Yankees vs Rays Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game
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This matchup sets up as a low-scoring affair, with strong bullpen performance on both sides and neither offense generating much recent power. Milwaukee’s relief corps owns a 2.89 xERA over the last week, while the Cardinals and Brewers have posted modest recent ISO marks of .162 and .151, respectively.
Jacob Misiorowski enters with a 2.11 FIP over the last month while limiting opponents to a 4% barrel rate. His four-seamer remains especially dominant, holding hitters to a .172 average. With Milwaukee also making quality contact lately, the Brewers have the pitching and offensive edge here.
The Cubs have been powered by outfielders Pete Crow-Armstrong and Seiya Suzuki the past 25 games, with the duo piling up 34 runs, 63 hits and 38 RBI while posting respective .498 and .374 wOBAs. Crow-Armstrong and Suzuki are also set to stay hot with Baltimore Orioles righty Shane Baz sporting a run-of-the-mill 4.47 xERA and xFIP. Turning to Orioles outfielder Taylor Ward, he’s teed off on southpaws to the tune of a .381 wOBA, and Cubs lefty Matthew Boyd has surrendered a healthy .420 xwOBAcon.
Both offenses enter in strong recent form, and the late-inning pitching has been vulnerable. Detroit owns a .212 ISO and 41% hard-hit rate over the last week, while the Tigers and Athletics bullpens have posted 5.99 and 7.32 FIPs, respectively, across their latest stretches of work heading into this matchup.
Tarik Skubal enters in shaky recent form, posting a 5.04 FIP and allowing 2.82 HR/9 over the last month. Oakland has paired a 47.5% hard-hit rate with five runs per game across its last five contests, while J.T. Ginn has limited opponents to a 33.3% hard-hit rate recently as well.
Griffin Conine has been crushing right handed pitching lately, and the matchup against Bryan Woo sets up nicely. The Marlins outfielder owns an elite Batters-Box rating with nearly 84% arsenal coverage against Woo, who has struggled to contain left handed hitters. Over his last 60 left handed hitters faced, Woo has allowed elevated contact, a 43%+ hard hit rate, and elite expected metrics. Meanwhile, Conine is generating a 51.6% hard hit rate and 13.6% barrel rate against righties. At plus money, an elite rated bat going over 1.5 HRR is a valuable look.
Let's kick off the Tuesday slate with a big plus-money Over on Max Meyer, who projects for 6.40 Ks today vs. Seattle with a fair price of +105. That's also on a 91-pitch pitch count, which could be low for a pitcher who can hit the triple-digit mark. The Miami righty gets a home start where he has been better this year and gets a Mariners offense that just wrapped up a home series vs. the Jays and is traveling about as far as a West Coast team can. Meyer owns a 9.8 K/9 at home this year, with a 50/50 K/BB rate over his last 10 starts. Seattle is a bottom-10 team in K% vs right-handed pitching, and its 27.7 K% over the last two weeks is the second-worst mark in baseball. Seven innings and seven punchouts over 95+ pitches is very obtainable.
I’m taking the Under because Seymour’s best trait attacks New York’s biggest offensive issue. The Yankees still carry power, but their high whiff rate is a problem here. Tampa Bay can pressure Warren with contact, but this is not a pure slugging profile. Warren has allowed only a 7.2% barrel rate and a .397 xSLG, so the Rays may need sequencing instead of one-swing damage. I make this closer to 7.7 runs, play to -152.
The problem for New York Yankees starter Will Warren shows up when he faces low-whiff lineups. Warren is good, not great, and if he cannot create empty swings, traffic becomes harder to escape. Tampa Bay owns a low 20% team whiff rate, attacking that exact pressure point. Ian Seymour gives the Rays the sharper counterpunch with a 29% whiff rate against a Yankees lineup sitting above 27%. Tampa Bay has the cleaner pitcher-to-lineup fit.
Astros right hander Tatsuya Imai has piled up strikeouts recently, posting a strikeout rate near 40% over his last three starts, but the underlying numbers remain concerning. During that stretch, he owns a 5.40 ERA while allowing plenty of hard contact. Through 12 starts, Imai has surrendered 10 first inning runs, good for an 8.18 first inning ERA. Now he faces a Washington lineup that thrives early, ranking among baseball's best first inning offenses with a 127 wRC+, .351 wOBA, and .804 OPS over its last 21 games. I am backing an early run in this matchup.
I want a right-handed bat against lefty Andrew Abbott in Cincinnati today, with Great American Ball Park once again projecting as one of the best home run parks on the slate. Abbott's home numbers help this play even more, as his ERA is nearly 1.5 runs higher at GABP. He has also allowed 12 home runs to right-handed hitters compared to just three to lefties and is currently battling his command. Abbott walked five batters in his last start, and two outings ago he surrendered three home runs. Alec Bohm is the right-handed bat I want in this lefty-heavy Phillies lineup. He's taken the Reds' starter deep in just seven career at-bats and is sporting a .924 OPS over his last eight games after a one-game benching that followed an 0-for-12 stretch. During that run, he has two homers and four doubles. Bohm also owns a better BlastContact% than both Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber over the last week.
