Post by Commissioner Erick on Jul 16, 2023 15:15:59 GMT -5
Los Angeles Dodgers vs Kansas City Royals
The 2030 World Series will be a contest between two of the PBA’s elite franchises. Kansas City makes it to the brightest stage for the second time in four seasons, as they look to punctuate a decade of success as an American League force. They have five AL Central titles the past six years, plus a World Series appearance in 2027 that left them tantalizingly close to a title. This year, they’re aiming to seal the deal and capture their inaugural title.
They’ll take on a Los Angeles team that is no stranger to the World Series, earning trips to the biggest stage in 2019, 2025, and 2026. Ben Vincent will look to become the league’s first three-time champion as he continues to refine a formula that has made the Dodgers the godfather of the National League.
Dodgers Offense versus Kansas City Pitching
The Dodgers have a remarkably stable lineup, playing only their same starting nine guys in their six-game set against St. Louis. Some of that is the Cardinals approach and the difficulty it provides platooning teams, but the Dodgers load up their roster with arms at the expense of bats. Against a more traditional Royals opponent, Wuilmer Becerra will likely reenter the lineup against Taylor Lehman, moving Jorge Ramos to the bench, but the same cast that played so well towards the end of the NLCS will be responsible for the Dodgers’ offensive successes or failures in the World Series.
The Dodgers almost have two different teams, their righty bats and their lefty bats. Their right-handed hitters are aggressive. They don’t walk much, they don’t strike out a whole lot, they run high averages, and in Salesman and Patrick Leonard, they have elite power.
The Dodgers left-handed bats are more patient. They work deep counts. They tend to walk a fair amount, and especially in Jeren Kendall’s case, will strike out a lot too. Kendall hits the ball far when he makes contact, but as a group, the prodigious power isn’t quite there.
Against a St. Louis team that attacks the strike zone, throws strikes, and was exceptionally right-handed, the Dodgers struggled for a first half of the series, then figured things out as the series progressed. That’s interesting news, as Kansas City has some similarities to their Midwest bretheren—The Royals don’t mess around with nibbling as they have the lowest walk rate by far in all of baseball. The Royals challenge hitters, with the fourth best strikeout rate in the American League. The Royals lean very right-handed with Taylor Lehman, Vincente Corado, and specialist Elijah Hines their only lefties. Finally, if Kansas City does groove one and a hitter hits it well—the combination of the team’s pitching and Kauffman Stadium’s outfield led to the only HR/FB% in the PBA under 10%. That’s similar to the Cardinals in that St. louis had the second lowest HR/FB% in the National League.
With the Royals and Cardinals both located in Missouri, the Dodgers may feel like their experiencing déjà vu, especially if Ryan Beyer gets pulled after 3 innings.
St. Louis did a lot of things right in the NLCS, even broadly winning the BABIP game the Dodgers excel in. Instead, as the series wore on, Salesman and Leonard were able to have success against the Cardinals righties, and Kendall was able to hit some homers. The Dodgers had to go mano-y-mano with a club that took away the main pathways the Dodgers want to score and LA was able to figure it out.
They’ll have to do it a second time.
T.J. Zeuch won 17 games relying on an elite, league-leading walk rate. He’s stingy with homers and he keeps the ball on the ground. The Dodgers hit the ball on the ground more than anybody though. Zeuch’s persistence in the zone versus Kendall’s eyes-closed uppercuts will make for appointment viewing. Luis Urias will make sure he hits the ball hard, Zeuch will make sure it’s driven straight into the ground, whether that ball finds a hole ahead of Salesman and Leonard will be huge for who has the run of the game.
Jeff Payton hasn’t worked as a starter much for the Royals, but he’s a Daniel Kent arm through and through. He coaxes grounders, he doesn’t get too many strikeouts, and he throws strikes. Interestingly, his stuff has not played up out of the pen this year, and his command has not been as sharp as Zeuch’s. The pitch-to-contact game requires precision, and it will be big for Payton to show if he has it this year.
Taylor Lehman is the left-handed T.J. Zeuch. He carries an epi-pen in the rare case he accidentally gets stung by a walk, and he allowed only 10 homers in 153.2 innings this year. The ball will never miss a bat, but it will always be hit on the ground. Whether or not that plays against the Dodgers’ lefties will determine a lot.
