Monkey Bytes: August 4

Saturday’s full slate produced eight reliever wins and 10 saves, including the first of Ben Joyce‘s career. It also provided potential hierarchy changes in Baltimore and Kansas City. There were two extra-inning contests, both won by the home team (Detroit and Seattle). Our condensed recaps cover the high-leverage events of interest.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Pierce Johnson (ATL) took over a tied game in the seventh. He gave up two hits, including the go-ahead Jesús Sánchez RBI double, resulting in his third loss. 
  • Yennier Cano (BAL) secured his fifth save with a clean bottom of the ninth and one strikeout against Cleveland. 
  • Héctor Neris (CHC) allowed a lead-off Tommy Pham triple and a go-ahead sacrifice fly, resulting in his fourth loss. 
  • Alexis Díaz (CIN) gave up a solo home run and finished a two-run win for his 22nd save. 
  • Peter Lambert (COL) allowed three hits and two earned runs in San Diego, resulting in his fifth loss. 
  • Jason Foley (DET) let the “place” runner score in the 10th and 11th innings but collected his third win courtesy of a walk-off rally in the bottom of the 11th. 
  • James McArthur (KCR) was tagged with his fifth loss and sixth blown save. In the bottom of the 11th, he allowed a lead-off triple, issued an intentional walk, induced a double play grounder, and gave up a walk-off Wenceel Pérez RBI single. It should be noted he was passed over for the save chance in the ninth. 
  • Ben Joyce (LAA) took over with a runner on third and two outs in the eighth. He stranded the runner and preserved the one-run win while retiring all four batters, including a game-ending strikeout of J.D. Martinez on a 104.7 m.p.h. fastball for his first career save.
  • Calvin Faucher (MIA) rebounded from Friday’s loss with his first save, preserving a one-run win in Atlanta. He worked around a one-out hit and recorded two strikeouts. This represents his second career save. 
  • Jhoan Durán (MIN) tossed a clean top of the ninth, finishing a four-run win over the White Sox. 
  • Huascar Brazobán (NYM) entered with a two-run lead in the seventh and suffered his third loss and fourth blown save. With two outs, he allowed a hit, issued a walk, and gave up Zach Neto’s go-ahead three-run home run.
  • Clay Holmes (NYY) recorded a fantasy manager’s favorite, a one-out save. Summoned with the bases loaded and two outs, he produced a game-ending George Springer strikeout for his 23rd save. 
  • Carlos Estévez (PHI) worked a clean bottom of the ninth but suffered his fourth loss on a walk-off walk in the tenth. He opened the tenth with an intentional walk (Cal Raleigh), recorded two outs, hit a batter, and forced in the winning run on a Mitch Haniger walk. This represents the first time he has allowed multiple walks in 37 appearances this year.
  • David Bednar (PIT) held on for his 20th save. He allowed two hits, an earned run, and a walk while striking out two during a two-run win over the Diamondbacks. 
  • Robert Suarez (SDP) shut the door on his 24th save with a clean ninth and one strikeout while preserving a one-run win over Colorado. 
  • Collin Snider (SEA) collected his second win. He recorded a scoreless top of the tenth, allowing a walk and striking out two, then benefited from his team’s walk-off rally.
  • Ryan Helsley (STL) secured his MLB-leading 34th save with a clean bottom of the ninth, capping his team’s late-innings rally. 
  • Pete Fairbanks (TBR) retired the side during a five-run win in Houston. 
  • Kirby Yates (TEX) stranded two runners in the eighth and worked a scoreless ninth for his 20th save. He finished 1.1 scoreless innings, giving up two hits and striking out two. 
  • Kyle Finnegan (WSH) set a career-high with his 29th save. He navigated around two hits for a scoreless ninth and recorded a strikeout during a two-run win against the Brewers.

Three Takeaways

  • Is Cano taking over?: With Craig Kimbrel logging lower leverage outings, Yennier Cano may be staking his claim on the preferred save share despite past struggles in the ninth inning. He closed out a win in Cleveland and has tweaked his arsenal, throwing more four-seam fastballs since June. Over his last 17.2 innings, he’s recorded 21 strikeouts against five walks (18.6 K-BB percentage) with a 1.13 WHIP and 2.81 SIERA.
  • Royals unrest in the bullpen hierarchy: Hunter Harvey and James McArthur suffered blown saves during an extra-inning loss in Detroit. More importantly, after Lucas Erceg worked a clean eighth inning, McArthur was passed over in the ninth for Harvey. But should Erceg be the most trusted option? Using the start of July as our starting point, Erceg has appeared in 12 games, spanning 10 innings with a loss, a save, five holds, a 10:2 K:BB (20 K-BB percentage), a 0.90 WHIP, and a 2.98 SIERA. Harvey has a loss, two blown saves, five holds, a 9:4 K:BB (9.6 K-BB percentage), 1.90 WHIP, and a 4.48 SIERA his last 10 innings, allowing at least a run in consecutive outings and in three of five with the Royals. McArthur has made 10 appearances since the start of July, posting two losses and four saves in six opportunities. He’s yielded a run in five games and multiple runs in three with a 1.84 WHIP, 6.1 K-BB percentage, and a 4.84 SIERA.
  • Is Faucher settling in?: Despite suffering a blown save on Friday, Miami used Calvin Faucher in the ninth on Saturday, and he responded with his first save of the season and the second of his career. Our hierarchy still shows Andrew Nardi as a save share. He faced the Matt Olson lineup lane in the eighth, but roles may have been reversed if it were the ninth.

Vulture Save Options for Sunday, August 4

  • George Soriano (MIA): His team’s hierarchy have all appeared in two straight games, leaving options thin for a potential save chance in Atlanta.
  • Nate Pearson (CHC): Neris has pitched in back-to-back games, and Hodge’s blown save yesterday may provide the newly acquired reliever a save chance this afternoon.

Vulture Save Options for Monday, August 5

  • Fernando Cruz (CIN): If Díaz works again today, it will be consecutive appearances.
  • Andrew Kittredge (STL): If Helsley pitches this afternoon, it will be back-to-back outings and three in the last four.

American League – August 3 Game Recaps

Baltimore Orioles – Taking over with a three-run lead, Yennier Cano locked down his fifth save with a clean ninth and one strikeout. He made an athletic play on Andrés Giménez’s groundout leading off the inning and threw eight pitches (62.5 Strike%) with one whiff. He’s recorded a save in two of his last three outings and been scoreless in eight of his previous nine.

  • Seranthony Domínguez let an inherited runner score on a José Ramírez home run in the eighth. Domínguez finished with a hit and an earned run while striking out one during his combined inning of relief.
  • Cionel Pérez was credited his 14th hold, allowing an earned run on a walk and striking out two over two-thirds innings.

