Collette Calls: Concerned About Pitching

Collette Calls: Concerned About Pitching

This article is part of our Collette Calls series.

According to our MLB Injury Report page, there are 244 pitchers on the injured list in baseball, and that did not include the news that Zac Gallen was going to miss time with a UCL injury or Jose Urquidy being pulled from tonight's game after 44 pitches declining fastball velocity. The list includes any pitcher in the organization because any injured pitcher hits the availability depth chart in the organization or available to organizations. The breakdown is as such:

Team

Pitchers

SD

14

TB

14

FA

12

HOU

12

LAD

12

SEA

12

TOR

11

PIT

10

BOS

9

MIL

9

NYY

9

SF

9

TEX

9

CHC

8

MIA

8

STL

8

WAS

8

DET

7

NYM

7

ARI

6

CWS

6

LAA

6

OAK

6

BAL

5

CLE

5

KC

5

CIN

4

COL

4

MIN

4

PHI

3

ATL

2

Coming into this season, it was widely recognized we were dealing with unchartered waters in how pitchers would bounce back from the craziness of 2020. Never before had pitchers twice been asked to ramp up and get ready for a season, with rather short notice for the second ramp up. Once the abbreviated season began, most pitchers were used in a way they likely had not experienced since their prep days in high school or early college. Most seasons, teams like to keep the year-over-year workload increase within a 25 percent threshold, but that is not possible for 2021. Teams need to cobble together 1,458

According to our MLB Injury Report page, there are 244 pitchers on the injured list in baseball, and that did not include the news that Zac Gallen was going to miss time with a UCL injury or Jose Urquidy being pulled from tonight's game after 44 pitches declining fastball velocity. The list includes any pitcher in the organization because any injured pitcher hits the availability depth chart in the organization or available to organizations. The breakdown is as such:

Team

Pitchers

SD

14

TB

14

FA

12

HOU

12

LAD

12

SEA

12

TOR

11

PIT

10

BOS

9

MIL

9

NYY

9

SF

9

TEX

9

CHC

8

MIA

8

STL

8

WAS

8

DET

7

NYM

7

ARI

6

CWS

6

LAA

6

OAK

6

BAL

5

CLE

5

KC

5

CIN

4

COL

4

MIN

4

PHI

3

ATL

2

Coming into this season, it was widely recognized we were dealing with unchartered waters in how pitchers would bounce back from the craziness of 2020. Never before had pitchers twice been asked to ramp up and get ready for a season, with rather short notice for the second ramp up. Once the abbreviated season began, most pitchers were used in a way they likely had not experienced since their prep days in high school or early college. Most seasons, teams like to keep the year-over-year workload increase within a 25 percent threshold, but that is not possible for 2021. Teams need to cobble together 1,458 innings over a season, so they need either a high volume of arms or pitchers who are able to pick up where they left off in 2019. 

Early on, there is a mixed bag of data on how the league is adjusting to the new frontier. The league, as a whole, appears to be easing its way back into normal pitching utilization. While the average starter is going slightly deeper into games than he did last year, the average pitch count by starters is up by only a handful while the percentage of outings with pitchers throwing 100 or more pitches (HighGM) is at its lowest point in recent years:

Season

Games

IP/GS

P/GS

Gm P>=100

HighGms

2015

4858

5.8

93

1862

38.3%

2016

4856

5.6

93

1734

35.7%

2017

4860

5.5

92

1574

32.4%

2018

4862

5.4

88

1223

25.2%

2019

4858

5.2

86

1167

24.0%

2020

1796

4.8

80

251

14.0%

2021

1050

5.1

84

116

11.0%

This was honestly surprising to me as it has felt like the league has been allowing pitchers to work deeper into games, no-hitters and attempted no-hitters aside. The data looks a bit different when we break it down by team:

Tm

GS

IP/GS

Pit/GS

Gm P>=100

HighGms

CLE

33

5.4

88

11

33%

OAK

37

5.5

89

10

27%

PHI

36

5.6

90

9

25%

STL

36

5.4

88

8

22%

HOU

36

5.3

88

6

17%

KCR

34

4.8

83

6

18%

SFG

36

5.7

87

6

17%

BOS

37

5.2

86

5

14%

CHW

33

5.4

89

5

15%

COL

35

5

84

5

14%

LAD

36

5.8

87

5

14%

SEA

36

5

82

5

14%

NYY

35

5.2

84

4

11%

TBR

37

4.6

72

4

11%

WSN

31

5.3

85

4

13%

LAA

35

4.6

83

3

9%

TEX

38

5

81

3

8%

BAL

36

5

82

2

6%

CIN

33

5

86

2

6%

DET

35

5

82

2

6%

MIA

35

5

79

2

6%

MIN

33

5.2

84

2

6%

SDP

36

4.5

77

2

6%

ATL

35

5

83

1

3%

CHC

35

4.8

80

1

3%

MIL

36

5.1

82

1

3%

NYM

30

5.1

78

1

3%

PIT

35

4.9

84

1

3%

ARI

36

5.3

86

0

0%

TOR

34

4.4

74

0

0%

Cleveland knows they have horses in their rotation and manager Terry Francona is riding them aggressively early on as one-third of the starts made by Cleveland starting pitchers have gone into triple-digit pitch counts. Shane Bieber has the recent track record of carrying a big workload, but the rest of the young staff does not and most of the staff is likely to hit its 2020 workload totals by the end of May:

