Sonny Gray

Sonny Gray

35-Year-Old PitcherSP
St. Louis Cardinals
2024 Fantasy Outlook
Gray was the runner up for the AL Cy Young award after posting a 2.69 ERA and 1.15 WHIP. He was largely the same pitcher as in 2022 (3.64 FIP compared to 3.66 FIP in 2022) with a similar strikeout rate (24.3% K%) and walk rate (7.3% BB%), but he was able to stay healthy and pitch more innings (32 starts compared to 24 in 2022) and more innings per outing (5.75 IP per game, compared to 4.96 IP per game in 2022). He may have been a bit luckier with a low 5.2% HR/FB, but he also had a low 9.4% HR/FB in 2022 as his home runs allowed numbers declined sharply in his move to Target Field from Great American Ball Park. His .295 BABIP was also his highest in five seasons, which shows his outstanding season wasn't all luck. At age 34, Gray has above-average control, limits hard contact (77th percentile in Barrel rate) and induces ground balls (47.3%) despite below average velocity (92.9 mph average fastball). He'll work at the top of the St. Louis rotation after signing a three-year, $70 free agent deal. Read Past Outlooks
RANKS
Rest of Season From Preseason
#147
ADP
$Signed a three-year, $70 million contract with the Cardinals in November of 2023. Contract includes $30 million team option ($5 million buyout) for 2027.
Expected to have normal offseason
PSt. Louis Cardinals
October 22, 2024
Gray is on track to have a normal offseason after finishing the regular season on the 15-day injured list with right forearm flexor tendinitis, Jeff Jones of the Belleville News-Democrat reports.
ANALYSIS
Gray missed his final start of the season because of the forearm issue, but his offseason training is expected to be unaffected. The right-hander held a 3.84 ERA, 1.09 WHIP and 203:39 K:BB across 28 regular-season starts during his first year in St. Louis.
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Pitching Stats
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2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
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Pitching Appearances Breakdown
Average Pitch Count
89
Last 10 Games
94
Last 5 Games
94
How many pitches does Sonny Gray generally throw?
 
1-10
 
11-20
 
21-30
 
31-40
 
41-50
 
51-60
 
61-70
 
71-80
 
81-90
 
91-100
 
101-110
 
111-120
 
121+
 
1-10
 
11-20
 
21-30
 
31-40
 
41-50
 
51-60
 
61-70
 
71-80
 
81-90
 
91-100
 
101-110
 
111-120
 
121+
 
1-10
 
11-20
 
21-30
 
31-40
 
41-50
 
51-60
 
61-70
 
71-80
 
81-90
 
91-100
 
101-110
 
111-120
 
121+
What part of the game does Sonny Gray generally pitch?
 
 
 
1st
 
 
 
2nd
 
 
 
3rd
 
 
 
4th
 
 
 
5th
 
 
 
6th
 
 
 
7th
 
 
 
8th
 
 
 
9th
 
Extra
 
 
 
1st
 
 
 
2nd
 
 
 
3rd
 
 
 
4th
 
 
 
5th
 
 
 
6th
 
 
 
7th
 
 
 
8th
 
 
 
9th
 
Extra
 
 
 
1st
 
 
 
2nd
 
 
 
3rd
 
 
 
4th
 
 
 
5th
 
 
 
6th
 
 
 
7th
 
 
 
8th
 
 
 
9th
 
Extra
% Games Reaching Innings Threshold
% Games By Number of Innings Pitched
Left/Right Pitching Splits
Since 2022
 
 
-3%
BAA vs RHP
2024
 
 
-15%
BAA vs RHP
2023
 
 
-6%
BAA vs RHP
2022
 
 
-17%
BAA vs LHP
BAA Batters K BB H 2B 3B HR
Since 2022vs Left .231 892 226 61 189 41 10 19
Since 2022vs Right .223 1021 277 69 208 42 2 21
2024vs Left .248 315 87 22 72 17 6 11
2024vs Right .210 356 116 17 70 16 0 10
2023vs Left .233 359 81 28 76 20 1 4
2023vs Right .220 395 102 27 80 14 2 4
2022vs Left .202 218 58 11 41 4 3 4
2022vs Right .244 270 59 25 58 12 0 7
More Splits View More Split Stats
Home/Away Pitching Splits
Since 2022
 
