MLB Best Bets Today: Odds, predictions and picks for Saturday, April 22nd
MLB Best Bets Today: Odds, predictions and picks for Saturday, April 22nd  

MLB schedule today has 16 games

We’ve got a busy Saturday with action all day long as there will be 16 games to think about. The Guardians and Marlins will play a twin bill at Progressive Field if Mother Nature cooperates, but there are other games threatened by weather.

It’s a big card, so let’s dive right in. A brief reminder: Make sure you are always checking the option for Listed Pitchers Must Start. Don’t just accept “Action”. (Tracking sheet)

Be sure to catch up on any episodes you missed from this week on VSiN Daily Baseball Bets. The podcast will return on Monday.

Here are some thoughts on the April 22 card (odds from DraftKings):

Los Angeles Dodgers (-120, 8.5) at Chicago Cubs

This is one of several games that has weather considerations today. A late start seems possible between Dustin May and Hayden Wesneski, but it could also be one of those situations where the game starts and then gets delayed, which would leave each team in a bind from a pitching standpoint.

The Dodgers sure seem to have the upper hand on the starting pitcher front with May, who has allowed eight runs on 15 hits in 24 innings of work. He’s coming off of his worst start of the season against the Mets with five runs allowed on eight hits, but he had his lowest Hard Hit% of the season in that start at 22.8%, so he wasn’t hit hard. It was just some bad luck and bad timing. I did expect some regression from May given that he hasn’t found his strikeout swagger yet with only 13 punchouts, but he’s still keeping the ball on the ground at a high rate to minimize damage.

Wesneski had a couple of rocky outings to start the year, but just fired seven innings of one-run ball in his start. All Major League lineups have some measure of talent to them, but the Oakland lineup that Wesneski bested is certainly not one high on the list. In starts against the Mariners and Reds, he allowed 10 runs (eight earned) over just six innings of work. Suffice it to say that the Dodgers lineup is better than the A’s lineup.

I think this game is lined pretty fairly. We’ll see how LAD bounces back from nearly getting perfect-gamed yesterday.

New York Mets at San Francisco Giants (-130, 9)

Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but the Giants face a lefty today and they’re terrible against lefties. This one is David Peterson, who simply has to follow the lead of Joey Lucchesi and he’ll wind up having some success. Peterson has not been all that sharp for the Mets this season, though, as he’s allowed 14 runs on 26 hits in 20.2 innings of work. He has two really good starts to his name against the Marlins and Padres, but also a bad start against the Brewers and a rough one last time out against the Dodgers.

Peterson does have some noteworthy positive regression signs. He’s running a .368 BABIP against, which should level off. He also has an outlandishly high HR/FB% against of 31.3%. He’s given up five homers with a GB% of 51.7%, so the fly balls that he has allowed have been well-struck.

After Lucchesi’s masterful performance yesterday with seven shutout innings and nine strikeouts, the Giants are down to a 60 wRC+ against southpaws. They’ve hit righties really well, but they have not hit virtually any of the lefties that they have faced.

It will be Logan Webb for the Giants as they look to bounce back. Webb has allowed 16 runs (13 earned) across his four starts with some noteworthy positive regression signs of his own. He’s got a stellar 28/3 K/BB ratio over 23.2 innings and a K% like that would normally lead to a strong LOB%. Webb has the opposite with a 60.9% strand rate. He’s also running a .350 BABIP and a 29.4% HR/FB%.

Both guys have positive regression signs that look similar and I think there’s a path to success. The path may be easier for Peterson given how the Giants have been against lefties, but I’m pretty high on Webb, so this one is a pass for me.

Colorado Rockies at Philadelphia Phillies (-180, 10.5)

Kyle Freeland and Cristopher Sanchez are slated to go in this one. I’ll keep this one brief. Sanchez is coming off of the IL to make this start after throwing 8.2 innings over two Triple-A starts with one run allowed on three hits with 11 K against three walks. Sanchez has just 52.2 MLB innings to his name with a 5.47 ERA and a 4.38 FIP. He’s not really a guy we know much about.

Freeland is and he was completely rocked in his last start. He allowed nine runs in just 2.2 innings as a lot of regression signs came together to create a perfect storm. He still has more to come with a 3.80 ERA, a 4.89 FIP, and a 5.54 xFIP, so I’ll be looking for that, but not at the expense of a huge number with this Sanchez cat on the mound.

Cincinnati Reds at Pittsburgh Pirates (-165, 9)

Luis Cessa gets the start for the Reds here, which automatically makes them unbettable. He’s a reliever masquerading as a starter for this team as they wait for some of their younger, higher-upside arms to get ready. In three starts, Cessa has struck out three of the 70 batters that he has faced and he just allowed 11 runs to the Phillies over three innings of work. He faced 27 batters in three innings, which is really, really hard to do.

In Freeland’s last start, I looked really hard at taking the Pirates. I knew that Kyle had a bevy of red flags and I had also done some digging on Rich Hill. Hill’s first two starts were really iffy with 10 runs allowed on 11 hits over nine innings. However, he then had a really solid start against the Astros with six innings of two-run ball. Then he followed it up with six really good innings in Colorado.

Haters and doubters will say that he was pitching with a big lead, but I noticed a change in Hill’s mechanics in his start against the Astros, as he moved his horizontal release point a bit. The mechanics tweak led to a spike in velocity and also improved spin rates, both of which he carried over into Coors Field, where spin rates usually sag because there’s less resistance on the baseball.

