2025 Fantasy Baseball Rankings & Tiers: Starting Pitchers fScores

If you have been reading or listening to my content, you have likely heard me reference fScores (named fScores for “fantasy scores”) or use them to compare players. This is a custom fantasy stat I created that aggregates other stats into core skills, weighted against the average player where 100 is average, similar to wRC+ or OPS+.

Drafting based on core skills, rather than attempting a “one size fits all” ranking allows for more customization in team building and team design to target the weak points of your team and allows for more balance.

Please read the article “What is fScore?” for a better understanding before going through the below rankings. The starting pitchers players listed at the top of each tier are where the tier starts and ends.

2025 Starting Pitchers Players fScores (Fantasy Baseball)

You will find a complete set of starting pitcher rankings at the end of this article.

Additional Positions and fScores

Tier 1 & Notes

It’s insane that Paul Skenes is already the top starter in (fantasy) baseball after only one year, but he was ridiculously good with an ERA under two as a rookie.

Logan Gilbert gets the edge as the number two-ranked starting pitcher over Tarik Skubal simply because he’s one of the most durable pitchers in baseball, while Skubal’s only season over 150 innings was 2023.

Skubal has been the best pitcher per plate appearance over the last couple of years, but Gilbert is more likely to get 200 innings and Skenes might have the highest upside of the entire group.

Tier 2 & Notes

Blake Snell has the best stuff in the majors, per fStuff, besides Jacob deGrom and Spencer Strider, who are both coming off injuries. He also signed with the best team in baseball.

George Kirby‘s upper-tier control makes him about as consistent as you can get. You can’t go wrong with picking a likely lock as a top-10 starter (pending injury).

Dylan Cease had a big step forward in San Diego with a great defense and pitcher’s park behind him, but will he be able to repeat in the event he’s traded?

Chris Sale is coming off a killer year that is almost not repeatable, but if he can do even 90% of what he did last season, he will have another top-10 year.

Zack Wheeler has been amazing for several years, but he is getting older and I expect a slight decline in 2025.

Michael King had his second consecutive great season as a starter and has emerged as an ace for the Padres. He still has some additional upside as a newer starter, per fScores, pushing him ahead of some of the other pitchers in this tier.

Corbin Burnes with the Diamondbacks is a pretty nice development for his fantasy value, though San Francisco would have been better.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto was as good as expected when he played (outside of his first start) as a Dodger. Hopefully, he will have better health in 2025. Yamamoto was as good as advertised and the poor health in 2024 might make him a good buy for 2025.

Cole Ragans has some control issues, but besides that, he pitched like the ace he seemed to be.

Bryce Miller has proven to be the lighter version of Spencer Strider I thought he could be. He even added a splitter that has allowed for more innings pitched.

Garrett Crochet is at the top of the stuff side of starting pitchers and could end 2025 at the top tier of starters with another strong season with a significant workload. The durability is my main concern for his 2025 cap as he only has 219 innings in his career with 146 of them coming last season in his first year as a starter in the majors.

Tier 3 & Notes

Logan Webb is the only starter in the top 40 with under a 100 fStuff. His carrying cards are his control and ability to limit damage with a strong workload.

Framber Valdez is very similar to Webb, however he has better stuff. Why is Webb above Valdez? Webb has a little better control and pitches in a much better stadium that limits damage, giving him a slight edge.

This is the second of the last three seasons where Jacob deGrom has the most ridiculous fScores imaginable, but will he stay healthy coming off surgery? He is projected to throw around 150 innings, but if he gets to 120-130 innings, he will be worth his draft price in this range.

Hunter Greene took some significant steps forward and appears to have a chance to break out further in 2025.

Shane McClanahan is back. Like deGrom, he is also projected to hit around 150 innings, but there is some risk with the injured pitchers as there is no guarantee they return 100% to form. 

Spencer Schwellenbach kind of popped out of nowhere last year when the Braves promoted him from AA to the Majors with only 13 innings pitched at the AA level and zero at AAA. However, he balled out and has top-20 upside with an over 20% K:BB ratio in his rookie campaign.

