The sinker is Ureña’s most-utilized pitch but only by a fraction -- he throws it 32.1% of the time compared to a 32.0% rate on his bread-and-butter changeup. Ureña’s changeup sits at 90.5 mph and has 17 inches of arm-side run, and has legitimately been one of the best of its kind in baseball.
Ureña’s changeup has been worth six runs, according to Statcast’s Run Value system. That’s tied for fifth-best among all changeups, only trailing the offerings from Cristopher Sánchez (+15), Nick Martinez (+8), Shane McClanahan (+8) and Robbie Ray (+7). Whether it’s the pitch profile or the sheer results, it’s been a great pitch.
The right-hander also throws a mid-80s sweeper that has produced strong results this season -- opposing hitters have just three hits in 31 at-bats ending on the pitch (.097 BA). While his 22.0% strikeout rate is a tick below league average, his 27.8% whiff rate ranks in the 70th percentile.
Groundball and weak contact machine
Ureña’s stuff produces a healthy amount of whiffs, but opposing hitters also have a hard time doing much against him even when they do put balls in play. By most contact quality measures, Ureña ranks extremely well.
• 55.0% groundball rate, 93rd percentile
• 87.1 mph avg. exit velocity, 82nd percentile
• 33.7% hard-hit rate, 80th percentile
• 5.9% barrel rate, 73rd percentile