Alex Cobb

Alex Cobb

36-Year-Old PitcherSP
San Francisco Giants
15-Day IL
Injury Hip
Est. Return 5/3/2024
2024 Fantasy Outlook
Cobb's 2023 innings total was his most of the previous four full seasons, so naturally it was time for him to have another injury. It was announced after the season that Cobb needed to have surgery on the labrum in his hip to address ongoing impingement issues. That said, the Giants must not be terribly concerned as they did exercise the $10M option on Cobb's contract for the 2024 season. That issue in his hip could help explain the decline in his strikeout rate, but the fact remains all of his offerings outside of his splitter were simply more hittable in 2023 than 2022. The league hit over .300 off his breaking balls and .280 off his fastball, and quite frankly, Cobb is lucky that his ERA was not in the mid 4's range. Cobb will not be ready to start the season, so expectations should sit around 25 starts and 130 innings since his health records are getting longer than John Dalton's dossier in Roadhouse. Read Past Outlooks
RANKSFrom Preseason
#506
ADP
$Signed a two-year, $18 million contract with the Giants in November of 2021. Giants exercised $10 million team option for 2024 in November of 2023.
Pauses throwing for elbow issue
PSan Francisco Giants
Hip
April 5, 2024
Cobb (hip) said Friday he's been shut down from throwing for a few days due to some flexor tendon inflammation, Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle reports.
ANALYSIS
It doesn't appear to be a serious concern since Cobb is expected to resume throwing Monday, but any arm issue is a notable development as he makes his way back from offseason hip surgery. The 36-year-old's return timeline will be pushed back at least a week, which likely means he won't make his season debut until sometime in May.
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Left/Right Pitching Splits
Since 2022
 
 
-5%
BAA vs RHP
2024
No Stats
2023
 
 
-5%
BAA vs RHP
2022
 
 
-5%
BAA vs RHP
BAA Batters K BB H 2B 3B HR
Since 2022vs Left .274 638 115 53 159 30 2 10
Since 2022vs Right .260 639 167 27 156 27 2 18
2024vs Left 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2024vs Right 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2023vs Left .279 336 47 29 85 18 2 7
2023vs Right .264 310 84 8 78 15 2 12
2022vs Left .269 302 68 24 74 12 0 3
2022vs Right .256 329 83 19 78 12 0 6
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Home/Away Pitching Splits
Since 2022
 
