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The Hot Start Of Trevor Williams Raises Interesting Questions

By Darragh McDonald | May 9, 2024 at 9:39pm CDT

Coming into 2024, Trevor Williams was something of an afterthought on the Nationals’ roster. But six weeks into the 2024 season, he has emerged as one of the more interesting members of the club, thanks to his utter dominance so far this year.

Entering the campaign, most baseball fans outside of the D.C. area probably weren’t thinking of Williams at all. Fans of the Nats were probably more excited about young players like MacKenzie Gore, James Wood or Dylan Crews. Williams was a veteran stopgap who didn’t draw much attention. He had some serviceable years in the past but struggled over 2019 and 2020, getting bumped into a swing role in 2021 and 2022.

The rebuilding Nationals signed him to a two-year deal going into 2023 with a $13MM guarantee. They had traded away many of their most established players and needed a veteran innings eater. Patrick Corbin’s contract was aging incredibly poorly while young guys like Gore, Josiah Gray and Cade Cavalli had not yet been fully established at the big league level.

The first year of the Williams deal was quite unremarkable. He did take the ball 30 times and chew up 144 1/3 innings, but with a 5.55 earned run average. His 8% walk rate was around league average but he struck out just 16.8% of batters faced and allowed 34 home runs.

After that performance, he didn’t even seem to be guaranteed a rotation spot on the 2024 club. Back in December, manager Dave Martinez said that Williams “right now is our fourth or fifth starter,” per Mark Zuckerman of MASNsports.com. That seemed to leave the door open to further additions bumping him out of the starting staff, but those never came. The Nats had a fairly quiet winter, which left Williams to open in the rotation alongside Gore, Gray, Corbin and Jake Irvin.

So far, that’s working out great for both Williams and the Nats. Through seven starts and 36 2/3 innings, he has just a 1.96 ERA. His 21.1% strikeout rate is still a bit below average but is a big jump from last year. He’s getting ground balls at a 49% rate and hasn’t yet allowed a home run this season.

There are some caveats to keep in mind here. Seven starts is obviously a small sample size and it’s incredibly unlikely he can continue posting results this strong. His .270 batting average on balls in play and 79.5% strand rate are both a bit on the fortunate side, as his his 0% home run per fly ball rate. His 2.50 FIP and 4.04 SIERA both suggest he hasn’t been quite as good as the 1.96 ERA might make you think.

Perhaps this is just a lucky stretch and regression is just around the corner. This kind of strong performance in a small sample isn’t unprecedented with Williams. Using the Baseball Reference Span Finder shows that his most dominant stretch of seven starts came with the Pirates in 2018. He finished that season particularly strong, with a 2.33 ERA in July, 1.16 in August and then 2.20 in September/October.

But there are also reasons for optimism, particularly since Williams changed his pitch mix by adding a sweeper. According to Statcast, he first threw the pitch last year but only 73 times, 2.8% of his pitches thrown with five other offerings coming in more frequently. But he’s up to 101 sweepers this year, a 17.9% clip. His four-seamer is still his go-to at 205 thrown, but the changeup is second at 103, meaning the sweeper is neck-and-neck with the change for his primary offspeed offering.

The results have been excellent so far, with opponents hitting just .167 against the sweeper and whiffing at a huge 41.2% rate. Even the Pitching Ninja is taking notice. By throwing more sweepers, he’s been able to threw fewer four-seamers and curveballs. As mentioned, the four-seamer is still is primary pitch, but he’s dropped the usage from 43.2% to 36.4%, while his curveball has gone from 6.9% down to just 0.5% this year. Of the 34 home runs he allowed last year, 21 of them were four-seamers and three more were curveballs, leading to respective slugging percentages of .563 and .629. Throwing them less was surely wise and has been paying off.

Changing up the mix seems to be throwing hitters off. Williams had a 10.2% barrel rate last year that is down to just 4% here in 2024. Last year’s average launch angle of 15.9 degrees is down to 11.5, which aligns with his increased ground ball rate and his refusal to let the ball leave the park. His results on his changeup and sinker have also been better than last year, perhaps due to the sweeper giving hitters something else to think about.

Again, regression is likely coming because he’s had a bit of luck so far. The league will also surely adjust to his new repertoire, which should lessen his ability to flummox batters with his arsenal. But even if he steps back from this ace-like performance a bit, it could still have impacts for him and the club.