The best starter was saved for last. Ryan Beyer may be, inning-for-inning, the best pitcher in the American League. He went 17-4 as an elite, efficient arm, who is seldom hit hard. He issued just 10 homers in 186.2 innings, striking out 203 and leading the league with a 2.17 ERA. He doesn’t pitch deep into games, but he has very few weaknesses when he is on the hill, and it will take elite hitting for the Dodgers to score against him.
Kansas City’s bullpen runs very right-handed and on the whole, it was very good, though not as dominant as prior editions. It gives up way more fly balls than the starters. It generally throws strikes and avoids home runs, though the arms with the worst control—Hines and righty Mark Harris—have ERAs that start with a 4 and not a 3.
Kansas City’s infield defense will be put to the test. It’s an excellent unit, particularly Quadir Murriel at Second Base. Xavier Edwards is a former Gold Glove winner at Shortstop, though Harland Guenette has struggled this postseason at Third Base with three errors.
The Dodgers hit a ton of ground balls, and Kansas City coaxes a ton of ground balls. How many turn into double plays may be a factor.
It’ll be a fun matchup with many of the same things to look for as the NLCS. Whether LA’s lefty bats succeed against KC’s strike throwers, whether Salesman and Leonard can win the battle against strong, but not over-powering right-handed pitching, and how much hit sequencing and double play generation can create or erase offense.
Royals Offense versus Dodgers Pitching
The Dodgers’ pitching has been particularly strong this postseason, especially from the left side. Pat Cypert has a 2.19 ERA, Joey Wentz has a 0.73 ERA, and though he’s struggled with rust, Dale Messina went 7 innings, allowing two runs, walking one, and striking out for in his last start after Juan Vega’s first inning homer made it 3-0 Cardinals in Game 6 of the NLCS. It’s a good crop of lefties that succeeds in different ways—Cypert keeps the ball in the park, Messina keeps the ball in the strike zone, and Wentz keeps the ball in a box of four-leaf clovers.
The righty starter, Grayson Rodriguez, was dominant at home against Philadelphia, and struggled on the road in St. Louis. He had better numbers at home than on the road over the regular season as well, though most of it was BABIP driven. Dodgers Stadium is conducive to low BABIPs with its symmetrical design and its marine layer knocking fly balls into the waiting gloves of outfielders. Kansas City has a vast, expansive outfield, and is also symmetrical—it may play similarly to a home game for Rodriguez should he start on the road.
The Dodgers have primarily relied on four arms this postseason for their bullpen—Closer Ismael Robles, setup men Arturo Pedroza and Bobby Spong, and situational right-hander Steve Stapelton.
Robles has been great. He blew a save his first outing of the playoffs, yielding a three-run homer to Royce Lewis in Game 1 of the NLDS. Since then, he’s gone 7 scoreless innings with seven saves in seven outings. Pedroza has been solid with a 3.38 ERA and Stapelton has faced six batters, retiring four, and allowing two singles.
Spong has been more hit-or-miss. He’s struck out 14 hitters in 8 innings, and tends to have huge career playoff strikeout numbers. He’s also been wild and yielded a huge BABIP. The end result is a 4.50 ERA. He has the stuff the handle even the best of hitters, but may create rallies at inopportune times.
Kansas City’s offense starts with Jorge Vargas. One of the most feared playoff sluggers of all time, he’s working with a .375 OBP this postseason despite just a .216 average. He’s drawn nine walks, and despite the walks and the low average, he does have 12 RBI’s thanks to four homers and two doubles.
However, the Dodgers’ lefties may be able to handle some of the rest of Kansas City’s lineup. Roderick Dalton slugged more than 400 OPS points lower against lefties than righties. Unless facing Grayson Rodriguez or Penguin Robles, he should not be taking an at bat against a lefty in a key spot the entire series. Situational left-hander Nick Rushing and even long man Travis Tyre should be pressed into action as a result.
Jesus B. Sanchez loses the platoon advantage against lefties, power-hitter Humberto Camacho won’t play against lefties, and red hot Quadir Murriel likely won’t play either. Harland Guenette is an impotent playoff performer, Xavier Edwards hasn’t hit all year, and while T.J. Hardman and Leodys Taveras have had decent numbers against lefties, they’ll have to prove the responsibility won’t be too much for them. Jorge Parra should be able todraw a walk and bang a double, and Jonathan Bakos has a stellar track record, but the Royals will need the bottom of the lineup to help out.
