New York Post

Focus on hurlers who won’t have limits

- By HOWARD BENDER

YEARS ago, baseball analyst Tom Verducci opined that starting pitchers who threw more than 60 innings from their total innings pitched the season prior were more susceptibl­e to injury. Case studies were done and after witnessing the “Verducci Effect” in action, many teams and their training staffs adhered to similar guidelines.

Though the disastrous 2020 season may be in our rearview mirror, the ripple effects of losing more than 100 games are being felt in 2021.

With the lack of a proper spring training last season, starting pitchers threw an average of 4.7 innings per start, and the average number of innings thrown by a starter in 2020 was near 60. That means starters, for teams looking to cap innings for their youngsters, may top out around 120-130 innings this season. That’s a far cry from the 200 innings a fantasy baseball manager is looking to get from their top-tier starters.

It brings into question, the idea of building your fantasy rotation around more veteran arms.

You may be enticed by the talents of a Jesus Luzardo, Sixto Sanchez or Ian Anderson, but are they going to serve you well in the long-run? You need more stability at the core, which means crafty veterans who are expected to have no limits this season.

Cubs righty Kyle Hendricks is the perfect building block in 2021. The name isn’t sexy and the strikeout rate pales in comparison to many, but he is a starter who made a minimum of 30 starts and threw no fewer than 177 innings in four of the five years leading up to 2020. He is not expected to be limited in any way this year. That means a rare 180 innings with an ERA below 3.50? Yes, please!

We all want to roster Jtoptier aces, but after they’re gone, you need to look for guys like Lance Lynn, Dallas Keuchel and Hyun-Jin Ryu. Having stabilizin­g innings-eaters could be your key to pitching success this fantasy season.

Howard Bender is the VP of operations and head of content at FantasyAla­rm.com buzzguy and catch him on the award-winning “Fantasy Alarm Radio Show” on the SiriusXM fantasy sports channel weekdays from 6-8 p.m. Go to FantasyAla­rm.com for all your fantasy baseball advice.

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