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Nick Mariano's Updated Saves+Holds Rankings for Fantasy Baseball Relief Pitchers

Devin Williams - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, Relief Pitchers, Draft Sleepers, MLB Injury News Updates

We're back to celebrate the glory that is relief pitchers with another rendition of my top-150 Saves+Holds (Solds) rankings with a month of play in the books. I know there are dozens of you out there who play in formats with SV+HLD, or leagues where Saves and Holds are separate categories. Or maybe you're just a fantasy baseball bullpens junkie and can't help yourself from reading relief pitcher content! Whatever your ailment, we've got the remedy.

While the closer's role is important, an increasing number of managers are moving their best arm into a flexible role while shuffling who gets the ninth. Saves+Holds (or Solds, or SV+HLD) leagues help fantasy leagues reward the best arms regardless of the inning, though it still favors closers in a vacuum. Be sure to also check out our constantly updated fantasy baseball closers and saves depth charts.

Reminder: A hold is recorded when a relief pitcher enters with a lead of three runs or less, or with the tying run on deck, at the plate, or on base, and maintains that lead while recording at least one out. While I look for pitchers used in high-leverage situations, this is also about how good the arm is and how efficient their K/9 works for many of you. There are notes and analysis below, following the rankings table.

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Updated Saves+Holds Rankings - Mixed Leagues