Pitcher

2019 IP

2020 IP

2021 IP

YoY Diff

Shane Bieber

214

77

55

22 

Aaron Civale

57

74

46

28 

Zach Plesac

115

55

40

15 

Triston McKenzie

0

33

23

10 

Logan Allen

MIN

10

15

(5)

This situation bears watching given the lack of track record with those young arms, especially given McKenzie's slim frame. Cleveland does not exactly have the system depth to start cycling arms through, so things could get interesting this summer once the younger arms start reaching new workload levels. The confusing thing is that Cleveland has a talented bullpen, but their usage has been rather rigid in their roles and utilization. That is not the case with Oakland, whose early usage is concerning:

Pitcher

2019 IP

2020 IP

2021 IP

YoY Diff

Chris Bassitt

144

63

48.1

15 

Cole Irvin

135

4

41

(37)

Sean Manaea

68

54

41

13 

Frankie Montas

96

53

36

17 

Jesus Luzardo

55

59

28

31 

Nobody on this staff has a track record of a big workload and is more well-known for their history dealing with injuries. Irvin at least had a decent workload in 2019 and worked 161 innings in 2018, but worked four innings last season while spending most of the season in the alternate site. Manager Bob Melvin leans heavily on Yusmeiro Petit, Lou Trivino and Jake Diekman out of the pen while trusting few other relievers so the starters have worked more than expected. Petit has already matched his 2020 workload, but if there were ever a rubber-armed reliever, it would be him. Given the injury history with the starting pitchers on this team, this feels like borrowed time for these guys as the workload numbers creep up this summer.

Philadelphia is coming off a season where its bullpen was historically awful, so one cannot blame it for hoping the starters could absorb more work this year. So far, so good on both accounts:

Pitcher

2019 IP

2020 IP

2021 IP

YoY Diff

Aaron Nola

202

71

47

24 

Zack Wheeler

195

71

47

24 

Zach Eflin

163

59

45

14 

Chase Anderson

139

34

31

Vince Velasquez

117

34

23

11 

This club at least has a decent track record of workload in previous seasons before 2020. This entire staff will exceed that 2020 workload by the end of the month, but Nola and Wheeler would be on pace to potentially triple their 2020 workload. 

None of this mentions pitchers such as Marcus Stroman, Eduardo Rodriguez, Joe Ross, Domingo German, Jameson Taillon and Michael Kopech, who did not pitch at all in 2020, and all but Kopech is working in a rotation every fifth or sixth day. You could throw Corey Kluber into that mix given he was pulled in the first inning of his only outing last year. Overall we have a fair amount of pitchers who have already increased their workload from 2020 by 20 or more innings:

Pitcher

2020 IP

2021 IP

20v21 Diff

Marcus Stroman

 

40

40 

Cole Irvin

3

41

38 

Mike Foltynewicz

3

40

37 

Corey Kluber

1

35

34 

Eduardo Rodriguez

 

33

33 

Joe Ross

 

31

31 

Domingo German

 

31

31 

Jameson Taillon

 

28

28 

Kohei Arihara

 

28

28 

Aaron Sanchez

 

28

28 

Shohei Ohtani

1

25

24 

Carlos Rodon

7

31

24 

Matt Harvey

11

35

24 

Bruce Zimmermann

7

30

23 

Michael Kopech

 

22

22 

Ryan Weathers

 

22

22 

Wade Miley

14

36

22 

Carlos Martinez

20

41

21 

Nick Pivetta

15

36

21 

Pitchers like Pivetta, Rodon, Rodriguez, Ohtani and Kopech are off to excellent starts but each outing from here pushes us further and further into the unknown. Given the rate of pitching injuries we have already seen in 2021, I cannot help but think of the infamous quote from "The Hunt for Red October":

I hope I am wrong. 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jason Collette
Jason has been helping fantasy owners since 1999, and here at Rotowire since 2011. You can hear Jason weekly on many of the Sirius/XM Fantasy channel offerings throughout the season as well as on the Sleeper and the Bust podcast every Sunday. A ten-time FSWA finalist, Jason won the FSWA's Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year award in 2013 and the Baseball Series of the Year award in 2018 for Collette Calls,and was the 2023 AL LABR champion. Jason manages his social media presence at https://linktr.ee/jasoncollette
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