Under the hood, Zac Gallen had a bit of a rough season as his control was not as good as usual, which led to only 148 innings pitched in 28 games knocking him from the consistent quality starts monster he previously was.

Bryan Woo has top-notch command and a very good fastball. He’s a big breaking pitch away from jumping up a tier.

Tanner Bibee is a tad inconsistent, which leads to some people not liking him, but he had a very strong second half and has plus secondaries, even if his fastball is only average.

Shane Baz started a little shaky at the beginning of his comeback season but finished incredibly strong. Those who tuned out for football likely missed how dominant he was at the end of the season with a 0.94 WHIP in his last 10 starts to go along with 19 strikeouts and only three walks in his final three starts of the season.

Gerrit Cole had his most up-and-down season since he was a Pittsburgh Pirate. While it’s entirely possible with a restful offseason he’ll be back to his former self in 2025, I think there’s a decent chance he is beginning the decline phase of his career. With the elbow injury lingering, it impacts my ranking of him for 2025.

Grayson Rodriguez has been very good when healthy and appears to be entering 2025 as the ace of the rotation after the Orioles only brought in Charlie Morton and Tomoyuki Sugano. His stuff and control did improve in 2024 from 2023.

Spencer Strider is projected to return in June and will likely be a top-tier starter upon his return, but you will be losing a couple of months of production. It’s also hard to draft auto-injured list (IL) players to start the year in leagues that don’t have an IL spot like the National Fantasy Baseball Championship (NFBC). That will also determine where you rank him via league type and settings.

Tier 4 & Notes

Brandon Pfaadt had a pretty under-the-radar strong season (mostly because of the 4.71 ERA), but the 3.65 SIERA and 18.8% K:BB ratio show us there is a strong season coming from Pfaadt, who made nice gains in the control area of his game in 2024.

Hunter Brown had a terrible first half and a phenomenal second half. I’m big on Brown for 2025 and think he figured out the pitch mix that will lead to his success.

Joe Ryan‘s season will all depend on health, which is why his fScore range varies so greatly. He is likely a Tier 3 starter when healthy, but will he pitch enough innings to optimize his value?

Tyler Glasnow is one of the best pitchers in baseball on a per-inning basis, but still only pitched 130-ish innings last season and had a rough second half concerning homers allowed.

We don’t know where Roki Sasaki will end up yet or how many innings he will pitch in 2025, which may diminish his value a little bit. It’s possible in the right situation he out-produces some of the Tier 3 guys in 2025 and has even more upside in dynasty leagues.

Jared Jones started the season on fire for the Pirates but had a lat strain mid-season that impacted him upon his return. It will be interesting to see how Jones rebounds with an offseason of rest. Can he return to his first-half form or will the second-half struggles continue?

Ryan Pepiot had a large uptick in stuff in 2024, making that Tyler Glasnow trade look pretty good for the Rays. My biggest concern with Pepiot is going to be moving to the smaller minor league ballpark considering he already had a slight homer problem in Tropicana Field.

Speaking of home run problems, Shota Imanaga was on fire most of the season for the Cubs and was a stellar financial bargain. However, he also had some home run issues, especially in the second half.

Pablo Lopez is way better than the back of the baseball card stats show. He finished with a 3.46 SIERA and 20.3% K:BB ratio, portending to a much better 2025. Buy low if you can.

Tier 5 & Notes

This is the number three starter tier in most leagues.

Sonny Gray was excellent in his first season in St. Louis and should be again with the support of a likely better defense in 2025 and a great pitcher’s park. He is 35 now and there’s a likely decline around the corner for Gray on the aging curve, though.

Shohei Ohtani is fresh to pitch again in 2025 after being a top-tier starter before injury, he will likely be capped around 120-130 innings in 2025 as he returns from Tommy John surgery and the Dodgers look to protect their big investment, especially considering you need that bat in the lineup.

Nathan Eovaldi is back with the Rangers as one of the most underrated pitchers in baseball. He’s extremely consistent.