Kansas City will pinch hit a bunch, which should serve them well. Expect to see Camacho and Bryce Zettel coming off the bench.
Hyo-sang Choo is not a great Catcher at throwing runners out, but Kansas City is second to last in the AL in stolen bases, and one of the worst baserunning teams as well. The Dodgers outfielders don’t have great Arm stats aside from Jeren Kendall, but Kansas City is likely to take it easy on the bases, not stressing the fielders too much.
Kansas City loves to pepper the gaps with doubles. How much will Jeren Kendall neutralize that approach?
Deciding Questions
Will T.J. Hardman and Leodys Taveras do damage against Los Angeles’ left-handed pitching?
Which versions of Joey Wentz and Dale Messina show up?
Who will win the battle of Alex Verdugo and Jeren Kendall versus Kansas City’s strike throwing righties?
Prediction: The Dodgers offense has had success against a team with a similar approach to Kansas City in the last round, and their reliance on left-handed arms helps immensely against Kansas City. When Ramos is playing, he and Kendall should control the outfield gaps. Dodgers 4-2.
Postseason Record Holders (75 PA Offensive Rate Stats, 25 IP, Pitching Rate Stats)
Games
1: Alex Verdugo—111
OBP:
1: Jorge Vargas—.440
SLG:
1: Lewis Brinson—.677
2: Jorge Vargas—.663
Lowest SLG
1: Harland Guenette—.264
OPS
1: Jorge Vargas—1.103
Lowest OPS
1: Darryl Wilson—.474
5: Harland Guenette—.550
Doubles
1: Francisco Mejia—23
2: Alex Verdugo—22
T3: Jonathan Bakos—19
Triples
1: Greg Jacks—6
2: Jonathan Bakos—5
T3: Alex Verdugo—3
BB
1: Paul Goldschmidt—48
3: Jeren Kendall—44
SB:
1: Eric Drouet—20
T3: Jeren Kendall—16
CS
T1: Joshua Lowe—5
T1: Juan Gestoso—5
T3: Jeren Kendall—4
T3: Alex Verdugo—4
T3: Jesus B. Sanchez—4
Fewest HR:
T1: Harland Guenette—0
T1: Eric Drouet—0
T1: Dalton Rone—0
T1: Nick Allen—0
T1: Ozzie Albies—0
T1: Quinten Holmes—0
T1: Noah Campbell—0
Fewest 2B:
T1: Hyo-sang Choo—1
T1: Luis Stud Morales—1
T1: Dalton Rone—1
Most At Bats without Triple
1: Nomar Mazara—385
2: Jeren Kendall—327
Strikeouts
1: Gary Sanchez—131
2: Jeren Kendall—118
GIDP:
1: Giancarlo Stanton—13
T2: Alex Verdugo—12
T5: Luis Urias—11
Lowest BABIP
1: Steve Goode—.087
5: Hyo-sang Choo—184
WPA
1: Francisco Lindor—2.89
2: Jorge Vargas—2.50
5: Roderick Dalton—1.85
Games
1: Juan Carrizales—51
4: Ismael Robels—43
5: Osiris Ramirez—41
Starts
1: Kyle Hendricks—32
3: T.J. Zeuch—22
T4: Eduardo Rodriguez—21
Innings
1: Kyle Hendricls—177.2
3: Eduardo Rodriguez—123.0
Losses
1: Kyle Hendricks—12
2: Eduardo Rodriguez—11
T3: T.J. Zeuch—8
Saves
1: Ismael Robels—28
Blown Saves
T1: Alex Claudio—4
T1: Jeruys Familia—4
T3: Ismael Robles—3
T3: Edgar E. Garcia—3
T3: Arturo Pedroza—3
ERA
1: Brandon Finnegan—1.20
2: Addison Reed—1.27
5: Taylor Lehman—1.85
FIP
1: Osiris German—1.71
2: Addison Reed—2.35
Worst FIP
1: Michael Bates—7.26
2: Grayson Rodriguez—6.34
Holds
1: David Robertson—19
T4: Bobby Spong—9
K%
1: Osiris German—36.7%
2: Ismael Robles—39.2%
BB%:
1: Eduardo Rodriguez—1.5%
WPA
1: Addison Reed—2.37
3: Ismael Robles—1.94
Lowest WPA
1: Luis Severino— -2.25
4: Eduardo Rodriguez— -1.61
The 2030 World Series will be a contest between two of the PBA’s elite franchises. Kansas City makes it to the brightest stage for the second time in four seasons, as they look to punctuate a decade of success as an American League force. They have five AL Central titles the past six years, plus a World Series appearance in 2027 that left them tantalizingly close to a title. This year, they’re aiming to seal the deal and capture their inaugural title.