Adjusted Hierarchy: Yennier Cano | Seranthony Domínguez | Craig Kimbrel

Detroit Tigers – Benefiting from a walk-off, Jason Foley collected his third win. He allowed both “place” runners to score in the 10th and 11th innings, allowing a hit and striking out one. He threw 23 pitches (16 strikes – 69.6 Strike%) and induced two whiffs.

  • Bryan Sammons logged 1.1 clean frames and stranded two runners in the eighth.
  • Will Vest gave up two hits in a combined, scoreless inning.
  • Kenta Maeda worked 3.2 innings, giving up six hits, three earned runs, and a walk while striking out four.

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

*= closer-by-committee

Kansas City Royals – With a one-run lead in the bottom of the 11th, James McArthur suffered his fifth loss and sixth blown save. He gave up a game-tying Parker Meadows triple, intentionally walked Javier Báez, induced a double play groundout, and then allowed a walk-off Wenceel Pérez single. Although he recorded a save on July 29, he was passed over in this contest, and another blown save signals a reduced leverage role.

  • Kris Bubic was tagged with his first blown save, giving up a hit, an unearned run, and a walk while striking out one in the tenth.
  • Hunter Harvey received the save chance with a two-run lead in the eighth but served up a lead-off home run, a double, and a game-tying RBI double by Báez, resulting in his third blown save.
  • Lucas Erceg retired the side and recorded a strikeout for his 15th hold.

Updated Hierarchy: *Hunter Harvey | *Lucas Erceg | *James McArthur

*= closer-by-committee

Los Angeles Angels – On August 3, Ben Joyce recorded his first career save. He took over with a runner on third and two outs in the eighth, stranding him on a groundout. Facing the top of the Mets’ lineup in the ninth, he retired the side, including a game-ending strikeout of J.D. Martinez at 104.7 m.p.h. with his four-seam fastball. Joyce threw 15 pitches (13 strikes – 86.7 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (20 SwStr%). This extended his scoreless streak to 18 games, spanning 22.2 innings with 20 strikeouts versus 10 walks.

  • Matt Moore collected his fifth win, recording two outs and allowing a hit over two-thirds scoreless in the eighth.
  • Hunter Strickland suffered his third blown save. He gave up a go-ahead grand slam by Martinez, scoring two inherited runners and putting two earned on his ledger.

Updated Hierarchy: Ben Joyce | Hunter Strickland | Hans Crouse

New York Yankees – Summoned with the bases-loaded and two outs, Clay Holmes recorded a game-ending strikeout by George Springer for his 23rd save, throwing four pitches (75 Strike%) with three whiffs.

  • Mark Leiter Jr. allowed three hits during two-thirds of the ninth before being removed.
  • Tommy Kahnle tossed a scoreless eighth, giving up a hit and striking out one.
  • Luke Weaver notched his 17th hold with a scoreless seventh. He issued a walk and struck out two. 

Hierarchy remains: Clay Holmes | Luke Weaver | Mark Leiter Jr.

Seattle Mariners – Entering at the top of the tenth, Collin Snider collected his second win courtesy of a walk-off rally at the bottom of the inning. He issued a walk and recorded two strikeouts, keeping the game tied versus the Phillies.

  • Andrés Muñoz tossed a scoreless ninth, allowing a walk and striking out two on 20 pitches (60 Strike%) with two whiffs while facing the top of the lineup.
  • Austin Voth retired the side and struck out two in the eighth.
  • Yimi García navigated around two walks and recorded a strikeout in a scoreless seventh.
  • JT Chargois logged 1.1 clean frames, striking out one.

Updated Hierarchy: Andrés Muñoz | Yimi García | Austin Voth

Texas Rangers – Pressed into action with two runners on and two outs in the top of the eighth, Kirby Yates allowed a hit but no runs with an inning-ending strikeout of Jarren Duran. Yates returned for the ninth, working around a lead-off infield single by retiring the next three batters, securing his 20th save. He finished with two hits and two strikeouts over 1.1 scoreless frames on 32 pitches (20 strikes – 62.5 Strike%) with five whiffs (15.6 SwStr%).

  • David Robertson allowed two hits and struck out two during 1.1 scoreless frames for his 23rd hold.
  • Josh Sborz gave up two hits and an earned run while striking out one over a combined inning for his eighth hold.
  • Andrew Chafin retired all three batters and stranded two runners for his ninth hold.
  • José Leclerc was awarded his fifth win. He tossed two-thirds scoreless, yielding a hit and two walks while striking out two.

Hierarchy remains: Kirby Yates | David Robertson | Andrew Chafin

National League – August 3 Game Recaps

Chicago Cubs – Taking over a tied game in the top of the ninth, Héctor Neris allowed a Tommy Pham lead-off triple and a Lars Nootbar sacrifice fly, resulting in his fourth loss.

  • Porter Hodge was tagged with his second blown save. It started with a one-out walk and a hit-by-pitch. With two outs, an infield single was aided by a throwing error, scoring a run. Nolan Arenado followed with a blooped single between three fielders, plating the tying runs. Hodge finished with two hits, three runs (two earned), and a walk while striking out one in the eighth.
  • Drew Smyly secured his fourth hold with a clean seventh, striking out one.

Hierarchy remains: Héctor Neris | Porter Hodge | Tyson Miller

Cincinnati RedsAlthough he allowed a Matt Chapman solo home run in the top of the ninth, Alexis Díaz posted his 22nd save during his team’s two-run win. He threw 13 pitches (11 strikes – 84.6 Strike%) and induced one whiff. He’s converted three straight saves in his last three appearances.

Hierarchy remains: Alexis Díaz | Fernando Cruz | Sam Moll

Miami Marlins – One day removed from suffering his first blown save, Calvin Faucher secured his first save of 2024 and second of his career, preserving a one-run win in Atlanta. He worked around a one-out Jarred Kelenic single with consecutive strikeouts. Faucher threw 18 pitches (13 strikes – 72.2 Strike%) and induced two whiffs.

  • Andrew Nardi fired a clean eighth, recording two strikeouts versus the 4-5-6 lineup pocket on 13 pitches (9 strikes – 69.2 Strike%) and produced two whiffs.
  • Anthony Bender retired the side in the seventh for his 11th hold.
  • Declan Cronin collected his third win. He logged two scoreless innings, allowing a hit and a walk while striking out two.

Hierarchy remains: *Calvin Faucher | *Andrew Nardi | Anthony Bender

Philadelphia Phillies – In an extended outing, Carlos Estévez retired the side in the ninth, keeping the game tied, but he suffered his fourth loss on a walk-off walk in the bottom of the tenth. During the tenth, he issued Cal Raleigh an intentional walk and induced a flyout and a strikeout. But with two outs, he hit a batter and walked Mitch Haniger, forcing in the game-winning run. Estévez threw 28 pitches (16 strikes—57.1 Strike%).

