One of my favorite early season stats to examine is always Strikeout-to-walk Ratio, or K/BB. It tends to indicate success in a simplistic way. Strikeouts are good. Walks are bad. A strong K/BB will typically reveal who’s getting it done with effective pitching. A strikeout artist can afford to walk some batters as long as he’s raking up Ks. Conversely, a control specialist needs to keep walks to a bare minimum to be useful.

Below is a table of the current top 25 in K/BB. I’ve included Strikeout Percentage minus Walk Percentage, or K-BB%, as it’s a good reference point to see in case a very low walk total due to few batters faced is driving a low K/BB.

Name

Team

K/BB

K-BB%

Hyun-Jin Ryu

Dodgers

22.5

26.4 %

Max Scherzer

Nationals

9

29.6 %

Carlos Carrasco

Indians

7.14

28.5 %

Tyler Glasnow

Rays

6.57

24.4 %

José Berríos

Twins

6.38

20.7 %

Madison Bumgarner

Giants

6.38

21.2 %

Zack Greinke

Diamondbacks

6.25

21.8 %

Matthew Boyd

Tigers

5.73

25.9 %

Matt Strahm

Padres

5.67

17.7 %

Blake Snell

Rays

5.56

28.9 %

Luke Weaver

Diamondbacks

5.5

22.6 %

Tyler Mahle

Reds

5.13

21.0 %

Chris Sale

Red Sox

5.09

24.3 %

Justin Verlander

Astros

5

24.2 %

Gerrit Cole

Astros

4.93

29.7 %

Stephen Strasburg

Nationals

4.86

26.2 %

Caleb Smith

Marlins

4.67

27.3 %

Chris Paddack

Padres

4.6

24.0 %

Brandon Woodruff

Brewers

4.5

23.1 %

Noah Syndergaard

Mets

4.5

20.4 %

Zach Eflin

Phillies

4.43

14.1 %

Pablo Lopez

Marlins

4.33

19.2 %

German Márquez

Rockies

4.33

19.1 %

Jacob deGrom

Mets

4.31

25.8 %

Carlos Carrasco makes for an intriguing buy low. He’s still getting you the Ks you paid for. The ratios could stabilize and make him a value. Matthew Boyd ’s breakout looks legit here. He’s a strikeout pitcher now. My best ball portfolio is thrilled to see Caleb Smith picking up where he left off in 2018 with great strikeout stuff. Smith was a worthwhile gamble for me as his injury wasn’t of the typical arm stress variety.

On the other end of the control spectrum are these pitchers issue far too many free passes.

Name

Team

K/BB

K-BB%

Brett Anderson

Athletics

1.16

1.6 %

Brad Keller

Royals

1.29

3.9 %

Sandy Alcantara

Marlins

1.29

3.5 %

Aaron Sanchez

Blue Jays

1.4

5.5 %

Jhoulys Chacín

Brewers

1.45

5.5 %

Matt Harvey

Angels

1.57

5.0 %

Trevor Richards

Marlins

1.62

8.0 %

Aníbal Sánchez

Nationals

1.64

8.1 %

Merrill Kelly

Diamondbacks

1.82

8.1 %

Zach Davies

Brewers

1.86

7.3 %

Dereck Rodríguez

Giants

2

8.3 %

Andrew Cashner

Orioles

2.06

9.3 %

José Ureña

Marlins

2.13

8.4 %

Reynaldo López

White Sox

2.24

13.2 %

Lance Lynn

Rangers

2.25

10.9 %

Marcus Stroman

Blue Jays

2.28

11.9 %

Jorge López

Royals

2.29

11.5 %

Jake Arrieta

Phillies

2.31

11.4 %

Jon Gray

Rockies

2.39

14.1 %

Robbie Ray

Diamondbacks

2.39

17.3 %

Julio Teheran

Braves

2.4

14.7 %

Kyle Freeland

Rockies

2.43

11.5 %

Martín Pérez

Twins

2.44

13.5 %

Trent Thornton

Blue Jays

2.44

14.6 %

Jake Odorizzi

Twins

2.53

16.1 %

It’s interesting to see Kyle Freeland on this list. Precise control was such a critical element to his 2018 success. That seemed like a skills gain that would translate to 2019 but hasn’t. Sandy Alcantara is likely ticketed for the minors once the Marlins deem Zac Gallen ready/affordable. Merrill Kelly was supposed to be Miles Mikolas light, but a command specialist without command is just a bad pitcher.

Strikeout-to-walk Ratio is an excellent starting point for a deeper dive on pitching. It can help you identify some buy lows, as well as some possible pickups to avoid. K/BB is also a great reference point when choosing a DFS pitcher. You absolutely want someone with a track record of significantly more strikeouts than walks.