Williams will be heading back out to free agency this winter and improved numbers will naturally lead to more interest and more earning power. His contract will be limited by his age, since he’ll be going into his age-33 season. But pitchers can still find decent money at that age or older, as shown in the MLBTR Contract Tracker.

Williams won’t be able to get near established aces like Jacob deGrom, Max Scherzer or Justin Verlander. But Seth Lugo’s trajectory isn’t terribly dissimilar from that of Williams. Lugo was bumped from starting into a relief role for a while, spent a year with the Padres re-establishing himself as a legit starter and then secured a three-year, $45MM deal with the Royals going into his age-34 season. Tyler Anderson got a three-year, $39MM pact after a breakout in his age-32 campaign while guys like Marcus Stroman, Nathan Eovaldi, Jose Quintana, Nick Martinez, Ross Stripling, Kenta Maeda and Alex Cobb secured two-year deals between $20MM and $37MM.

Of that group, only Anderson and Eovaldi received qualifying offers. Stroman and Cobb received QOs earlier their careers and were no longer eligible, and Quintana wasn’t eligible prior to signing his Mets deal since he was traded in the prior season. But Lugo, Martinez, Stripling and Maeda were allowed to hit free agency without a QO. That perhaps suggests Williams is a long shot to get one himself, even if he continues putting up good numbers, but Anderson’s situation shows it’s at least something the Nats may consider. Anderson had a 4.62 career ERA before breaking out with the Dodgers in 2022. He posted a 2.57 ERA, got the QO and still found his aforementioned three-year deal from the Angels, netting the Dodgers an extra draft pick.

Putting over $20MM on the table for a guy they just signed to $13MM over two years, a deal they undoubtedly regretted halfway through, would be a big risk for the Nats. But they also have almost nothing on the books thanks to their ongoing rebuild. Corbin’s ill-fated deal is finally done after 2024 and Strasburg’s retirement allowed the club to pay out the remainder of his deal with deferred payments. Joey Gallo’s deal has a buyout on a mutual option. Keibert Ruiz signed an eight-year extension with a low average annual value, and that’s it in terms of future commitments.

Of course, the qualifying offer decision will only have to be made if he lasts all year with Washington. The club is currently 18-18 and still in the thick of the National League Wild Card standings, but the Nats have a -8 run differential and are just 5-9 against teams that are above .500. Based on their poor results in past seasons and the fact that they weren’t really expected to compete this year, it’s entirely possible that they slip back in the coming months.

If that happens, then it’s far more likely that the Nats simply trade Williams for whatever he can fetch at the deadline. The return likely wouldn’t be huge for a 32-year-old rental, but pitching is always in demand and he will find interest if he continues pitching well. That scenario would be good for Williams, allowing him to pitch for a team in contention while also taking the QO off the table.

There are still many ways this could play out and many factors that will play a role in the path forward. Can Williams keep this up or will the league adjust? Will the warm summer air simply allow more balls to cruise over the fence? Will the Nats hover around the Wild Card race or will they fall out of it? Time will provide the answers to those questions, but the fact that Williams is even this interesting is quite remarkable, considering where things stood about six months ago.

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MLBTR Originals Washington Nationals Trevor Williams

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27 Comments

  1. sad tormented neglected mariners fan

    1 year ago

    Nats would be fortunate if they could get some prospects for him at the deadline

    Washington will contend in 2025

    7
    Reply
  2. FartCopter

    1 year ago

    Patrick Corbin needs more hate.

    5
    Reply
    • gbs42

      1 year ago

      Why? He doesn’t want to suck. No heed for hate.

      4
      Reply
      • sad tormented neglected mariners fan

        1 year ago

        I hope Corbin could go to a team like the dodgers and relive some of his 2019 days

        Reply
    • Ray Epps

      1 year ago

      Corbin is horrible but the Nats would of never of won the WS without him.

      2
      Reply
  3. jimmyz

    1 year ago

    I haven’t watched Trevor at all this season but in the past what I’ve seen is a serviceable but unremarkable fastball with inconsistent secondary pitches. He can have great starts when his breaking balls and changeup are on and he can get shelled when they aren’t. Hopefully he finds consistency with his sweeper to give him a reliable secondary pitch to minimize the bad starts.

    3
    Reply
    • Cmurphy

      1 year ago

      When he’s on, he’s good. I was sort of bummed when he was shipped to New York from Chicago (more-so than Baez). If it wasn’t for that pesky appendix that shelved him for so long.