  • José Alvarado worked a scoreless eighth, allowing a hit and striking out one.
  • Matt Strahm fired a clean seventh, striking out the side.
  • Jeff Hoffman gave up four hits, four earned runs, and a walk while striking out two in the sixth, resulting in his fourth blown save.

Hierarchy remains: Carlos Estévez | Jeff Hoffman | José Alvarado

Pittsburgh Pirates – Hanging on for his 20th save, David Bednar allowed an earned run in the top of the ninth but induced a game-ending flyout with runners on the corners, preserving a two-run win. After recording consecutive strikeouts, he allowed a double, walked Corbin Carroll, and gave up Ketel Marte’s RBI single. He threw 23 pitches (14 strikes – 60.9 Strike%) and produced four whiffs. This marked his second straight save, giving up multiple hits and a run.

  • Aroldis Chapman recorded his 16th hold with a clean eighth, striking out the side.
  • Kyle Nicolas collected his second win, allowing a hit and striking out one over two scoreless frames.

Updated Hierarchy: David Bednar | Aroldis Chapman | Kyle Nicolas

San Diego Padres Shutting the door on his 24th save, Robert Suarez preserved a one-run with a clean ninth and recorded one strikeout. He threw nine pitches (77.8 Strike%) and produced two whiffs (22.2 SwStr%). This extended his scoreless streak to seven games, during which he’s posted ten strikeouts against one walk.

  • Tanner Scott gave up a Jacob Stallings solo home run and struck out two for his second hold.
  • Jason Adam collected his fifth win, tossing a scoreless seventh. He allowed a hit and recorded a strikeout.

Hierarchy remains: Robert Suarez | Tanner Scott | Jason Adam

Washington Nationals – Despite letting both inherited runners score in the top of the eighth on a Gary Sánchez single, Kyle Finnegan retired four of five hitters for his career-high, 29th save. He threw 18 pitches (13 strikes – 72.2 Strike%) and induced one whiff. He had allowed at least a run his two previous appearances and though scoreless in this outing, has given up eight by his last 15 batters faced.

Hierarchy remains: Kyle Finnegan | Robert Garcia | Derek Law

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Monkey Bytes: August 3

Friday night’s slate featured some confusing usage patterns, fueling more questions than answers in the remaining unsettled bullpen hierarchies following the trade deadline. Six relievers recorded a win, and there were six saves, including yesterday’s vulture recommendation, Joe Jiménez. Our Closer CliffsNotes recaps the high-leverage events of interest.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Ryan Thompson (ARI) held on for his second save. He allowed a lead-off Oneil Cruz single, a stolen base, and a one-out Rowdy Tellez RBI single before inducing consecutive groundouts, preserving a one-run win. After tossing a clean seventh, Dylan Floro was awarded his fourth win, the first with his new team. 
  • Joe Jiménez (ATL) navigated around a hit and a walk while striking out three in a scoreless ninth for his third save. Aaron Bummer collected his third win, working a scoreless top of the eighth, yielding a hit and striking out two. 
  • Héctor Neris (CHC) took over a bases-loaded situation in the eighth and let one runner score on a walk but logged 1.1 scoreless frames and recorded two strikeouts en route to his 15th save. Tyson Miller logged 1.2 clean frames and struck out one while collecting his third win. 
  • Cade Smith (CLE) collected his sixth win. He logged 1.2 clean frames and struck out three against Baltimore. 
  • Victor Vodnik (COL) secured his fifth save while appearing for a third straight day. He issued a walk and recorded a strikeout during his scoreless ninth in San Diego. 
  • Shelby Miller (DET) struggled in a non-save appearance. He took over in the seventh and let both inherited runners score, along with four earned runs on his ledger, yielding four hits without recording an out. 
  • Josh Hader (HOU) notched his 22nd save with a scoreless ninth despite issuing a walk during a one-run win over the Rays. Bryan Abreu retired the side in the seventh while striking out two and earned his second win courtesy of his teammates taking the lead in the bottom of the inning. 
  • Calvin Faucher (MIA) suffered his third loss. Entering in the bottom of the eighth with a one-run lead, he allowed three earned runs on three hits and two walks (one intentional) while striking out one. 
  • Colin Holderman (PIT) took over a tied game in the top of the eighth. He gave up two hits and the go-ahead run on a double by Geraldo Perdomo, resulting in his third loss. 
  • Jeremiah Estrada (SDP) had a rare rough outing. He allowed three hits, three earned runs, and two walks while striking out two in two-thirds of the sixth, resulting in his second loss and second blown save. 
  • Kevin Kelly (TBR) was tagged with his second loss. He gave up an unearned run and two hits over 1.1 innings in Houston. 
  • Chad Green (TOR) nailed down his eighth save, striking out the side against the Yankees top of the lineup. Brendon Little tossed 1.2 scoreless innings, allowing a hit and striking out two for his first major league win.

Three Takeaways

  • Arizona’s revamped hierarchy: With a three-run lead at the bottom of the sixth, Kevin Ginkel was summoned but struggled with his command. He was removed with two runners on and two outs. A.J. Puk was deployed like the “fireman” but gave up three consecutive hits, scoring both inherited runners and getting an earned run on his line. Dylan Floro tossed a clean seventh. Justin Martinez was the most impressive reliever in this game, even with his inconsistent sequence against Andrew McCutchen. Ryan Thompson secured his second save despite allowing two hits and an earned run in the ninth. A match-up-based approach may continue while Paul Sewald works on his mechanical issues, making this a challenging read. Fantasy managers can add Thompson, but things are different in the ninth than in the eighth inning.
  • Miami loses a late lead: After Anthony Bender retired the first three Atlanta hitters in the sixth for his tenth hold, Andrew Nardi tossed a scoreless seventh facing the 4-5-6-7 hitters. Calvin Faucher took over in the eighth, allowing three earned runs on three hits and two walks, resulting in his first blown save and third loss. Who would have received the ninth remains a mystery, but our projected high-leverage triumvirate remains these three. However, the roles may change in the coming weeks, making this another problematic situation for those seeking one reliever for saves.
  • V-squared effective again: For a third straight game, and in Colorado’s fifth straight win, Victor Vodnik turned in a scoreless outing. Last night, he secured his fifth save by working around a one-out walk with a pop-out and a game-ending strikeout of Jackson Merrill. His team has one of the most demanding remaining schedules, but he’s established himself as the closer, which has value for fantasy purposes. He can be an effective short-term option in the next scoring period with so many bullpens in flux.

