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    Stephen Kolek’s Pitch Mix Has Stopped Working, & His Slider Is Suffering

    The slider is still elite, but the rest of the arsenal no longer works as a unit.

    Yirsandy Rodríguez
    Image courtesy of © Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

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    Stephen Kolek owns one of the lowest strikeout rates among Kansas City starters. His K% sits at 9.9 against lefties and 10.0 against righties, second-worst in the rotation in both splits. Yet his slider still generates whiffs at a level comparable to some of the best relievers in the league. In 2026, it has produced a 42.7% whiff rate and a 34.1% strikeout rate. Isolated, it belongs in a different profile.

    A pitch mix is not a collection of stuff but a sequence in which each pitch gives meaning to the next. In 2025, Kolek's sinker and changeup provided that structure. Neither dominated, but both shaped at-bats. The sinker generated ground balls (64.7% GB), while the changeup neutralized lefties (.049 AVG, 26.2% K). Together, they forced hitters to cover the lower half of the zone, opening lanes for the four-seam and slider.

    In 2026, that foundation is gone. Both pitches have lost their ability to alter swing decisions. The changeup no longer punishes zone contact, and the sinker no longer consistently drives the ball into the ground.

    Pitch Type Chase% 2025 Chase% 2026 BA 2025 BA 2026
    Sinker 24.7% 22.2% .267 .304
    Changeup 32.3% 29.6% .049 .310

    Without that base, the rest of the arsenal flattens. The four-seam fastball is no longer protected vertically; its ground-ball rate drops from 47.2% to 30.3%, while usage rises to 27.7%. Hitters no longer need to respect the bottom of the zone.

    Pitch Type Usage 2025 Usage 2026 Whiff% 2026 K% 2026
    Sinker 24.1% 22.0% 6 6.6
    Changeup 11.6% 12.5% 18.4 16.1
    4-Seam 25.6% 27.7% 18.1 7.5
    Slider 23.4% 16.8% 42.7 34.1

    The slider remains the only elite pitch in the mix. But it no longer shapes at-bats because the pitches surrounding it aren't fooling batters. The slider's usage has declined, and its role as a finishing weapon has lessened. Kolek's start against Tampa Bay made it visible. Three runs in the second inning, 42 pitches to escape it. The problem was not execution, but duration. No at-bat was forced into early commitment.

    The results by times through the order confirm the pattern:

    TTO FIP AVG SLG HardHit%
    1st Time 3.82 .250 .408 34.9
    2nd Time 4.51 .243 .392 23.0
    3rd Time 6.11 .298 .574 46.2

    Each pass through the lineup strips another layer of flexibility. By the third time, hitters are no longer predicting a sequence; they are attacking isolated pitches. Without sinker or changeup-shaped counts, the four-seam becomes predictable, and the slider becomes detached. The mix stops functioning, weakening all of Kolek's offerings.

    In the end, the data does not describe a decline in stuff. It describes a pitch mix that no longer forces decisions. And when that happens, the outcome is already simplified before the pitch is thrown. Kolek still has a dominant weapon, but he no longer has a working system.

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