Garrett Crochet, the Red Sox pitcher, has a troubling 7.88 ERA this season, ranking 72nd out of 73 qualified pitchers. Concerns arise from his declining ability to get ahead in counts and execute pitches effectively, particularly with his sweeper against right-handed hitters.
Key points
Garrett Crochet has a 7.88 ERA this season.
He ranks 72nd out of 73 qualified pitchers.
Crochet's ability to get ahead in counts has declined.
His sweeper pitch has become less effective in two-strike counts.
Mechanical issues may be affecting his pitch location.
Garrett CrochetBoston Red SoxDetroit TigersMinnesota Twins
BOSTON, MA - APRIL 19: Garrett Crochet #35 of the Boston Red Sox pitches during the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Sunday, April 19, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Natalie Reid/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
BOSTON, MA - APRIL 19: Garrett Crochet #35 of the Boston Red Sox pitches during the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Sunday, April 19, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Natalie Reid/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
The 2025 American League Cy Young runner-up, Garrett Crochet, ranks 72nd of 73 qualified pitchers in ERA this season. Through five starts, heās registered a 7.88 ERA in 24 innings. Over his last two starts, heās allowed more earned runs than strikeouts, and more home runs than scoreless innings. After the worst start of his career against the Minnesota Twins, he came out and surrendered a first-inning run against the Detroit Tigers, making Red Sox Nation hold its collective breath. After cruising through the second, third, and fourth innings and allowing Red Sox fans to exhale, the Tigers jumped on him for four more runs in the fifth inning so fast that any breath would have been a gasp.
So, is it time to worry? I touched on this briefly in my game recap, but I say no. The velocity dipped in his start against Minnesota, and he paid the price for it, but it was following a 100+ pitch performance, and consistent with an early-season outing last season after a long outing, when he also temporarily lost some velo. It was back up on Sunday, and the stuff looked as sharp as it normally does. His sinkers on the armside earned strikes, while his fastballs above the zone flew by hitters in two-strike counts. He didnāt get as many strikes with his cutter, but it wasnāt so bad that he couldnāt use the pitch at all.
But there are two problems worth keeping an eye on.
The first is that heās falling behind hitters. In 2025, Crochet threw 31.5% of his pitches ahead in the count. So far in 2026, that number is down to 25.2%. The league average is down to about 28% from 29%, potentially in part due to ABS, but Crochet went from above average to below. Heās also getting to two-strike counts against fewer hitters. In 2025, according to my janky Excel work, he got two strikes against 57% of the hitters he faced. In 2026, heās getting to put away counts against 46% of opponents.
The second problem is his execution with two strikes, particularly with his sweeper. Iām going to focus on righties because Crochet isnāt going to see many lefties. Lefties are 4 for 13 against Crochet this season, but his sinker is still incredibly effective, and opponents will start as many righties as possible against him.
In two-strike counts against righties, his sweeper accounts for almost 35% of his offerings. That makes it his most used pitch in those counts, a year after his four-seam dominated in two-strike counts. While heās throwing it more, itās been less effective. The putaway rate is down from 30% to 19%, despite a nearly identical shape. When the shape is the same, and the way a pitch is deployed is the same, but the results are different, it typically comes down to location. Thatās the case here.
Simply put, heās not getting the ball to the glove side as frequently. A left-handed sweeper to a right-handed hitter will play best at the back foot, and Crochet hasnāt thrown to that spot as often this season. When itās over the middle or up, righties can get around it and pull it to left field for hits. The good news is the stuff is still there. Maybe itās feel, maybe itās a mechanical issue. Letās look at it in practice.
Hereās in the fourth inning. His first time up, we walked on five pitches, three of them nowhere close to the strike zone.
The at-bat starts with a fastball for a called strike. It looks like he wanted it up and in, but misses on the arm side, but itās a strike nonetheless. Good start.
At 0-1, Crochet goes to his sweeper and locates it low in the zone. Itās hard to say if Narvaezās target is meant to be where the ball is supposed to start or finish, so he might have been looking to backdoor it for a called strike. If it is a miss, itās not a bad one. Itās low in the zone, and Torkelsonās early swing fouls it off. Now at 0-2, Crochet can throw whatever he wants. Iād probably elevate a four-seam, or double up on the sweeper, and try to get it to the back foot.