Vulture Save Option for Saturday, August 3

  • Seranthony Domínguez (BAL): This may be off the radar, but Kimbrel pitched in a non-save outing during a four-run loss, and Yennier Cano’s 5.34 ERA in the ninth may provide this vulture save opportunity in today’s slate.

Vulture Save Option for Sunday, August 4

  • Porter Hodge (CHC): If Neris pitches today, it will be back-to-back outings.

American League – Game Recaps from August 2

Houston Astros – Although he dealt with traffic, Josh Hader recorded his 22nd save with a scoreless ninth, preserving a one-run win over the Rays. With one out, he hit José Caballero with a pitch and picked him off first, resulting in a caught stealing, walked Alex Jackson and induced a game-ending flyout. Hader threw 16 pitches (7 strikes – 43.8 Strike%) and induced one whiff. He’s been scoreless in eight of his last nine outings while converting all seven save chances with 12 strikeouts against five walks.

  • Ryan Pressly notched his 19th hold, navigating around two hits and striking out one in a scoreless eighth.
  • Bryan Abreu collected his second win. He retired the side and recorded two strikeouts in the seventh, followed by his team’s go-ahead rally in the bottom of the inning.

Hierarchy remains: Josh Hader | Ryan Pressly | Bryan Abreu

Toronto Blue JaysShutting the door on his eighth save, Chad Green fired a clean bottom of the ninth while striking out the side against the Yankees’ 1-2-3 hitters. He threw 16 pitches (9 strikes – 56.3 Strike%) and induced two whiffs. He extended his scoreless streak to seven games, recording a win, three saves, and a hole while striking out eight without issuing a walk.

  • Zach Pop tossed a scoreless eighth and struck out one for his eighth hold.
  • Brendon Little collected his first win. He logged 1.2 scoreless frames, allowing a hit and striking out two.
  • Génesis Cabrera stranded two runners in the fifth. He gave up a hit and a walk while striking out one over two-thirds of an inning.

Hierarchy remains: Chad Green | Zach Pop | Génesis Cabrera

National League – Game Recaps from August 2

Arizona Diamondbacks – In the first game, with Paul Sewald out of the closer role, Ryan Thompson held on for his second save. He allowed two hits, including Rowdy Tellez’s RBI single, while preserving a one-run win in Pittsburgh. He threw 20 pitches (60 Strike%) without inducing a whiff. In this outing, he lost his seven-game scoreless streak but may get a brief run for saves.

  • Justin Martinez tossed a scoreless eighth, issuing a walk and striking out three for his seventh hold.
  • Dylan Floro worked a clean seventh and collected his fourth win.
  • A.J. Puk was summoned with two runners on and one out and gave up three consecutive hits, putting an earned run on his line while letting both inherited runners score during his second blown save.
  • Kevin Ginkel was credited with his 11th hold despite giving up a hit, three earned runs, a walk, and a hit batter while striking out one in two-thirds of the sixth.

Updated Hierarchy: *Ryan Thompson | *Justin Martinez | *A.J. Puk

*= closer-by-committee

Atlanta Braves – Capping his team’s comeback rally, Joe Jiménez secured his third save. He worked around a one-out single and a two-out double by recording all three outs via strikeout while preserving a two-run win over the Marlins. He threw 28 pitches (17 strikes – 60.7 Strike%) and produced four whiffs (14.3 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in his last eight appearances and 17 of his last 18 with 19 strikeouts against seven walks.

  • Aaron Bummer collected his third win. He tossed a scoreless eighth, giving up a hit and striking out two ahead of his team’s three-run rally in the bottom of the inning.

Hierarchy remains: Raisel Iglesias | Joe Jiménez | A.J. Minter

Chicago Cubs – Forced into action in the top of the eighth, Héctor Neris inherited a bases-loaded, two-out situation. He let one score on a Brendon Donovan walk and produced an inning-ending strikeout of Brandon Crawford. Neris returned for the ninth and retired the side for his 15th save. He threw 17 pitches (10 strikes – 58.8 Strike%) and induced three whiffs (17.7 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in 12 of his last 13 outings since June 22, with 17 strikeouts against five walks while converting all five save chances across 12 innings.

  • Julian Merryweather struggled with his command, issuing four walks and throwing a wild pitch, resulting in two earned runs and recording two strikeouts in two-thirds of the eighth.
  • Drew Smyly worked 1.1 scoreless frames, allowing a walk.
  • Tyson Miller earned his third win. After taking over in the fifth, he pitched 1.2 clean innings and recorded a strikeout.

Updated Hierarchy: Héctor Neris | Porter Hodge | Tyson Miller

Colorado Rockies – Pitching for a third consecutive day, Victor Vodnik secured his fifth save with a scoreless ninth. He allowed a one-out walk by Jake Cronenworth but retired the next two batters, preserving a three-run win in San Diego. He threw 23 pitches (15 strikes – 65.2 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (13 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless in seven of his last eight contests, recording a win and four saves with nine strikeouts against three walks.

  • Tyler Kinley also logged a third straight appearance, securing his ninth hold with a clean eighth inning.

Hierarchy remains: Victor Vodnik | Tyler Kinley | Justin Lawrence

Miami Marlins – With a one-run lead in the bottom of the eighth, Calvin Faucher issued a lead-off walk, recorded an out on a sacrifice bunt, and gave up a game-tying Jorge Soler single. After a pinch runner entered, Faucher allowed an Austin Riley double, a Marcell Ozuna sacrifice fly and intentionally walked Matt Olson before an Orlando Arcia RBI single. He suffered his third loss and first blown save while giving up three hits, three earned runs, and two walks while striking out one.

  • Andrew Nardi notched his 13th hold, issuing a walk and striking out three in a scoreless seventh.
  • Anthony Bender secured his tenth hold, retiring the side and striking out two in the sixth.

Updated Hierarchy: *Calvin Faucher | *Andrew Nardi | Anthony Bender

Pittsburgh Pirates – In ascending order of appearances, Jalen Beeks let his only inherited runner score in the top of the sixth, allowing an Alek Thomas RBI single and recording two outs, one via strikeout.

  • Aroldis Chapman suffered his fourth blown save, giving up a Josh Bell solo home run and striking out two in the seventh.
  • Colin Holdmerman gave up two hits and an earned run in the eighth, resulting in his third loss.
  • Dennis Santana served up a Ketel Marte solo home run, issued a walk, and recorded a strikeout in the ninth.

