Monkey Bytes: August 19

Somedays provide more angst than others in the world of high-leverage relievers. Yesterday, they offered an anxiety-driven afternoon. Tampa Bay closer Pete Fairbanks not only suffered his fourth blown save, he allowed a game-tying three-run home run before leaving with the team’s trainer. Early reports speculate on the potential for a lat injury, which could end his season depending on the severity. While fantasy managers prefer clarity, this may result in the Rays mixing-and-matching for saves over the next two weeks or the rest of the season.

For Sunday’s 15-game slate, 13 games were decided by two or fewer runs, seven were one-run contests, and four were extended into extra innings. Seven relievers recorded wins and nine secured saves. Our condensed game recaps capture the high-leverage events of interest, but those seeking deeper analysis should reference the specific team pages, or this post will be too long.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Justin Martinez (ARI) tossed a scoreless bottom of the 11th but suffered his fourth loss in the 12th. Following a sacrifice bunt and a walk, he gave up Dylan Carlson’s walk-off RBI single. He absorbed two losses in Tampa Bay, throwing 18 strikes of his 34 pitches (52.9 Strike%). 
  • Raisel Iglesias (ATL) shut the door on his 26th save with a clean ninth and recorded one strikeout. This extended his scoreless streak to 12 games, during which he’s converted five saves with 16 strikeouts versus one walk across 13 innings.
  • Seranthony Domínguez (BAL) quelled a bases-loaded situation in the top of the eighth on an inning-ending popout. He recorded his fourth save, third with Baltimore, despite giving up Rob Refsnyder’s solo home run in the ninth while retiring three batters via strikeout. He’s been scoreless in eight of ten games with the Orioles, and both runs have been scored on solo home runs. 
  • Victor Vodnik (COL) issued a one-out walk during a scoreless ninth and notched his ninth save, securing a one-run win over the Padres. He’s converted five of six save opportunities in August but has posted more walks (8) than strikeouts (6) over his 8.1 innings this month. 
  • Beau Brieske (DET) collected his second win even though he let the “place” runner score in the top of the tenth, courtesy of a walk-off rally in Williamsport. He allowed a hit and recorded a strikeout against the Yankees. 
  • Josh Hader (HOU) nailed down his 27th save with a clean top of the ninth and two strikeouts while preserving a combined shutout against the White Sox. This extended his scoreless streak to nine games, during which he’s recorded one win and seven saves, with 12 strikeouts against three walks through 9.1 innings.
  • Lucas Erceg (KCR) was summoned with the bases loaded and one out in the seventh. He retired both batters via strikeout, then worked around a one-out single in the eighth for 1.2 scoreless frames. He secured his 18th hold and recorded four strikeouts, but this usage pattern should remind fantasy managers he’s the highest-leveraged reliever, not the closer. 
  • Michael Kopech (LAD) notched his second save with the Dodgers and 11th of the season with a clean ninth, preserving a one-run win in St. Louis. He did work with reduced velocity after appearing three times in four days. He will get at least two days off, per Dave Roberts. Kopech has been scoreless through 9.1 innings since the trade deadline with 13 strikeouts against one walk (40 K-BB%) and retired 28 of 30 batters faced (0.22 WHIP).
  • Calvin Faucher (MIA) navigated around consecutive singles by retiring the next three Mets, two via strikeout, securing his third save and preserving a one-run win. 
  • Jared Koenig (MIL) recorded his first career save with a clean ninth against Cleveland’s 2-3-4 hitters. After the game, manager Pat Murphy confirmed Devin Williams was unavailable after appearing in three of the previous four contests. 
  • Jhoan Durán (MIN) appeared for the fourth time in five days, suffering his sixth loss in the bottom of the tenth. After recording a strikeout, he gave up Josh Jung’s walk-off RBI single. 
  • Reed Garrett (NYM) stranded two runners in the seventh but issued two walks, resulting in an earned run and his fifth loss in the eighth. Phil Maton let one of two inherited runners score on Derek Hill’s RBI single but worked 1.1 scoreless innings. 
  • Clay Holmes (NYY) suffered his MLB-leading tenth blown save. He allowed Colt Keith’s one-out double and Jace Jung’s game-tying RBI single in the bottom of the ninth. Despite his recent rough patch, Aaron Boone said Holmes will be his closer. Mark Leiter Jr. gave up two hits and two runs (one earned) during his fifth loss and a third blown save in the bottom of the tenth. 
  • Dany Jiménez (OAK) took over in the top of the tenth against the Giants and served up two home runs, resulting in three runs (two earned), and his third loss of the season. Mason Miller fired a clean ninth and recorded two strikeouts, keeping the game tied. 
  • Matt Strahm (PHI) took over a tied game at the top of the eighth. He allowed a lead-off single and a walk. After a sacrifice put runners in scoring position, a go-ahead sacrifice fly resulted in his second loss. 
  • Ryan Walker (SFG) logged two innings while registering his eighth win. He returned for the tenth after tossing a scoreless ninth in a tied contest. He allowed the “place” runner to score on Brent Rooker’s RBI single but prevented further damage by retiring the next three hitters via strikeout. Walker finished with two hits allowed, an unearned run, and a walk while striking out five. 
  • Edwin Uceta (TBR) navigated around a bunt single for a scoreless top of the 12th while recording two strikeouts. He collected his first win courtesy of a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. He’s been scoreless in 10 of 11 appearances in the second half, with 23 strikeouts against two walks across 16 innings.
  • Andrew Chafin (TEX) retired the side in the top of the tenth and struck out one. He collected his fourth win courtesy of a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. Kirby Yates suffered his first blown save, allowing Carlos Santana’s game-tying solo home run in the ninth. 
  • Chad Green (TOR) navigated around Cody Bellinger’s single and stolen base for a scoreless ninth and his 13th save during a 1-0 win in Chicago. Despite allowing a run in three of his previous four appearances, he’s converted all six save chances in August.
  • Kyle Finnegan (WSH) gave up a lead-off single and then induced a double play groundout, followed by an inning-ending grounder, preserving a two-run win in Philadelphia for his 31st save.

Vulture Save Options for Monday, August 19

  • Tyler Rogers (SFG): Walker logged two innings and threw 35 pitches on Sunday. 
  • Manuel Rodríguez (TBR): Uceta and Cleavinger have appeared in back-to-back games. Expect fluidity in usage patterns with Fairbanks sidelined. 
  • Paul Sewald (ARI): Martinez has pitched in two of the last three. Will Sewald receive his first save chance since July? 
  • Cole Sands (MIN): Durán’s worked in four of the previous five days, and Jax in three of the last four. 
  • Kris Bubic (KCR): Erceg tossed 28 pitches during a 1.2 inning Sunday. 