 
-57%
ERA at Home
2024
No Stats
2023
 
 
-66%
ERA at Home
2022
 
 
-48%
ERA at Home
ERA WHIP IP W L SV K/9 BB/9 HR/9
Since 2022Home 2.34 1.10 161.1 11 8 0 8.5 2.3 0.6
Since 2022Away 5.48 1.55 139.2 3 7 0 8.3 2.5 1.2
2024Home 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2024Away 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2023Home 1.95 1.04 74.0 5 2 0 7.3 1.8 0.7
2023Away 5.70 1.59 77.1 2 5 0 8.3 2.6 1.5
2022Home 2.68 1.16 87.1 6 6 0 9.6 2.7 0.4
2022Away 5.20 1.51 62.1 1 2 0 8.4 2.5 0.7
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Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Alex Cobb See More
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25 days ago
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Likely sticking in San Francisco
PSan Francisco Giants
October 4, 2023
Alex Pavlovic of NBC Sports Bay Area reports that the Giants will soon finalize the picking up of Cobb's $10 million club option for 2024.
ANALYSIS
The right-hander will turn 36 years old over the weekend and finished the season on the injured list with a hip impingement after pitching through the injury for much of the second half, but neither fact is expected to give San Francisco much pause on the contract decision. Cobb joined the team on a two-year deal, plus the club option, in November of 2021 and has been a reliable rotation piece with a 3.80 ERA in 56 starts for the Giants.
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
2023
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2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
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2015
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2013
2012
2011
After seven starts, Cobb was sitting on a 6.25 ERA and 1.55 WHIP. A 27.7% strikeout rate and 6.4% walk rate along with a 2.73 FIP and 2.39 xFIP screamed patience while his .411 BABIP and 49% LOB mark regressed. Sure enough, Cobb registered a 3.05 ERA and 1.24 WHIP the rest of the way. After starting 31 games from 2019-2021, the veteran started 28 games, collecting 149.2 frames, his most since 2018. He increased the use of his splitter while bagging his four-seam fastball and cutting back on curves. The 35-year-old righthander will be back in the Giants rotation, so he'll again benefit from a great home pitching venue. Despite avoiding the IL last season, health is a concern, but he's still a potential bargain relative to cost. Cobb is especially useful in formats where streaming is facilitated.
The Giants have shown in recent years with the likes of Kevin Gausman, Anthony DeSclafani and Alex Wood that they can help veteran starters get the most out of their stuff. The departure of Buster Posey hurts, but this is still a top-shelf situation for a pitcher such as Cobb, who signed this offseason for $20 million over two years. While Cobb could be in for one of the best years of his career, the renaissance began last year with the Angels. He registered a 3.76 ERA, 1.26 WHIP and career-best 16.5 K-BB%. His 53.3 GB% was tied with Sandy Alcantara for the 11th-best mark among pitchers who threw 90-plus innings. Cobb threw his sinker and splitter a combined 79% of the time, while also mixing in his 83-mph curveball, which has above-average velocity and drop. His splitter was a whiff machine and has elite horizontal break. Finger and wrist injuries limited Cobb to 93.1 innings, and while durability isn't a strength, Cobb's skills seem bankable, especially with a more favorable team context.
Cobb returned to the mound in 2020 after missing most of 2019 with a hip injury. Following his struggles over a limited sample that year, Cobb returned to form, posting a 4.30 ERA and 1.34 WHIP. Although he improved, the right-hander was still a shaky fantasy option. He should be one of the Orioles' top starting options in 2021, but that speaks more to the team's lackluster rotation than to Cobb's potential. The 33-year-old remained steady with a 4.21 xFIP in 2020, but he had a middling 16.8 K% and struggled with an 8.0 BB% that was his worst since his rookie year. His 40.5% hard-hit rate had significantly increased from his marks during full seasons in 2017 and 2018. Cobb hasn't received much run support in his three years with the Orioles, sputtering to a 7-22 record. He's been consistent outside of his 2019 campaign, but his skill set doesn't present much fantasy upside.
Cobb missed most of 2019 with back and hip issues, as he made only three starts. Although last year provided a limited sample, most signs point to more struggles ahead for Cobb. The right-hander -- almost impossibly -- surrendered nine homers over 12.1 innings while fanning eight. While the struggles were extreme and could have been exacerbated by his injuries, Cobb has struggled mightily since signing a four-year deal with the Orioles prior to the 2018 season, with a 5.36 ERA and 110:45 K:BB over 31 starts. The 32-year-old packs a limited strikeout punch, and while his swinging-strike rate rose to 10.5% in 2019 after hitting just 7.3% the year before, that uptick did not result in more Ks. Even if Cobb remains healthy in 2020, his low strikeout rate and high home-run rate make him a fantasy liability. He's not worth rostering outside the deepest of fantasy leagues.
Cobb signed late, joining the Orioles on March 20. He ultimately debuted April 14. Perhaps it was not having a normal spring, or the park change to hitter-friendly Camden Yards, but on July 8, Cobb was sitting with an unsightly 6.67 ERA and 1.62 WHIP. From that point until he was shut down in mid-September after aggravating a blister, Cobb spun a 2.59 ERA and 1.14 WHIP. The thing is, Cobb's strikeout and walk rates were essentially the same in both stretches. The major differences were a .340 BABIP and 61.4 LOB% though July 8 followed by a .249 BABIP and 80.3 LOB% the rest of the way. Cobb was neither as bad as he looked early nor as good as he appeared late. The bottom line is, unless Cobb misses more bats (7.3 SwStr%) he'll be prone to wild fluctuation, especially in such an offense-happy park and division. Fantasy math: volatile ratios plus low wins and whiffs equals no thanks.
Coming off a season with five starts at the major-league level, Cobb made 29 starts spanning a career-high 179.1 innings. His 3.66 ERA looks nice, but a 4.16 FIP and 4.24 xFIP suggest it should have been half a run higher. Cobb's BABIP was a little low and his left-on-base percentage a little high, but not egregiously so. The key with Cobb is strikeouts. To maintain a mid-3.00s ERA, he needs to miss more bats, as a 17.3 percent strikeout rate won't get it done. It's a small sample, but if he can sustain what he did to close the season, Cobb's whiffs will climb. Specifically, in his last seven outings, he recorded a 2.81 ERA, 1.20 WHIP, 38 strikeouts and eight walks in 38.1 innings. In those efforts, he drastically altered his pitch mix, throwing more curves while barely using his changeup. Cobb's low strikeouts should keep his price down. It's worth paying to see if his last seven games were indicative of the future.