Max Fried is going to be pitching in Yankee Stadium next year. We have seen many pitchers fold when moving to New York (Sonny Gray, Frankie Montas and a declining Carlos Rodon, to name a few examples). I’m a bit weary of him this year until we see if he can control the likely increase in home run rate.

Kutter Crawford is another pitcher with a tale of two halves after an excellent first half in 2024 and blah second half. The underlying metrics support a better pitcher than the final line, though, so we should see an uptick in overall 2025 performance.

Gavin Williams is better than he’s shown so far in his major league career. A Hunter Brown-like renaissance could be on the way in 2025.

Taj Bradley is very similar production-wise to Tanner Bibee on a per-inning basis (except Bibee pitches deeper into games), even though their arsenals are the opposite of each other. After a near 2.0 HR/9 rate in 2023, I’m not confident Bradley will be able to keep the ball in the yard in the minor league stadium, but he should still put up some nice K:BB rates. Expect a Brandon Pfaadt-like season from Bradley with a big-time buying opportunity in 2026 as the Rays eventually transition back to Tropicana.

Carlos Rodon had a nice bounce-back season with the Yankees in 2024 with the biggest downside being the home run rate — Yankee Stadium is a tough place to avoid homers.

I have never been a Yusei Kikuchi guy, but he has been very good for two years in a row now including a stellar run with now division rival Houston.

Bailey Ober is an oddity because the results of his stuff greatly outperform the actual pitch metrics per Stuff+ models, so this tells me most of his success is due to his pitching acumen and ability to mix his pitches well.

Cristopher Sanchez is a ground ball machine who is great at limited damage, similar to Logan Webb.

Luis Castillo is getting a tad older and might be exiting his career peak based on his age. My ranking of him may change from now until March depending on if he stays in Seattle or if he is moved to a significantly worse pitching environment.

Yu Darvish saw a large drop off in stuff last year, but this may have also been a result of injuries. Despite this, he was still very effective when he was healthy.

Kodai Senga has some control issues, but killer stuff when healthy, which is his biggest question heading into 2025.

Justin Steele is a two-pitch guy (they are decent pitches, to be fair), but he makes it work and has for three consecutive seasons.

Freddy Peralta‘s finish in 2024 was a bit concerning as he was giving up a lot of flyballs that led to some big-time damage against him. His command also tapered off, which makes Peralta a bit risky and less of a high-end option.

Luis Gil is coming off a phenomenal season and part of me wants to rank him much higher, but his command is lackluster and he outperformed his underlying metrics.

Aaron Nola might get an edge in points leagues because he always pitches so many innings, but his fastball has gotten worse the last couple of seasons and I am concerned he is leaving his peak behind.

Tanner Houck is hard to barrel up, which is his best trait. If he can repeat the workload, he’s a valuable mid-tier pitcher.

Seth Lugo was a stud in 2024, he has upper-tier control and is good at limiting damage, but he’s likely to see a decent amount of regression in 2025 at 35.

Tier 6 & Notes

There are so many starters that this is the tier I’ll be more selective on blurbs instead of discussing each starter.

Kumar Rocker dominated the minors and has a good shot at making the rotation out of camp in the event the Rangers decide to go to a six-man with deGrom and Tyler Mahle both coming off injury.

Brandon Woodruff is a top-15 starter if healthy… but his injury is so odd. Will he be healthy in 2025? We have no clear answer yet.

Nick Pivetta is an interesting name who could jump a tier depending on where he signs.

Drew Rasmussen should be a starter by the second half and Griffin Jax is rumored to potentially start in the event the Twins trade a starter away.

Jack Flaherty was fantastic for the Tigers and then blah for the Dodgers. Flaherty needs to sign somewhere with an advanced pitching development system for me to be comfortable acquiring him in 2025.

Quinn Mathews showed elite stuff in the minors in 2024 and is built for a large workload early in the 2025 season.

Tier 7 & Notes

Jesus Luzardo needs to show health to get back to his top-40 starter potential. Philadelphia has done a great job keeping players healthy, so there is room to buy here despite the tougher home ballpark.

Kevin Gausman was very mediocre in 2024 and he appears to be past his peak based on the decrease in his stuff metrics.

