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In the last 15 years, 2001-15, there have been fifteen American League pitchers who struck out 8+ men per game as rookie starters. So, one a year. Whether the league needs it or not, it gets one of these rookies every season.
.
Rook SP |
Year |
K per 9 IP |
Went on to do what? |
Francisco Liriano |
2006 |
11.0 |
Was going to be Johan Santana+ before DL |
(Yu Darvish) |
2012 |
10.4 |
exceed Iwakuma's salary |
Gio Gonzalez |
2009 |
9.7 |
3-5 WAR last six years in a row |
(Masahiro Tanaka) |
2014 |
9.3 |
exceed Iwakuma's salary |
Lance McCullers, HOU |
2015 |
9.2 |
... |
Matt Moore |
2012 |
9.2 |
Make Trump money after 9 IP |
Colin McHugh, HOU |
2014 |
9.1 |
Go 19-7 the next year too |
Michael Pineda |
2011 |
9.1 |
Confirm everything you ever suspected about SSI |
Felix Doubront, BOX |
2012 |
9.0 |
blow out his shoulder |
Carlos Rodon, CWS |
2015 |
9.0 |
... |
NATE KARNS |
2015 |
8.9 |
lose his job?! |
(DiceK) |
2008 |
8.8 |
exceed Iwakuma's salary |
Scott Kazmir |
2005 |
8.8 |
win 100 games so far |
Jake Odorizzi |
2014 |
8.8 |
pitch even better last year |
whoop, I didn't get the right number of rows on there and my table formats are unforgiving about that. So these two rookies over 8.5 get their own train car:
.
Trevor May |
2015 |
8.6 |
... |
CC Sabathia |
2001 |
8.5 |
REALLY make Trump money |
.
We should also mention Matt Shoemaker who not only fanned 8.2 men for DiPoto in 2014, but also went 16-4, 3.04 while doing it. And Trevor Bauer fanned 8.1 as a rookie. That's it for the guys who fanned more than 8 per game. Fifteen of them in fifteen years, if you edit out the NPB superstars.
There are a couple of others to mention: Joba Chamberlain fanned 11 men as a rook, while playing "swing man" and starting a dozen games. And Rafael Soriano fanned 9.0 men as a rookie for the M's, starting eight games.
Even if you go below 8K per game. Look at the woeful 7+ strikeout rook SP's ... next on the list is one Erikkkk Bedard :- ) and after him Roenis Elias. LOL. He was the second player in the Miley deal, right? The names keep coming: Zach McAllister, Chris Archer, Yordano Ventura. That's right in order, if you're taking guys with 120 innings and up.
True, out of 16 rookies who fanned so many American Leaguers, four of them pitched last year. With strikeouts up. Also true, though, that guys like Colin McHugh didn't run 2+ ERA's by no blinkin' accident. And what do you think of the quality of that LIST! There's hardly an Anthony Varvaro among them.
....
Here he is, last Independence Day, throwing the magic disappearing yakker. Taijuan's great and all, but I don't notice that any of his offspeed pitches hit wormholes on the way to the plate.
And here's a quality read from the Seattle Times.
Bonus idea cloud for the morning. Why, again, is Taijuan Walker ahead of Nate Karns on the depth chart? I don't mean "he shouldn't be." I mean, why is he? Such is the power of talent. Taijuan is a Cy Young winner the way you draw one up in the test tube.
....
The reason we mention, is that they interviewed Nate Karns after the game today and he sounded pretty blinkin' ticked that he was still pitching for a job this year. Can't say I blame him. Nobody else like him ever had to. But then again, none of the other guys had James Paxton in front of them, now did they. K-Pax has an ERA 50 points lower than Karns' and James hasn't even found a rhythm yet.
Well, maybe he wasn't really that ticked. You could hear his exasperation over the radio, but Rizzs jumped in immediately with the platitudes about what a nice young kid and all. :: shrug :: I'D be ticked, tell ya that.
All the pundits say the M's obviously go with Ryan Cook or Justin DeFratus in the 'pen. Generically, that would be the usual thing to do, and by "the usual thing" we mean "the hackneyed thing." But the pundits are not taking into consideration that, in this specific case, we got two Michael Pineda-class battleships at the end of the rotation. I'd let the Paxton-Karns loser take a few innings off in the Mariner bullpen, priceless though Justin DeFratus might be.
I just don't see how a rookie SP goes out and kicks keister like Nate Karns did, and then goes back to AAA. How can you LIVE with yourself.
:- )
Who knows. There could come a game situation where you'd rather signal down to the 'pen to get a 98 MPH lefty, than signal down for a waiver claim. Baseball can surprise you.
Enjoy,
Dr D