They’ll take on a Los Angeles team that is no stranger to the World Series, earning trips to the biggest stage in 2019, 2025, and 2026. Ben Vincent will look to become the league’s first three-time champion as he continues to refine a formula that has made the Dodgers the godfather of the National League.
Dodgers Offense versus Kansas City Pitching
The Dodgers have a remarkably stable lineup, playing only their same starting nine guys in their six-game set against St. Louis. Some of that is the Cardinals approach and the difficulty it provides platooning teams, but the Dodgers load up their roster with arms at the expense of bats. Against a more traditional Royals opponent, Wuilmer Becerra will likely reenter the lineup against Taylor Lehman, moving Jorge Ramos to the bench, but the same cast that played so well towards the end of the NLCS will be responsible for the Dodgers’ offensive successes or failures in the World Series.
The Dodgers almost have two different teams, their righty bats and their lefty bats. Their right-handed hitters are aggressive. They don’t walk much, they don’t strike out a whole lot, they run high averages, and in Salesman and Patrick Leonard, they have elite power.
The Dodgers left-handed bats are more patient. They work deep counts. They tend to walk a fair amount, and especially in Jeren Kendall’s case, will strike out a lot too. Kendall hits the ball far when he makes contact, but as a group, the prodigious power isn’t quite there.
Against a St. Louis team that attacks the strike zone, throws strikes, and was exceptionally right-handed, the Dodgers struggled for a first half of the series, then figured things out as the series progressed. That’s interesting news, as Kansas City has some similarities to their Midwest bretheren—The Royals don’t mess around with nibbling as they have the lowest walk rate by far in all of baseball. The Royals challenge hitters, with the fourth best strikeout rate in the American League. The Royals lean very right-handed with Taylor Lehman, Vincente Corado, and specialist Elijah Hines their only lefties. Finally, if Kansas City does groove one and a hitter hits it well—the combination of the team’s pitching and Kauffman Stadium’s outfield led to the only HR/FB% in the PBA under 10%. That’s similar to the Cardinals in that St. louis had the second lowest HR/FB% in the National League.
With the Royals and Cardinals both located in Missouri, the Dodgers may feel like their experiencing déjà vu, especially if Ryan Beyer gets pulled after 3 innings.
St. Louis did a lot of things right in the NLCS, even broadly winning the BABIP game the Dodgers excel in. Instead, as the series wore on, Salesman and Leonard were able to have success against the Cardinals righties, and Kendall was able to hit some homers. The Dodgers had to go mano-y-mano with a club that took away the main pathways the Dodgers want to score and LA was able to figure it out.
They’ll have to do it a second time.
T.J. Zeuch won 17 games relying on an elite, league-leading walk rate. He’s stingy with homers and he keeps the ball on the ground. The Dodgers hit the ball on the ground more than anybody though. Zeuch’s persistence in the zone versus Kendall’s eyes-closed uppercuts will make for appointment viewing. Luis Urias will make sure he hits the ball hard, Zeuch will make sure it’s driven straight into the ground, whether that ball finds a hole ahead of Salesman and Leonard will be huge for who has the run of the game.
Jeff Payton hasn’t worked as a starter much for the Royals, but he’s a Daniel Kent arm through and through. He coaxes grounders, he doesn’t get too many strikeouts, and he throws strikes. Interestingly, his stuff has not played up out of the pen this year, and his command has not been as sharp as Zeuch’s. The pitch-to-contact game requires precision, and it will be big for Payton to show if he has it this year.
Taylor Lehman is the left-handed T.J. Zeuch. He carries an epi-pen in the rare case he accidentally gets stung by a walk, and he allowed only 10 homers in 153.2 innings this year. The ball will never miss a bat, but it will always be hit on the ground. Whether or not that plays against the Dodgers’ lefties will determine a lot.
