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2015 Starter Rankings

As has become an All-Star break tradition, here’s a peek ahead at some very, very preliminary 2015 player rankings. I’m only concerned with next year here, so these aren’t true keeper rankings; if I were factoring in 2016 and beyond, some younger players would be listed quite a bit higher. As always, I’m going position by position (trying to account for next year’s position eligibility) and including a top 300 overall.

This winter’s free agents are listed without teams. Players facing option years are listed as “opt” in the team column.

Follow us at @Rotoworld_BB and @matthewpouliot on Twitter.

Click to see other preliminary 2015 rankings:

Top 300 | RP | OF | 1B | 2B | SS | 3B | C | DH

Editor’s Note: Rotoworld’s partner FanDuel is hosting a one-day $35,000 Fantasy Baseball league for Friday night’s MLB games. It’s $25 to join and first prize is $6,000. Starts at 7:05pm ET on Friday. Here’s the FanDuel link.

2015 Starting pitcher Rankings

2015SPTeam2014
1Clayton KershawDodgers1
2Adam WainwrightCardinals7
3Felix HernandezMariners5
4Madison BumgarnerGiants6
5Stephen StrasburgNationals3
6Max Scherzer 8
7Yu DarvishRangers10
8Zack GreinkeDodgers17
9Cliff LeePhillies2
10David PriceRays9
11Chris SaleWhite Sox13
12Cole HamelsPhillies21
13Julio TeheranBraves26
14Sonny GrayAthletics32
15Johnny CuetoReds30
16Jordan ZimmermannNationals18
17Matt HarveyMetsNR
18Justin VerlanderTigers4
19Doug FisterNationals22
20Garrett RichardsAngels113
21Jeff SamardzijaAthletics37
22Alex CobbRays12
23Michael WachaCardinals15
24Mat LatosReds25
25Homer BaileyReds19
26Gio GonzalezNationals23
27Mike MinorBraves27
28Matt CainGiants14
29James Shields 16
30Andrew CashnerPadres31
31Jon Lester 34
32Yordano VenturaRoyals71
33Hyun-Jin RyuDodgers28
34Gerrit ColePirates24
35Chris ArcherRays36
36Anibal SanchezTigers42
37Corey KluberIndians60
38Hisashi IwakumaMariners52
39Masahiro TanakaYankees20
40Tyson RossPadres57
41Lance LynnCardinals46
42Archie BradleyDiamondbacks89
43Derek HollandRangers86
44C.J. WilsonAngels39
45John LackeyRed Sox45
46Scott KazmirAthletics81
47Taijuan WalkerMariners96
48R.A. DickeyBlue Jays29
49Dallas KeuchelAstros126
50Jose QuintanaWhite Sox58
51Jake ArrietaCubs151
52Marcus StromanBlue Jays158
53Alex WoodBraves48
54Andrew HeaneyMarlins165
55Jesse HahnPadresNR
56Kevin GausmanOrioles115
57Jered WeaverAngels44
58Carlos MartinezCardinals95
59Jose FernandezMarlins11
60Tim HudsonGiants61
61Trevor BauerIndians205
62Zack WheelerMets65
63Francisco Liriano 41
64Charlie MortonPirates76
65Rick PorcelloTigers55
66Drew SmylyTigers62
67Ian KennedyPadres40
68Kyle LohseBrewers85
69Mike LeakeReds66
70Tony CingraniReds33
71Nathan EovaldiMarlins83
72Kris MedlenBravesNR
73Clay BuchholzRed Sox35
74Tyler SkaggsAngels125
75Ervin Santana 47
76Yovani Gallardoopt79
77Danny DuffyRoyals127
78Jason Hammel 141
79Tim LincecumGiants70
80Henderson AlvarezMarlins88
81Jon NieseMets109
82Jake OdorizziRays140
