Juan Nicasio

Juan Nicasio

38-Year-Old PitcherP
 Free Agent  
2024 Fantasy Outlook
There was no outlook written for Juan Nicasio in 2024. Check out the latest news below for more on his current fantasy value.
$Signed a one-year contract with the Rangers in January of 2020.
Placed on restricted list
PTexas Rangers  
Personal
August 18, 2020
Nicasio was placed on the restricted list for personal reasons Tuesday, Brian McTaggart of MLB.com reports.
ANALYSIS
Nicasio is travelling home to be with his family in the Dominican Republic, though he reportedly isn't opting out of the season. It's not clear when he's expected to return. Luis Garcia will join the Rangers' bullpen in a corresponding move.
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Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Juan Nicasio See More
Collette Calls: The Homestretch
August 8, 2022
Jason Collette examines everything that's possible down the stretch by taking a look at some of the best stretch runs of the past few seasons.
The Z Files: Changing Wins to Innings and Saves to Solds
February 26, 2021
Todd Zola examines the impact of new scoring categories on the pitching side, including the rise in value of top set-up men like Tyler Duffey.
Dream11 Fantasy Baseball: Rangers at Mariners
September 4, 2020
Juan Pablo Aravena breaks down Friday's Rangers at Mariners game for Dream11 contests.
Past Fantasy Outlooks
2020
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2015
2014
2013
2012
Nicasio entered the season as something of an enigma after coming over in an offseason trade from Seattle, having posted a widely divergent ERA (6.00) and FIP (2.99) the previous year for the Mariners. His ERA did indeed move in the desired direction in Philadelphia, but not nearly as much as his FIP suggested, coming in at 4.75. His 3.87 FIP again suggests he deserved better but isn't exactly an elite mark, as neither his 20.7% strikeout rate or 9.7% walk rate was particularly good. It's probably safe at this point to paint Nicasio as a pitcher who will regularly post a worse ERA than his peripherals suggest, as he owns a 3.91 FIP but a 4.64 ERA through nine major-league seasons. He's been better than average according to FIP- in five straight seasons but worse than average by ERA- in seven of the last eight. Don't expect him to suddenly be pitching in the ninth inning in 2020.
Nicasio had one of the strangest statistical seasons for a reliever that we have seen in some time. He had the 15th-best K-BB% among all relievers that worked at least 40 innings in 2018. He had a 62.8% first-pitch strike rate, an 11.1% swinging-strike rate and a 2.99 FIP. His ERA in the stat capsule is no misprint; he really did have a 6.00 ERA last year thanks to the luck dragons attacking his kingdom. Nicasio stranded just 58.1% of baserunners and had a .402 BABIP, both of which were well off from his career norms. He also ended the season with knee surgery in late August, but the expectation is that Nicasio should be fine to start the season. Nobody could be that unlucky for two consecutive seasons, so expect a bounce back, and don't be surprised if Nicasio works his way into some saves eventually after being traded to Philadelphia in the Jean Segura deal.
Nicasio has found himself in the bullpen over the past few years since fizzling out as a starter with Colorado. While he didn't exactly post a gaudy strikeout rate last season (9.0 K/9), he did enough well in 76 appearances between Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and St. Louis to finish with a FIP below 3.00. A fastball-slider pitcher, he posted a 6.9 percent walk rate and allowed just five homers in 72.1 innings (45.6 percent groundball rate). He pumped in first-pitch strikes to 67.4 percent of the batters he faced and was smart about where he worked in the strike zone, limiting opposing hitters' chances to pull the ball (29.6 pull percentage). He's gained velocity working in shorter spurts and he fared well as the closer after joining the Cardinals late in the year. After signing with Seattle in the offseason, Nicasio should return to a setup role.
As a starter, Nicasio lasted only 12 games, compiling a 5.05 ERA, 1.41 WHIP and 63:25 K:BB in 62.1 innings. Opponents stacked lineups with left-handed batters, who slashed .291/.366/.568 in 233 plate appearances against him. A midseason move to the bullpen then salvaged some of Nicasio's season. As a reliever, he registered a 3.88 ERA, 1.33 WHIP and 75:20 K:BB in 55.2 innings. He also set a franchise record by striking out at least one batter in 33 straight relief appearances, during which he compiled a 2.81 ERA, 1.19 WHIP and a whopping 73 strikeouts in 48 innings. Nicasio ranks behind Tony Watson, Dan Hudson and Felipe Rivero in the pecking order for saves, but he showed he has closer-like stuff.