Vulture Save Stashes for Tuesday, August 20

  • David Robertson (TEX): If Yates pitches tonight, it will be consecutive appearances. 
  • Bryan Abreu (HOU): If Hader pitches today, it will be his second straight outing. Abreu pitched on Saturday and Sunday, so he should be rested on Monday. If not, Tayler Scott would be in line for Tuesday.

What to Watch For (August 19-through-25)

  • Arizona Diamondbacks: Torey Lovullo has deployed Justin Martinez as his closer but has not confirmed his role in press conferences. He’s very loyal to veterans, and a strong week by Paul Sewald could propel him back into the “closer” conversation. 
  • Baltimore Orioles: Seranthony Domínguez has taken over the primary save share. How will the team handle getting there? Dillon Tate and Bruce Zimmerman could be recalled before the end of August. The biggest question remains: can the team help Craig Kimbrel find his first-half form? 
  • Boston Red Sox: Can the team remain in the mix until Justin Slaten and Liam Hendriks can bolster the bullpen? 
  • Chicago Cubs: Héctor Neris has a clause in his contract and receives a player option if he appears in 60 games or records a game-finished in 45. Entering this scoring period, he’s pitched in 46 games and finished 33. If the team prefers letting him walk at the end of the season, will Jorge López receive more save chances over the last six weeks? 
  • Chicago White Sox: Will the team keep using Chad Kuhl in save chances, sparse as they are? Will anyone emerge down the stretch for the closer role in 2025? Should we care? 
  • Colorado Rockies: Will Victor Vodnik remain the closer despite a negative K-BB percentage in August? He’s posted a 2.04 WHIP and a 6.34 SIERA across 8.1 innings this month. 
  • Detroit Tigers: Has Jason Foley reclaimed the primary save share for Detroit? He recorded his 16th save and has pitched in the ninth inning in his last three appearances. 
  • Los Angeles Dodgers: Does Michael Kopech parlay his strong start with the Dodgers into a more prominent leverage role in 2025, too? Should fantasy managers be concerned with his velocity dip on Sunday in St. Louis? 
  • Milwaukee Brewers: What workload can Devin Williams handle over the last six weeks? Three appearances in four days prove encouraging, but when Trevor Megill returns, will they press this type of usage pattern with “The Airbender” or keep him rested for the postseason? 
  • Minnesota Twins: With Rocco Baldelli pursuing the division, not just the playoffs, does this keep Cole Sands on the periphery of fantasy value in deeper formats? He’s recorded two wins and two saves since July 22. He’s one of four relievers with at least two wins and two saves in this timeframe: Robert Suarez (three wins, four saves), Joel Payamps (two wins, two saves), and Josh Hader (two wins, seven saves). 
  • Philadelphia Phillies: Can they get their leverage ladder back on track? It’s been tough sledding in the second half. 
  • Pittsburgh Pirates: How does David Bednar finish the season? This may determine his fantasy value for 2025. He showed signs in his most recent save while navigating around a bases-loaded situation against Seattle, but can he carry this over for the last six weeks? 
  • San Francisco Giants: When will the team recall Camilo Doval, and will he receive save opportunities in September? Bob Melvin left the door open for the demoted closer: 
  • Tampa Bay Rays: With Pete Fairbanks potentially out for the remainder of the season, pending his MRI, we project a match-up-based bullpen with Edwin Uceta, Garrett Cleavinger, Manuel Rodríguez, Colin Poche, and Kevin Kelly in the mix for saves. Here are the team’s Win Probability Added results for the second half through Sunday’s extra-inning win over Arizona: 
  • Texas Rangers: There have been conflicting reports on how the team will handle the end of the season as its hopes of making the playoffs fade. Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic speculated that the team could put some players on waivers to save money, but Evan Grant, the team’s beat writer for The Dallas Morning News, reported Chris Young does not want to take this route.

Thanks for being a part of the Closer Monkey community. Stay safe and be well.

Statistical Credits:

Fangraphs.com

Baseball-Reference.com

Statcast

Monkey Bytes: August 18

Baseball Reference identifies a blowout as a game decided by five or more runs. Saturday’s slate featured six such contests, though two provided a save. Relievers only recorded two wins and seven saves, though four were of the ancillary variety. Our condensed recaps cover the high-leverage events of interest and some relievers getting in work in yesterday’s action.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Paul Sewald (ARI) tossed a scoreless bottom of the eighth in an eventual loss. He allowed a hit and hit a batter while recording all three outs via strikeout. He’s been scoreless through six outings in August with eight strikeouts against two walks. 
  • Jorge López (CHC) gave up Addison Barger’s lead-off home run in the top of the ninth, then struck out Toronto’s 1-2-3 hitters, including a game-ending strikeout of Vlad Guerrero Jr. for his third save, first as a Cub. López had his 14-game scoreless streak snapped, but he’s produced a 23:7 K:BB since June 28. 
  • Alexis Díaz (CIN) tossed a scoreless top of the seventh during a lopsided loss, allowing a hit and striking out one against the Royals’ 5-6-7-8 batters. He threw 10 pitches (80 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (30 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in six of his last seven with seven strikeouts against two walks over 6.2 innings. 
  • Jason Foley (DET) completed a combined shutout with a scoreless ninth. He navigated around Aaron Judge’s leadoff double and a walk while striking out one in a non-save appearance. 
  • Calvin Faucher (MIA) worked a clean bottom of the eighth and recorded a strikeout in a shutout loss against the Mets. He threw 11 pitches (63.6 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (27.3 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless over his last four appearances but has not received a save chance on August 7.
  • Cole Sands (MIN) notched his fourth save with a clean bottom of the ninth and striking out one, finishing a three-run win against Texas. 
  • Devin Williams (MIL) recorded his fourth save with a clean top of the ninth, preserving a one-run win against Cleveland’s 2-3-4 lineup pocket on ten pitches. 
  • Michel Otañez (OAK) navigated around a two-out infield single and a walk for a scoreless ninth while recording his first major league save. He threw 26 pitches (17 strikes – 65.4 Strike%) and generated six whiffs (23.1 SwStr%) with three strikeouts, completing the combined shutout of the Giants. 
  • David Bednar (PIT) inherited a bases-loaded with no-out situation in the top of the ninth and retired three straight batters, two via strikeout, for his 22nd save. He only threw nine pitches and produced three whiffs, snapping his six-game streak of allowing at least a run. 
  • Ryan Helsley (STL) nailed down his MLB-leading 38th save with a clean ninth and recorded a strikeout during a two-run win over the Dodgers. He’s registered a save in five straight outings. 
  • Richard Lovelady (TBR) took over a bases-loaded situation in the top of the eighth with two outs and stymied the rally. He returned for the ninth and recorded his first save, throwing 1.1 clean frames in a five-run win over Arizona. He’s the ninth pitcher with a save for the Rays this season.

Vulture Save Options for Sunday, August 18

  • Aroldis Chapman (PIT): Bednar has appeared in two straight games. 
  • Josh Winckowski (BOS): Jansen, Martin, and Sims have pitched the previous two games. 