Oddly enough, Hill actually had his best spin rates of the season in that outing in Denver. He generated a lot more swing and miss across his entire arsenal in that start against the Rockies and it looks like he and the Pirates fixed whatever the early-season issue was.

It’s a big number today with Hill, but he’s definitely figured some things out and the Reds offense stinks away from Great American Ball Park. Luis Cessa stinks pretty much anywhere. The Reds bullpen is also odious. The Pirates pen is a little shorthanded tonight with David Bednar having worked 3-in-4 and 4-in-6. Colin Holderman and Robert Stephenson have also worked B2B days, but the Pirates are doing some good things on the pitching side and have one of the league’s top relief corps. I can’t say that about the Reds.

It’s a hefty number. Shop around for a cheaper one because they are out there. But, I’m on the Pirates here.

Pick: Pirates -165

San Diego Padres (-155, 9.5) at Arizona Diamondbacks

The second big return of the week for the Padres will be today with Joe Musgrove back on the bump after missing some time due to a weight room mishap. Musgrove fractured his toe when he dropped a weight on it, but he’s back now after a couple of rehab starts. He allowed seven runs on 11 hits over 9.1 innings with a solid 14/1 K/BB ratio, but his rehab starts did come 10 days apart, with the second one coming at Single-A.

Musgrove “tweaked” his shoulder in his first rehab outing and the Padres played it carefully with one of their prized rotation pieces. He only threw 69 pitches in that Single-A start with four runs allowed on six hits.

Merrill Kelly seemingly fixed his walk issue last time out against the Cardinals. After walking four guys in each of his first three starts, Kelly didn’t walk anybody in his six innings against the Redbirds. He has only allowed six earned runs over 21.1 innings of work to this point. He has been able to work around the walks thanks to a really good D-Backs defense. There are some regression signs lurking in the profile, though.

He has a 2.53 ERA with a 4.23 FIP and a 4.79 xFIP, with that high walk rate doing a lot of damage to his FIP and xFIP metrics. He’s running a .264 BABIP with a 76.1% LOB%, which is a little high given his strikeout rate. However, he’s also limited hard contact well aside from his first start and I do think it makes sense for his control metrics to settle in now given that he pitched for Team USA in the WBC and a lot of guys have had some issues coming back from that.

Unless Musgrove settles in from a command standpoint, I like the Diamondbacks offense in this matchup. They don’t draw walks, but that’s less important against a guy like Musgrove, who fills up the zone. He has a 6.1% BB%. Aggressive teams should fare well against guys with iffy command, which I presume Musgrove has at present. Typically he doesn’t, but those two rehab starts are the only starts he’s made this season. He suffered his injury on Feb. 28 and had not yet appeared in a Spring Training game.

I’m sure he’s been throwing sim games and side sessions and stuff, but that’s not the real deal against a big league team. Specifically, a big league team that ranks third in wRC+ at home this season.

Pick: Diamondbacks +135

Toronto Blue Jays at New York Yankees (-170, 7.5)

Alek Manoah and Gerrit Cole are listed for the early start in the Bronx, as the Yankees are a big favorite behind their ace. Cole has been every bit of an ace this season with 32 strikeouts in 28.1 innings with just three runs allowed on 13 hits. He has not allowed a HR yet this season after giving up 33 long balls last year.

Manoah has not looked like an ace for the Blue Jays. He has nearly as many walks (15) as strikeouts (16) in his 19.1 innings of work. He’s given up 15 runs on 23 hits over his four starts. There just isn’t much to like about the profile right now, but he is a guy with good stuff and generally good command, so he could get it turned around at any time.

It’s a big price here and understandably so. I just don’t see much of an edge on this game.

Chicago White Sox at Tampa Bay Rays (-190, 7)

Dylan Cease and Shane McClanahan are listed to go in this one between the White Sox and Rays after a high-scoring affair at the Trop yesterday. This is not expected to be an 8-7 game with two studs on the bump, though there are a couple of interesting notes about this game. McClanahan is left-handed and we have seen a ton of line movement in the past on the White Sox against lefties. McClanahan is not your average, run-of-the-mill southpaw, though, so there aren’t a ton of reasons to bet against him.

He’s come as advertised this season as well with four runs allowed over 23 innings and 27 strikeouts. He does have 11 walks, but the White Sox are not a lineup that draws a lot of free passes, so I don’t think that slight shortcoming is going to be that much of an issue for him.

Cease has only allowed five earned runs over his four starts, though he has given up four unearned runs. He has 29 strikeouts in 22.1 innings of work and he, too, has had a little bit of a problem at times finding the strike zone. Truth be told, McClanahan and Cease have really similar statistics overall and the same regression signs from an ERA-FIP-xFIP standpoint.

It’s a big number here on McClanahan and you virtually never get Cease at a number like this, but I still can’t take the plunge here. The White Sox have not really looked the part against most opponents this season and I’d be surprised to see them do a number on McClanahan. They could gut out a 3-2 win, but the paths to victory do seem rather limited.

Oakland Athletics at Texas Rangers (-240, 8.5)

Shintaro Fujinami and Andrew Heaney are the starters set to get going here in this AL West battle. Fujinami was a little bit better in his start against the Mets after allowing 13 runs in his first two starts. He allowed three runs on four hits with five strikeouts against two walks. Hopefully he does settle in a bit because his stuff profile is actually really special. He just doesn’t seem to have MLB-level control or command yet, but each data point is a chance for him to figure some stuff out.

  
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By VSiN