Hierarchy remains: David Bednar | Aroldis Chapman | Colin Holderman

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Monkey Bytes: August 2

Although small, Thursday’s five-game slate provided plenty of intrigue, especially the last three contests. Raisel Iglesias secured his 23rd save while working in a third straight game. Ryan Helsley allowed a walk-off rally by the Cubs, and cagy veteran Hunter Strickland suffered a blown save versus the Rockies.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Raisel Iglesias (ATL) appeared for a third straight game and recorded his 23rd save, his first in the second half, with a clean ninth while recording a strikeout. 
  • Nate Pearson (CHC) benefited from a walk-off rally and collected his first win. He worked two scoreless frames, giving up a hit and striking out one. 
  • Tyler Kinley (COL) notched his first save since June and sixth of the season, with a scoreless bottom of the tenth. Victor Vodnik picked up his third win courtesy of a scoreless ninth, keeping the game tied after his teammates rallied at the top of the inning and scored the game-winning run in the tenth. 
  • Hunter Strickland (LAA) suffered his second blown save. He issued a walk and gave up a game-tying Jake Cave two-run home run in the top of the ninth. If only the team had better options for save chances. 
  • Ryan Helsley (STL) tied his season-high by allowing four hits and three earned runs for the first time in 2024. This resulted in his fourth loss and third blown save during a walk-off against the Cubs. 

What to Watch For This Weekend

American League

Baltimore OriolesCraig Kimbrel last recorded a save on July 7 and has allowed seven earned runs over his last six appearances spanning 5.2 innings. Will Brandon Hyde call upon Yennier Cano and his career 5.34 ERA in the ninth inning or try newly added Seranthony Domínguez (28 career saves) in save situations this weekend?

Boston Red SoxKenley Jansen is day-to-day after tweaking his back during a pitch on Wednesday. Will he appear on consecutive days this weekend, or will Lucas Sims and/or Luis García receive an opportunity in the ninth?

Detroit Tigers – Who gets the next save chance for the Tigers? Shelby Miller secured his team’s only second-half save and may be in line, but save chances have been few and far between for this team over the last two weeks.

Kansas City Royals—Although no signs of a role change are imminent, adding Hunter Harvey and Lucas Erceg at the trade deadline signals that the team needs better outcomes in high-leverage events. James McArthur enters the weekend as the presumed closer, but he must improve his recent results. He converted four of five saves in July but allowed at least a run in four of eight games with a 1.73 WHIP and 9.8 K-BB percentage.

Los Angeles Angels—Fantasy managers cannot force a change in the bullpen hierarchy, but Hunter Strickland‘s blown save last night may give Ben Joyce a chance shortly. It’s tough to determine what a rebuilding team gains by using a 35-year-old pending free agent in save situations.

National League

Arizona Diamondbacks – July will be a month Paul Sewald hopes to forget. He suffered four blown saves and was spared a fifth when Ryan Thompson bailed him out on Wednesday. It’s more than a mechanical issue, especially with Sewald’s four-seam velocity remaining a tick down compared with last year. Fantasy players will keep tabs on how Torey Lovullo uses his relievers in save chances this weekend. Will it be Sewald? Thompson (a Clay Holmes-lite)? Or newly acquired A.J. Puk? Or a combination of them in a match-up-based approach with Kevin Ginkel also in the mix?

Los Angeles Dodgers—This leverage ladder has had a rough last 30 days, with as many blown saves (eight) as saves (eight) in 23 games. Which reliever will emerge in August? Can Evan Phillips find his past form? Could Michael Kopech earn a more prominent leverage role in the next two weeks?

Miami Marlins – Although the team has not had a save opportunity since trading Tanner Scott, Calvin Faucher finished a four-run win earlier this week and could be in line for his first save since 2022 this weekend. However, this could also be a match-up-based bullpen with Andrew Nardi and Anthony Bender in the mix. Stay tuned.

Milwaukee Brewers – Devin Williams will not be making back-to-back outings in the near term, and there has been no indication when the team will take the training wheels off during his return from a stress fracture in his back. Will Joel Payamps be the preferred ancillary save option? Can those with Trevor Megill hold out hope for save chances once he returns?

San Diego Padres—After reporting to his new team, Tanner Scott said he would be ready whenever the phone rang, as Kevin Acee covered in this post for The San Diego Union-Tribune. Mike Shildt confirmed Robert Suarez will remain his closer, but he can used more sparingly and not log multiple-inning outings with the new “superpen” A.J. Preller has put together, adding Scott and Jason Adam.

San Francisco Giants – The good news is Camilo Doval converted six of seven save opportunities in July. However, he also finished the month with a 1.68 WHIP and 18.4 K-BB percentage through 8.1 innings. Can he regain past results over the remainder of the second half?

Vulture Save Option for Friday, August 2

  • Joe Jiménez (ATL): This time, an Atlanta reliever other than Raisel Iglesias should pitch since he’s worked in three consecutive games.

Vulture Save Option for Saturday, August 3

  • Andrew Kittredge (STL): If Helsley pitches again today, it will be back-to-back outings.

American League – Game Recap from August 1

Los Angeles Angels – In the top of the tenth, Hans Crouse made a throwing error on a sacrifice bunt by Sam Hilliard leading off the inning, scoring the “place” runner. This resulted in his third loss. Crouse recovered with two strikeouts while retiring the next three batters.

  • Hunter Strickland suffered his second blown save in the ninth. His outing started with a walk, a leverage mortal sin, and a one-out, game-tying Jake Cave two-run home run. Strickland finished with a hit, two earned runs, and a walk while striking out one on 18 pitches (50 Strike%) with one whiff.
  • Ben Joyce tossed a scoreless eighth, navigating around a hit and a walk while striking out one. After the first two batters reached, he induced a double play groundball and struck out Brenton Doyle, ending the threat. He threw 19 pitches (12 strikes – 63.2 Strike%) and induced two whiffs. He secured his seventh hold and extended his scoreless streak to 17 games, spanning 21.1 innings with 19 strikeouts against 10 walks and a 0.85 WHIP.

Hierarchy remains: *Ben Joyce | *Hunter Strickland | Hans Crouse

*= closer-by-committee

National League – Game Recaps from August 1

Atlanta Braves – Securing his first second-half save and 23rd of the season, Raisel Iglesias fired a clean top of the ninth and recorded a strikeout despite appearing in a third straight game. He threw 10 pitches (60 Strike%) and induced one whiff. He’s been scoreless over his last seven with nine strikeouts against one walk.

  • A.J. Minter retired the side and recorded two strikeouts for his ninth hold in the eighth inning.
  • Luke Jackson let one of two inherited runners score, yielding a hit and retiring one for his third hold.
  • Dylan Lee issued two walks, resulting in an earned run, and recorded a strikeout in two-thirds of the seventh, getting credit for his third hold.

Hierarchy remains: Raisel Iglesias | Joe Jiménez | A.J. Minter

Chicago Cubs – Taking over with his team down by two runs, Nate Pearson tossed two scoreless frames, allowing a hit and striking out one. He collected his first win courtesy of his team’s three-run rally in the bottom of the ninth. Pearson threw 28 pitches (20 strikes – 71.4 Strike%) and induced one whiff during his second outing with his new team.