Three Takeaways

  • Sewald and velocity: During his team’s eventual loss, Paul Sewald recorded his sixth scoreless appearance in August. He’s collected a win this month but has not received a save opportunity since July 31. His manager has not closed the door for the veteran to get save chances through the end of the season, but with 38 games remaining, the window of opportunity continues to shrink. Fantasy managers should monitor his velocity closely, Justin Martinez’s walk rate, and usage patterns over the next two weeks. Sewald has seen a slight uptick in recent outings, and he admitted the oblique injury earlier this season affected his results. Mining his results from Statcast since his arrival in Arizona, here are Sewald’s splits when he throws his four-seam fastball above and below 92 m.p.h. since August 5, 2023:

Link: https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/EpkpW/6/

  • Cubs hierarchy tweak: Although Porter Hodge has performed well in a set-up capacity, with Héctor Neris unavailable after throwing 33 pitches on Friday, Craig Counsell called upon Jorge López for the save. He responded with his third of the season and first as a Cub after allowing a lead-off home run by striking out the first three hitters in Toronto’s lineup, including a game-ending one of Vlad Guerrero Jr. Neris remains atop our hierarchy. If his past struggles resurface, it could open the door for more López save chances.
  • A vulture in Sands: Usage patterns and performance dictate value in head-to-head leagues. Hitting on the right stream option can swing a week. Over his last 10 appearances, Cole Sands has recorded two wins and two saves with 12 strikeouts against one walk and a 0.975 WHIP across 12.1 innings since July 22. He’s not perfect and not assured this productivity level will continue, but with the Twins pushing for the division and a spot in the playoffs, he may be a sneaky streamer moving forward.

American League – Game Recaps for August 17

Minnesota Twins Providing his teammates with much-needed rest, Cole Sands capped his team’s comeback rally by securing his fourth save, preserving a three-run win in Texas. He retired the side and recorded a strikeout on nine pitches (77.8 Strike%) with two whiffs (22.2 SwStr%).

  • Jorge Alcala notched his 15th hold, firing a clean eighth and striking out one against the Rangers’ 3-4-5 lineup pocket.
  • Ronny Henriquez logged two scoreless frames, scattered two hits, and recorded a strikeout while collecting his first win. 

Hierarchy remains: Jhoan Durán | Griffin Jax | Jorge Alcala

Oakland A’s – After recording two strikeouts in the top of the ninth, Michel Otañez allowed an infield single and a walk before producing a game-ending strikeout of Casey Schmitt for his first career save. He threw 26 pitches (17 strikes – 65.4 Strike%) and generated six whiffs (23.1 SwStr%) while completing the combined shutout.

  • T.J. McFarland stranded a runner and retired both batters in the eighth for his 14th hold.
  • Grant Holman made his major league debut by stranding two runners in the seventh and gave up a hit during two-thirds scoreless while recording his first hold.
  • Scott Alexander worked two-thirds scoreless in the seventh despite yielding a hit and a walk.

Adjusted Hierarchy: Mason Miller | Tyler Ferguson | Michel Otañez

National League – Game Recaps for August 17

Chicago Cubs – Pitching through the rain, Jorge López lost his 14-game scoreless streak, allowing Addison Barger’s lead-off home run in the top of the ninth. He recovered with consecutive strikeouts of George Springer, Daulton Varsho, and Vlad Guerrero Jr. for his first save as a Cub and his third of the season. López threw 14 pitches (11 strikes – 78.6 Strike%) and produced four whiffs (28.6 SwStr%). He’s been moving up the leverage ladder and may push Héctor Neris aside for more save chances.

  • Porter Hodge notched his ninth hold, issuing two walks and recording two strikeouts over 1.2 scoreless innings.
  • Drew Smyly gave up three hits and an earned run in one-third of the seventh, getting credit for his seventh hold.
  • Julian Merryweather worked a scoreless sixth for his second hold.
  • Tyson MIiler secured his ninth hold with a scoreless fifth. Nate Pearson collected his second win with two scoreless innings, navigating around a hit and two walks while striking out one. 

Updated Hierarchy: Héctor Neris | Jorge López | Porter Hodge

Milwaukee Brewers – Shutting the door on his fourth save, Devin Williams fired a clean top of the ninth against the Guardians’ 2-3-4 lineup pocket. He threw 10 pitches (50 Strike%) and induced two whiffs. He’s converted a save in his last four outings, recording six strikeouts while retiring all 12 batters.

  • Jared Koenig secured his sixth hold with a clean eighth and struck out the side.
  • Joel Payamps worked a clean seventh and recorded a strikeout for his 14th hold.

Hierarchy remains: Devin Williams | Joel Payamps | Bryan Hudson

Pittsburgh Pirates – Summoned with the bases loaded and no outs, David Bednar inherited a save situation with a five-run lead. He induced a shallow flyout by Victor Robles, then produced consecutive Randy Arozarena and Julio Rodríguez strikeouts, stranding all three runners and securing his 22nd save. He threw nine pitches (77.8 Strike%) and generated three whiffs (33.3 SwStr%). His split finger had much better movement in this outing. This snapped his six-game streak of allowing at least a run, and he retired five of his last six batters via strikeout.

  • Domingo Germán created the mess, issuing a walk and hitting two batters, prompting his removal in the top of the ninth.
  • Dennis Santana logged two scoreless frames and recorded three strikeouts for his second hold.
  • Kyle Nicolas retired his only batter on a strikeout and notched his sixth hold in the sixth.

Hierarchy remains: David Bednar | Aroldis Chapman | Kyle Nicolas

St. Louis Cardinals – Retaking the major league lead with his 38th save, Ryan Helsley fired a clean top of the ninth and recorded a strikeout, finishing a two-run win against the Dodgers. He only needed six pitches (83.3 Strike%) and induced one whiff (16.7 SwStr%) while facing the 4-5-6 lineup pocket. He’s converted a save in his last five appearances and been scoreless in four.

  • JoJo Romero secured his 29th hold, retiring the side in the eighth.

Hierarchy remains: Ryan Helsley | Andrew Kittredge | JoJo Romero

Thanks for being a part of the Closer Monkey community. Stay safe and be well.

Statistical Credits:

Fangraphs.com

Baseball-Reference.com

Statcast

Monkey Bytes: August 17

Even though it was not a full slate, Friday’s 14 games featured 11 games decided by three or fewer runs, nine by two or less, and seven one-run contests. Relievers recorded six wins, though a blown save accompanied two. High-leverage relievers also secured eight saves in a stress-filled slate.

