Cubs +100 over WHITE SOX Travis Wood has a 3.25 ERA and 1.25 WHIP
through six starts. In five of those six starts he’s allowed three runs or less
and all of his skills are supported by his xERA of 3.53. Wood’s 37 K’s in 38
innings is supported by his 10% swinging strike rate, which is up two points
from last year. His control is also trending the right way, as he has issued
just seven walks. Wood has been steady and is certainly worth backing but this
choice is more about fading John Danks.
Danks is getting progressively worse
each season. He went 4-14 with a 4.75 ERA in 138 innings last season. Danks
returned in mid-May last season from a year off (shoulder) but left his
velocity on the DL. This season in 36 innings, Danks has an alarming K/BB split
of 20/21. His fastball tops out at 88 MPH and his swinging strike rate over his
last two starts is 5%. Batters are making contact on 90% of his pitches when
he’s in the strike zone and that’s the worst mark in the majors for pitchers
with at least four starts this year. Danks has a xERA of 5.53 to go along with
a groundball/fly-ball split of 38%/42%. There is nothing in Danks’ profile that
is appealing and until he shows us something different he’s an automatic fade
when favored.
Cincinnati +145 over BOSTON There’s really not a lot to like about
the Cincinnati Reds. This is a ball club that has more flaws than Oscar
Pistorius’ defense. From their defense to their offense to their bullpen to
their inability to score key runs with RISP, the Reds are as frustrating to
watch and/or wager on than just about any other team in the majors. That said,
we can’t refuse this take-back on Mike Leake against Jake Peavy. A steady dose
of groundballs and strong control provide Leake with a nice floor. Only two of
Leake’s 37 starts since the beginning of last season have been disastrous. That
tells us that the Reds have a chance to win every time Leake starts. Leake’s
groundball/line-drive/fly-ball profile of 57%/16%/27% is further proof that
he’ll almost always keep his team in the game and has the ability to work
through innings quickly. He seldom walks anyone, he has a 1.04 WHIP and his
3.53 ERA is right in line with his xERA of 3.49. If we were to describe Leake
with one word it would be “reliable”.
Jake Peavy is anything but reliable. Pay
no attention to Peavy’s 2.87 ERA because it is driven by extremely lucky hit
and strand rates of 25% and 87% respectively. That low hit rate and high strand
rate are both unsustainable. Peavy is precisely the reason you don’t purchase
surface stats. His skills have been on a steady decline for two years running
and they’ve never been worse than they are right now. Peavy has a 4.48 xERA
overall and a 5.02 xERA over his past two starts. As a fly-ball pitcher with
poor durability, with worsening control (21 BB in 36 innings) with a home in
the AL East, Peavy's risk outweighs his reward. A big correction in Peavy’s ERA
is coming.
You can also follow me on Twitter @sportswagers3 and instantly be notified when picks are posted
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To remove first post, remove entire topic.
Y-T-D record = 48-50 (+14.58 units)
All plays are 2 units
Cubs +100 over WHITE SOX Travis Wood has a 3.25 ERA and 1.25 WHIP
through six starts. In five of those six starts he’s allowed three runs or less
and all of his skills are supported by his xERA of 3.53. Wood’s 37 K’s in 38
innings is supported by his 10% swinging strike rate, which is up two points
from last year. His control is also trending the right way, as he has issued
just seven walks. Wood has been steady and is certainly worth backing but this
choice is more about fading John Danks.
Danks is getting progressively worse
each season. He went 4-14 with a 4.75 ERA in 138 innings last season. Danks
returned in mid-May last season from a year off (shoulder) but left his
velocity on the DL. This season in 36 innings, Danks has an alarming K/BB split
of 20/21. His fastball tops out at 88 MPH and his swinging strike rate over his
last two starts is 5%. Batters are making contact on 90% of his pitches when
he’s in the strike zone and that’s the worst mark in the majors for pitchers
with at least four starts this year. Danks has a xERA of 5.53 to go along with
a groundball/fly-ball split of 38%/42%. There is nothing in Danks’ profile that
is appealing and until he shows us something different he’s an automatic fade
when favored.
Cincinnati +145 over BOSTON There’s really not a lot to like about
the Cincinnati Reds. This is a ball club that has more flaws than Oscar
Pistorius’ defense. From their defense to their offense to their bullpen to
their inability to score key runs with RISP, the Reds are as frustrating to
watch and/or wager on than just about any other team in the majors. That said,
we can’t refuse this take-back on Mike Leake against Jake Peavy. A steady dose
of groundballs and strong control provide Leake with a nice floor. Only two of
Leake’s 37 starts since the beginning of last season have been disastrous. That
tells us that the Reds have a chance to win every time Leake starts. Leake’s
groundball/line-drive/fly-ball profile of 57%/16%/27% is further proof that
he’ll almost always keep his team in the game and has the ability to work
through innings quickly. He seldom walks anyone, he has a 1.04 WHIP and his
3.53 ERA is right in line with his xERA of 3.49. If we were to describe Leake
with one word it would be “reliable”.
Jake Peavy is anything but reliable. Pay
no attention to Peavy’s 2.87 ERA because it is driven by extremely lucky hit
and strand rates of 25% and 87% respectively. That low hit rate and high strand
rate are both unsustainable. Peavy is precisely the reason you don’t purchase
surface stats. His skills have been on a steady decline for two years running
and they’ve never been worse than they are right now. Peavy has a 4.48 xERA
overall and a 5.02 xERA over his past two starts. As a fly-ball pitcher with
poor durability, with worsening control (21 BB in 36 innings) with a home in
the AL East, Peavy's risk outweighs his reward. A big correction in Peavy’s ERA
is coming.
You can also follow me on Twitter @sportswagers3 and instantly be notified when picks are posted
I got to believe that the Cubs should be able to get to Danks even with their crap lineup from just a pitching standpoint Wood is hands down the better pitcher and he should continue his success against the Sox
0
I got to believe that the Cubs should be able to get to Danks even with their crap lineup from just a pitching standpoint Wood is hands down the better pitcher and he should continue his success against the Sox
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