  • Jorge López let his only inherited runner score in the seventh on Nolan Arenado’s RBI single and recorded a strikeout in his one-third of an inning.

Hierarchy remains: Héctor Neris | Porter Hodge | Julian Merryweather

Colorado Rockies – With a one-run lead in the bottom of the tenth, Tyler Kinley retired the side and recorded a strikeout against the Angels’ 3-4-5 hitters despite uncorking a wild pitch. This marked his first save since June 11.

  • Victor Vodnik collected his third win. He threw a scoreless ninth, allowing a walk and striking out one while his team trailed by one, then benefited from a game-tying two-run home run by Jake Cave. Vodnik tossed 18 pitches (55.6 Strike%) and induced one whiff. He’s been scoreless in six of his last seven appearances with eight strikeouts against two walks while converting this win and three saves.
  • Angel Chivilli worked a clean seventh and recorded a strikeout.

Hierarchy remains: Victor Vodnik | Tyler Kinley | Justin Lawrence

St. Louis Cardinals – August began poorly for Ryan Helsley. He suffered his fourth loss and third blown save, allowing a walk-off rally by the Cubs. After retiring Seiya Suzuki on a pop-out, Cody Bellinger launched a solo home run, followed by an Isaac Paredes groundout. However, with two outs, Nico Hoerner singled, stole second base, and scored on Dansby Swanson’s RBI double, then scored on Mike Tauchman’s pinch-hit double. Helsley gave up four hits for the second time this season and three earned runs, his most allowed all year. He threw 24 pitches (17 strikes – 70.8 Strike%) and produced five whiffs (20.8 SwStr%).

  • JoJo Romero notched his 27th hold with a clean bottom of the eighth and two strikeouts.

Hierarchy remains: Ryan Helsley | Andrew Kittredge | JoJo Romero

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Monkey Bytes: August 1

Following a voluminous trade deadline for relievers, roles will continue to evolve through this weekend. It is challenging to say one reliever will be the closer when teams may be deploying a match-up-based approach or auditioning players for their leverage role. Because of this, the hierarchies and our closer depth chart will undergo multiple updates over the next few days.

Yesterday, two relievers recorded wins, and there were only four saves. While many keep chasing saves in unsettled situations, a reliever may emerge for the Rockies. Change may be on tap in Arizona, and the Dodgers remain challenging to predict.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Ryan Thompson (ARI) was called upon with one out in the ninth and two runners on. He produced a strikeout, scored a runner on a wild pitch, intentionally walked a batter, and induced a game-ending groundout, preserving a one-run win.  
  • Pierce Johnson (ATL) collected his fourth win. He took over in the sixth and stranded two runners. He finished with 1.1 scoreless innings, giving up a hit and a walk while striking out two. 
  • Zack Kelly (BOS) worked a scoreless top of the tenth, navigating around a wild pitch and a walk while striking out one. He earned his fourth win via a walk-off double by Rafael Devers leading off the bottom of the inning. 
  • Victor Vodnik (COL) nailed down his fourth save. He retired the side against the Angels and recorded a strikeout while preserving a one-run win. 
  • Josh Hader (HOU) notched his 21st save with a scoreless ninth. He allowed a hit and recorded a strikeout while finishing a one-run come-from-behind win over the Pirates. 
  • Jared Koenig (MIL) was tagged with his third loss. He gave up a hit, two unearned runs, and a walk while striking out one in two-thirds of the seventh. Elvis Peguero replaced him, letting two of three inherited runners score on an Austin Riley single. 
  • Clay Holmes (NYY) recorded his 22nd save, allowing a hit during a scoreless ninth.

Two Takeaways

  • Sewald on the hot seat: Although his manager deflected a direct answer in this video, Paul Sewald began July with three blown saves, and he ended it with a hold but was removed from his save opportunity yesterday on the brink of his fifth in a 12-game span. His four-seam fastball velocity remains down this season and the lingering effects of his oblique injury may signal it’s not going to rebound with time off. In the near term, fantasy managers await Torey Lovullo’s plan for future saves, but a mix of A.J. Puk, Ryan Thompson, and Kevin Ginkel may happen as soon as this weekend. For the visual crowd, here is his splits-by-pitch this year versus last:

Link: https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/MEhoi/3/

  • V-squared: Targeting a Rockies reliever can cause apprehension, but with so many bullpens thrust into disarray, could Victor Vodnik help fantasy managers in the near term? He secured his fourth save in July and has a 20.3 K-BB percentage with a 0.92 over his last 16.1 innings since June 21.

Vulture Save Option for Thursday, August 1

  • A.J. Minter (ATL): He did not pitch yesterday, but Iglesias and Jiménez did, leaving him atop our hierarchy for today’s match-up against Miami.
  • Calvin Faucher (MIA): If being contrarian, he worked the ninth during a four-run win and could receive the team’s first save chance in the post-Scott era.

American League – Game Recaps from July 31

Boston Red SoxNavigating around a wild pitch, Zack Kelly collected his fourth win after stranding the “place” runner in the top of the tenth. He allowed a walk and recorded a strikeout during his scoreless outing before his team’s walk-off rally in the bottom of the frame.

  • Kenley Jansen tossed a scoreless ninth, issuing a walk and striking out one. He did “tweak” his back, and he’s considered day-to-day until their next game on Friday.
  • Josh Winckowski retired the side in the eighth and recorded a strikeout.
  • Lucas Sims stranded two runners despite issuing a walk during two-thirds scoreless in the seventh.

Hierarchy remains: Kenley Jansen | Lucas Sims | Zack Kelly

Houston Astros – Securing his 21st save, Josh Hader worked around a one-out Jared Triolo single with a strikeout and a game-ending groundout, preserving the one-run win. He threw 13 pitches (76.9 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (23.1 SwStr%). He finished July with nine saves while making 12 appearances, eight scoreless with 14 strikeouts versus four walks, and a 097 WHIP through 10.1 innings.

  • Ryan Pressly navigated around two hits for a scoreless eighth and his 18th hold.
  • Bryan Abreu retired the side in the seventh, notching his 26th hold.

Hierarchy remains: Josh Hader | Ryan Pressly | Bryan Abreu

New York Yankees – Working around a lead-off Kyle Schwarber single, Clay Holmes retired Austin Hays on a flyout and induced a game-ending double play groundout by Bryce Harper for his 22nd save, preserving a one-run win and a sweep. He threw seven pitches (85.7 Strike%) with one whiff. He converted three of seven save opportunities in July and allowed at least a run in four outings.

  • Mark Leiter Jr. gave up three hits and an earned run while striking out two in the eighth, getting credit for his 16th hold.
  • Tommy Kahnle notched his seventh hold, stranding a runner and issuing a walk with a strikeout in two-thirds of the seventh.
  • Luke Weaver recorded his 16th hold, allowing two hits and an earned run during his combined inning. 