Nicasio had an up-and-down season in Los Angeles last year. He struggled with his control to the tune of a 4.9 BB/9, and for the second straight year left-handed batters hit over .300 against him, a whopping .348. His 10.0 K/9 was certainly impressive enough, but he's not likely going to get lucky enough again to post a 2.0 HR/FB rate. He has been one of the darlings of spring training, fanning over a batter per inning while excelling at preventing runs, and it's possible that he is this year's Ray Searage reclamation success. First, he'll have to win a rotation spot.
With a fastball capable of touching the mid-90s, Nicasio has often tantalized with his gifts but has seen his productivity trend downward since his 2011 MLB debut. Though he was one of the few Rockies pitchers to avoid the DL last season, Nicasio was a complete mess at the back end of the rotation, yielding a 5.92 ERA and 15 home runs over 73 frames before the Rockies sent him to the minors. He returned to the majors in August and served in a relief role the rest of the way, where he found better results (3.48 ERA, 17:5 K:BB ratio over 20.2 innings). Alas, it wasn’t enough to convince the Rockies that they had a future bullpen ace on their hands, as he was traded to the Dodgers in November. Nicasio’s new team is hopeful the move away from Coors Field might be precisely what he needs to emerge as a useful fifth starter, but he’ll work in middle relief if he fails to claim a rotation spot in spring training.
After his previous two campaigns were besieged by injuries, Nicasio enjoyed a healthy 2013 season, but his habitual inconsistency resulted in disappointing returns. Erratic command of the strike zone often mounted Nicasio’s pitch counts early on in games, limiting him to just nine quality starts in his 31 turns. As one might expect from his failure to work deep in games, Nicasio’s walk rate spiked to a career-worst (9.1 percent), while his strikeout rate also bottomed out at 16.9 percent, the latter of which may have been influenced by a two mile-per-hour decline in his fastball velocity. With Nicasio no longer an enigma after finally completing a full season in the majors and his rate stats headed in the wrong direction, it’s difficult to be bullish on the 27-year-old’s prospects at this point. Nicasio will almost certainly claim the No. 4 or 5 rotation spot coming out of the spring, but he seems a prime candidate to get pushed to long relief once some of the Rockies’ more promising younger pitchers are ready for the big leagues.
Nicasio's 2012 season was marred by bad luck in both performance and health. After opening the year in the Colorado rotation, Nicasio's campaign came to an end after he required season-ending surgery to remove four bone chips from his knee. When he was on the mound, he was hit around with regularity, resulting in a 1.62 WHIP. However, aside from a rise in walk rate, most of Nicasio's peripherals argue that he actually took a step forward, as his strikeout rate ticked up (8.4 K/9) despite giving up an inordinate amount of hits, as his .378 BABIP suggests. Nicasio recovered from knee surgery quickly enough to pitch in fall instructional and winter leagues, allowing him to regain some lost innings and sufficiently prepare for 2013. Now fully healthy, Nicasio could very well emerge as one of the team's better starters, assuming his walk rate and batting average against fall more in line with his career norms.
Nicasio's season ended in a very scary incident on the mound as a line drive that hit him in the head ultimately required surgery to repair a fracture to the C1 vertebra in his neck. Initially, there were questions as to whether Nicasio would pitch again, but the offseason reports about his progress have been very encouraging as he shed his brace in late September, was throwing from a mound in October and started taking full bullpen sessions in the Dominican Republic in November. Nicasio showed excellent control throughout his time in the minors, while his success during a 13-start stint with Colorado before the injury (7.28 K/9IP, 2.26 BB/9IP) should open up an opportunity for him coming out of spring training assuming that he's back to full health.
More Fantasy News
Contract selected
PTexas Rangers  
August 14, 2020
Nicasio's contract was selected by the Rangers on Saturday.
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Reassigned to alternate camp
PTexas Rangers  
July 19, 2020
Nicasio was reassigned to the Rangers' alternate training site Sunday, Levi Weaver of The Athletic reports.
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Scheduled to pitch Monday
PTexas Rangers  
July 13, 2020
Nicasio (back) is serving as the starting pitcher in the Rangers' intrasquad matchup Monday.
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Joins roster pool
PTexas Rangers  
Back
July 2, 2020
The Rangers added Nicasio (back) to their 60-man roster pool Thursday.
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Back tightens
PTexas Rangers  
Back
March 5, 2020
Nicasio was scratched from an appearance Monday due to tightness in his back, T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com reports.
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