Kris Bubic is projected for the rotation in 2025. He is a nice, cheap bounceback candidate to watch.

It’s tough to pick Reds pitchers, but Rhett Lowder has shown a good ability to limit damage.

Zebby Matthews‘ elite control could lead to a nice 2025 season. Draft him as people will be looking at the over 6.00 ERA rather than the 18.1% K-BB ratio and 3.78 SIERA in the Majors.

Luis Garcia is coming back from injury and is a nice bounce-back candidate.

Jackson Jobe did not perform as well as expected in 2024 in the Minors. I have some pitch mix concerns with him as the pitch stuff ratings are ridiculously good, but the results don’t match.

Tier 8 & Notes

Hayden Birdsong reminds me of Taj Bradley a bit, but he has to get the fastball under control or he will end up as a bullpen arm.

This tier has some fun second-half names. Andrew Painter, Eury Perez and Shane Bieber all have elite upside.

There are some nice innings eaters or back-end starters in this tier who won’t hurt you including Jameson Taillon, Mitch Keller, Sean Manaea, Jose Berrios and Michael Wacha.

Tier 9 & Notes

This tier has a lot of upside and also a lot of risk.

When will Chase Dollander debut? Could we see him get a Paul Skenes-like workload this season?

Caden Dana had a rough Major League debut and is only 21, but he could use some more seasoning in the Minors before returning to the Majors.

Andre Pallante was elite at limiting damage, but what’s keeping him from becoming a Justin Steele-type is the lack of elite command.

Sean Burke is interesting if he can make some gains in the control department.

Will Landen Roupp get a chance to start in spring? I’ve always compared him to Corbin Burnes and his career track right now is somewhat similar.

Will Sawyer Gipson-Long return to the rotation or the bullpen?

Michael McGreevy has some lackluster stuff. Unlike Pallante, he has very good command, so he could end up developing into a Justin Steele-type.

Lucas Giolito is supposedly going to start the season healthy, so let’s keep an eye on him this spring.

Joey Cantillo and Chayce McDermott are interesting sixth-starter names to watch this season. They both have good stuff and bad command.

Tier 10 & Notes

Will Chase Burns make it to the Majors this year? If so, when? He probably has the stuff and this may depend on his team’s performance. I doubt the Reds drafted him second overall to play around in the Minors all year.

Ryan Weathers was pretty good in 2024, as I had expected after the spring, but he needs to build up the innings.

There are a number of guys in this tier who will probably be decent streamers: Frankie Montas, Luis Severino, Kyle Gibson and Charlie Morton, for example.

Can the Guardians develop Slade Cecconi and Luis L. Ortiz?

Will Reid Detmers continue to get tanked or will he bounce back?

Will Cade Cavalli break camp and get his stuff back or will he end up in the bullpen?

Can Aaron Ashby and Joe Boyle find success in bullpen roles?

How much playing time will Brandon Sproat and Tink Hence get in 2025?

Tier 11 & Notes

This tier is unlikely to play a regular role in 10-12 team leagues, but in deeper leagues, some of these pitchers could make an impact in 2025.

Biggest upside guys: Max Meyer, Carson Whisenhunt, Emmet Sheehan and Thomas Harrington, for example.

Tier 12 & Notes

I don’t expect many of these pitchers to make a big impact in 2025, but some of these younger pitchers could get the call sooner than I expect if enough injuries occur. Most of these younger guys are also worth watching for keeper or dynasty leagues if not owned.