Hierarchy remains: Clay Holmes | Luke Weaver | Mark Leiter Jr.

National League – Game Recaps from July 31

Arizona Diamondbacks – Summoned with two runners on and one out in the top of the ninth, Ryan Thompson recorded a strikeout against Harold Ramírez, intentionally walked Luis García Jr., and induced a game-ending groundout by Riley Adams for his first save.

  • Paul Sewald gets credit for his first hold despite his rough outing. It started with a lead-off walk, a leverage mortal sin, a groundout, a CJ Abrams RBI double, and two more walks, prompting his removal. Sewald finished with a hit, two earned runs, and three walks on 24 pitches (9 strikes – 37.5 Strike%). He finished July with a bloated 2.20 WHIP through 12 appearances spanning 10 innings and converted five of nine save chances, though this outing does not qualify.
  • Kevin Ginkel allowed three hits and an earned run while striking out one in the eighth.
  • A.J. Puk fired a clean seventh, striking out one.

Updated Hierarchy: Paul Sewald (hot seat) | A.J. Puk | Ryan Thompson

Atlanta Braves – Pressed into action with two runners on and two outs in the bottom of the sixth, Pierce Johnson kept the game tied despite issuing a walk with an inning-ending strikeout. He added a scoreless seventh inning and collected his fourth win when his teammates rallied for two in the top of the inning. Johnson finished with a hit and a walk while striking out two over his 1.1 scoreless innings.

  • Joe Jiménez tossed a scoreless eighth, giving up a hit and striking out two.
  • Raisel Iglesias retired the side and recorded two strikeouts in the ninth, preserving the four-run win. He threw 15 pitches (60 Strike%) and induced two whiffs. He’s been scoreless in his last six outings but has not secured a save in the second half.

Hierarchy remains: Raisel Iglesias | Joe Jiménez | A.J. Minter

Colorado Rockies – Locking down his fourth save, Victor Vodnik retired the side and recorded a strikeout while preserving a one-run win over the Angels. He threw eight pitches (75 Strike%) and induced one whiff. Through 11 outings in July, he converted all four save chances with 13 strikeouts versus three walks and a 0.90 WHIP across 13.1 innings.

  • Tyler Kinley notched his eighth hold with a scoreless eighth. He allowed a walk and struck out two. 

Updated Hierarchy: Victor Vodnik | Tyler Kinley | Justin Lawrence

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Monkey Bytes: July 31

It’s a difficult time of year with many fantasy players transitioning toward football preparations, the trade deadline, and managers providing sometimes misleading information. Doing our due diligence can reap dividends, but patience may be required, especially for those who stashed Ben Joyce for second-half saves.

Tuesday’s slate provided five reliever wins, two via bulk relief outings and two on blown saves, resulting in a win after his respective team rallied. There were more blown saves (six) than saves (four), with two by the Yankees’ bullpen, including an MLB-leading eighth of the season. Last, two games required extra innings, with the Yankees and Padres emerging victorious.

Closer CliffsNotes

  • Alexis Díaz (CIN) recorded his 21st save. He gave up a hit during a scoreless ninth against the Cubs.
  • Rookie Fraser Ellard (CHW) lost his MLB debut. He issued two walks, which resulted in two earned runs, and retired one batter in the top of the eighth in Kansas City.
  • Jake Bird (COL) suffered his second loss. Taking over a tied game in the bottom of the seventh, he served up a go-ahead Jo Adell home run.
  • Sam Long (KCR) notched his first save with a clean bottom of the ninth and recorded two strikeouts while preserving a one-run win over the White Sox.
  • Hunter Strickland (LAA) secured his first save since 2022 with a clean ninth against the Rockies, as we planned.
  • Alex Vesia (LAD) suffered his third loss, allowing a walk, followed by a single, an intentional walk, and a walk-off hit by Donovan Solano in the bottom of the tenth.
  • Declan Cronin (MIA) allowed his only inherited runner to score, taking over for an injured Edward Cabrera in the sixth. He also absorbed his third loss and first blown save, giving up three hits, four earned runs, and two walks during his outing.
  • Michael Tonkin (NYY) worked the 11th and 12th innings, getting tagged with his second blown save but collecting his fourth win, finishing a one-run win over the Phillies.
  • Orion Kerkering (PHI) suffered his second loss, allowing the “place” runner to score on a hit and a go-ahead sacrifice fly in the top of the 12th.
  • Robert Suarez (SDP) retired the side and recorded two strikeouts in the top of the tenth against the Dodgers, then collected his sixth win courtesy of a walk-off in the bottom of the inning.
  • Tyler Alexander (TBR) logged 2.1 bulk innings en route to his fourth win. He gave up a solo home run and struck out three against Miami.

Three Takeaways

  • Re-Joyce or revolt?: While reading articles or tweets providing information about roles, it’s challenging reading between the lines, but even in this note from Sam Blum, it said Ben Joyce would get “many” of the reps for saves if the team traded Luis García. In the first save chance after the team traded its two veteran relievers atop the hierarchy, Ron Washington summoned Hunter Strickland for the ninth against the Rockies’ bottom-of-the-lineup. In this tweet, Washington said he would use a pending free agent (Strickland), Joyce, and Hans Crouse, in future save opportunities. Patience may be required, but one should avoid overreacting to this usage pattern.
  • Dodgers and fluidity: Last night’s loss marked the third time in the last 13 games Los Angeles squandered a five-run lead, which resulted in a loss. Blake Treinen allowed two solo home runs in the ninth, and Alex Vesia gave up the walk-off run in the tenth, though his manager tried removing him for Evan Phillips but could not because of the rules preventing this after a mound visit by the pitching coach. Operating without defined roles and spotty performances makes predicting who will pitch based on match-ups tough and which reliever will get the save. Since July 12, the Dodgers bullpen has a combined 6.75 ERA. Here are their Win Probability Added results in this timeframe:
  • How long will the leash be for Holmes?: It can be a dubious honor leading the majors in blown saves, but at least he’s still getting chances. Clay Holmes suffered his eighth blown save while trying to protect a one-run lead against the Phillies. He allowed a lead-off infield single, induced a groundout, gave up a single, and recorded another fielder’s choice groundout, but with two outs, he uncorked a wild pitch, scoring Johan Rojas from third base. After intentionally walking Kyle Schwarber, Trea Turner produced another infield single, loading the bases before an inning-ending groundout by Bryce Harper. There was no loud contact, but traffic on the bases for a reliever lacking swing-and-miss stuff makes situations like this difficult. Momentum has not been kind; he’s only converted two of six save chances in July with a 1.45 WHIP through 9.2 innings. Will he keep the closer role in August, or will this become another match-up-based bullpen?