The best starter was saved for last. Ryan Beyer may be, inning-for-inning, the best pitcher in the American League. He went 17-4 as an elite, efficient arm, who is seldom hit hard. He issued just 10 homers in 186.2 innings, striking out 203 and leading the league with a 2.17 ERA. He doesn’t pitch deep into games, but he has very few weaknesses when he is on the hill, and it will take elite hitting for the Dodgers to score against him.
Kansas City’s bullpen runs very right-handed and on the whole, it was very good, though not as dominant as prior editions. It gives up way more fly balls than the starters. It generally throws strikes and avoids home runs, though the arms with the worst control—Hines and righty Mark Harris—have ERAs that start with a 4 and not a 3.
Kansas City’s infield defense will be put to the test. It’s an excellent unit, particularly Quadir Murriel at Second Base. Xavier Edwards is a former Gold Glove winner at Shortstop, though Harland Guenette has struggled this postseason at Third Base with three errors.
The Dodgers hit a ton of ground balls, and Kansas City coaxes a ton of ground balls. How many turn into double plays may be a factor.
It’ll be a fun matchup with many of the same things to look for as the NLCS. Whether LA’s lefty bats succeed against KC’s strike throwers, whether Salesman and Leonard can win the battle against strong, but not over-powering right-handed pitching, and how much hit sequencing and double play generation can create or erase offense.
Royals Offense versus Dodgers Pitching
The Dodgers’ pitching has been particularly strong this postseason, especially from the left side. Pat Cypert has a 2.19 ERA, Joey Wentz has a 0.73 ERA, and though he’s struggled with rust, Dale Messina went 7 innings, allowing two runs, walking one, and striking out for in his last start after Juan Vega’s first inning homer made it 3-0 Cardinals in Game 6 of the NLCS. It’s a good crop of lefties that succeeds in different ways—Cypert keeps the ball in the park, Messina keeps the ball in the strike zone, and Wentz keeps the ball in a box of four-leaf clovers.
The righty starter, Grayson Rodriguez, was dominant at home against Philadelphia, and struggled on the road in St. Louis. He had better numbers at home than on the road over the regular season as well, though most of it was BABIP driven. Dodgers Stadium is conducive to low BABIPs with its symmetrical design and its marine layer knocking fly balls into the waiting gloves of outfielders. Kansas City has a vast, expansive outfield, and is also symmetrical—it may play similarly to a home game for Rodriguez should he start on the road.
The Dodgers have primarily relied on four arms this postseason for their bullpen—Closer Ismael Robles, setup men Arturo Pedroza and Bobby Spong, and situational right-hander Steve Stapelton.
Robles has been great. He blew a save his first outing of the playoffs, yielding a three-run homer to Royce Lewis in Game 1 of the NLDS. Since then, he’s gone 7 scoreless innings with seven saves in seven outings. Pedroza has been solid with a 3.38 ERA and Stapelton has faced six batters, retiring four, and allowing two singles.
Spong has been more hit-or-miss. He’s struck out 14 hitters in 8 innings, and tends to have huge career playoff strikeout numbers. He’s also been wild and yielded a huge BABIP. The end result is a 4.50 ERA. He has the stuff the handle even the best of hitters, but may create rallies at inopportune times.
Kansas City’s offense starts with Jorge Vargas. One of the most feared playoff sluggers of all time, he’s working with a .375 OBP this postseason despite just a .216 average. He’s drawn nine walks, and despite the walks and the low average, he does have 12 RBI’s thanks to four homers and two doubles.
However, the Dodgers’ lefties may be able to handle some of the rest of Kansas City’s lineup. Roderick Dalton slugged more than 400 OPS points lower against lefties than righties. Unless facing Grayson Rodriguez or Penguin Robles, he should not be taking an at bat against a lefty in a key spot the entire series. Situational left-hander Nick Rushing and even long man Travis Tyre should be pressed into action as a result.
Jesus B. Sanchez loses the platoon advantage against lefties, power-hitter Humberto Camacho won’t play against lefties, and red hot Quadir Murriel likely won’t play either. Harland Guenette is an impotent playoff performer, Xavier Edwards hasn’t hit all year, and while T.J. Hardman and Leodys Taveras have had decent numbers against lefties, they’ll have to prove the responsibility won’t be too much for them. Jorge Parra should be able todraw a walk and bang a double, and Jonathan Bakos has a stellar track record, but the Royals will need the bottom of the lineup to help out.