Some of my favorites: Hagen Smith, K.C. Hunt, Alejandro Rosario, Emiliano Teodo (bullpen or starter) and Parker Messick

2025 fScores Starting Pitchers Rankings

Name Age fPDurability fStuff fControl fERA TOTAL FUTURE BETA Last Tommy John Surgery
Paul Skenes 23 92 110 114 183 133 153
Logan Gilbert 28 115 114 125 139 133 140 2.22
Tarik Skubal 28 86 115 125 166 131 141 2016
Blake Snell 32 75 128 102 188 131 130
George Kirby 27 105 102 138 131 128 131 4.51
Dylan Cease 29 97 120 99 152 126 130 6.45 2014
Chris Sale 36 89 110 114 165 127 137 2020
Zack Wheeler 35 100 110 117 141 126 123 2.64 2015
Michael King 30 87 111 105 168 125 135
Corbin Burnes 30 99 115 108 131 122 123 7.86
Yoshinobu Yamamoto 26 62 112 107 164 118 140
Cole Ragans 27 101 110 97 149 122 130 2019 (& 2018)
Bryce Miller 26 100 108 111 127 121 132
Garrett Crochet 26 76 117 95 136 114 133 2022
Logan Webb 28 109 95 115 156 127 129 4.74 2016
Framber Valdez 31 95 105 104 163 124 130 4.89
Jacob deGrom 37 20 142 149 172 128 157 2023
Hunter Greene 25 81 116 104 133 114 132 2019
Shane McClanahan 27 40 115 106 124 103 138 2023
Spencer Schwellenbach 25 78 106 124 160 124 146 2021
Zac Gallen 29 97 104 102 148 121 119 10.96
Bryan Woo 25 83 104 120 126 117 130 2021 (IB)
Tanner Bibee 26 98 105 107 136 120 127
Shane Baz 26 64 112 104 129 110 142 2022
Gerrit Cole 34 83 112 110 134 118 120 18.86
Grayson Rodriguez 25 66 115 104 116 108 130
Spencer Strider 26 39 132 103 119 106 137 2024 (IB)
Brandon Pfaadt 26 106 107 111 111 118 124
Hunter Brown 26 98 105 98 144 119 119 0.06
Joe Ryan 29 64 107 121 125 112 125
Tyler Glasnow 31 56 122 108 124 110 121 2021
Roki Sasaki 23 70 118 107 128 114 121
Sandy Alcantara 29 43 108 116 125 105 131 2023
Jared Jones 23 66 114 99 116 106 137
Ryan Pepiot 27 71 112 106 126 111 127
Shota Imanaga 31 83 113 120 102 113 117
Pablo Lopez 29 93 106 116 113 112 117 1.59 2013
Sonny Gray 35 89 111 110 120 116 110 23.69
Shohei Ohtani 30 43 114 99 136 105 129 2023
Nate Eovaldi 35 93 101 114 131 118 114 2016 (& 2007)
Max Fried 31 98 98 104 154 116 109 11.64
Kutter Crawford 29 101 105 109 119 113 120 2019
Gavin Williams 25 80 104 96 132 108 120
Taj Bradley 24 98 115 99 106 110 121
Carlos Rodon 32 95 114 99 113 114 110 32.76 2019
Yusei Kikuchi 34 92 111 104 111 113 121 13.3
Bailey Ober 29 86 104 120 111 108 115 2015
Cristopher Sanchez 28 84 98 116 126 109 117
Luis Castillo 32 89 108 110 119 108 102
Yu Darvish 38 54 106 109 125 102 121 2015
Kodai Senga 32 31 113 93 137 99 121
Justin Steele 29 84 100 107 142 106 113 2017
Freddy Peralta 29 81 105 98 126 107 109 12.76
Luis Gil 27 83 112 86 113 99 113 2022
Aaron Nola 32 108 105 114 105 109 102 6 2016 (PRP)
Tanner Houck 29 79 100 99 140 107 108
Seth Lugo 35 100 96 110 131 111 107 2017 (PRP)
Kumar Rocker 25 35 114 104 154 106 147
