Dallas, TX
Dissecting Dallas Keuchel

I’ll apologize at the outset for a lengthy post, but I do believe that the Twins’ FO and coaching staff are going to be having discussions revolving around this topic, and I feel TD should have it, too.
Causes of Keuchel’s Decline
To say that I was skeptical of Dallas Keuchel’s ability to be effective as a Twins starter would be an understatement. I definitely fall on the “Keuchel’s AAA numbers are smoke and mirrors” side of the debate, and (24hrs ago) I would have rather seen a Varland/Winder/BP day start than Keuchel taking the ball. In my opinion, most of his issues related to a lack of the precise command that won him the AL Cy Young in ’15.
In that season, his sinker averaged 90.0mph, and in 2016 (the first year statcast recorded vertical movement), it averaged 25.9″ of drop (4.1″ above average). In 2022, his average sinker velocity was 87.8mph with 30.1″ of drop (3.8″ above average). This kind of regression is normal– Clayton Kershaw’s average four-seamer has lost 3.0mph in the same 2015-2023 span.
Some of the off-speed stuff is not quite there. Keuchel’s slider has regressed heavily. It averaged 52.2″ of drop and 10.1″ of sweep at 78.5mph in ’16 while presenting a very hittable 45.3″ of drop and 9.8″ of sweep at 77.0mph in ’22. His changeup was very heavy in arm-side run (18.3″ in ’15), and he has since traded ~4″ of arm-side run for ~8″ of drop.
Here is a screenshot of his Baseball Savant page with the information about his pure “stuff” (left) and control (right):
The information on the right paints a good picture of what is occurring. In ’15 and ’17, Keuchel prevented over 40 runs with pitches on the edges. His style revolved around pitching the hitter into two-strike counts and then making them swing at a pitch they weren’t looking for on a fringe. That being said, the 1st Pitch Strike Percentage and Zone Percentage dropping 4.9% and 5.8%, respectively, since 2016 is quite worrying. He found himself in 3-0 counts 5.1% of the time in ’22 (up from 3.0% in ’15) and got to 0-2 in 19.5% of his PAs in ’22 (down from 22.3% in ’15). A changeup on the low outside corner is much more dangerous in 0-2 than it is in a 3-0 count, as the hitter is likely rolling that pitch over if he swings, yet he doesn’t have to on 3-0. Pitching into good counts is how the Keuchels/Maedas/Civales of the baseball world make their living. Keuchel has not done a lot of that since the shortened COVID season and it’s been his downfall.
His inability to work counts in his favor allowed hitters to be much choosier and sit on pitches, which is exasperated by the fact that he only throws in the high 80s. He can’t throw an F-you fastball at the numbers the way Duran, Lopez, or Jax can throw on 3-0. Getting into favorable counts is imperative and a key sign of whether or not Keuchel will be able to revive his career.
His Twins Debut
On a surface level, Keuchel was great in his debut. Pitching 5.0 innings of 1 ER ball is about as good as anyone could ask for, especially when the leverage corps all had a day of rest. If we go any deeper, however, we start to run into some complexity. He gave up 8 hits and 2 walks (2.00 WHIP) while striking out none (4.46 FIP). Of course, the 61.9% groundball percentage is much closer to his ’15 GB rate (61.5%) than his ’22 rate (50.7%). His hard-hit percentage (28.6%) is lower than any full-season mark of his, as well as his average EV (81.7mph). To see whether the hits were lucky (on the part of the hitters), let’s take a look at every PA with Keuchel on the mound.
Top 1
Ketel Marte: Flyout (84.9mph at 47 degrees) .020 xBA Corbin Carroll: Walk (N/A) N/A Tommy Pham: GIDP (97.0mph at 0 degrees) .420 xBA
Top 2
Christian Walker: Groundout (39.6mph at -57 degrees) .220 xBA Lourdes Gurriel: Single (88.5mph at 16 degrees) .930 xBA Emmanuel Rivera: FC (83.1mph at -26 degrees) .070 xBA Jake McCarthy: Single (59.4mph at -55 degrees) .330 xBA Nick Ahmed: Groundout (96.9 mph at -3 degrees) .330 xBA
Top 3
Carson Kelly: Single (64.5mph at -1 degrees) .120 xBA Ketel Marte: GIDP (78.4mph at 6 degrees) .290 xBA Corbin Carroll: Single (98.6mph at 7 degrees) .590 xBA Tommy Pham: Walk (N/A) N/A Christian Walker: Lineout (112.1mph at 8 degrees) .780 xBA
Top 4
Lourdes Gurriel: Single (88.4mph at 18 degrees) .760 xBA Emmanuel Rivera: Flyout (94.0mph at 40 degrees) .020 xBA Jake McCarthy: Flyout (75.2mph at 54 degrees) .100 xBA Nick Ahmed: Lineout (97.0 mph at 17 degrees) .490 xBA
Top 5
Carson Kelly: Double (103.5mph at 5 degrees) .590 xBA Ketel Marte: Groundout (80.4mph at -8 degrees) .120 xBA Corbin Carroll: Single (60.2mph at 30 degrees) .520 xBA Tommy Pham: RBI Groundout (94.6mph at -16 degrees) .120 xBA Christian Walker: Single (26.8mph at -42 degrees) .250 xBA Lourdes Gurriel: Groundout (93.0mph at -16 degrees) .140 xBA
We can use an xBA of .350 to be our threshold of “allowable” xBA, where a hit recorded with an xBA less than .350 is judged to be “bad luck” and an out recorded on a ball with an xBA above .350 is “good luck.” Using this threshold, Keuchel had three instances of “good luck” and three instances of “bad luck.”
His average xBA was 0.343 with two walks, though only one of the eight hits went for extra bases (and none of the “loud outs” would have gone for extra bases except maybe the Walker lineout). An average xBA above .300 is quite atrocious, as it is considerably higher than his .289 xBA mark in 2022, when he was among the bottom 1% of the league in this category. Sample size and the lack of strikeouts are likely the culprit of this large number, though a 15% K-rate would only reduce the xBA to a .292 mark.
In terms of working the count, he reached zero 3-0 counts and had the hitter on an 0-2 count 21.7% of the time (very close to his ’15 number). In this regard, he performed quite well and was able to get big outs by getting ahead of guys early. Additionally, the McCarthy hit in the 2nd, the Carroll hit in the 5th, and the Walker hit in the 5th all had xBAs above .250 despite being hit slower than 61mph. Expected batting average incorporates the batter’s footspeed, and three balls hit under 61mphs resulting in hits is bad luck (despite what xBA says) as the pitcher has won if he can induce extremely weak contact.
Conclusion
Obviously, it’s hard to make concrete conclusions about a five-inning start. We’re still debating how effective Pablo Lopez, Griffin Jax, Sonny Gray, and Emilio Pagan have been, and they have had 69% (nice) of a season to give us data. As it pertains to Keuchel, the early returns are promising. He’s using the same pitch mix (sinker/changeup/cutter/slider) that he’s used for his whole career and has worked the count in a way we haven’t seen from him since his ’15-’17 stretch of dominance. His xBA allowed is quite worrying, though three soft singles likely skewed this small sample of data. His groundball rate has returned to the 60%+ range, and he only gave up two extra-base-worthy batted balls in 5.0 IP. On the whole, his performance doesn’t raise a ton of additional concern from me; however, it hasn’t inspired a ton of optimism, either.
I would feel really uncomfortable if Keuchel had to start a playoff game, but as a 6th starter, I think he brings some promise. What do you guys think? Does he deserve to start another game? Was his debut a fluke, or was it a sign that he’s a changed pitcher? Thanks for staying with me through this statcast-infused salad, and I hope we can have a good discussion about Keuchel’s future with the franchise.

