Jacob deGrom Fearless Forecast

Matt Harvey is getting all the hype these days, touching 99 mph on the gun, throwing nasty 84 mph curves, and looking healthy. I think he will have an excellent year. For some reason though, the world at large is still underrating Jacob deGrom.

First off, I recommend you read this FanGraphs article from midsummer, detailing the changes he made to his pitching mechanics to make this “rags to riches” leap into the upper echelon.

I’ve been notoriously high on deGrom since I watched him pitch. I wrote about him on reddit back in July 2014. I’ll update the numbers I used, infra:

He’s been excellent — and not in any flukey kind of way. deGrom’s pitch types and peripherals support that what he did last year is VERY REAL.

Let me reiterate last year’s line: 140 IP (178.1 IP of usage), 9.2 k/9, 2.69 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, 2.67 FIP, 3.03 xFIP, 3.19 SIERA. Those are top-20 numbers. And unlike phenoms that regress with time (see Jesse Hahn in 2014), deGrom only got BETTER as the innings racked up.

That is what we love to see — for three reasons:

(1) His body can withstand the rigors of a 200 IP season,

(2) He IMPROVED, rather than regressing, and

(3) Hey, for those of us in H2H leagues, we want our guy pitching well for the fantasy playoffs!

His control improved with time, with increased strikeouts. As of my last post, he had an 8.8 k/9 and 2.7 K/BB. He ended year with a 9.3 k/9 and 3.4 K/BB. We love to see improvement in both those respects. Keep the walks down and strikeouts up, and success often naturally follows!

He’s generating a lot of swinging strikes. For reference, the league average sw/str% is approximately 8.6%.

Jacob deGrom has an overall 11.9 sw/str%, which is well above league average. Looking at pitch F/X data, his slider (12.4% sw/str%, 46/370 pitches), changeup (20.2%, 55/272), both fastballs (10.8%, 108/1000), and curveball (16.0%, 34/212) are all above-average, strikeout-quality pitches.

deGrom essentially features a five-pitch arsenal. Of 2,225 MLB pitches thrown:

44.9% (1000/2225) Fastballs averaging 93.5 mph. Max Velocity, 97.3 mph.

16.5% (368/2225) 2-Seam Fastballs averaging 93.2 mph, Max Velocity, 97.4 mph.

16.6% (370/2225) Sliders averaging 86.8 mph, Max Velocity 91.3 mph (adding mph to his slider is a huge part of his success).

12.2% (272/2225) Changeups averaging 83.9 mph.

9.5% (212/2225) Curveballs averaging 79.3 mph.

3 Cutters–not really a pitch he uses.

deGrom has a diverse arsenal of pitches, with some legitimate velocity differentials, and a good fastball, topping out at 97+ mph. He has 7 mph between fastballs and slider. 10 mph between fastballs and changeup. 14+ mph between fastballs and curveball. 22.5 mph between the high-end spectrum of his fastball and low-end spectrum of his curve.

Essentially, deGrom is legit. His peripherals and Pitch F/X data don’t really suggest that he’s due for any significant regression. Citi Field is still an excellent pitcher’s park, despite the fact that the fences were recently moved in (3-11 feet). I don’t think it will make a significant difference; maybe a home run or two leaves the park that wouldn’t have before.

It’s worth noting that his top speeds increased late in the year, logging his highest speed fastball in the second half of the season. Again, I love a pitcher that doesn’t fatigue.

Concerns: He had Tommy John surgery in 2010, but it seems he has worked his way back from that. Sophomore slump or hitters figuring him out are worth considering. And of course, a couple fly ball outs might turn into home runs.

Fearless prediction: 32 games, 210 IP, 2.80 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, 234 Ks (10 k/9) – and deGrom finally gains some respect withing the fantasy baseball community as a top-15 fantasy pitcher. That bold prediction being said, I think he’s being criminally underrated in fantasy drafts, with his ADP of 112 in yahoo leagues.

112! At that price, go ahead and reach.





Law student and fantasy baseball junkie.

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