 
-30%
ERA at Home
2024
 
 
-46%
ERA at Home
2023
 
 
-9%
ERA at Home
2022
 
 
-27%
ERA at Home
ERA WHIP IP W L SV K/9 BB/9 HR/9
Since 2022Home 2.71 1.07 259.0 17 12 0 10.0 2.5 0.5
Since 2022Away 3.88 1.18 211.0 12 10 0 9.1 2.5 1.1
2024Home 2.79 0.99 93.2 9 5 0 10.7 2.0 0.5
2024Away 5.20 1.21 72.2 4 4 0 11.4 2.2 2.0
2023Home 2.67 1.11 97.2 4 5 0 9.2 2.3 0.4
2023Away 2.92 1.19 86.1 4 3 0 8.7 3.1 0.4
2022Home 2.66 1.14 67.2 4 2 0 10.4 3.3 0.8
2022Away 3.63 1.12 52.0 4 3 0 6.8 1.9 0.9
More Splits View More Split Stats
Stat Review
How does Sonny Gray compare to other starting pitchers?
This section compares his stats with all starting pitcher seasons from the previous three seasons (minimum 120 innings)*. The bar represents the player's percentile rank. For example, if the bar is halfway across, then the player falls into the 50th percentile for that stat and it would be considered average.

* Exit Velocity, Barrels/BBE %, Balls Hit 95+ MPH %, and Spin Rate are benchmarked against 2019 data (min 120 IP). See here for more exit velocity/barrels stats plus an explanation of current limitations with that data set.
  • K/BB
    Strikeout to walk ratio.
  • K/9
    Average strikeouts per nine innings.
  • BB/9
    Average walks per nine innings.
  • HR/9
    Average home runs allowed per nine innings.
  • Fastball
    Average fastball velocity.
  • ERA
    Earned run average. The average earned runs allowed per nine innings.
  • WHIP
    Walks plus hits per inning pitched.
  • BABIP
    Batting average on balls in play. Measures how many balls in play against a pitcher go for hits.
  • GB/FB
    Groundball to flyball ratio. The higher the number, the more likely a pitcher is to induce groundballs.
  • Left On Base
    The percentage of base runners that a pitcher strands on base over the course of a season.
  • Exit Velocity
    The speed of the baseball as it comes off the bat, immediately after a batter makes contact.
  • Barrels/BBE
    The percentage of batted ball events resulting in a Barrel. A Barrel is a batted ball with similar exit velocity and launch angle to past ones that led to a minimum .500 batting average and 1.500 slugging percentage.
  • Spin Rate
    Spin Rate is the rate of spin on a baseball after it is released. It is measured in revolutions per minute (rpm).
  • Balls Hit 95+ MPH
    The percentage of batted balls hit that met or exceeded the 95 MPH threshold.
  • Swinging Strike
    The percentage of pitches that result in a swing and a miss.
K/BB
5.21
 