Rankings updated on May 4th

Rank Tier Player Team Lg
1 1 Josh Hader MIL NL
2 1 Liam Hendriks CWS AL
3 1 Raisel Iglesias LAA AL
4 1 Edwin Diaz NYM NL
5 2 Jordan Romano TOR AL
6 2 Taylor Rogers SD NL
7 2 Kenley Jansen ATL NL
8 2 Giovanny Gallegos STL NL
9 2 Emmanuel Clase CLE AL
10 2 Craig Kimbrel LAD NL
11 2 Devin Williams MIL NL
12 2 Andrew Kittredge TB AL
13 3 Ryan Pressly HOU AL
14 3 Aroldis Chapman NYY AL
15 3 David Bednar PIT NL
16 3 Paul Sewald SEA AL
17 3 Corey Knebel PHI NL
18 3 Scott Barlow KC AL
19 4 Hector Neris HOU AL
20 4 Michael King NYY AL
21 4 Ryan Helsley STL NL
22 4 Clay Holmes NYY AL
23 4 Anthony Bender MIA NL
24 4 Camilo Doval SF NL
25 4 Andres Munoz SEA AL
26 4 Gregory Soto DET AL
27 4 Kendall Graveman CWS AL
28 4 Jhoan Duran MIN AL
29 4 Lucas Sims CIN NL
30 5 William Smith ATL NL
31 5 Jorge Lopez BAL AL
32 5 Jonathan Loaisiga NYY AL
33 5 Chad Green NYY AL
34 5 Tanner Rainey WAS NL
35 5 Diego Castillo SEA AL
36 5 Tyler Rogers SF NL
37 5 Ryan Tepera LAA AL
38 5 David Robertson CHC NL
39 6 Daniel Hudson LAD NL
40 6 Aaron Bummer CWS AL
41 6 Josh Staumont KC AL
42 6 Joe Barlow TEX AL
43 6 Michael Fulmer DET AL
44 6 Daniel Bard COL NL
45 6 Dany Jimenez OAK AL
46 6 Mark Melancon ARI NL
47 6 Jake McGee SF NL
48 6 A.J. Minter ATL NL
49 6 Tyler Matzek ATL NL
50 6 Art Warren CIN NL
51 6 Tim Mayza TOR AL
52 6 Andrew Chafin DET AL
53 6 Matt Wisler TB AL
54 6 Hansel Robles BOS AL
55 6 Brooks Raley TB AL
56 6 Emilio Pagan MIN AL
57 6 Steven Wilson SD NL
58 6 Matt Barnes BOS AL
59 6 Adam Cimber TOR AL
60 6 Rafael Montero HOU AL
61 6 Phil Maton HOU AL
62 7 Jake Diekman BOS AL
63 7 Seth Lugo NYM NL
64 7 Mychal Givens CHC NL
65 7 Lou Trivino OAK AL
66 7 Cole Sulser BAL AL
67 7 Alex Vesia LAD NL
68 7 Trevor May NYM NL
69 7 Luis Garcia SD NL
70 7 Brad Boxberger MIL NL
71 7 Aaron Loup LAA AL
72 7 Seranthony Dominguez PHI NL
73 8 Dylan Floro MIA NL
74 8 Jake Cousins MIL NL
75 8 Brusdar Graterol LAD NL
76 8 J.P. Feyereisen TB AL
77 8 Ian Kennedy ARI NL
78 8 Genesis Cabrera STL NL
79 8 Tanner Scott MIA NL
80 8 Trevor Stephan CLE AL
81 8 Drew Smith NYM NL
82 8 Jose Ruiz CWS AL
83 8 Erik Swanson SEA AL
84 8 Tyler Duffey MIN AL
85 8 Yimi Garcia TOR AL
86 8 Wil Crowe PIT NL
87 8 Anthony Bass MIA NL
88 8 Collin McHugh ATL NL
89 8 Nick Sandlin CLE AL
90 9 Joe Mantiply ARI NL
91 9 Scott Effross CHC NL
92 9 Zach Jackson OAK AL
93 9 Joely Rodriguez NYM NL
94 9 Tyler Kinley COL NL
95 9 Alex Lange DET AL
96 9 Brad Hand PHI NL
97 9 Matt Strahm BOS AL
98 9 Tommy Kahnle LAD NL
99 9 Adam Ottavino NYM NL
100 9 Spencer Strider ATL NL
101 9 Alex Colome COL NL
102 9 Chris Stratton PIT NL
103 9 Ryan Thompson TB AL
104 9 Miguel Castro NYY AL
105 9 Amir Garrett KC AL
106 9 Drew Steckenrider SEA AL
107 9 Domingo Acevedo OAK AL
108 9 Noe Ramirez ARI NL
109 9 Matt Bush TEX AL
110 9 Dillon Tate BAL AL
111 9 Joe Smith MIN AL
112 9 Ryan Brasier BOS AL
113 9 Jason Adam TB AL
114 10 Brock Burke TEX AL
115 10 Richard Bleier MIA NL
116 10 Anthony Gose CLE AL
117 10 Keegan Thompson CHC NL
118 10 Steven Okert MIA NL
119 10 Sam Hentges CLE AL
120 10 Griffin Jax MIN AL
121 10 Luis Cessa CIN NL
122 10 Mike Mayers LAA AL
123 10 Rowan Wick CHC NL
124 10 Nick Wittgren STL NL
125 10 Collin Snider KC AL
126 10 Ryne Stanek HOU AL
127 10 Colin Poche TB AL
128 10 Blake Taylor HOU AL
129 10 Dillon Peters PIT NL
130 10 Jalen Beeks TB AL
131 10 Trevor Gott MIL NL
132 10 Robert Suarez SD NL
133 10 Phil Bickford LAD NL
134 10 Dinelson Lamet SD NL
135 10 Jose Alvarado PHI NL
136 10 David Phelps TOR AL
137 10 A.J. Puk OAK AL
138 10 Taylor Clarke KC AL
139 10 Jarlin Garcia SF NL
140 10 Robert Stephenson COL NL
141 10 Carlos Estevez COL NL
142 10 Chasen Shreve NYM NL
143 10 Chris Martin CHC NL
144 10 Lucas Luetge NYY AL
145 10 Dylan Coleman KC AL
146 10 Kyle Finnegan WSH NL
147 10 Tony Santillan CIN NL
148 10 Kodi Whitley STL NL
149 10 Jacob Barnes DET AL
150 10 Trevor Richards TOR AL

Saves+Holds Tiered Rankings Analysis Notes

-Liam Hendriks had many of us worried with early-season scuffles, but he looks back to normal after a week off meant to alleviate back tightness. The 33-year-old collected his seventh save of 2022 on Wednesday night with a 1-2-3 inning, which marks his fourth straight appearance without a hit allowed since taking some time off. Whew.

-Jordan Romano & Taylor Rogers are off to hot starts, performing well and getting plenty of save opportunities thrown their way. You love to see it, especially if you’re a Padres fan realizing what could’ve been had Rogers not stepped into San Diego’s bullpen.