83Wily PeraltaBrewers117
84Wade MileyDiamondbacks67
85Patrick CorbinDiamondbacksNR
86Matt GarzaBrewers72
87Josh Beckett 123
88Dylan BundyOrioles282
89Odrisamer DespaignePadresNR
90Justin Masterson 56
91Jake Peavy 63
92Phil HughesTwins94
93Shelby MillerCardinals51
94Dan Harenopt53
95Danny SalazarIndians38
96Jeremy HellicksonRays84
97Rubby De La RosaRed Sox279
98Jarred CosartAstros167
99Drew PomeranzAthletics157
100Jimmy NelsonBrewers185
101Brandon McCarthy 90
102Roenis EliasMariners280
103Dillon GeeMets82
104Alex MeyerTwins240
105Michael PinedaYankees119
106Drew HutchisonBlue Jays108
107James PaxtonMariners118
108Bartolo ColonMets74
109Jesse ChavezAthletics137
110Mark BuehrleBlue Jays104
111Noah SyndergaardMets212
112Tanner RoarkNationals135
113Robbie ErlinPadres101
114A.J. Burnettopt69
115Henry OwensRed Sox314
116Jonathan GrayRockies257
117Jason VargasRoyals112
118CC SabathiaYankees54
119Jarrod ParkerAthleticsNR
120Marco GonzalesCardinalsNR
121Edwin JacksonCubs91
122Erasmo RamirezMariners68
123Travis WoodCubs93
124Matthew WislerPadres190
125Alfredo SimonReds135 RP
126Wei-Yin Chenopt99
127Jorge De La Rosa 142
128Chris TillmanOrioles100
129Carlos RodonWhite SoxNR
130Marco EstradaBrewers64
131Ubaldo JimenezOrioles106
132Gavin Floyd 128
133Felix DoubrontRed Sox92
134Brett Andersonopt111
135Joe KellyCardinals132
136Allen WebsterRed Sox192
137Kyle GibsonTwins134
138Collin McHughAstros298
139A.J. GriffinAthletics59
140Brandon WorkmanRed Sox77 RP
141Brandon BeachyBravesNR
142Dan StrailyCubs43
143Edwin EscobarGiants317
144Rafael MonteroMets168
145Tom KoehlerMarlins156
146Jeff LockePirates121
147Matt MooreRays49
148Miguel GonzalezOrioles73
149Robbie RayTigers266
150Ricky NolascoTwins110
151Cory LuebkePadresNR
152John DanksWhite Sox87
153Hiroki Kuroda 50
154Ivan NovaYankees75
155Aaron SanchezBlue Jays245
156Jaime GarciaCardinals97
157Chase AndersonDiamondbacksNR
158C.J. EdwardsCubs273
159Daniel HudsonDiamondbacks234
160Chad Billingsleyopt139
161Anthony DeSclafaniMarlins290
162Trevor CahillDiamondbacks103
163A.J. ColeNationals275
164Bud NorrisOrioles163
165Casey KellyPadres210
166Anthony RanaudoRed Sox276
167Jhoulys ChacinRockies130
168Eddie ButlerRockies207
169Trevor MayTwins259
170Martin PerezRangers122
171Jeremy GuthrieRoyals147
172Tommy MiloneAthletics80
173Josh Johnsonopt78
174Tyler GlasnowPiratesNR
175Jose BerriosTwinsNR
176Brad PeacockAstros173
177Daniel NorrisBlue JaysNR
178Jesse BiddlePhillies201
179Jameson TaillonPirates194
180Luke JacksonRangers357

Starting pitchers

  • Just three of the top 60 pitchers here are free agents this winter: Scherzer, Shields and Lester. There’s still a fair amount of talent behind the big three, though, in Liriano, Ervin Santana, Hammel, Beckett, Masterson, Peavy, McCarthy and De La Rosa. Of the pitchers with options, Gallardo and Chen figure to be back with the Brewers and Orioles, respectively. Haren has a $10 million player option to stay with the Dodgers that he might well exercise unless he finishes strong.

