Saturday and has a negative K-BB percentage in September, though two walks have been intentional. Through his last six games, he’s allowed seven walks while producing five strikeouts (-7.7 K-BB%) with a 1.76 WHIP, a 7.35 SIERA, and a 55.7 strike percentage. His rolling game chart illustrates his struggles this season, which fantasy managers must decide if he’s given a pass because of lingering results from his oblique injuries or if the league has adjusted:
Those seeking full game recaps should surf the team pages; they’ve all been updated with Saturday’s results.
Thanks for being a part of the Closer Monkey community. Stay safe and be well.
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