-Devin Williams is still an electrifying talent with wicked strikeout stuff to help those who must eye K/9. Perhaps you play in rotisserie leagues with inning caps, or your H2H matchups since need as many whiffs from RP slots as possible and you don’t have many SP/RP guys to slot in. After some early stumbles, Williams looks to have righted the ship so I’m not docking him from preseason expectations. He’d issued six walks and allowed four runs in his first four games but has posted 6 ⅓ IP of scoreless ball with only two hits and two walks since then. We’ll take it.

-Ryan Pressly is set to return shortly so I’ll leave him on the table for now. While Hector Neris and Rafael Montero performed admirably in his stead, Pressly remains the man for Houston when healthy.

-Michael King looks like NYY’s most effective arm at the moment, boasting a starter’s four-pitch mix that plays up out of the bullpen. Even if the raw SV+HLD tally isn’t at the top of any leaderboards, his 25/3 K/BB ratio and 0.51 ERA through 17 ⅔ IP cannot be ignored. The Yankees will win many a game, so it wouldn’t be surprising to see a premier fireman reach 6-8 wins on top of the relief stats. Clay Holmes is no slouch either, being used more frequently in a traditional RP mold compared to King’s multi-inning stints. That means more holds for you and me. It’s crazy how Chad Green and Jonathan Loaisiga can “struggle” and this bullpen is still A-OK.

-Tyler Rogers & Ryan Tepera may not win any K/9 titles, but they’re logging holds at a steady pace and have solidified roles at the back-end of their bullpens. Names such as these, or Michael Fulmer, don’t have to be sexy, they just have to reliably get the job done.

-Daniel Bard won’t be crowned the King of Consistency for his career, but he is opening 2022 as well as we could’ve hoped after 2021’s crumbling. He lost the closer’s role following a loss of command last season, which prompted many to wonder if he’d lost the zone in a similar way to that which led to his early retirement in the 2010s. He’s coming out swinging with seven saves and a win on the back of a 13/0 K/BB ratio across nine innings. The 1.96 FIP and xFIP are in lockstep with the 2.00 ERA and we are mile-high happy. Bud Black said he prefers a stopper who has strikeout stuff and it’s clear there’s no committee here.

-Jake Diekman has nine holds but Boston’s bullpen is a straight-up nightmare at the moment and Diek is no exception. The southpaw has always lived dangerously with a walk rate in the 12-14% range but it’s a tad higher at the moment alongside a troubling HR uptick that reared its head in ‘21. Prior to last season, Diekman’s HR/9 was always below 1.0 and that meant the crummy walk rates didn’t do as much damage. In 2021 it jumped to 1.48 and he’s already surrendered two round-trippers in just 8 ⅔ IP so far in ‘22. He also blew a save just last night. I think Boston needs Garrett Whitlock in the ‘pen, and he’d be a top-25 guy here if he was, but we’ll see how they utilize Tanner Houck. Maybe there’s another level as a reliever for the right-handed Chris Sale.

-Dylan Floro should make his 2022 MLB debut soon so I’m tossing him into the 70s with the expectation he regains the closing role in short order. Anthony Bender still looks off to me, as he blows his second save and takes his third loss of ‘22 while I write this, with fewer whiffs and seemingly less confidence in the zone. Floro held his own in 2021, posting a 2.81 ERA with an identical 2.81 FIP over 64 frames for the Marlins. Anthony Bass also has a quiet six holds already too.

*I’ll say that it’s difficult to lay guys such as Spencer Strider into these, as they clearly offer ratio relief and K/9 upside in fantasy but don’t get many late opportunities. If you want to target the pitchers who work longer stints early in games, or hope for the relief wins that we see from Brock Burke and Keegan Thompson, then go right ahead. I’d suggest not reading much into their placement on boards such as this and following a roster construction/risk tolerance decision tree for yourself instead.

Once you hit a certain spot towards the lower end of ranking tables then it really becomes more about what your needs are. That should always inform your path but when it comes to late darts and free-agent speculation, you simply have to be wise and play for yourself, not play for my or anyone else’s lists. Don’t be afraid to add a guy like Oakland’s Zach Jackson after one game. Be honest with your ratio buffers when taking on a committee piece like Chris Stratton or Matt Barnes. Be forgiving on early surface RP stats, with many still under 10 innings of play, looking instead at walk rates and overall command.

You can do this!



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