Dave L Funnell @sportz_nutt51
There have been 22 pitchers who have thrown
more than 3000 pitches over the last three seasons. Do you have any workload
concerns for any of them?
The 101st New York Baseball Writers’ Gala will
be held on
Saturday, January 24, 2026.
The Gala will feature many of the game’s
biggest stars
PLUS
The 40th anniversary of
the World Champion 1986 Mets!
2025 NEW YORK CHAPTER AWARDS
Joe DiMaggio “Toast of the Town”: Pete Alonso with Darryl Strawberry as
the Presenter
Willie, Mickey & The Duke: 1986 Mets
rotation represented by Ron Darling, Sid Fernandez, and Doc Gooden
Casey Stengel, “You Can Look It Up”: Jesse Orosco
William Slocum/Jack Lang “Long &
Meritorious Service”: Ron Guidry and Willie Randolph
Ben Epstein/Dan Castellano “Good Guy”: Clay Holmes with
Newsday's Laura Albanese as the Presenter
The 101st Annual New York Baseball Writers’
Gala
IF PAYMENT IS PROCESSED AFTER FRIDAY, JANUARY
16TH
TICKETS WILL BE AT THE WILL-CALL DESK OUTSIDE
THE GRAND BALLROOM ON EVENT DAY
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Hilton in Midtown Manhattan
1335 6th Ave, New York, NY 10019
(212) 586-7000
Cocktail hour: 6 p.m.
Dinner: 7 p.m.
Individual Reserved Tickets: $395
Tables of 10, 11, or 12 are available; though
10 is preferred.
All Seating is reserved.
PLEASE INCLUDE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS IN EVERY
ELECTRONIC PURCHASE
Admission includes a copy of SCOREBOOK, the
annual program.
Edited by Rick Cerrone, this glossy
full-color magazine is filled with original artwork and stories about our
honorees.
*For special dietary requests and special needs seating requirements: bbwaanewyork@gmail.com
Codify @CodifyBaseball
MLB Pitches Thrown At 98+ MPH:
2008: 11,301
2009: 13,785
2010: 14,807
2011: 13,826
2012: 15,615
2013: 17,169
2014: 19,922
2015: 28,093
2016: 28,949
2017: 25,499
2018: 25,621
2019: 27,561
2020: 10,747*
2021: 33,287
2022: 38,274
2023: 40,803
2024: 40,725
2025: 51,597
Mets Biggest Free Agent Need
New York Mets: Ace Starter
For as good as president of baseball
operations David
Stearns is at finding value on the margins, the Mets need a
stopper.
Nolan McLean could develop into an ace, Sean Manaea might
bounce back and David Peterson's disastrous second have may prove to be an
aberration. Making all those bets would be a lot easier if the Mets have a sure
thing going every five days.
Even if the Mets aren't willing to consider
trading McLean, Jonah Tong, Brandon Sproat and perhaps even Kodai Senga could
be part of a trade to land an impact starter. Any of Skubal, Alcantara, Peralta
or Ryan would look great taking the ball for the Mets on Opening Day.
Thomas Nestico @TJStats
Cooper Criswell (claimed by NYM) is a soft tossing long reliever
who posted a 4.48 ERA 4.46 FIP across 154.2 IP in his career
Cooper Criswall
6-6 200
RHRP turns 30 in July Free Agent: 2031
2018
3rd Rd. pk LAA, Univ, of North Carolina
MLB
2025 -
-0.1-WAR, 1-0, 3.57
Career –
0.1-WAR, 8-7, 4.48
Minors
2025 – AAA:
16-G, 14-ST, 4-2,
3.70, 1.34, 65-2-IP, 68-K, 28-BB
2025 Pitching Stats Overview
He's
ranked among the fastest-tempo pitchers in MLB with the bases empty (11.6
seconds per pitch). His overall arsenal emphasizes groundball induction and
deception rather than overpowering velocity.