Cobb made a generally strong return from May 2015 Tommy John surgery, a pair of disastrous outings to end the season notwithstanding. Before giving up 15 earned runs over 4.1 innings in his last two starts, he'd posted a solid 3.06 ERA and 12:4 K:BB in 17.2 innings over his first three trips to the mound. The 29-year-old has a proven track record, having posted a trio of double-digit win seasons from 2012-14, but it remains to be seen if his arm can fully return to form. While he would seem to have the inside track to a rotation spot entering spring training, Cobb will need to fend off the likes of Matt Andriese and Blake Snell. Otherwise, Cobb could make for an interesting long-term project in a bullpen capacity, an option that may be explored once he exhausts every opportunity to reclaim a starter's role.
Cobb is only draftable in 2016 if you play in a keeper league. Otherwise, rostering him will be a frustrating experience. Don’t believe us? Ask those folks who drafted Matt Moore in 2015. Moore came back in early July and was beaten like a drum for five starts before going back to the minors. Once he came back up in September he looked more like the guy we saw before his injury, it was too late. Moore had his surgery in mid-April of 2014 while Cobb had his in mid-May 2015. If you take Moore’s timetable and copy it over for Cobb, you get two months of stats for Cobb in a best-case scenario. The more likely scenario is that Cobb doesn’t make it back to the majors until sometime later in August, and he won’t immediately be the guy we saw flourish in 2014. Re-draft leaguers can put aside some FAAB dollars while keeper leaguers can look to draft and stash him for 2017 and beyond.
Cobb, when healthy, is one of the better pitchers in the game. The problem has been injuries. His 2011 season ended in early August with a shoulder issue that required surgery. In 2012, a batted ball off his leg cost him time. In 2013, Cobb had a batted ball go off his head, costing him two months, and he missed six starts in 2014 after straining his oblique muscle while batting in an interleague game. When he is not in the trainer’s room, he’s piling up strikeouts with his split-change and generating tons of groundballs. He rarely gets himself into trouble, but has been known to have a stink-bomb of a game once a year. With injuries removed from his profile, Cobb would be a top-15 starting pitcher. As is, he provides the strong ratios, strikeouts and double-digit wins on an annual basis.
Cobb shined in his first 13 starts last season before a scary incident in June in which he was hit in the head by a line drive. He returned to the mound two months later and came back with ferocity. Over his final nine starts of the season, he went 5-1 with a 2.41 ERA and finished the season with a record of 11-3 and an ERA of 2.76. He set career marks in every pitching category as a starter despite making only 22 starts. He had an impressive 8.4 K/9 rate over the course of the season and had three games with 10 or more strikeouts. He went 7-0 at the friendly confines of Tropicana Field, but also had a solid 2.70 ERA on the road. He will head into 2014 as one of the top starters in the Rays' rotation.
Cobb lost out on a spot in the Rays' rotation to start the regular season, but an injury to Jeff Niemann had him called up to start on May 19 and he remained in the rotation for the rest of the year. Over 23 starts, the young right-hander went 11-9 with a 4.09 ERA and 106 strikeouts. These numbers may not blow anyone away but he really turned the corner late in the season. Over his last 11 starts he posted a 7-1 record and a 3.09 ERA that was skewed by one subpar performance. He was able to stretch later into games over that span, something he struggled with earlier in the season. All in all, Cobb will be in the mix with the stable of talented starting pitchers vying for a spot in the 2013 rotation. If he wins a spot, he is a decent late-round option, given his strong finish in 2012.
Cobb mowed down Triple-A hitters to the tune of a 1.87 ERA with a 1.143 WHIP before getting a promotion to the big club. He made his first start for the Rays on May 1 giving up four runs in 4.1 innings but was optioned back to Durham immediately after the game. Cobb came up for good on May 31 and was part of a six-man rotation until he underwent season-ending surgery to repair a blockage near his rib cage. The injury is not expected to be an issue, and he should be ready to go once pitchers and catchers report for camp. Cobb features a fastball in the low-90s, a solid curve and an above-average changeup that has some splitting action to it. While with the Rays he held his own with a 3.42 ERA over nine starts, demonstrating he's ready for the big show. His ERA was aided by a 54 percent groundball rate, which helped mask a drop in his strikeout rate, albeit a small sample size with the Rays. Cobb is expected to compete for a spot in the rotation, though the Rays return all of their starters and have Matt Moore vying for a spot as well. If Cobb lands in the back of the Tampa rotation, he'd make for an interesting sleeper pick considering his success last year with the Rays and his minor league track record.
Cobb turned in an outstanding season at Double-A Montgomery, winning team MVP honors. He finished the season 7-5 with a 2.71 ERA while striking out 128 batters over 119.2 innings. The organization sent him to the AFL where over seven starts (25 innings), he finished 1-3 with a 6.12 ERA. After his time there, he stated that he worked a lot on developing a cutter, which likely explains his struggles. He'll likely start in the rotation at Triple-A Durham with an eye on the bigs in late 2011. The Rays' logjam of starting pitchers could force him into the bullpen for his first taste of the big leagues.
More Fantasy News
Throws bullpen session Sunday
PSan Francisco Giants
Hip
April 1, 2024
Cobb (hip) continued his rehab process, throwing a bullpen session in Arizona on Sunday, Shayna Rubin of the San Francisco Chronicle reports.
ANALYSIS
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Throws five innings Thursday
PSan Francisco Giants
Hip
March 29, 2024
Cobb (hip) threw five innings in a minor-league game Thursday, Alex Pavlovic of NBC Sports Bay Area reports.
ANALYSIS
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Moves to 15-day IL
PSan Francisco Giants
Hip
March 28, 2024
The Giants placed Cobb (hip) on the 15-day injured list Thursday.
ANALYSIS
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Throwing 40 pitches in minors game
PSan Francisco Giants
Hip
March 22, 2024
Cobb (hip) will throw 40 pitches in a minor-league game Friday, Alex Pavlovic of NBC Sports Bay Area reports.
ANALYSIS
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Making Cactus League debut Friday
PSan Francisco Giants
Hip
March 19, 2024
Cobb (hip) is scheduled to throw three innings during one of Friday's split-squad Cactus League games against the Cubs, Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chroniclereports.
ANALYSIS
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