Brandon Woodruff 31 38 113 116 160 113 132 2023 (shoulder)
Clarke Schmidt 29 56 107 100 138 102 120 2017
Nick Pivetta 32 89 116 109 109 109 109
Drew Rasmussen 29 27 117 118 163 110 134 2017 (& 2016)
Bowden Francis 29 67 102 118 134 107 128
Griffin Jax 30 54 118 102 155 114 123
Jose Soriano 26 63 106 93 137 105 133 2021
Jack Flaherty 29 74 107 98 115 102 114
Quinn Mathews 24 88 107 97 133 104 117
David Festa 25 81 109 98 113 104 110
MacKenzie Gore 26 91 107 92 111 105 112
Spencer Arrighetti 25 96 102 94 111 104 119
Brayan Bello 26 90 99 98 128 104 110 0.46
DJ Herz 24 93 102 92 114 103 120
Zach Eflin 31 82 94 124 112 104 106 17.5
Jesus Luzardo 27 40 109 100 106 91 118 2016
Nestor Cortes 30 74 100 105 128 103 104 16.38
Kevin Gausman 34 94 102 104 123 101 100 2.39
Jacob Misiorowski 23 58 108 88 135 95 114
Kris Bubic 27 51 103 122 135 101 132 2023
Reynaldo Lopez 31 69 109 103 133 98 107
Rhett Lowder 23 68 95 103 141 103 114
Merrill Kelly 36 64 95 105 121 98 107 2.72
Chris Bassitt 36 98 94 94 125 106 97 3.03 2016
Jeffrey Springs 32 42 110 113 127 95 117 2023
Zebby Matthews 25 69 103 122 112 106 118
Max Scherzer 40 62 111 115 119 100 105
Bobby Miller 26 57 110 92 101 97 113
Nick Martinez 34 81 96 119 130 107 114
Tyler Mahle 30 26 101 108 123 91 118 2023
Luis Garcia 28 43 106 102 118 93 119 2023
Jordan Montgomery 32 85 96 101 123 102 96 18.11 2018
Dustin May 27 17 103 99 164 101 127 2023 (& 2021)
Reese Olson 25 63 102 104 120 92 114
Clay Holmes 32 64 110 95 144 102 118 2014
Jackson Jobe 22 83 100 99 110 95 111
Bubba Chandler 22 65 106 95 109 93 113
Hayden Birdsong 23 88 106 90 123 105 110
Tomoyuki Sugano 35 71 97 123 109 102 109
Andrew Painter 22 34 107 111 144 92 122 2023
Clayton Kershaw 37 42 100 103 132 95 106
Braxton Garrett 27 34 93 125 108 91 115 2017
Robbie Ray 33 42 107 87 110 86 113 2023
Eury Perez 22 25 118 104 97 93 107 2024
Ryne Nelson 27 89 95 110 110 101 108
Nick Lodolo 27 53 107 101 91 91 106
Ben Brown 25 84 111 95 95 95 106 2019
Jameson Taillon 33 105 88 116 108 107 109 2.94 2019 (2014)
Mitch Keller 29 90 96 102 103 103 104
Sean Manaea 33 98 99 102 119 100 105 1.53
David Peterson 29 78 96 95 124 98 108
Shane Bieber 30 39 104 111 121 100 119 2024
Matthew Boyd 34 42 101 103 119 91 111 2023
Jose Berrios 31 98 97 106 112 98 98 1.45
Walker Buehler 30 42 92 96 105 86 111 2022 (& 2015)
Michael Wacha 33 85 94 106 119 96 98
Chase Dollander 23 68 104 93 125 95 116
Caden Dana 21 72 98 103 125 96 117
Andre Pallante 26 87 86 91 157 99 109
Edward Cabrera 27 70 105 90 107 98 103
Jordan Hicks 28 74 101 85 107 99 107 2019
Ronel Blanco 31 82 106 94 105 97 103
Sean Burke 25 46 107 91 113 92 132 2018
Landen Roupp 26 80 110 96 168 112 121
Sawyer Gipson-Long 27 21 112 106 135 99 107 2024
Garrett Whitlock 29 36 100 105 121 88 113 2019
Michael McGreevy 24 80 87 120 130 100 121