Our condensed game recaps cover all of the high-leverage outings of interest. Plus, today’s Three Takeaways looks into Los Angeles relievers bringing the heat during their save chances last night, another bumpy save with David Bednar, and Craig Kimbrel’s decline continues with a hat tip for one of my Dad’s favorite movies, “The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Justin Martinez (ARI) took over a tied game in the bottom of the ninth. After issuing a one-out walk, a two-out single scored the runner on a fielding error in centerfield, handing Martinez his third loss. He finished two-thirds of an inning with two hits, an unearned run, and a walk while striking out two. 
  • Craig Kimbrel (BAL) allowed a walk and two home runs, resulting in three earned runs in the top of the seventh with his four-seam fastball averaging 92.7 m.p.h. 
  • Kenley Jansen (BOS) shut the door on his 23rd save with a clean bottom of the ninth and two strikeouts versus the Orioles’ 2-3-4 lineup pocket. He’s not allowed a baserunner through 4.2 innings in August while converting all three save chances. 
  • Héctor Neris (CHC) had been pitching well in the second half, but with one out and the bases loaded, he was called for a balk, then allowed a two-out, two-RBI triple, ceding a three-run lead. He was charged with his fifth blown save and his first since June 17. Tyson Miller emerged with his fourth win courtesy of a clean top of the tenth and a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. 
  • Chad Kuhl (CHW) held on for his first save during a one-run over the Astros. He gave up Jon Singleton’s solo shot in the bottom of the ninth and recorded two strikeouts in his appearance. Justin Anderson was awarded his first win. He logged 1.1 scoreless frames. 
  • Victor Vodnik (COL) finished a four-run win in a non-save capacity. He dealt with traffic. His outing began with a hitter reaching on an error, followed by a single. He induced a double play groundout, issued a walk, and induced a game-ending groundout for a scoreless ninth. 
  • Ben Joyce (LAA) recorded his second save. He took over in the eighth with two runners on and one out, inducing an inning-ending double play groundout. Against the top of Atlanta’s lineup in the ninth, he worked around Marcell Ozuna’s two-out single and recorded a strikeout for 1.2 scoreless frames. 
  • Michael Kopech (LAD) nailed down his first save with the Dodgers, firing a clean bottom of the ninth and striking out two while preserving a one-run win in St. Louis. He’s the 12th reliever with a save this season which ties a team record set in 2022. He’s also retired 25 of 27 batters faced since the trade deadline with 13 strikeouts. 
  • Joel Payamps (MIL) filled in capably for his closer, securing his sixth save with a clean top of the ninth and striking out one against the Guardians. 
  • Jhoan Durán (MIN) appeared for a third straight contest and notched his 18th save with a scoreless bottom of the ninth. He allowed a two-out infield hit but produced a game-ending strikeout, preserving the one-run win. 
  • Clay Holmes (NYY) nailed down his 26th save with a clean ninth and recorded two strikeouts while preserving a combined shutout in Detroit. 
  • Carlos Estevez (PHI) could not finish the combined shutout, giving up three consecutive hits in the top of the ninth, and suffered his fourth blown save. However, he collected his third win courtesy of a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. Estévez allowed three hits and two earned runs while striking out two on 27 pitches. 
  • David Bednar (PIT) allowed a run for a sixth straight appearance but held on for his 21st save during a two-run win. He gave up two hits and an earned run while recording three strikeouts against the Mariners. 
  • Andrew Kittredge (STL) suffered his sixth blown save. He let both inherited runners score on three hits, including a three-run home run by Kevin Kiermaier, ceding the lead in the top of the sixth without retiring a batter. 
  • Pete Fairbanks (TBR) not only lost a nine-game scoreless streak, but his stretch of 13 straight saves also ended on Corbin Carroll’s game-tying two-run home run in the top of the ninth. He collected his third win, benefiting from his team’s walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. 
  • Chad Green (TOR) took over a tied game in the bottom of the tenth and issued a walk, followed by Seiya Suzuki’s walk-off RBI single, resulting in his third loss. 
  • Kyle Finnegan (WSH) suffered his sixth loss on a walk-off in Philadelphia. After allowing two hits, he intentionally walked Kyle Schwarber before giving up Trea Turner’s walk-off single without recording an out. 

Vulture Save Option for Saturday, August 17

  • Griffin Jax (MIN): Durán has appeared in three straight; will Jax be next? It feels like Rocco Baldelli’s all in on pursuing the Guardians. If Jax gets today off, Jorge Alcala would be in line for the vulture save. 
  • Aroldis Chapman (PIT): Bednar threw 26 pitches on Friday, so the team may prefer giving him today off.

Vulture Save Stashes for Sunday, August 18

  • Paul Sewald (ARI): I’m not sure if he qualifies as a vulture, but if Martinez pitches again on Saturday, it will be consecutive outings, leaving the wily veteran in play for the save on Sunday. 
  • Jake Cousins (NYY): If Holmes, Weaver, and Kahnle pitch today, it will be back-to-back outings for all three, leaving Cousins atop the hierarchy on Sunday.

Three Takeaways

  • The Good: Michael Kopech (LAD) and Ben Joyce (LAA) recorded saves on Friday night. Kopech nailed down his first with the Dodgers and his tenth of the season with a clean ninth while striking out two. He averaged 99.9 m.p.h. with his four-seam fastball and threw his highest maximum speed this season, reaching 102.6 in this outing. Joyce took over with two runners on and one out in the eighth, inducing an inning-ending double play groundout. He finished his second save with 1.2 scoreless frames, though he only faced four hitters and recorded a strikeout. He averaged 102.7 m.p.h. with his four-seam fastball with a max velocity of 104 m.p.h. Per Statcast, he’s thrown 184 of his 199 four-seams this year at 100 m.p.h. or faster.
  • The Bad: For a sixth straight appearance, David Bednar allowed at least a run during his 21st save. He gave up Jorge Polanco’s solo home run leading off in the ninth and a single before retiring the next three batters via strikeout. For the season, his ERA (5.83) sits over two runs above his SIERA (3.80), but his WHIP sits at 1.37 after this contest. Since the All-Star break, he’s posted a 2.36 WHIP and a 5.9 K-BB percentage. Over his last six games, he’s converted three of five save chances with two losses, nine runs (eight earned), an 8:7 K:BB, a .387 batting average against, and a 1.190 on-base plus slugging percentage (OPS). He remains the team’s preferred save option, but stashing Aroldis Chapman for ancillary saves may not be a bad idea.
  • The Ugly: It’s tough seeing the recent results for the reliever with the fifth-most saves all-time, but Craig Kimbrel‘s struggles continued in the seventh inning against Boston last night. He allowed a walk and three earned runs while serving up two home runs without a strikeout. Of bigger concern, he averaged 92.7 m.p.h. with his four-seam fastball in this contest. He’s given up at least a run in five of his last eight games, allowing nine hits, ten runs (eight earned), nine walks against eight strikeouts, a .290 batting average against, and a 1.055 OPS. He’s only throwing strikes in 55.1 percent of his pitches in these contests, resulting in a 2.35 WHIP, 6.25 SIERA, and a 9.6 swinging strike percentage. He may need a reset or a stint on the injured list, but he should not be in lineups moving forward.