      Reply
  4. 1979andcounting

    1 year ago

    Qualifying offer? You talkin about Qualifying offer? For Trevor Williams…..come on now.

    12
    Reply
  5. SODOMOJO

    1 year ago

    He’s been fun to watch. You’d like to see him get into the 7th inning, but I realize that we are in a different time. You can toss 150 innings over 32 starts and be “really good” these days

    4
    Reply
  6. Mercenary.Freddie.Freeman

    1 year ago

    Spider tack???

    1
    Reply
  7. HiredGun23

    1 year ago

    “the fact that Williams is even this interesting is quite remarkable.” Not as remarkable as anyone thinking it warranted an article…

    1
    Reply
    • elmedius

      1 year ago

      It was a good article.

      14
      Reply
    • Braves_saints_celts

      1 year ago

      The folks at mlbtr obviously thought it warranted an article. I liked the article. I’m pretty sure many others enjoyed the article too. As a baseball fan, not just a braves fan, I love seeing guys succeed, especially those that have been written off.

      4
      Reply
    • lesterdnightfly

      1 year ago

      Maybe merited an article, but not a Tolstoyan saga as this is.

      1
      Reply
  8. Flanster

    1 year ago

    I’m glad to see him doing well. He’s been a serviceable pitcher for a few years now

    Reply
  9. Jbigz12

    1 year ago

    2/22 is the ceiling. Don’t think anyone buys in.

    1
    Reply
  10. YourDreamGM

    1 year ago

    A+ 7 games

    1
    Reply
  11. waldfee

    1 year ago

    Fun fact: Trevor Williams is one of only 3 (three!) percent of MLB players, drafted out of college ahead of graduation, who got his degree later. From Arizona State, mind you, so it’s still practically worthless. But he put in the effort and that’s commendable,

    According to a Pittsburgh Gazette article, 97 percent of early drafted college players NEVER get their degree at any later time. Pretty sad picture in regard to the NCAA’s oft-proclaimed “STUDENT athletes”.

    2
    Reply
    • StudWinfield

      1 year ago

      So he’s commended for achieving something “worthless”? (Your word). I commend the 97% who chose not to spend $20k+ of their own or someone else’s money for something that is not required to make a living.

      Reply
    • Jbigz12

      1 year ago

      Is that drafted and make the MLB?

      Seems extremely low for those who toil away in the minors and never make any real money. I also probably wouldn’t finish my degree if I made 10’s of millions.

      2
      Reply
    • JoeBrady

      1 year ago

      A lot of college degrees are worthless. If the dude grew up in a family of steamfitters, electricians,etc., he’s probably better off joining the union than going back for a philosophy degree.

      1
      Reply
      • Jbigz12

        1 year ago

        Or if he’s popular enough he can become a good ol real estate agent!

        Reply
  12. Simm

    1 year ago

    There are some teams in desperate need of starting pitching the Nats should look to sell high on him. Though my guess is they wait and see how long they hang around the playoff picture. You don’t want to throw the white flag up on a young contending team too soon. At the same time if they wait too long he may regress and be worth very little.

    The last wild card spot or two in the NL look like a bunch of .500 teams. Unless a couple of teams get hot and separate most the NL will likely hang around and have a chance.

    Only 4 teams Marlins, white Sox, A’s and Rockies seem to be clear sellers at the deadline. A few others will likely join them. Especially if the next month doesn’t go well for teams like the Astros, cardinals, giants, reds who all could play well and be contending or continue to slip and be all but out of it.

    1
    Reply
  13. CleaverGreene

    1 year ago

    Nice gentleman, great teammate, I hope he turns this year into a very lucrative 2/30M contract. He deserves it.

    Reply
  14. solaris602

    1 year ago

    I’d like to see CLE land him in June or July if he can keep up the pace. Wouldn’t require giving up a lot of prospect talent, and he’d only be due between $3 & $4M by then.

    Reply
  15. Logjammer D"Baggagecling

    1 year ago

    I didn’t know he was still playing tbh.

    Reply
  16. MLBTR needs to hire editors

    1 year ago

    How much is Williams’ agent kicking MLBTR to write this fluff piece about him? These player-friendly cash grabs are so out of place among the actual news and transactional analysis that this site is actually good at. Stop trying to be Fangraphs by posting some stats that anyone can find online.

    Reply

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