Brett Anderson, Dodgers
The lefty version of B. Morrow, Anderson is a talented pitcher in the mold of M. Buehrle. Over 505 career innings Anderson has a 3.72 ERA and 1.28 WHIP, and that 55 percent ground ball rate is intriguing as all get out (think Dallas Keuchel). At the same time we've heard it all before with Anderson. Doesn't matter how talented he is since he simply cannot stay on the field. Since throwing 175.1 innings as a rookie he's only had one season with half as many innings the last five years. In fact, the last three seasons he hasn't even thrown 45 innings in any campaign. Enjoy him while he's out there. 

Chase Anderson, Diamondbacks
Some folks out there love Anderson. Last year he had a 4.01 ERA and 1.37 WHIP over 21 starts. In two outings this season those marks are 4.09 and 1.55. He does have 11 strikeouts in 11 innings this season pushing his career mark to 116 in 125.1 innings, but he's also the owner of a 3.16 BB/9, 1.22 HR/9 and 1.14 GB/FB. Strikeouts could be there, but not much else at the moment. 

Mark Buehrle, Blue Jays
In his first start this season he won his 200th career game. Mark won his second outing as well. The last  seven years he's won at least 12 games, and every season since 2001 he's been in the double-digits in the win column. You know what he is. It's the same thing he has been for 15 years. Start him in the right matchup, don't run him out there every time, and understand his ratios will be league average. 

Kyle Gibson, Twins
I wrote this back on April 1st. "...be cautious with Kyle. Dude is wildly inconsistent and through 41 career starts his numbers do not hint that a breakout is coming in 2015..." Kyle has made two starts this season. First time out he allowed six runs over 3.2 innings. Last time he tossed 6.2 innings while allowing only a single run. Goodness is he a frustrating own. Through two starts his K/9 (2.61), which is awful, is barely better than his WHIP (2.13). Good luck.

Tim Lincecum, Giants
The last three years the K-rate for Lincecum has gone down: 9.19, 8.79 and 7.75 per nine. Through two starts this year the number is just 6.75. The only good news is that he's walk rate of 3.00 would be the second best mark of his career. Lincecum will have a battle to make 30 starts this season if those rates continue, unless the Giants keep dealing with injuries. Lincecum's fastball through two outings is coming in at 87.3 mph. That's scary for a guy who owns a 91.9 career mph mark. 

Tyler Matzek, Rockies
See the team he pitches for which is a huge negative for the 11th overall selection in the 2009 Entry Draft. Through 22 big league outings he has a 3.88 ERA, 1.39 WHIP an a 6.91 K/9 mark. Could match all those numbers this season, but if he does he's nothing other than a league average streaming option. 

Brandon Morrow, Padres
I've been pushing Morrow since, literally, 2008. I've never been right. Why? Because dude simply cannot stay healthy. Only once in the last five years has he thrown 150 innings. The last three years he's failed to throw 125. The last two years he's failed to throw 55 innings. He's also lost a ton of punchouts over the years. The last five seasons here is his K/9: 10.95, 10.19, 7.80, 6.96 and 8.10. Can't stay healthy,  K-rate going down... take a chance, he's looked sharp and has a great park, but the fact is that he's a total wild card.

Jonathon Niese, Mets
He has a sharp 1.59 ERA through two starts but... his K/BB ratio is 1.50 and his WHIP is 1.76. Health continues to be an issue for Niese, but he's a solid streaming option in most formats. The last three seasons Niese has a 3.49 ERA and 1.28 WHIP so he's not gonna killa ya, but he also has only struck out 6.88 batters per nine and doesn't dominate anyone. 

Wily Peralta, Brewers
Peralta won 17 games with 154 strikeouts last year. Did you know that? Through two starts it's been rough as he's the owner of a 1.50 WHIP and has struck out just three batters in 12 innings. The strikeouts will improve, ditto the ratios, but Wily has little heat behind his name making him a solid add off waivers if he's sitting out there. 

Drew Pomeranz, Athletics
Through two starts he's 1-1 with a 3.00 ERA, 0.75 WHIP and he's the owner of 11 strikeouts and one walks over 12 innings. Going back to last season, Pomeranz has pretty much crushed it since he joined the team from Oakland. He's gone 6-5 with a 2.44 ERA, 1.06 WHIP, 8.33 K/9 and he's allowed only 6.56 hits per nine innings. Hard to think he's going to match that level of production the rest of the way, but he's clearly put himself in place to be a significant contributor in 12-team mixed leagues.

Erasmo Ramirez, Rays
I was an arm short in AL LABR so I added Erasmo off waivers. I should have jumped in my time machine and bought a ticket on the Titanic. In two outings Ramirez has a 23.62 ERA and 3.75 WHIP. He makes Mr. Walker of the Mariners seem like a quality arm. We're up to 212 innings with Ramirez, over four seasons, and we have a 5.09 ERA and 1.42 WHIP. You can move on in all mixed leagues.

Taijuan Walker, Mariners
One of the best pitchers in baseball in Spring Training, Walker has looked a buffoon once the bright lights were turned on. Through two starts he's allowed six walks, 15 hits and 14 runs over 7.1 innings. That's a 17.18 ERA and 2.86 WHIP for Walker. An elite prospect, Walker might as well be pitching underhand right now. The real question is - how much rope will the Mariners give him? I would try to exercise patience and hold him if you can, but if his next outing looks like the first two it's not crazy to think that the Mariners remove him from the rotation. 

Travis Wood, Cubs
Travis Wood last April: 3.52 ERA, 31 strikeouts in 30.2 innings. He finished the year with a 5.03 ERA,  1.53 WHIP and had a K/9 of 7.57. Wood simply isn't very talented. He's really nothing other than an innings eater in an NL-only setup. The strikeouts won't last - he just doesn't have the stuff for it - and we know the ratios are going up (career: 4.08 ERA, 1.29 WHIP). A poor mans Mark Buehrle