It's a big name at a big price with a nine-inning home run edge. Bobby Witt Jr. and the Kansas City offense get to face a tired Mets bullpen that used six arms yesterday and has leaned on its three best relievers in back-to-back games. New York is going with a bullpen game to add injury to insult, and this staff has allowed 29 runs over its last three games. Witt might only have three homers over the last 30 days, but he also missed a week, has nine games under his belt since returning, and ranks 10th in all of baseball in BlastContact% (23.2%) over that span. The home runs and hard contact are coming, and there could be a handful before the All-Star break. The Royals' shortstop might see three or four different pitchers today, but that also means he'll get plenty of plate appearances against the weaker arms in New York's bullpen over nine innings.
The Royals laid a thumping on the Phillies yesterday and bring those bats to Citi Field today, where the Mets are going with a bullpen day. Normally that might not be ideal, but it actually sets up well for the Royals' moneyline. The Mets have leaned heavily on their bullpen, using their top three relievers in back-to-back games and six arms yesterday in an extra-inning win over Atlanta. Despite ripping off two straight victories, New York has still allowed 29 runs over its last three games and is in a very tough spot in the late innings today. Kansas City's offense has been quiet for much of the season, but it's coming off its best performance of the year. With the bullpen advantage clearly on the Royals' side, I don't see this closer to a 50/50 than a 56/44.
The Guardians rank 29th in xwOBA while averaging just 3.8 runs per game since star Jose Ramirez sustained a hand injury, and they’re in tough against rolling Twins righty Taj Bradley. Bradley has spun a tidy 2.24 xERA while holding opposing hitters to a 7.4% blast-contact rate across his past three starts, so I like him to cruise through the Cleveland lineup tonight. The final leg of this same-game parlay turns to Minny star Byron Buxton, and he’s posted a monster .400 wOBA against righties this season while picking up 29 hits, 17 runs and 18 RBI with a .396 xwOBA across 25 games since June 1.
Miguel Vargas finds himself in a strong matchup against Red Sox left hander Payton Tolle. Vargas enters today with an elite Batters-Box rating, covering nearly 91% of Tolle’s pitch mix. Left handed pitching has been his strength this season, posting a .306 BA, .424 OBP, .571 SLG, 58.5% hard hit rate, and 17% barrel rate over his last 60 at bats against southpaws. Meanwhile, Tolle has struggled to keep right handed hitters from elevating the baseball, allowing a 71.4% elevation rate with a .700 xSLG. Vargas is a strong candidate to clear his bases prop.
The Boston Red Sox have a great power profile against left-handed pitching, ranking eighth in OPS, fourth in ISO, and first in fly ball rate over the last five weeks.
The Chicago White Sox have excelled against lefties all season, leading the majors in ISO.
Payton Tolle has posted an xERA of 4.0 or higher in four of his last five and will be tested.
Bet to -115.
This is a complete fade of Zac Gallen. If you want to get frisky and back the Padres to score in the first inning instead of the YRFI, I would not blame you. San Diego has been swinging the bat extremely well over the last week and brings six elite rated hitters, plus two more with strong ratings, according to Batters-Box's current season ratings. Gallen has been a disaster in the opening frame, allowing 15 earned runs through 18 starts for a 7.50 first inning ERA. Opposing hitters own a .342 batting average and .964 OPS in the first, making -121 a very fair price.
Zac Gallen has posted a 7.24 ERA over his past 12 starts, conceding an average of 4.6 runs when he takes the bump.
The San Diego Padres are going with German Marquez as an opener, a minor leaguer in bulk, then turning to a bullpen that ranks dead last in FIP over the past two weeks.
I like the Over here, and would play it to -115.
This is a giant number for a short-leashed pitcher facing an offense that is deader than dead. Trevor McDonald projects for around 90 pitches today, which might be generous for a guy who has thrown more than 90 pitches just once over his last eight starts. He is coming off a one-hit outing and projects as a better-than-a-hit-per-inning starter. He gets the coldest offense in baseball, which has managed just three runs and 13 hits over its last four games (36 innings) and has done nothing offensively since hitting the West Coast last week. Toronto hasn't recorded more than three hits in three straight games. Because of that, the Giants bullpen is fresh and ready to go, making a 15-out outing from McDonald very realistic. It's time to fade the Jays until this offense shows signs of life.
This +475 same-game parlay backs Ernie Clement to stay hot with a hit, Kazuma Okamoto to drive in a run, and both offenses to combine for over eight runs, fueled by San Francisco's recent power surge.