American League – Full Recaps for August 17

Boston Red SoxShutting the door on his 23rd save and the 443rd of his career, Kenley Jansen retired the side and recorded two strikeouts against the Orioles’ 2-3-4 lineup pocket. He threw 12 pitches (66.7 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (25 SwStr%). He’s not allowed a baserunner through four appearances in August and converted all three saves with seven strikeouts in 4.2 innings.

  • Chris Martin allowed three hits and an earned run during his 11th hold in the eighth.
  • Luis García gave up four hits and three earned runs in the seventh.
  • Lucas Sims retired all three batters and stranded a runner in the sixth for his 15th hold.
  • Bailey Horn stranded two runners in the fifth, issued a walk, and recorded two strikeouts in two-thirds scoreless, securing his third hold.

Hierarchy remains: Kenley Jansen | Chris Martin | Lucas Sims

Los Angeles Angels – Summoned with two runners on and one out in the top of the eighth, Ben Joyce induced an inning-ending double play groundout. He returned against the top of Atlanta’s lineup on the ninth, worked around Marcell Ozuna’s two-out single, and recorded a strikeout in 1.2 scoreless frames for his second save. He threw 14 pitches (71.4 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (21.4 SwStr%).

  • Matt Moore gave up a hit and a walk over one-third scoreless in the eighth, getting credit for his tenth hold.
  • Hunter Strickland navigated around two hits and recorded a strikeout in a scoreless seventh, securing his eighth hold.
  • Brock Burke collected his first win, logging 1.2 scoreless innings, issuing two walks, and striking out two.

Updated Hierarchy: Ben Joyce | Hunter Strickland | Matt Moore

Minnesota Twins Appearing for a third straight game, Jhoan Durán secured his 18th save with a scoreless ninth. He allowed a two-out infield single before producing a game-ending strikeout. He threw 13 pitches (9 strikes – 69.2 Strike%) and generated four whiffs (30.8 SwStr%). He’s converted three saves in August and been scoreless in five of six outings this month.

  • Griffin Jax locked down his 20th hold with a clean eighth and recorded two strikeouts.
  • Steven Okert notched his seventh hold, stranding a runner while retiring both batters in the seventh, one via strikeout.
  • Cole Sands escaped with his fourth hold, scattering three hits and striking out one in two-thirds scoreless.

Hierarchy remains: Jhoan Durán | Griffin Jax | Jorge Alcala

New York Yankees – Completing a combined shutout and his 26th save, Clay Holmes retired the side and recorded two strikeouts in Detroit. He threw 14 pitches (71.4 Strike%) and induced two whiffs (14.3 SwStr%). He’s converted three straight save chances and five of his last six.

  • Tommy Kahnle fired a clean eighth, securing his tenth hold.
  • Luke Weaver allowed a hit and struck out one in a scoreless seventh, notching his 19th hold.

Hierarchy remains: Clay Holmes | Luke Weaver | Jake Cousins

National League – Full Recaps for August 17

Arizona Diamondbacks – Taking over a tied game in the bottom of the ninth, Justin Martinez suffered his third loss. He issued a one-out walk and gave up a walk-off single, with a fielding error by Jake McCarthy scoring the walk-off run. Martinez finished his outing with a hit, an unearned run, and a walk while striking out two on 14 pitches (50 Strike%) with two whiffs (14.3 SwStr%).

  • Ryan Thompson was tagged with his seventh blown save. He allowed four hits, three earned runs, and a walk while striking out two in two-thirds of the eighth.
  • A.J. Puk notched his 11th hold, stranding a runner and retiring all three batters he faced, one via strikeout.

Hierarchy remains: Justin Martinez | A.J. Puk | Paul Sewald

Chicago Cubs – Benefiting from a walk-off rally, Tyson Miller notched his fourth win after retiring the side in the top of the tenth.

  • Héctor Neris suffered his fifth blown save and first since June 17 in the ninth. His outing began with consecutive singles, and a one-out hit loaded the bases. With one out, he was called for a balk, scoring a runner, before eventually recording a strikeout. However, with two outs, George Springer launched a game-tying two-RBI triple. Neris finished with four hits and three earned runs while striking out two. He had been scoreless in eight of his previous ten games in the second half.
  • Porter Hodge secured his eighth hold with a scoreless eighth inning, giving up a hit and striking out two.
  • Jorge López fired a clean seventh and struck out two for his eighth hold. This extended his scoreless streak to 14 games, and he’s posted 20 strikeouts against six walks with a 1.125 WHIP over his last 16 innings.
  • Drew Smyly worked a clean sixth while striking out the side for his sixth hold. 

Updated Hierarchy: Héctor Neris | Porter Hodge | Jorge López

Los Angeles Dodgers – Summoned with a one-run lead, Michael Kopech recorded his first save with his new team and his tenth of the season. He retired the side against the Cardinals’ 9-1-2 lineup pocket and recorded two strikeouts. This save tied a franchise record set in 2022, becoming the 12th pitcher with at least a save for Los Angeles this season. He threw 13 pitches (69.2 Strike%) and induced two whiffs (15.4 SwStr%). He’s allowed two baserunners of his 27 batters faced since the trade deadline with 13 strikeouts (48.1 K%).

  • Joe Kelly secured his 12th hold with a scoreless eighth, giving up a walk and striking out one.
  • Evan Phillips notched his fourth hold, walking one and striking out one.
  • Anthony Banda navigated around two hits and recorded a strikeout during thirds scoreless in the sixth for his eighth hold, though he let both inherited runners score.

Updated Hierarchy: *Daniel Hudson | *Michael Kopech | Evan Phillips

*= closer-by-committee

Milwaukee Brewers – Filling in capably during his closer’s day off, Joel Payamps nailed down his sixth save with a clean top of the ninth and recorded a strikeout. He threw 14 pitches (9 strikes – 64.3 Strike%) and induced one whiff against the Guardians’ 8-9-1 hitters.

  • Nick Mears notched his 12th hold, striking out both batters in the eighth.
  • Bryse Wilson gave up three hits, including two home runs and three earned runs, during one-third of the eighth.
  • Elvis Peguero worked a scoreless seventh, issuing a walk and striking out two.

Hierarchy remains: Devin Williams | Joel Payamps | Bryan Hudson

Philadelphia Phillies – Suffering his first blown save since April 16, Carlos Estévez allowed an opposite-field, bloop, and José Tena’s RBI single before recording an out. The game-tying run scored on a fielder’s choice RBI groundout. Estévez bore down, recording consecutive strikeouts, keeping the game tied. He collected his second win courtesy of a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. Of more considerable concern, he’s allowed a run in four of his first eight appearances since the trade deadline while converting one save.