Kansas City will pinch hit a bunch, which should serve them well. Expect to see Camacho and Bryce Zettel coming off the bench.
Hyo-sang Choo is not a great Catcher at throwing runners out, but Kansas City is second to last in the AL in stolen bases, and one of the worst baserunning teams as well. The Dodgers outfielders don’t have great Arm stats aside from Jeren Kendall, but Kansas City is likely to take it easy on the bases, not stressing the fielders too much.
Kansas City loves to pepper the gaps with doubles. How much will Jeren Kendall neutralize that approach?
Deciding Questions
Will T.J. Hardman and Leodys Taveras do damage against Los Angeles’ left-handed pitching?
Which versions of Joey Wentz and Dale Messina show up?
Who will win the battle of Alex Verdugo and Jeren Kendall versus Kansas City’s strike throwing righties?
Prediction: The Dodgers offense has had success against a team with a similar approach to Kansas City in the last round, and their reliance on left-handed arms helps immensely against Kansas City. When Ramos is playing, he and Kendall should control the outfield gaps. Dodgers 4-2.
Postseason Record Holders (75 PA Offensive Rate Stats, 25 IP, Pitching Rate Stats)
Games
1: Alex Verdugo—111
OBP:
1: Jorge Vargas—.440
SLG:
1: Lewis Brinson—.677
2: Jorge Vargas—.663
Lowest SLG
1: Harland Guenette—.264
OPS
1: Jorge Vargas—1.103
Lowest OPS
1: Darryl Wilson—.474
5: Harland Guenette—.550
Doubles
1: Francisco Mejia—23
2: Alex Verdugo—22
T3: Jonathan Bakos—19
Triples
1: Greg Jacks—6
2: Jonathan Bakos—5
T3: Alex Verdugo—3
BB
1: Paul Goldschmidt—48
3: Jeren Kendall—44
SB:
1: Eric Drouet—20
T3: Jeren Kendall—16
CS
T1: Joshua Lowe—5
T1: Juan Gestoso—5
T3: Jeren Kendall—4
T3: Alex Verdugo—4
T3: Jesus B. Sanchez—4
Fewest HR:
T1: Harland Guenette—0
T1: Eric Drouet—0
T1: Dalton Rone—0
T1: Nick Allen—0
T1: Ozzie Albies—0
T1: Quinten Holmes—0
T1: Noah Campbell—0
Fewest 2B:
T1: Hyo-sang Choo—1
T1: Luis Stud Morales—1
T1: Dalton Rone—1
Most At Bats without Triple
1: Nomar Mazara—385
2: Jeren Kendall—327
Strikeouts
1: Gary Sanchez—131
2: Jeren Kendall—118
GIDP:
1: Giancarlo Stanton—13
T2: Alex Verdugo—12
T5: Luis Urias—11
Lowest BABIP
1: Steve Goode—.087
5: Hyo-sang Choo—184
WPA
1: Francisco Lindor—2.89
2: Jorge Vargas—2.50
5: Roderick Dalton—1.85
Games
1: Juan Carrizales—51
4: Ismael Robels—43
5: Osiris Ramirez—41
Starts
1: Kyle Hendricks—32
3: T.J. Zeuch—22
T4: Eduardo Rodriguez—21
Innings
1: Kyle Hendricls—177.2
3: Eduardo Rodriguez—123.0
Losses
1: Kyle Hendricks—12
2: Eduardo Rodriguez—11
T3: T.J. Zeuch—8
Saves
1: Ismael Robels—28
Blown Saves
T1: Alex Claudio—4
T1: Jeruys Familia—4
T3: Ismael Robles—3
T3: Edgar E. Garcia—3
T3: Arturo Pedroza—3
ERA
1: Brandon Finnegan—1.20
2: Addison Reed—1.27
5: Taylor Lehman—1.85
FIP
1: Osiris German—1.71
2: Addison Reed—2.35
Worst FIP
1: Michael Bates—7.26
2: Grayson Rodriguez—6.34
Holds
1: David Robertson—19
T4: Bobby Spong—9
K%
1: Osiris German—36.7%
2: Ismael Robles—39.2%
BB%:
1: Eduardo Rodriguez—1.5%
WPA
1: Addison Reed—2.37
3: Ismael Robles—1.94
Lowest WPA
1: Luis Severino— -2.25
4: Eduardo Rodriguez— -1.61