Sandy Alcantara Off To Poor Start, Imperiling Marlins Present, Future

By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/02 23:00:05
0
Share
copy
Miami Marlins catcher Agustín Ramírez, left, and starting pitcher Sandy Alcantara talk during a ... More baseball game against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Los Angeles, Tuesday, April 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong) No, the Miami Marlins were not one of the majority of MLB clubs entering 2025 with designs on a playoff spot. They were well aware of their lot as non-contenders, and entered the season with an everyday lineup filled with career minor leaguers with limited upside. Ditto their starting rotation, with a couple of major exceptions. Youngster Eury Perez has a fairly extreme ceiling, and is in the midst of rehabbing from Tommy John surgery. By midseason or so, he could be ready to take the ball in major league games that count. Despite a lengthy rehab, he just turned 22. Then there’s recent staff ace and 2022 NL Cy Young winner Sandy Alcantara. He too underwent Tommy John surgery, in October 2023, and at age 29 took the ball on opening day of this season. To put it mildly, things haven’t gone quite as planned in his first six starts. 2-3, 8.31, with an ugly 19/17 K/BB ratio and 26 hits allowed in 26 innings. There’s simply no way to spin those numbers positively, and the eye test has been at least as alarming. A typically insightful “MLB Now” segment the day after his most recent start featuring Al Leiter with host Brian Kenny and Joel Sherman about summed it up – as much as anything else, the sheer volume of non-competitive pitches thrown in his last outing against the mighty Dodgers is cause for concern. So where have we come from, where are we now, and where might we be going with regard to Alcantara? Remember – there’s a huge elephant in the room here. Alcantara’s greatest long-term value to his club is as a trade asset. He’s guaranteed $17.3 million this season and next, with a club option for $21.3 million in 2027. If he’s an ace, that’s a bargain, and he could bring a much-needed haul to the perennially rebuilding Marlins. But if he is what he currently appears to be.....well, that’s another story. Alcantara may have won the 2022 Cy, but my batted ball-based evaluation system didn’t consider him particularly deserving. He would have been 5th on my hypothetical ballot, behind Aaron Nola, Carlos Rodon, Corbin Burnes and Max Fried. He was exceedingly lucky on grounders that season, with a 59 actual, Unadjusted Grounder Score compared to a much higher 108 adjusted mark. Overall, his 76 “Tru” ERA- about equaled his 77 FIP- and was way above his 58 ERA-. He made a run at NL Contact Manager of the Year honors (Fried prevailed), with an 84 Adjusted Contact Score. His ability to rack up grounders and minimize liners and walks while muting contact authority of all types made up for a middling K rate. In 2023, Alcantara when slightly backward in many respects. His K rate dropped from 23.4% to 19.8%, over a half standard deviation below league average. His grounder rate remained high and his liner rate low, though both crept in the wrong direction. Despite all those grounders, his contact management performance was basically average (98 Adjusted Contact Score), and his “Tru”- checked in at 93, right in line with his ERA- and FIP- (both at 94). My methods had him as the 14th best qualifying NL starter. Then injury struck, putting him on the shelf until this 2025. In spring training, we heard a lot of talk about the resurgence in his velocity to pre-injury levels. And sure, when you’re a guy who bumps 100 mph with both of his fastballs and sits in the upper 90s, that sounds impressive. But his velocity isn’t all the way back – all four of his primary pitches, his four-seamer, sinker, changeup and slider have all lost at least a full mph since 2023. That’s not insignificant. And let’s drill a little deeper into his arsenal to get a better feel for his overall pitching profile. In 2022, 2023 and 2025, he has never thrown a single one of those four offerings more than 30% of the time. He really doesn’t own a go-to out pitch – he relies on the interaction among all four. Each season I issue pitch grades for all of the qualifying offerings of every MLB starting pitchers with 135 or more innings pitched, based on their bat-missing and contact management performance relative to the league. All four of his pitches got “B” grades or better in both 2022 and 2023, but only two (his changeup in 2022 and his four-seamer in 2023) got “A” grades. The sinker got a “B+” in 2022, the slider did the same in 2023. The rest were average “B” grades. This shows that any of his pitches has flashed above average at one time or another, but just as importantly, their respective floors were at the league average level. While Alcantara has a reputation as more of a contact manager than a bat-misser, he showed bursts of excellence in both disciplines in 2022-23. His four-seamer was an above average bat-misser in 2022 and 2023, while his changeup also was in 2022. His changeup, sinker (both in 2022) and slider (in 2023) stood out with regard to contact management at one time or another. Now it’s too early to run any meaningful contact management numbers for 2025, but we can make some cursory conclusions based on some surface level numbers. After never allowing higher than league average exit speeds on any batted ball type in 2022-23, he’s allowing higher than league average authority on flies (95.0 mph), liners (96.4 mph) and grounders (87.3 mph) in 2025. His liner rate allowed is way up. He’s allowed 10 of his 24 hits with his sinker, his second most frequently used pitch. And he’s allowed six hits – half for extra bases – with his four-seamer, his third most frequently used pitch. That’s pretty concerning. The bat-missing trends aren’t good either. Alcantara’s overall swing-and-miss rate was 12.3% in 2022 and 12.2% in 2023. Pretty good for a pitcher with an ordinary K rate. Lots of swings and misses, plenty of weak contact works. This year, his whiff rate is down to 10.6%, and the biggest issue surrounds his most important pitch – his four-seamer. While the four-seamer is the game’s least effective pitch, and overall usage has been trending downward for years, the great ones have great fastballs. So even though Alcantara took a slight step backward in 2023, the emergence of an “A”-grade fastball was heartening and gave me good feelings about his future. His pitch-specific whiff rate had climbed from 10.8% in 2022 to 14.2% in 2023. Well, it’s sitting at 6.2% thus far in 2025. If you could localize all of his issues down to a single number (beside the walks), this would be it. There are plenty of questions to be asked here, and some should be directed at Marlins’ GM Peter Bendix. Was Alcantara ready for a full workload as of Opening Day, or was the club perhaps a little too aggressive to get him off to a good start and enhance his trade value? Sure, his velo looked good in the spring, but was he stretched out to the level one expects of their #1 starter? Pitchers have been in Alcantara’s situation many times before. Some take a while to bounce back – but do – others continue to struggle, and some re-injure themselves. Heck, just last year Garrett Crochet got off to a terrible start with the White Sox coming off of TJ, righted himself and then got dealt to the Red Sox for a king’s ransom at the deadline. This could go in any number of directions. But all eyes will be on Alcantara when he makes his next starts, when the opposition isn’t as formidable. A lot is at stake for both player and team. Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tonyblengino/2025/05/02/sandy-alcantara-off-to-poor-start-imperiling-marlins-present-future/