  • Jeff Hoffman stranded a runner and secured his 17th hold, retiring both batters in the eighth, one via strikeout.
  • Matt Strahm stranded two runners in the seventh and left with a runner on in the eighth, resulting in his 12th hold.

Hierarchy remains: Carlos Estévez | Jeff Hoffman | Matt Strahm

Pittsburgh Pirates – It was difficult, but David Bednar held on for his 21st save, snapping his team’s 10-game losing streak. However, he did allow Jorge Polanco’s solo home run, extending his streak of giving up a run to six straight appearances. Bednar finished with two hits, an earned run, and three strikeouts in this outing. He threw 26 pitches (15 strikes – 57.7 Strike%) and produced six whiffs (23.1 SwStr%). He’s converted three of his last five save opportunities.

  • Aroldis Chapman fired a clean eighth and recorded a strikeout for his 19th hold.
  • Kyle Nicolas tossed a clean seventh, securing his fifth hold. 

Hierarchy remains: David Bednar | Aroldis Chapman | Kyle Nicolas

Thanks for being a part of the Closer Monkey community. Stay safe and be well.

Statistical Credits:

Fangraphs.com

Baseball-Reference.com

Statcast

Monkey Bytes: August 16

Although small in stature, Thursday’s seven-game slate featured multiple high-leverage events of interest. Oakland used Mason Miller for a two-inning save against the Mets with an off day looming on Friday. Devin Williams appeared on consecutive days versus the Dodgers and recorded his third save of the season.

Four relievers recorded wins and four secured saves. Our condensed game recaps cover these events.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Jason Foley (DET) notched his first save since July 10 with a clean top of the ninth, preserving a one-run win and a sweep of Seattle. Shelby Miller logged 1.1 clean frames and collected his sixth win. 
  • Daniel Hudson (LAD) entered with a one-run lead against the Brewers’ 2-3-4 lineup pocket in the bottom of the eighth but allowed three hits, three earned runs, and a walk. He suffered his second loss and a seventh blown save. 
  • Devin Williams (MIL) shut the door on his third save with a clean top of the ninth and recorded two strikeouts. He also appeared on consecutive days for the first time this season. Since his activation, he racked up 11 strikeouts of 22 batters faced. 
  • Jhoan Durán (MIN) recorded his 17th save, preserving a one-run win in Texas. He retired the side, two via strikeout. Jorge Alcala collected his third win, tossing a clean eighth and striking out one.
  • Reed Garrett (NYM) suffered his fourth loss and a fourth blown save. He gave up three hits, two earned runs, and a walk in the top of the sixth against Oakland, ceding the lead. 
  • Mason Miller (OAK) logged two scoreless frames while issuing a walk and striking out three for his 18th save, preserving a one-run win over the Mets.
  • Andrés Muńoz (SEA) took over with a runner on third and two outs but gave up Javier Báez’s go-ahead two-run home run, resulting in his fourth loss and a fourth blown save. This appearance snapped his 12.1-inning hitless streak and his 14.1-inning scoreless inning streak.
  • Kirby Yates (TEX) appeared on back-to-back days, and for the third time in four games, he suffered his second loss. He allowed two one-out walks, threw a wild pitch, and gave up a go-ahead sacrifice fly in the top of the ninth against Minnesota.

Vulture Save Options for Friday, August 16

  • Griffin Jax (MIN): Durán has pitched on consecutive days. 
  • Joel Payamps (MIL): Devin Williams logged his first back-to-back appearances on Wednesday and Thursday. 
  • David Robertson (TEX): Yates has appeared in on consecutive days and in three of the last four. 
  • Austin Voth (SEA): Muñoz and García have pitched the previous two days. 

Vulture Save Options for Saturday, August 17

Usage patterns will determine this on Friday. It isn’t easy, though, with 16 teams off on Thursday and resetting their bullpens.

Three Takeaways

  • D-Will goes back-to-back: Perhaps his seven-pitch outing on Wednesday played a part in his second straight save chance on Thursday, but Devin Williams recorded outings on consecutive days for the first time this season, securing his second save in many days against the Dodgers top of the lineup. Across the two appearances, he threw 23 pitches with 16 strikes (69.6 Strike%) and induced three whiffs (13 SwStr%). How he responds after this usage pattern likely determines his workload management moving forward, but it’s encouraging. Trevor Megill worked a scoreless outing in his first rehab contest and could return soon, beefing up the Brewers’ leverage ladder.
  • Dodgers Part 1: In this column for The Los Angeles Times, Mike DiGiovanna discusses the “trust tree,” as Dave Roberts references his high-leverage usage patterns. Michael Kopech and Daniel Hudson were assigned the heart-of-the-order lineup lanes in yesterday’s game against Milwaukee. Kopech recorded a scoreless inning versus the 3-4-5 hitters, but Hudson suffered a loss and a blown save, with some bad luck on comeback contact. Los Angeles relievers have accrued the fifth most innings this season and face an upcoming roster crunch with Ryan Brasier’s pending activation on Saturday and Blake Treinen returning next week. Only Michael Grove and Brent Honeywell have been logging multiple-inning outings, with one on the block for a roster spot. The team may cut Joe Kelly when Brasier returns in St. Louis, but keeping relievers fresh when using four an outing will be challenging.
  • Dodgers Part 2: Acknowledging Michael Kopech has performed well since his acquisition, could he enter the conversation for saves soon? In a separate column for The Los Angeles Times, DiGiovanna broached this with Roberts. The cagey manager responded, “We’ll see,” and “We’ve got time.” With a two-game lead for the National League West and a game-and-a-half lead for a first-round bye, the runway may be shorter than he’s used to. Nothing definitive for fantasy managers other than Kopech’s 7.1 scoreless frames with the Dodgers while allowing a hit and a walk with 11 strikeouts of 24 batters faced (41.7 K-BB percentage, 0.27 WHIP). Those with roster space can stash him for saves if room allows or be ready to pounce if he gets an opportunity this weekend in St. Louis.

American League – Full Recaps, August 15

Detroit Tigers – Capping a comeback rally, Jason Foley secured his 16th save with a clean ninth and recorded a strikeout. He threw 14 pitches (9 strikes – 64.3 Strike%) and induced one whiff against the Mariners’ 6-7-8 lineup pocket. This marks his first save since July 10.

  • Shelby Miller collected his sixth win. He stranded a runner in the seventh and retired all four batters, one via strikeout during his appearance.
  • Kenta Maeda was the “bulk follower.” He logged 5.2 innings, giving up a hit and a walk while striking out five.

Hierarchy remains: *Tyler Holton | *Jason Foley | Shelby Miller

*= closer-by-committee

Minnesota Twins Taking over in the ninth with a one-run lead, Jhoan Durán retired the Rangers’ 9-1-2 hitters in order, two via strikeout while recording his 17th save. He threw 18 pitches (66.7 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (16.7 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in four of five outings in August with two saves.