Dallas, TX
Heika’s Take: Stars take advantage of home ice, dominate in Game 3 win | Dallas Stars

“I thought we had a lot more guys look a lot more dangerous tonight, up and down the lineup,” DeBoer said. “You know, that’s a credit to our group. We looked at last game, we made some adjustments, and our whole group was more dangerous. We got some great contributions from some unsung heroes. Our penalty kill, I thought Sam Steel was outstanding tonight, Colin] [Blackwell had a couple of blocked shots. A lot of work by guys that don’t get noticed a lot.”
Dallas, TX
Cowboys’ toughest 2025 game will be against NFC powerhouse on the road

After going 7-10 in 2024, the Dallas Cowboys are hoping to get back on track in 2025. They’ve made some huge changes as they turn to a new head coach in Brian Schottenheimer and added more firepower — including the addition of wide receiver George Pickens.
While they should be praised for being proactive this offseason, they still face a daunting task with one of the toughest schedules in the league.
MORE: Cowboys’ defensive free agency signing named most ‘head-scratching’ move
There are several tough opponents that Dallas will have to overcome, but according to Pro Football Network’s Kyle Soppe, the toughest challenger will be a team they know well. Soppe says the biggest obstacle for the Cowboys will be heading to Detroit to take on the Lions.
“America’s team has to travel to Detroit to face the team that America has fallen in love with recently. The Lions went into Jerry’s World in Week 6 of last season and won by 38 points. If a healthy Dak Prescott can post a competitive effort on the road against a top-tier team in the conference, it would go a long way toward proving that this team is ready to compete for a playoff spot in a strong NFC East.”
Dallas won in a controversial contest in 2023, but the Lions made a statement last year by humiliating the Cowboys at home. The Cowboys have a chance to erase that awful performance from their memory, while getting revenge in Detroit.
In years past, they’ve folded in the face of such challenges. This test will prove whether or not Brian Schottenheimer’s culture change is working.
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Dallas, TX
With Dallas Stars in prime playoff spot, veering off concerning course could go a long way