Lucas Giolito 30 41 107 94 101 86 108 2024 (& 2012)
Jake Irvin 28 105 93 96 91 101 106 2020
Aaron Civale 30 79 92 103 107 98 101
Joey Cantillo 25 61 103 87 119 96 104
Andrew Heaney 34 89 104 107 106 97 97 2016
Jakob Junis 32 67 96 129 121 98 101
Grant Holmes 29 63 102 107 103 89 111
Alec Marsh 27 81 102 95 103 94 103
Chayce McDermott 26 58 101 84 112 88 101
Chase Burns 22 63 113 98 101 91 108
Jack Leiter 25 67 107 90 98 94 107
Chris Paddack 29 38 93 117 101 88 109 2022 (& 2016)
Keider Montero 24 113 94 94 102 98 108
Mitchell Parker 25 92 89 97 98 93 106
Ryan Weathers 25 43 96 99 103 82 114
Tobias Myers 26 90 91 104 105 93 105
Kyle Harrison 23 100 92 94 94 91 102
Chase Silseth 25 58 99 94 96 93 102
Frankie Montas 32 74 101 96 99 90 100
Luis L. Ortiz 26 89 95 95 109 93 99
Cody Bradford 27 68 95 118 102 91 101
Luis Severino 31 95 101 100 93 93 95 2020
Slade Cecconi 26 66 94 110 95 90 101
Simeon Woods Richardson 24 92 86 97 103 92 99
Kyle Gibson 37 85 98 94 105 96 90 1.74 2011
Reid Detmers 25 72 104 92 87 90 96
Cade Cavalli 26 18 107 88 109 79 103 2023
Erick Fedde 32 83 87 96 101 88 91 2014
Zack Littell 29 75 90 118 104 92 104
Cade Povich 25 99 96 95 94 92 98
Yariel Rodriguez 28 66 96 93 128 90 99
Richard Fitts 25 68 93 106 125 94 103
Charlie Morton 41 79 105 93 110 92 85 29.21 2012
Casey Mize 28 52 90 105 103 83 99 2022
Landon Knack 27 83 99 98 97 97 103
JP Sears 29 97 92 107 72 91 99 0.71
Ryan Feltner 28 79 92 92 117 92 99
Jose Quintana 36 83 86 99 130 94 92 17.42
Tyler Anderson 35 88 98 98 105 93 86 21.14
German Marquez 30 46 94 104 97 81 101 2023
Aaron Ashby 27 38 108 101 136 90 113
Drew Thorpe 24 78 92 101 112 91 94
Quinn Priester 24 55 90 102 117 88 98
Marcus Stroman 34 77 86 94 114 92 91
Dean Kremer 29 80 94 98 106 90 92
Brandon Sproat 24 70 100 96 111 90 105
Brady Singer 28 96 93 99 98 92 93 8.28
Joe Boyle 25 52 113 82 138 91 93
Tink Hence 22 60 108 97 136 101 109
DL Hall 26 56 92 89 114 85 96
Ty Madden 25 66 99 96 100 88 95
Noah Schultz 21 65 99 102 143 92 109
Osvaldo Bido 29 59 102 94 119 89 98
Jonathan Cannon 24 92 87 99 104 93 103
Randy Vasquez 26 69 90 95 103 88 100
J.T. Ginn 26 54 96 96 97 87 96 2020
Mitch Spence 27 98 92 101 78 89 92
Andrew Abbott 26 81 94 93 90 87 91
Michael Grove 28 49 99 100 99 83 98 2017
Louie Varland 27 37 99 106 98 81 100
Max Meyer 26 76 96 99 84 85 95 2022
Kenta Maeda 37 84 97 107 98 92 86 2021
Lance Lynn 38 64 98 101 99 86 91 2015
Ranger Suarez 29 73 89 97 107 87 87
Tylor Megill 29 49 104 94 107 84 94
Griffin Canning 29 75 98 92 97 86 92 2020 (IB)
Alex Cobb 37 38 85 117 126 86 92 2015
Justin Verlander 42 68 100 104 109 91 82 45.58 2020
Spencer Turnbull 32 25 100 95 116 79 101 2021
Carson Whisenhunt 24 59 103 90 108 84 95
Hayden Wesneski 27 52 96 102 100 83 95
