Jordan Zimmermann

Jordan Zimmermann

37-Year-Old PitcherP
 Free Agent  
2024 Fantasy Outlook
There was no outlook written for Jordan Zimmermann in 2024. Check out the latest news below for more on his current fantasy value.
$Signed a one-year contract with the Brewers in March of 2021. Released by the Brewers in May of 2021.
Elects to retire
PFree Agent  
May 11, 2021
Zimmermann announced his retirement Tuesday.
ANALYSIS
Zimmermann was close to retirement in late April when the Brewers chose to promote him from the alternate site, but he'll decide to end his career after all following just two appearances this season. He'll close his 13-year career with 95 wins, a 4.07 ERA and 1,271 strikeouts.
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2021 MLB Game Log
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2020 MLB Game Log
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2019 MLB Game Log
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Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Jordan Zimmermann See More
Weekly Pitcher Rankings: deGromination
May 1, 2021
Todd Zola ranks the week's starting pitchers, including Aaron Nola with a pair of favorable opponents.
Yahoo DFS Baseball: Sunday Picks
September 27, 2020
Chris Morgan urges you to take the best available pitcher on today's slate.
FanDuel MLB: Sunday Targets
FanDuel MLB: Sunday Targets
September 27, 2020
September 27, 2020
It's the final day of the regular season and Erik Halterman analyzes the more appealing player options.
Dream11 Fantasy Baseball: Brewers at Tigers
September 9, 2020
Juan Pablo Aravena breaks down Wednesday's Brewers at Tigers game for Dream11 contests.
Dream11 Fantasy Baseball: Tigers at Indians
August 22, 2020
Juan Pablo Aravena breaks down Sunday's Tigers at Indians game for Dream11 contests.
Latest Fantasy Rumors
Preparing for another season?
PFree Agent  
January 14, 2021
Zimmermann is preparing as if he's going to pitch this season, according to Jason Beck of MLB.com.
ANALYSIS
Zimmermann will probably draw mild interest interest, but he is not expected to receive a guaranteed big-league pact. He has largely been ineffective since coming to Detroit five seasons back and is now also recovering from a forearm injury. Retirement is apparently not on the table -- at least for now.
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
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2008
With a week left in summer camp, Zimmermann was shut down with forearm stiffness, delaying his 2020 debut until Sept. 10. In his fist outing, he started, tossing three frames, allowing one unearned run. He then moved to the bullpen where he was lit up in his next appearance before closing the season with a clean inning. It's going to be difficult for Zimmermann to latch on somewhere as a starter, considering he'll be 35 years old and has lost time the past two seasons with forearm issues and was never able to attain the level of success in his five-year tenure in Detroit he enjoyed with Washington. Poor durability and a low strikeout rate are not the recipe for fantasy success in today's landscape where the margin for error when assimilating a staff is smaller than ever.
In the latest example of "spring training stats don't matter," Zimmermann had a 1.10 WHIP and 21:4 K:BB in the Grapefruit League and went on to post an ERA just shy of 7.00 during the regular season, the worst mark of his career. Zimmermann missed time with elbow and neck injuries and did not pick up his first win of 2019 until July 29. It would prove to be his only victory of the season. He saw his K-rate sag back to 16.3%, coinciding with another lost tick of velocity. While Zimmermann continued to limit the free passes, his Zone% was a career-low 40.4% and he got clobbered when he challenged in the strike zone. The expected stats say he was actually a bit fortunate in the SLG department, which is hard to fathom. Detroit will be paying Zimmermann $25 million in 2020 and may want to squeeze as many innings out of him as possible, but Zimmermann is not even a viable AL-only consideration.
Coming off a career-worst campaign in 2017 (6.08 ERA and 1.55 WHIP), Zimmermann bounced back and put together his best season since joining the Tigers in 2016, although that's not saying much. The veteran right-hander improved both his strikeout and walk rates in 2018, resulting in the second-best K/BB (4.27) of his career and his best since 2014. Despite the improvement, a drop in fastball velocity (his average fastball in 2018 clocked in 1.9 mph below his career average) and a jump in Zimmermann's home-run rate, from 1.63 HR/9 in 2017 to 1.92 HR/9 in 2018, resulted in an unremarkable 4.52 ERA and 1.26 WHIP. The 32-year-old is still owed $50 million over the next two seasons, assuring him a spot in Detroit's starting rotation as long as he's healthy. Zimmermann underwent sports hernia surgery after the season, but he's expected to be ready for spring training.