  • Jorge Alcala collected his third win. He fired a clean bottom of the eighth and struck out one ahead of his team’s go-ahead rally in the top of the ninth.
  • Griffin Jax allowed a hit and recorded a strikeout in a scoreless seventh, keeping the game tied.

Hierarchy remains: Jhoan Durán | Griffin Jax | Jorge Alcala

Oakland A’s – Preserving a one-run win, Mason Miller logged two scoreless frames against the Mets. After striking out the side in the eighth, he hit a batter and issued a two-out walk before inducing a game-ending lineout by Francisco Alvarez, securing his 18th save. Miller threw 39 pitches (25 strikes – 64.1 Strike%) and generated nine whiffs (23.1 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless through four appearances in August while converting all three save opportunities.

  • Scott Alexander navigated around two hits and recorded a strikeout in a scoreless seventh for his eighth hold.
  • Tyler Ferguson collected his first win. He worked two scoreless innings, allowing a hit and a walk while striking out two.

Hierarchy remains: Mason Miller | Tyler Ferguson | Austin Adams

National League – Full Recaps, August 15

Los Angeles DodgersDaniel Hudson took over with a one-run lead in the bottom of the eighth against Milwaukee’s 2-3-4 lineup pocket. He allowed a lead-off double, a walk, and a ricocheted infield single, loading the bases. Willy Adames produced an RBI single and consecutive runs scored on a fielder’s choice groundouts, handing Hudson his second loss and a seventh blown save. He allowed three hits, three earned runs, and a walk during his two-thirds of the eighth. He’s given up at least a run in three of his last four games.

  • Anthony Banda stranded a runner and retired his only batter in the eighth.
  • Alex Vesia issued two walks leading off the seventh, then retired the next three batters for his tenth hold.
  • Michael Kopech fired a clean sixth and recorded a strikeout for his fifth hold. He remains scoreless as a Dodger with 11 strikeouts against one walk across 7.1 innings.

Hierarchy remains (for now): *Daniel Hudson | *Michael Kopech | *Evan Phillips

*= closer-by-committee

Milwaukee Brewers – Making his first appearance on consecutive days, Devin Williams shut the door on his third save with a clean ninth and striking out two. He threw 16 pitches (9 strikes – 56.3 Strike%) and induced two whiffs. He’s recorded a save in three straight games and been scoreless in five of six with 11 strikeouts of 22 batters faced.

  • Bryan Hudson collected his fifth win. He logged two clean frames, recorded two strikeouts, and stranded a runner in the seventh.
  • Elvis Peguero let one of two inherited runners score, yielding two hits and retiring one batter between the sixth and seventh innings.

Updated Hierarchy: Devin Williams | Joel Payamps | Bryan Hudson

New York MetsPitching in a one-run loss, Edwin Díaz tossed a scoreless top of the ninth, issuing a walk and striking out two. He threw 20 pitches (60 Strike%) and induced two whiffs.

  • Ryne Stanek worked a scoreless eighth, walking one and striking out one.
  • Phil Maton escaped with a scoreless seventh despite allowing a hit and two walks.
  • Reed Garrett suffered his fourth loss and a fourth blown save, giving up three hits, two earned runs, and a walk while striking out one in the sixth.
  • Huascar Brazobán gave up a hit, an earned run, and two walks with one strikeout in the fifth.

Hierarchy Remains: Edwin Díaz | Phil Maton | Reed Garrett

Thanks for being a part of the Closer Monkey community. Stay safe and be well.

Statistical Credits:

Fangraphs.com

Baseball-Reference.com

Statcast

Monkey Bytes: August 15

Wednesday’s split slate featured 15 games, with seven relievers recording a win while five secured a save. Michael Tonkin (NYY) notched the third three-inning save in the last two days, closing out an eight-run win over the White Sox. The slate also included three extra-inning games, with Detroit, Houston, and Texas emerging victorious.

For those seeking saves, Seranthony Domínguez (BAL) and Lucas Erceg (KCR) nailed down their second saves with their new teams, which will be covered in our Three Takeaways. First, our condensed recaps cover yesterday’s high-leverage events of interest.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Seranthony Domínguez (BAL) navigated around a lead-off walk with a strikeout and a game-ending double play groundout for his third save, second with the Orioles. 
  • Zack Kelly (BOS) suffered his second loss. He allowed Jonah Heim’s go-ahead two-run home run in the top of the tenth. Josh Winckowski was tagged with his first blown save, serving up a three-run home run in the ninth. 
  • Sam Moll (CIN) retired the side in the third inning as the first reliever out of the bullpen and collected his third win as a result. 
  • Tyler Holton (DET) retired the side and recorded a strikeout in the top of the tenth. He collected his fifth win courtesy of a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. 
  • Josh Hader (HOU) worked two clean frames and recorded his fifth win. He took over a tied game and preserved his win while striking out three. This marks his fourth two-inning outing this season, extending his scoreless streak to eight games. 
  • Lucas Erceg (KCR) stranded two runners in the eighth and logged 1.1 clean frames while securing his fifth save, second with the Royals.
  • Brent Honeywell (LAD) suffered his first loss, hitting a batter, allowing an unearned run, and recording two strikeouts over two innings.
  • Devin Williams (MIL) secured his second save against the top of the Dodgers’ lineup with a clean ninth and a strikeout on seven pitches, preserving a one-run win. Joel Payamps retired all four batters and collected his third win. 
  • Jhoan Durán (MIN) made his third appearance since August 9 in the seventh inning against the top of the Royals’ lineup. He allowed two hits and an earned run while striking out one on 22 pitches. 
  • Michael Tonkin (NYY) recorded his second save, logging three scoreless frames during a lopsided win over the White Sox. He gave up two hits and struck out two. Tim Hill collected his fourth win after retiring the side in the sixth and his teammates’ three-run rally in the top of the seventh. 
  • José Ruiz (PHI) took over at the top of the fifth and was awarded his third win. He stranded two runners and retired both batters, one via strikeout. 
  • Collin Snider (SEA) gave up a walk and Akil Baddoo’s walk-off RBI double at the bottom of the tenth, resulting in his second loss. Yimi García suffered his second blown save, allowing a game-tying Kerry Carpenter two-run home run in the eighth. 
  • Garrett Cleavinger (TBR) allowed a two-out walk followed by a go-ahead RBI single at the top of the tenth, resulting in his third loss. 
  • Kirby Yates (TEX) closed out a two-run extra-inning win in Boston with a clean tenth while recording one strikeout for his 21st save. Matt Festa earned his first win, logging 1.1 clean frames.

Vulture Save Option, Thursday, August 15

  • Joel Payamps (MIL): Until Devin Williams appears on consecutive days we must plan on a vulture save the day after he works, though the closer intimates his availability today in this postgame interview.
  • Matt Strahm (PHI): Estévez and Hoffman have pitched in back-to-back games.