Hunter Goodman is in another excellent spot to attack his 1.5 hits, runs, and RBI prop against Dodgers left hander Justin Wrobleski. The Rockies catcher has been crushing southpaws, posting a .333 batting average, .383 OBP, and .630 SLG over his last 60 plate appearances against lefties. Meanwhile, Wrobleski has struggled against right handed bats, allowing a 55.2% hard hit rate and 12.8% barrel rate over his last 60 batters faced. Goodman has also cleared this prop 53.3% of the time when carrying an elite Batters-Box rating this season. At -110, this is a strong value.
A combined seven elite rated hitters and three strongly rated bats, according to Batters-Box, is more than enough for me to back early runs. Michael Lorenzen owns the worst pitcher rating in the current dataset and has been crushed in the first inning, allowing 13 earned runs through 18 starts with opponents posting an .869 OPS. Justin Wrobleski has not been much better early, surrendering 7 first inning earned runs through 14 starts. Both offenses have been scorching over their last 21 games, each producing at least a 129 wRC+, .799 OPS and .173 ISO. Expect traffic on the bases early.
D-backs starter Jose Cabrera struggled to find the strike zone in his last outing, surrendering three earned runs over 3 1/3 innings against Milwaukee. Arizona will also have a tough time against Michael King, who has held D-backs hitters to a .546 OPS across 62 at-bats. The Padres are playable to -150.
The Cardinals are in a premium offensive spot against Zac Gallen, who enters the day with the second-worst pitcher rating in Batters-Box's current season model. Gallen has struggled to limit power and hard contact, carrying poorly rated matchup marks in ISO, hard contact rate, and ground ball rate. St. Louis counters with seven elite-rated hitters and an offense averaging more than 2.5 first five innings runs per game at home. The Cardinals have also been red hot lately, posting a 122 wRC+ over their last 12 games. With so many favorable individual matchups, backing the offense as a whole makes plenty of sense.
Zac Gallen has been one of the most vulnerable pitchers on the board, especially away from Arizona, where he owns a 7.68 ERA and 6.00 xERA while surrendering plenty of hard contact and barrels. Things do not get any easier against a Cardinals lineup loaded with seven elite-rated hitters according to Batters-Box. St. Louis has been one of the hotter offenses in baseball recently, producing a 122 wRC+, .782 OPS, and .345 wOBA over its last 12 games. With Gallen's struggles and the Cardinals continuing to swing hot bats, this sets up as an excellent spot to back St. Louis early and often.
Okamoto's hitting profile perfectly matches up well against Imanaga’s stuff. The Cubs starter throws a heavy dose of the fastball and gets barreled up at a 10.4% rate. The Jays third baseman barrels the ball better than anyone in the Blue Jays lineup with a 13.5% barrel rate, while owning a 63.2% hard hit rate against the four-seamer.
Swanson is just 1-for-6 against Cease in his career. Cease has electric stuff, leading the American League with 110 Ks, while ranking in the 97th percentile in K-rate. Springer is turning a corner with a 1.089 OPS over his last nine games.
Atlanta and Chicago send two of the best lineups in baseball to the dish, and they respectively rank eighth and third in wOBA against lefties for the campaign. The two clubs have also trended to the Over, and I'm particularly expecting White Sox southpaw Anthony Kay to struggle considering he's saddled with the fifth-highest xERA in baseball among the 100 pitchers with at least 60 innings this year.
I'm fading Chicago White Sox lefty Anthony Kay on Thursday. He's sporting the fifth-highest xERA among the 100 pitchers with at least 60 innings, after all. Plus, the Atlanta Braves enter ranked eighth in wOBA against southpaws for the season and sixth in overall xwOBA across the past 14 days.
The Yankees rank Top-3 in OPS, ISO, OBP, xWOBA, and hard hit rate when facing left-handed pitching. The Red Sox have hit righties very well over the past four weeks, sitting ninth in wOBA, ninth in ISO, and fourth in batting average. Play the Over to -120.
Ranger Suarez has started four games against teams ranking Top-10 in OPS vs. left-handed pitching, allowing 13 runs and posting a 6.13 ERA during those games. The New York Yankees lead the majors in OPS against lefties so they’re a prime candidate to cause Suarez problems. Playable to -145.
The Braves have dropped five of six while averaging just 2.8 runs per game and ranking 29th in wOBA without Ronald Acuna Jr. (hamstring), and it’s been a smoke-and-mirrors start for veteran lefty Martin Perez, and there’s serious statistical correction ahead of his .230 BABIP and 80.2% strand rate considering they’re both high-end marks about pitchers with at least 60 innings this season. San Francisco is just the offense to kick-start the regression, too. The Giants are pacing the majors in wOBA and fourth in xwOBA over the past 30 days, after all.
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