K/9
11.0
 
BB/9
2.1
 
HR/9
1.1
 
Fastball
92.6 mph
 
ERA
3.84
 
WHIP
1.09
 
BABIP
.313
 
GB/FB
1.46
 
Left On Base
67.3%
 
Exit Velocity
81.8 mph
 
Barrels/BBE
5.8%
 
Spin Rate
2524 rpm
 
Balls Hit 95+ MPH
23.2%
 
Swinging Strike
13.6%
 
Advanced Pitching Stats
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Defensive Stats
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
Gray's trade to Minnesota delivered a needed steady option at the top of the rotation as he bounced back from a subpar season to post a 3.08 ERA and 1.13 WHIP. Gray benefited from the move to Target Field with a 2.66 ERA and 10.5 K/9 at home (he had a 3.38 ERA in three seasons at Great American Ball Park). Gray has below average velocity, but his four-seam fastball has among the highest spin rates in the league (98th percentile per Baseball Savant). He also gets high spin rates on his off-speed pitches, making his slider and curve ball plus pitches. A slight decline in velocity and strikeout rate (8.8 K/9) were offset by improved control (2.7 BB/9). His durability is becoming a concern as he threw just 119.2 IP, having IL stints twice for a hamstring strain and another for a pectoral strain. He also averaged just 4.96 IP per start with the Twins rarely allowing him to go deep into games. Assuming he can stay healthy, however, he'll be counted on to lead Minnesota's rotation again.
Gray missed the beginning of the season with a back injury and then most of June with a groin injury, and thus was limited to 26 starts and 135.1 innings. When he was on the mound, his 4.19 ERA and 1.22 WHIP were a little worse than expectation, but well within the range of reasonable expectations. Gray was hurt by his ballpark (4.89 ERA, 1.7 HR/9), and by an inability to work deep into games, averaging 5.2 innings per start. Gray's 72.4% LOB% was among the bottom third of starting pitchers with his workload, which reflected the Reds below-average infield defense. Cincinnati opted for a full teardown, and Gray was shipped to Minnesota shortly after the end of the lockout, where he'll headline the Twins' starting rotation.
Gray arguably was every bit the Reds' ace as much as Trevor Bauer or Luis Castillo until two bad starts in September, which were then followed by a trip to the DL with a back injury. Even after those two starts, he still posted a 3.70 ERA, 1.21 WHIP and 72 strikeouts in 56 innings. It's no wonder, then, that plenty of teams expressed interest in trading for Gray during the offseason. The big question, though, is why would the Reds look to deal him? He signed a very affordable four-year, $38 million deal with the Reds in January 2019 after his trade from the Yankees. Even with a team needing some financial flexibility, that's a tremendous price for his skills, unless the Reds are concerned that the back injury is a harbinger for future ailments. A change in venue wouldn't necessarily improve his outlook -- Gray actually pitched better in Cincy than elsewhere over the last two seasons.
Much of the credit to Gray's improvement in 2019 goes to Reds pitching coach Derek Johnson, who previously coached him at Vanderbilt. Gray is quick to credit him, and without him Gray probably doesn't agree to the contract extension that cemented the trade bringing him to Cincinnati from the Yankees. While Gray threw more curveballs and sliders than in 2018, he said it was more a matter of fine-tuning each of his pitches rather than overhauling his pitch mix, generating more spin in the process. The result was a strikeout rate that spiked to 29.0% from 21.1% the year before, as Gray worked on getting opposing hitters to chase each, which they did to the tune of a .172 wOBA against his slider and .181 against his curveball. Gray might start spring training behind after having loose bodies in his elbow removed at the end of the season, but he'll form a strong top-three with Luis Castillo and Trevor Bauer.
Gray was much maligned in 2018. He drew the ire of Yankees fans and infamously smirked as he was booed off the home field Aug. 1 following a seven-run implosion. He was moved to the bullpen shortly thereafter and finished the season with a 4.90 ERA, almost a run and a half higher than his 2017 mark, though the ERA estimators all say he deserved better (4.17 FIP, 4.10 xFIP, 4.28 SIERA). His walk rate went in the wrong direction (9.8%), but he maintained an above-average 21.1% strikeout rate and 50% groundball rate. He had a 6.98 ERA at home but was much better when he got out of the band box in New York, posting a 3.17 ERA, 1.15 WHIP, .223 BAA and 0.38 HR/9 on the road. Yankee Stadium was a terrible fit for him, and while he landed in another extreme hitters' park in Cincinnati following a January trade, we still feel good about Gray's chances of bouncing back.
Gray rebounded from a nightmarish, injury-plagued 2016 campaign with the Athletics to rehabilitate his trade value and become arguably the top arm on the trade market before he was dealt to the Yankees on July 31. The right-hander didn’t really move the needle for the team’s playoff hopes by posting a 3.72 ERA and surrendering 11 homers (including eight at Yankee Stadium) over 11 starts, but he at least provided the team with another dependable innings eater behind ace Luis Severino. Along with enjoying better health, the key to Gray’s turnaround was making more use of his off-speed offerings, which aided him to an 8.4 K/9 rate, his best mark since his rookie year. With a full season in the Bronx awaiting him, Gray could struggle to curb the home-run problem that has plagued him the last two years, but it seems he has discovered a pitch mix that should allow him to avoid another disaster on the level of 2016.
The A's really screwed the pooch by not trading Gray last offseason, as the team has few assets and Gray's value had nowhere to go but down. Now coming off a disaster campaign and becoming increasingly expensive as the right-hander accrues service time, Gray's trade value is at an all-time low, and the A's find themselves in the unenviable position of having to either accept 50 cents on their trade dollar or to sit back and pay to see whether Gray can reestablish his market value. That's not to say that Gray's disastrous 2016 season was bound to happen, but as a pitcher with a very modest strikeout rate, his ultimate value was largely determined by results on balls in play, factors that are largely outside his control. He will look to resurrect his value in 2017 and the A's will give him every opportunity to do so, but he is a two-category pitcher as long as he's in Oakland and those two categories fell apart last season.