Vulture Save Option for Wednesday, July 31

  • Gregory Santos (SEA): Andrés Muñoz and Yimi García have pitched in three of the previous four days.

Vulture Save Stash for Thursday, August 1

  • Pierce Johnson (ATL): If Atlanta’s high-leverage triumvirate all pitch again today in Milwaukee, it will mark consecutive outings for Raisel Iglesias, Joe Jiménez, and A.J. Minter, leaving Johnson in line for the save on Thursday. Stay tuned.

American League – Game Recaps from July 30

Kansas City Royals – Summoned with a one-run lead in the ninth, Sam Long retired the side and recorded two strikeouts for his first save. He threw 14 pitches (71.4 Strike%) and one whiff.

  • Hunter Harvey allowed a lead-off Nicky Lopez single, a one-out Luis Robert Jr. single, and an RBI fielder’s choice groundout before an inning-ending strikeout for his MLB-leading 28th hold.

Updated Hierarchy: *James McArthur | *Hunter Harvey | *Lucas Erceg

*= closer-by-committee

Los Angeles Angels – With a three-run lead, Ron Washington summoned Hunter Strickland for his first save since August 1, 2022. Strickland responded with a clean top of the ninth and recorded a strikeout against the Rockies’ 7-8-9 hitters on nine pitches (77.8 Strike%) with two whiffs (22.2 SwStr%). He’s been scoreless over his last five appearances.

  • Ben Joyce notched his sixth hold, retiring the side in the eighth against the 4-5-6 lineup pocket, needing only six pitches (83.3 Strike%) with one whiff (16.7 SwStr%). This extended his scoreless streak to 16 games, spanning 20.1 innings.
  • José Quijada gave up a game-tying Ezequiel Tovar solo home run, resulting in his first blown save, and collected his first win courtesy of his team’s rally in the bottom of the inning.

Updated Hierarchy: *Ben Joyce | *Hunter Strickland | Hans Crouse

*= closer-by-committee

New York Yankees – Working two innings in the 11th and 12th, Michael Tonkin collected his fourth win and second blown save, allowing a hit, an unearned run, and a walk while striking out three.

  • Mark Leiter Jr. navigated around a hit and a walk for a scoreless tenth, stranding the “place” runner in his team debut.
  • Clay Holmes suffered his MLB-leading eighth blown save. He gave up three hits, an earned run on a wild pitch, and a walk (intentional – Kyle Schwarber) in the bottom of the ninth. He’s only converted two of his last six save chances and given up at least a run in four of his previous eight.
  • Luke Weaver notched his 15th hold, retiring the side in the eighth.
  • Tommy Kahnle fired a clean seventh, striking out one for his sixth hold.

Updated Hierarchy: Clay Holmes | Luke Weaver | Mark Leiter Jr.

National League – Game Recaps from July 30

Cincinnati RedsNavigating around a lead-off walk with three straight outs, Alexis Díaz secured his 21st save, finishing a three-run win over the Cubs. He threw 16 pitches (9 strikes – 56.3 Strike%) and induced one whiff. He’s converted all four save chances in July despite allowing at least a run in three of eight outings.

  • Buck Farmer notched his first hold, firing a clean eighth and striking out two.
  • Fernando Cruz let his only inherited runner score on a wild pitch, allowed a walk, and gave up a hit during one-third of the seventh, getting credit for his 22nd hold.
  • Justin Wilson allowed an earned run and a walk while striking out one during a combined inning for his tenth hold.
  • Nick Martinez collected his fourth win as the “bulk follower,” logging four scoreless frames, scattering four hits, and striking out three.

Hierarchy remains: Alexis Díaz | Fernando Cruz | Sam Moll

Los Angeles Dodgers – Working with reduced velocity in recent outings, Alex Vesia suffered his third loss in the bottom of the tenth against the Padres. He issued Kyle Higashioka a lead-off walk and retired Luis Arraez on a sacrifice bunt, putting runners on second and third. After a mound visit, Vesia issued Jurickson Profar an intentional walk but had to remain in the game despite Dave Roberts trying to get Evan Phillips from the bullpen because of the previous mound visit. Donovan Solano delivered a walk-off RBI single instead.

  • Blake Treinen gave up two solo home runs, including a game-tying blast by Jackson Merrill, resulting in his fourth blown save in the ninth.
  • Anthony Banda secured his sixth hold, retiring the side and striking out one in the eighth.

Hierarchy: *Daniel Hudson | *Brent Honeywell | Blake Treinen 

*= closer-by-committee

New York MetsPressed into action with two runners on and two outs in the eighth, Edwin Díaz quelled the rally with an inning-ending strikeout and retired all three in the ninth for his first four-out save in 2024. He threw 20 pitches (70 Strike%) and produced three whiffs (15 SwStr%) while recording two strikeouts and his 13th save. He’s converted six of seven save chances in July.

  • Ryne Stanek had a runner reach on an error and issued a walk during two-thirds scoreless in the eighth, securing his 16th hold.

Updated Hierarchy: Edwin Díaz | Phil Maton | Huascar Brazobán

Philadelphia Phillies – Suffering his second loss, Orion Kerkering allowed a lead-off Jazz Chisolm Jr. single and a go-ahead sacrifice fly, scoring the “place” runner in the top of the 12th. He also recorded a strikeout while throwing 12 pitches (75 Strike%) and getting two whiffs (16.7 SwStr%).

  • Jeff Hoffman logged two innings, spanning the 10th and 11th, giving up two hits, an unearned run, and striking out one.
  • Carlos Estévez retired the side in the ninth against the Yankees’ 3-4-5 lineup pocket on 15 pitches during his team debut.
  • José Ruiz tossed a scoreless eighth, issuing a walk and striking out two.
  • Matt Strahm was tagged with his sixth blown save, issuing two walks and serving up a go-ahead Chisolm Jr. three-run home run.
  • José Alvarado retired his only batter in the sixth for his seventh hold and stranded two runners.

Adjusted Hierarchy: Carlos Estévez | Jeff Hoffman | José Alvarado

San Diego Padres Preserving a tied game with a clean top of the tenth, Robert Suarez collected his sixth win when his teammates produced a walk-off rally in the bottom of the inning. He threw 10 pitches (80 Strike%) and generated four whiffs against the Dodgers’ 4-5-6 lineup pocket.

  • Jeremiah Estrada tossed a scoreless ninth, allowing a hit and striking out two.
  • Logan Gillaspie retired the side in the eighth.
  • Adrian Morejon navigated around a hit and two walks while striking out one in a scoreless seventh.

Adjusted Hierarchy: Robert Suarez | Tanner Scott | Jason Adam

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