-- Price

--

You may also like

ZachXBT: Humanity private key leak and abnormal surge in H token should be viewed separately

On June 9, according to related disclosures, on-chain investigator ZachXBT posted an update on Humanity’s roughly $31 million security incident, saying that after further analyzing fund flows, he currently tends to believe the project team was not involved in an “inside job” or a self-staged attack. According to him, the official explanation about the private key leak was broadly accurate, but before the token unlock, the price of H had been artificially pushed higher, and the hacker later took advantage of that market environment; therefore, the private key leak and the earlier abnormal price pumping should be regarded as two separate and independent events. This reframing has shifted the market’s understanding of the nature of the incident. Earlier discussion around Humanity had focused on whether the team directly participated in the attack or used the security incident to cover up internal operations. ZachXBT’s latest remarks shift the focus from “whether it was self-theft” to “whether there were pre-unlock market structure issues.” He also questioned whether the team may have.

Morning Report | OpenAI has submitted an S-1 registration statement draft to the U.S. SEC; Morpho completes $175 million financing

Overview of Important Market Events on June 9th

Morning Report | BitMine increased its holdings by 126,971 ETH last week; trader Eugene announced his exit from the crypto market

Overview of Important Market Events on June 8th

Wang Chuan: How can one not feel anxious after the neighbor Old Wang made thirty times profit by investing in storage stocks? (Seven) - A quarter-century cycle

In-depth analysis of the "reflexivity" bubble trap in storage stocks: Beware of the backlash from the bullwhip effect and the false narrative of high growth; do not let the short-term myth of wealth become a wealth abyss that cannot be recovered for 25 years.

Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."

The major reshuffle has just begun.

$75 billion in foreign capital has fled, and South Korean retail investors have absorbed it all using leverage

Despite the accelerated migration of Korean funds from cryptocurrency to the stock market, the Korean market remains an important barometer for global cryptocurrency retail liquidity and recovery turning points.

Contents

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more
iconiconiconiconiconiconicon
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com