Gray followed up his successful first full MLB season in 2014 with a 2.73 ERA and 14 wins over 31 starts in 2015. Gray was one of the Cy Young favorites into September, but a few late season blow-ups pushed his ERA up more than a half point in the last month of the season. Gray did not rediscover his strikeouts from his initial big league debut (9.4 K/9 in 2013), but he did manage to cut his walks down from 3.0 BB/9 in 2014 to 2.6 in 2015. Gray supplements his average strikeout rate by limiting line drives with his 16.6-percent line drive rate — good for fourth best among all qualified starters in 2015. Gray now has two and a half fantastic seasons under his belt and while he will not get you the elite strikeouts of some of the top aces, he gets to pitch half his games in a spacious pitcher's park. It is possible that his struggles in September could push his ADP back a little bit as people may forget just how great he was for the first five months.
After a great half-season in 2013 followed by a gem against the Tigers in the ALDS, the hype was high for Gray heading into 2014 and all he did was live up to it. In his first full season, Gray won 14 games and put up a 3.08 ERA over 219 innings. His K/9 rate fell from 9.5 in 2013 to 7.5 in 2014, but that was somewhat expected with the large uptick in innings as the strikeouts really dropped off in the second half. Gray appeared to be tiring late in the year after entering August with an ERA of 2.65, but he seemed to find a second wind with a 2.25 ERA and nearly a strikeout per inning over his last five starts. Gray also added to his reputation as a fantastic big-game pitcher, throwing a complete game shutout gem on the final day of the regular season to get the A's into the playoffs. The sky appears to be the limit for Gray and he should be drafted even higher in 2015, especially since he gets to pitch half his games in a spacious home park.
Gray was the A's top pitching prospect coming into 2013, and he exceeded any and all expectations upon his call-up to the A's as a starter in August. He made 10 starts with the A's and won five games, while putting up a 2.85 ERA with a 9.2 K/9. He later capped off his season with an eight-inning shutout of the Tigers in Game 2 of the ALDS. Gray features a fastball that sits in the low 90s, but he also has an exceptional curveball that he uses to strike batters out. He has a rotation spot locked up in 2014, and his future appears to be quite sunny.
Gray was selected 18th overall in the 2011 draft out of Vanderbilt. In his first full season in the minors, Gray had some growing pains compiling a 4.26 ERA in 27 starts, all but one of which were in Double-A. He has a live fastball and also possesses a curveball that was ranked as the best in the 2011 draft. Gray's strikeout rate fell way off from his six-start debut in 2011 as he only struck out 5.9 K/9 in 2012. Going into last season, it was assumed that Gray would be in the A's rotation at some point in 2013, but it looks like more seasoning is in order. For his development, 2013 will be a big year for Gray to put some results together to show he was worthy of his first-round selection.
Gray was the A's first-round selection in the June draft and was immediately tasked with facing Double-A hitters following a collegiate career at Vanderbilt. His professional debut went well during a five-start stretch with Double-A Midland. He's not an imposing figure on the mound, but does a nice job of keeping the ball on the ground and figures to spend a good chunk of the season at Triple-A Sacramento after proving that he's solved Midland to begin the year.
More Fantasy News
Placed on injured list
PSt. Louis Cardinals
Forearm
September 21, 2024
The Cardinals placed Gray on the 15-day injured list Saturday with right forearm flexor tendinitis.
ANALYSIS
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Final start iffy due to soreness
PSt. Louis Cardinals
Undisclosed
September 20, 2024
Gray said he pitched through some "lingering" soreness during Wednesday's start against the Pirates, Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports.
ANALYSIS
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Fans eight in no-decision
PSt. Louis Cardinals
September 19, 2024
Gray did not factor into the decision in a win over the Pirates on Wednesday, allowing four runs on nine hits and no walks over 5.2 innings while striking out eight.
ANALYSIS
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Picks up 13th win
PSt. Louis Cardinals
September 12, 2024
Gray (13-9) earned the win Thursday over the Reds, allowing one run on two hits and two walks over six innings. He struck out nine.
ANALYSIS
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Excellent in no-decision
PSt. Louis Cardinals
September 4, 2024
Gray allowed one run on four hits and one walk while striking out seven batters over seven innings in a no-decision against Milwaukee on Wednesday.
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Might prefer to stay put
PSt. Louis Cardinals
November 5, 2024
Gray has "shown an openness to remain" with the Cardinals rather than waive his no-trade clause and be dealt, Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports.
ANALYSIS
The Cardinals are on the record as looking to trim payroll this offseason, and one way they could do it is asking veterans such as Gray, Nolan Arenado and Willson Contreras to waive their no-trade clauses. Goold's reporting suggests Gray might be the most likely of the three to stay put, although nothing looks to be clear-cut at this point. Gray was paid $10 million in 2024 but will see his salary rise to $25 million in 2025 and then $35 million in 2026, with a $30 million club option or $5 million buyout for 2027. Even with the backloaded contract, there would surely be trade interest in the righty if he does ultimately decide he'd prefer to be dealt. Gray posted a 3.84 ERA, 1.09 WHIP and 203:39 K:BB over 166.1 innings during the 2024 season.
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