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Earned Runs Board · Today

Best MLB earned runs matchupsTuesday, July 14, 2026

Every starting pitcher on the Tuesday, July 14, 2026 slate, scored — ranked by projected earned runs allowed. Run prevention, the lineup he faces, and how deep he goes. Tap any card for the full breakdown.

#Pitcher · MatchupScore

Pitcher earned runs Rate7.8% Runs / BF

vs LHB8.2%
vs RHB8.6%
K-BB% (command-adj. skill)23.3%

How often he gives up earned runs to the batters he faces, by hand.

Workload23.0 BF

Expected batters faced23.0
From recent starts8

How deep he tends to go — the count multiplier.

Projection2.3 ER

Expected earned runs — built from how his rate stacks up against each hitter in the lineup, across his projected plate appearances.

Opposing Lineup · run-proneness13.8% avg

BatterRateExp PA
1. Kyle Schwarber (L)12.9%3.0
2. Juan Soto (L)14.9%3.0
3. Freddie Freeman (L)12.7%3.0
4. CJ Abrams (L)14.2%3.0
5. Max Muncy (L)13.3%3.0
6. Ozzie Albies (L)16.4%2.0
7. Brandon Marsh (L)13.1%2.0
8. Andy Pages (R)12.9%2.0
9. Drake Baldwin (L)13.5%2.0

Each hitter's earned runs rate vs this pitcher's hand, and the plate appearances he's projected to see.

Dylan Cease's full player page →

Pitcher earned runs Rate9.4% Runs / BF

vs LHB9.3%
vs RHB9.5%
K-BB% (command-adj. skill)16.8%

How often he gives up earned runs to the batters he faces, by hand.

Workload24.6 BF

Expected batters faced24.6
From recent starts8

How deep he tends to go — the count multiplier.

Projection2.7 ER

Expected earned runs — built from how his rate stacks up against each hitter in the lineup, across his projected plate appearances.

Opposing Lineup · run-proneness12.8% avg

BatterRateExp PA
1. Mike Trout (R)14.2%3.0
2. Yordan Alvarez (L)11.4%3.0
3. Shea Langeliers (R)13.6%3.0
4. Junior Caminero (R)16.1%3.0
5. Bobby Witt Jr. (R)14.3%3.0
6. Cody Bellinger (L)11.5%3.0
7. Ben Rice (L)12.1%2.6
8. Riley Greene (L)9.7%2.0
9. Ernie Clement (R)11.9%2.0

Each hitter's earned runs rate vs this pitcher's hand, and the plate appearances he's projected to see.

Cristopher Sánchez's full player page →

What the earned runs allowed board is

The Earned Runs board projects how many earned runs a starter gives up vs his line. One statistical model scores every matchup on the slate the same way — a star and a backup judged on the matchup in front of them, not their name — and every number is graded against the real box score once the games go final.

How the model gets its number

It isn't a gut call or a name game. The projection is built from a few things:

  • His run-prevention rate vs the lineup's hand.
  • The park.
  • Projected length of outing.

Those pieces combine into one number, and the model re-tunes itself weekly against how its past calls actually landed.

Is there a betting edge here?

Efficiently priced — transparency board. It's also a core input to our team run model (moneyline + team totals), where the edge actually lives.

How to use it

Read it for who's in line for a clean or rough outing; the bettable version is the team-total board it feeds.

Everything here is a research signal from the model, graded in public — not betting advice, and no outcome is guaranteed.