As the 2026 Major League Baseball season gets underway, the traditional concept of the starting pitcher going seven deep and handing the ball to a set-up man and a closer is completely dead. Analytics departments have permanently altered how pitching staffs are constructed, turning the modern MLB bullpen into a high-velocity chess match of specialized roles and matchup hunting.
The “Opener” is Mainstream
What started as a quirky experiment by a few small-market teams is now standard operating procedure across the league. Many teams are deploying hard-throwing relievers to get through the top of the opponent’s lineup in the first inning, before handing the ball over to a “bulk guy” who eats the middle frames. This strategy prevents the opponent’s best hitters from seeing the same pitcher multiple times in a game, statistically reducing the damage they can inflict.
Velocity Over Everything
If you look at the back end of any major league bullpen right now, it is a parade of pitchers throwing 100 mph with physics-defying breaking balls. Teams are drafting and developing relievers entirely based on elite spin rates and raw velocity, rather than command. The philosophy is simple: stuff is king. Managers are perfectly willing to live with the occasional walk if it means their relievers can strike out two batters with the bases loaded in a high-leverage situation.