Vulture Save Option, Friday, August 16

  • Austin Voth (SEA): If Muñoz and García pitch today, it will be two straight outings.

Three Takeaways

  • Seranthony secures his second consecutive save: With the bullpen fully rested, Brandon Hyde summoned Seranthony Domínguez with a three-run lead in the top of the ninth against the Nationals. Despite allowing a lead-off walk, Domínguez notched his second save with the Orioles, and third this season, with a scoreless ninth while striking out one. He’s been scoreless in eight out of his nine games since his acquisition, with 10 strikeouts versus three walks (21.2 K-BB%) and a 0.78 WHIP. He’s also recorded a game finished in four of his last five games with saves in each of the last two. He may not be the closer by designation, but he’s being deployed like one.
  • Erceg records his second save with KC, but: In the seventh inning, Lucas Erceg was throwing in case he was needed. However, he was not brought into the contest until the eighth, with runners on the corners and two outs. He stranded both runners and retired the side in order in the ninth for his second save with the Royals and fifth this season. With Hunter Harvey on the injured list, Erceg will continue receiving save chances. Still, it’s possible he will revert into the highest-leveraged reliever (HLR) next week or even in games this weekend. This does not mean fantasy managers cannot reap the rewards of his upcoming save chances; they must not be on tilt if he’s called upon in the seventh or eighth inning with the game on the line based on his usage patterns since being acquired. The good news is he’s been scoreless through his first seven games with Kansas City, securing two saves and five holds with eight strikeouts against zero walks (30.8 K-BB%) and a 0.39 WHIP through 7.2 innings.
  • Hader and multi-inning outings: Before signing his contract with the Astros, Josh Hader made his last multiple-inning outing on August 14, 2020. He worked in one inning or less in the next 193 outings through the end of last season. He was upset about losing money in arbitration hearings when his save total was depressed by recording four or more outs, making him less available. During his first season with Houston, he’s already logged five appearances requiring four or more outs, including yesterday’s two-innings against Tampa Bay. Through 54.1 innings this year, he ranks second in strikeouts by relievers (82) and he’s averaging almost four batters faced per outing with the increased workload. This must be accounted for in next year’s projections since he’s willing to appear in multiple-inning outings after receiving his five-year contract.

American League – Full Game Recaps, August 14

Baltimore Orioles – After issuing a lead-off walk during a 10-pitch at-bat, Seranthony Domínguez bore down, recording a strikeout of Luis García Jr. and inducing a game-ending double play groundout for his third save, second with the Orioles. He threw 19 pitches (12 strikes – 63.2 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (15.8 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in eight of his last nine appearances since July 26, with 10 strikeouts versus three walks.

  • Cionel Pérez notched his 17th hold with a clean eighth and recorded a strikeout.
  • Yennier Cano retired the side for his 27th hold on 10 pitches (70 Strike%).

Updated Hierarchy: Seranthony Domínguez | Yennier Cano | Cionel Pérez

Detroit Tigers – Benefiting from a walk-off rally, Tyler Holton collected his fifth win. He retired the side and recorded two strikeouts in a clean top of the tenth against Seattle’s 2-3-4 hitters on 13 pitches (10 strikes – 76.9 Strike%) with three whiffs (23.1 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in nine of ten games in the second half with 14 strikeouts against two walks with this win and two saves.

  • Jason Foley worked a clean ninth and struck out one, keeping the game tied.
  • Shelby Miller stranded the bases-loaded in the eighth while retiring both batters, one via strikeout.
  • Will Vest gave up a hit, an earned run, a walk, and a hit batter over one-third of the eighth.

Updated Hierarchy: *Tyler Holton | *Jason Foley | Shelby Miller

*= closer-by-committee

Houston Astros – Logging his fourth two-inning outing this season, Josh Hader collected his fifth win during a one-run extra-inning contest in Tampa Bay. Hader retired all six batters, three on strikeouts. He threw 29 pitches (21 strikes – 72.4 Strike%) and generated a season-high 10 whiffs (34.5 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in his last eight games while converting six saves with 10 strikeouts versus three walks over 8.1 innings.

  • Bryan Abreu suffered his fourth blown save. He issued a walk, gave up two stolen bases, and a game-tying fielder’s choice groundout, scoring an earned run in the eighth.
  • Tayler Scott stranded two runners and retired both batters, one via strikeout, for his sixth hold in the seventh.
  • Kaleb Ort was credited with his first hold despite recording one out and walking two in the seventh.

Hierarchy remains: Josh Hader | Ryan Pressly | Bryan Abreu

Kansas City Royals – Summoned with two runners and two outs in the bottom of the eighth, Lucas Erceg stranded both while retiring all four batters for his fifth save, second with the Royals. He threw 13 pitches (10 strikes – 76.9 Strike%) and induced two whiffs (15.4 SwStr%). He has remained scoreless since the trade deadline, appearing in seven games spanning 7.2 innings with eight strikeouts versus zero walks.

  • Sam Long was credited with his fourth hold, recording two outs and allowing two hits before his removal in the eighth.

Hierarchy remains: *Lucas Erceg | *Kris Bubic | James McArthur

*=  closer-by-committee

National League – Full Game Recaps, August 14

Milwaukee Brewers – Matched up with the top of the Dodger’s lineup with a one-run lead, Devin Williams turned in a dominant performance, retiring the side and recording a strikeout for his second save. He threw seven pitches, all strikes, and induced one whiff (14.3 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in four out of five games this season, with nine strikeouts versus one walk.

  • Joel Payamps collected his third win, retiring all four batters. He also stranded two runners in the seventh, keeping the game tied before a go-ahead rally in the bottom of the inning.
  • Jared Koenig suffered his second blown save, giving up three hits and an earned run while recording both outs via strikeout in the seventh.
  • Nick Mears worked 1.1 scoreless frames, yielding a hit and striking out one for his 11th hold.

Hierarchy Remains: Devin Williams | Joel Payamps | Elvis Peguero

Philadelphia Phillies – Preserving a four-run win, Carlos Estévez retired the side and recorded two strikeouts against the Marlins. He threw 15 pitches (60 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (20 SwStr%).

  • José Alvarado worked around a hit and a walk for a scoreless eighth.
  • Jeff Hoffman gave up a hit and struck out three in a scoreless seventh, notching his 16th hold.
  • Matt Strahm fired a clean sixth, striking out one for his 11th hold.
  • José Ruiz collected his third win. He stranded a runner while retiring both batters, one via strikeout, in the top of the fifth.

Hierarchy remains: Carlos Estévez | Jeff Hoffman | Matt Strahm

Thanks for being a part of the Closer Monkey community. Stay safe and be well.

Statistical Credits:

Fangraphs.com

Baseball-Reference.com

Statcast