So perhaps I was mistaken about life after Mikko. Seemed like the Stars had shown plenty of positive signs of being able to produce on their own, once he stopped delivering nightly hat tricks or four-point games. Instead, the entire squad was blanked in Winnipeg Friday night, making this a very compelling 1-1 series that continues with a 3:30 puck drop on Sunday at the AAC.
Dallas remains in prime position to keep advancing in this marathon affair called the Stanley Cup playoffs. Just by gaining a split in Winnipeg, the Stars secured the slight edge that is home-ice advantage, although this spring home teams are winning at a better than 2-1 rate — highly unusual for the NHL. Dallas is contributing with a 3-1 record at the AAC. And how things stand makes all the difference in the world when two teams of equal stature are going at it.
But the Stars also lost by four goals Friday night, and even if you want to excuse the empty-net strike from about 185 feet by Nikolaj Ehlers, this was still the fourth time Dallas has lost by at least three goals in the playoffs.
Cause for concern?
“You know what, some of them, the Colorado ones, I did because I thought we got overwhelmed,’’ Stars coach Pete DeBoer said Saturday after the team landed at Love Field. “I didn’t think that was the case last night. When you dive into the analytics and stuff, I think that was the story, too. Couple of those Colorado games were concerning, but I didn’t think last night’s was in that category.’’
Still, with one notable exception (a turning point Game 5 against Colorado), the Stars either win a close game or get drowned in a blowout. No other club has lost four times by three goals. I suppose the good news is that the only other three-time loser by three goals is Winnipeg. The Jets didn’t come close to winning a game in St. Louis, and if goaltender Connor Hellebuyck can be counted upon to resort to those bad performances (he was pulled in each game), Dallas can set its sights on, most likely, the Edmonton Oilers in the next round.
That all seems a little too easy, not to mention a dangerous assumption to make. The Stars forced Hellebuyck to provide at least a few big stops in the second period of Friday’s shutout, and now who’s to say that the game’s best goaltender hasn’t regained his singular focus? For me, Friday’s 4-0 Jets win looked a heck of a lot like Winnipeg’s 4-0 victory at the AAC in the final week when the visitors were nailing down the Presidents’ Trophy and the Stars were encased in a weird late-season slump.
Dallas still looks like that team a little too much, and Winnipeg, which got defenseman Josh Morrissey back into its lineup for Game 2, making the team truly healthy for the first time in the playoffs, looked a lot like the regular season Jets.
“He’s their Miro Heiskanen, you know,’’ DeBoer said. “So that changed things. It slots people for them. It’s a big boost of confidence for their whole group.’’
The Stars could use a similar injection but it won’t come Sunday afternoon. DeBoer said Heiskanen — injured against Vegas on Jan. 28 — won’t play in Game 3 and will return to day-to-day status for Tuesday’s Game 4.
“You know, when he comes back it’s going to be, obviously, a good day, but even then he’s been out for three and a half months. We’re going to have to temper our expectations on what he’s going to bring after that long of an absence,’’ DeBoer said.
For now, it’s back to scratching and clawing and hoping for emergency relief from Rantanen. What do all these blowouts really mean? Not much, maybe, in the sense that Florida won the Stanley Cup last June and lost four games by three or more goals. Of course, the Panthers spread that over two months with two of the losses coming to the Oilers in the Finals after they had grabbed a 3-0 lead. That’s different from losing all of one’s games by three goals.
If you’re looking to local Stanley Cup history, the Stars in 1999 lost seven games in their entire run to the Cup in Buffalo. They lost six games by one goal (four of those in overtime). Their only two-goal loss was a 7-5 defeat against Colorado in Game 5.
Not every Cup winner has to follow the same path. We’re just talking about surviving the second round, anyway. A bounce of the puck here or there, a first postseason goal from Matt Duchene or maybe a second from Mikael Granlund or Jamie Benn could go a long way towards moving the Stars beyond a team quietly waiting for another Mikko miracle.
X/Twitter: @TimCowlishaw
Find more Stars coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
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