He goes with a sinker thatās supposed to be away from Torkelson, but he spikes it for ball one. Itās a non-competitive pitch and a hard sequence off. At 1-2, Iād again look for an elevated four-seam or sweeper.
Itās the sweeper, and itās a really good one. It doesnāt get a swing, but itās located in an area where he will get swings if he throws it consistently. Itās maybe a little bit low, but thatās nitpicking. After spitting on a good breaking ball, hitters often look for a fastball because they feel as if they showed the pitcher they have the breaking ball covered. He also knows that Crochet doesnāt want to get to 3-2 with a runner on base and two outs. With that in mind, Crochet can double up on the sweeper in the same location to get a chase from Torkelson.
See what I mean? Torkelson is clearly looking for something hard, and heās way out in front of this one. Thatās basically it for Crochet. When he locates the sweeper, heās going to carve up lineups. When he doesnāt, and hitters can look for one of his fastballs, things get more difficult. The ability to drop changeups in for called strikes to keep hitters honest would go a long way, but heās never shown the willingness to commit to the pitch or the ability to throw it in the strike zone.
So thatās what it looks like when itās going good, but what about when itās going poorly? Hereās a look at some two-strike offerings against in the first inning.
The first 0-2 pitch is a sweeper thatās fouled off. Notice the location? Itās in the zone, neither inside nor low enough to get a whiff.
He doubles up on it after the foul ball, this one misses on the arm side, where itās never close to being a strike. Here are all the whiffs he got on the sweeper against righties last season.
There are a few away from righties, but the vast majority came down and in. Moving on.
At 1-2, Crochet goes to the cutter, and it again catches too much of the plate. Vierling fouls it down the line, and we do it again.
He tries to elevate a four-seam for his fourth two-strike pitch of the at-bat, but itās down in the zone and fouled straight back. A straight-back foul ball typically means the hitter just missed it, so Iād avoid doubling up on that one.
He goes back to the sweeper, and itās up in the zone. Vierling gets around it and pulls it into left field for a double. As an aside, sweepers typically benefit from velocity. This one was only 80 mph, a few ticks below his average. I know this is the forum where Iām supposed to dive into this stuff, but itās late, and I have a deadline, so keep an eye on for more on how his sweeper velocity could be impacting his performance.
Thatās an example of Crochet not being able to put guys away, one of the issues I mentioned. The other is falling behind hitters. I wonāt bore you with videos of Crochet missing with his fastball over and over again, only for the fastballs in the zone to get hit because hitters are ready for it. Thatās what happened with , who blew the game wide open with his fifth-inning home run.
Long story short, Iād bet on a bounce-back from Crochet. The stuff is still there, and itās just a matter of execution. Why he hasnāt been able to locate with two strikes, I canāt tell you. Fortunately, it likely isnāt a months-long fix. It could be as simple as throwing on the side between starts and making a tweak to get right. Itās not as if he was totally lost on Sunday, either. Itās easy to think about the run he allowed in the first inning and think that he struggled all day, but in reality, he dominated for the better part of 4.2 innings. His next start will likely come against the this weekend. Iām backing the pig to get back on track when that time comes.
Q&A
What is Garrett Crochet's current ERA and how does it compare to other pitchers?
Garrett Crochet has a 7.88 ERA this season, ranking him 72nd out of 73 qualified pitchers.
Why is Garrett Crochet struggling with his performance in 2026?
Crochet is struggling due to falling behind hitters and decreased effectiveness of his sweeper pitch, particularly in two-strike counts.
How has Garrett Crochet's pitch execution changed from 2025 to 2026?
In 2026, Crochet's ability to get to two-strike counts has dropped from 57% to 46%, and his putaway rate with his sweeper has decreased from 30% to 19%.
What mechanical issues might be affecting Garrett Crochet's pitching this season?
Crochet may be experiencing mechanical issues, as he is not consistently locating his sweeper to the glove side, leading to more hits against him.
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