Pitch Repertoire
Criswell
relies on four pitches in 2025, blending sink and movement to generate weak
contact. His fastball sits in the low-90s, complemented by off-speed
offerings for deception.
Changeup
31.2%
usage - 43.5 in. drop / 13.6 in. ARM-side
Cutter
29.7%
usage - 28.4 in. drop / 0.0 in.
Sinker
27.9%
usage - 36.0 in. drop / 15.1 in. ARM-side
Sweeper
11.2%
usage - 42.7 in. drop / 19.9 in.
glove-side
Changeup: His primary pitch for whiffs and grounders,
thrown hardest off his sinker to create velocity separation. It features
significant arm-side run and above-average drop, making it effective against
right-handed hitters.
Cutter: A reliable secondary option with positive run
value, used to jam same-handed batters. It has minimal horizontal movement but
good depth, helping with contact management.
Sinker: Criswell's "fastball" for tunneling
with the changeup, emphasizing sink over velocity. Low whiff rate but induces
groundballs (his career GB% hovers around 50%).
Sweeper: A breaking ball for sweeping glove-side action,
deployed situationally against lefties. It's his least-used pitch but adds
horizontal diversity; the negative run value suggests room for refinement in
larger samples.
Criswell's
repertoire is contact-oriented, with a career 22% K-rate and strong command
(elite walk rates in the minors).
NEW: Top 100 Draft prospects for '26
Roch Cholowsky, SS, UCLA
Grady Emerson, SS, Fort Worth Christian HS, Texas
Justin Lebron, SS, Alabama
Jacob Lombard, SS, Gulliver Prep, Fla.
Drew Burress, OF, Georgia Tech
Derek Curiel, OF, Louisiana State
Carson Bolemon, LHP, Southside Christian School, S.C.
Gio Rojas, LHP, Marjory Stoneman Douglas HS, Fla.
Cameron Flukey, RHP, Coastal Carolina
Sawyer Strosnider, OF, Texas Christian
Edwin Díaz
What we know: The relief pitching market has
moved quickly recently, specifically with closers. First, it was Raisel
Iglesias, who re-signed with the Atlanta Braves on a one-year, $16 million
deal. Then on Sunday, former Met Ryan Helsley and the Baltimore Orioles agreed
to a two-year, $28 million deal. And Devin Williams is the most recent. Could
Díaz be next?
Teams pursuing Díaz, according to multiple
sources, include the Mets, Toronto Blue Jays, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Boston
Red Sox.
Right now, the Mets still lead the race to
sign him, but the Blue Jays and Dodgers remain close behind. The Dodgers,
however, aren’t willing to match the contract Díaz wants at the moment – a deal
reportedly similar to the five-year, $102 million contract he signed with the
Mets back in late 2022. Their hesitance comes from their decision last
offseason to give lefty closer Tanner Scott a multi-year deal, a move that
backfired when he struggled for most of the season.
The Blue Jays, unlike the Dodgers, have
positioned themselves as a “serious threat” to land Díaz. They’ve already shown
they’re willing to spend big after signing Dylan Cease to a seven-year, $210
million deal and Cody Ponce to a three-year, $30 million contract. Whether they
ultimately sign Díaz or not, they’re clearly involved in the closer market. The
New York Post’s Jon Heyman reports that the Jays aren’t believed to be opposed
to moving reliever Jeff Hoffman into a setup role after he gave up 15 homers in
the regular season. They’re also exploring Pete Fairbanks as an option – and
signing him would almost certainly take them out of the running for Díaz.






Some very fascinating material here. It was interesting to see that only four of those 22 pitchers throwing 3000 or more pitches had remained on the same team. It was also interesting that Tanner Scott and Jeff Hoffman (both on the 3000 list) were discussed later in different contexts.
ReplyDeleteSo many 98+ pitches. I wonder how Nolan Ryan would do in this day and age of accelerating velocity?
ReplyDelete