  • It’s not ideal, but nine Padres crack the top 180, along with eight starters apiece from the Athletics, Cardinals and Red Sox. Cashner and Ross are probably the locks for the San Diego rotation, with Hahn not far behind. I’m guessing Kennedy will be gone, probably before the trade deadline. I’m also getting more optimistic about Despaigne, who showed his best velocity to date in his start against the Dodgers last time out. So, if a veteran joins those four (Cashner, Ross, Hahn and Despaigne), then the Padres might not have any room for Erlin, Wisler, Luebke and Kelly. But Erlin, Luebke and Kelly are all rehab cases anyway; they just all had too much upside to exclude.

Interestingly, the Padres also hold a $4 million option on Josh Johnson’s services after he underwent Tommy John surgery. I imagine they’ll decline it, though that’s not a bad price at all for a lottery ticket.

  • The uncertainly and crowding in the Cardinals rotation made those rankings tough calls. Wacha would be in the top 15 if not for this year’s stress reaction in his shoulder. It could prove to be a completely isolated incident, and since there aren’t any known rotator cuff or labrum issues, he still has a good chance of being an elite pitcher next year. However, given the way we’ve seen the stress reactions/fractures recur with McCarthy, I did have to ding Wacha’s ranking a bit. So, he’s No. 23. I also have Carlos Martinez at No. 58, which is pretty high for a guy who might wind up back in the pen. But he has such a high ceiling that I couldn’t see putting him any lower than that. If Wacha and Martinez join Wainwright and Lynn in next year’s rotation, it’d leave just one spot for Miller, a possibly healthy Jaime Garcia, Kelly and prospect Marco Gonzales.

  • The Red Sox rotation is completely up in the air, what with Lester and Peavy in free agency and Lackey’s status uncertain. Lackey’s contract calls for him to earn just $500,000 next year because of a term added at the onset of his five-year, $82.5 million deal relating to him missing time with an arm problem (he didn’t pitch in 2012 following Tommy John surgery). Lackey figures to be a very unhappy camper if the Red Sox actually ask him to pitch for the major league minimum, so something will have to be worked out, perhaps a two-year extension that would bring his salary back up.

Plus, beyond the veterans, the Red Sox have a whole bunch of youngsters that are worthy of chances, even if there’s only one elite prospect (Henry Owens) in the bunch. I ranked them: Rubby De La Rosa, Owens, Allen Webster, Brandon Workman and Anthony Ranaudo, with Matt Barnes missing the cut. The Red Sox also have Buchholz and Doubront under control and they’ll make a bid to retain Lester, so it’s hard to tell just how much room there will be for those young arms.

  • Four teams have just three starters in the top 150: the Dodgers, Indians, Phillies and Rockies. The Dodgers are in the best shape of those teams, what with their three being Kershaw, Greinke and Ryu. They might also have Haren back, and they can re-sign Beckett if they want, though they may aim higher. I was tempted to include 17-year-old phenom Julio Urias in the top 180 based on the possibility that he could be ready next summer. Zach Lee wasn’t given a lot of consideration, though.

  • I put Harvey at No. 17 for now. He was performing like a top-five pitcher pre-surgery, but we’ll have to see how he looks next spring before he sees that territory again.

  • Tanaka got something of a placeholder ranking at No. 39. Depending on how his rehab goes in the coming weeks, he could require Tommy John surgery that would sideline him for all of 2015. He’s the lone Yankee in the top 100 here, with Pineda at No. 105 and Sabathia at No. 118. The rehabbing Nova, who figures to miss at least the first month or two of the season, is at No. 154.

  • Rodon, at No. 129, was the lone 2014 draft pick to crack the list here, though consideration was given to the Phillies’ Aaron Nola and the Giants’ Tyler Beede.

  • Kuroda is listed at No. 153 because I’m assuming this will be his last year in MLB, whether he retires or simply heads back to Japan. If he did decide to come back, he’d still crack the top 100, but not the top 50 or 60.

  • No current Japanese players made the rankings, though I did consider including right-hander Kenta Maeda. The 26-year-old is hoping to be posted this winter, and he could be a fine middle-of-the-rotation guy in MLB.