Miles Mikolas 36 84 83 104 106 90 82 5.65
Thomas Harrington 23 64 93 112 105 89 102
Emmet Sheehan 25 31 113 97 123 88 93 2024
Chase Petty 22 84 96 92 99 91 105
Will Warren 26 65 99 95 94 89 91
Joey Estes 23 91 84 112 73 87 95
Matt Waldron 28 76 86 103 89 86 92
Trevor Rogers 27 57 88 94 104 81 92
Colin Rea 34 73 88 106 99 87 89
Austin Gomber 31 85 83 106 90 87 88
Albert Suarez 35 69 88 103 106 87 85 2009
Antonio Senzatela 30 45 79 100 106 78 98 2023
Jon Gray 33 66 93 105 98 86 83
Yilber Diaz 24 66 92 90 104 84 89
Eduardo Rodriguez 32 72 87 95 107 86 83
Ian Seymour 26 72 101 97 125 86 105 2022
Graham Ashcraft 27 57 98 93 97 82 89
Adam Mazur 24 68 89 97 91 85 93
Ben Lively 33 80 82 98 91 84 89
Kyle Wright 28 43 96 99 94 78 89
Javier Assad 27 83 83 89 104 85 87
Matt Manning 27 30 93 96 109 78 89
Cristian Javier 28 23 104 91 119 84 88 2024
Kyle Freeland 32 83 81 110 89 86 85 17.22
Steven Matz 34 36 90 101 105 79 95 2010
Hagen Smith 21 43 105 97 126 87 103 2019
K.C. Hunt 24 59 96 101 148 88 112
Lance McCullers 31 4 103 92 139 79 95 2018
Alejandro Rosario 22 54 111 110 140 90 122
AJ Smith-Shawver 22 61 97 91 100 83 88
Samuel Aldegheri 23 60 101 89 95 79 93
Robby Snelling 21 80 93 96 104 83 92
Patrick Sandoval 28 51 96 90 118 84 84 2024 (IB)
Emiliano Teodo 24 51 108 87 122 80 98
Bailey Falter 29 66 87 99 94 82 83
Roansy Contreras 25 65 93 91 93 82 79
Tony Gonsolin 31 38 84 100 92 75 92 2023
Mason Black 25 74 92 94 88 83 86
Jordan Wicks 25 69 88 95 72 78 88
George Klassen 23 60 102 81 107 83 93 2021
Hunter Barco 24 46 103 98 97 81 90 2022
Nick Nastrini 25 76 99 81 91 83 84
Dane Dunning 30 82 84 93 91 84 77 2019
Parker Messick 24 78 93 99 132 80 103
Cooper Hjerpe 24 33 102 90 113 78 89
Bryce Elder 26 56 93 94 98 81 77
Cade Horton 23 28 93 96 100 76 101 2021
Hurston Waldrep 23 66 90 82 135 79 94
Connor Phillips 24 55 101 82 83 79 84
Mason Adams 25 64 91 99 117 77 93
Ian Anderson 27 60 95 88 88 79 80 2023
Drue Hackenberg 23 75 91 86 131 76 103
Brandon Birdsell 25 80 86 105 87 79 95 2016
Gunnar Hoglund 25 56 91 101 76 76 88 2021
Logan Allen 26 58 88 89 90 78 77
Sean Sullivan 22 64 96 112 126 88 109
Chase Hampton 23 49 97 91 111 77 92
Blade Tidwell 24 73 95 84 90 77 92
Isaac Coffey 25 70 98 95 100 75 94
Emerson Hancock 26 48 83 98 87 75 81
Cal Quantrill 30 76 79 89 93 80 76 2015
Tekoah Roby 23 31 89 91 90 73 79
Carson Palmquist 24 76 95 88 93 79 90
Adrian Houser 32 47 83 94 103 77 75 2016
Paul Blackburn 31 45 89 99 98 78 73
Jonah Tong 22 53 99 81 111 76 93
Brad Lord 25 67 90 92 105 72 88
Jackson Baumeister 22 61 106 100 130 83 97
Owen Wild 22 69 105 101 108 76 97
Cristian Mena 22 59 87 85 98 72 82
Mick Abel 23 77 94 79 101 69 86
Taijuan Walker 32 64 84 90 77 75 68 23.86 2018
Top 75 112.71
Top 150 104.31
Total 95.47


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