Zimmermann's slight semblance of fantasy relevance took another hit in 2017, as the veteran hurler turned in a career-worst 6.08 ERA over 160 innings. His exorbitant ERA was the worst mark in the majors among starting pitchers who threw at least 150 innings. Three years removed from an All-Star campaign in which he posted a 2.66 ERA and 22.8 strikeout rate, Zimmermann looked like a shell of his former self this past season. Though he still had decent zip on his fastball (roughly 93 mph average velocity), the 31-year-old saw his strikeout rate fall to a career-low 14.5 percent and he was squared up for a career-worst 1.63 HR/9. Zimmermann is a rapidly declining asset but is still owed a hefty $74 million over the final three years of his contract. While he'll likely be counted upon to eat up innings in 2018 for the rebuilding Tigers, he can be left off your fantasy radar as it seems Zimmermann's best days are long behind him.
Zimmermann just suffered his worst season ever in 2016. The real question at this point is how much of it was injury-related and how much was a degradation of skills? His 3.66 ERA in 2015 might push you closer to degradation, but his strikeout and walk rates that year were completely in line with his 2011-13 seasons while his 2014 stands out as a career year. The one key change in 2015 was his career-worst home run rate (1.1 HR/9) and it was even a tick worse in 2016 at 1.2 HR/9. Neck and lat injuries might have been at play in the career-low 15 percent strikeout rate and the spike in walk rate to six percent, his highest since 2009. Zimmermann had a 3.24 ERA through 13 starts, before he allowed 11 earned runs in 9.2 innings in two starts before the neck injury and another 15 earned runs in 9.2 innings the rest of the way with a second DL stint mixed in. A healthy Zimmermann should yield something close to a 4.00 ERA in his age-30 campaign.
Zimmermann didn't exactly have the kind of season he hoped for heading into free agency. Although his fastball was down a tick, he still averaged 93 mph, and there was no other obvious sign of decreased effectiveness in his arsenal. Still, his ERA and FIP both soared by a run or more, his home run rate spiked to a career-high 1.07, and his K/9 rate tumbled back down into the sevens after a career-high 8.2 in 2014. If he's able to rebound, there's no reason to think he won't be a solid mid-rotation starter once again, but six years removed from Tommy John surgery, the clock could be ticking on his new elbow ligament, and the slight drop in velocity might be a harbinger of rough times ahead. The Tigers signed him to a five-year, $110 million contract in the offseason, however, confident in his ability to return to form and slot in behind Justin Verlander in their rotation.
Zimmermann has become the workhorse of the Nationals' staff, averaging 203 innings and 15 wins over the last three seasons while producing consistently very-good-to-excellent ratios. His K/9 rate even spiked up to a career-best 8.2, giving him more juice than expected in five-category leagues, and while Stephen Strasburg has the shinier pedigree and gaudier strikeout numbers, it's Zimmermann that opposing hitters seem to dread facing the most, an opinion backed up by his September no-hitter. Although he continues to toy around with a changeup, he relied even more heavily than usual on his mid-90s fastball and vicious slider last year, and with free agency looming, he'll have plenty of motivation to gun for his first 20-win campaign. Given his contract status, there's a chance he could get dealt before spring training, but there aren't many teams that can provide him with the offensive and defensive support that the Nats can, so a trade wouldn't likely improve his value. In all likelihood, Zimmermann will be leading the club back into the postseason hunt in 2015.
With Stephen Strasburg unable to buy a win and Gio Gonzalez taking a step back in 2013, it was Zimmermann who took his turn as the Nationals' staff ace and set career highs in innings, wins, total strikeouts and walk rate. Somewhat amazingly, all four of his pitches (fastball, slider, curveball and changeup) showed a positive run expectancy last year, which was the main engine of his success more than any one dominant pitch. He won't challenge the 200-strikeout mark, which keeps him from being an elite fantasy starter, but Zimmermann is solidifying his spot near the top of the next tier of pitchers.
The Nationals took the shackles off Zimmermann in 2012 and his numbers showed no regression, as his walk and strikeout rates were almost identical to the season before. He pounds the strike zone with plus stuff, and while that has not translated into elite numbers, he does not need to reach that level in a rotation that already features two aces in Stephen Strasburg and Gio Gonzalez. If Davey Johnson starts letting him go a little deeper into games his win total might pick up a bit, but otherwise expect more of the same from Zimmermann.
Zimmermann was the Nationals' most consistent starting pitcher during the 2011 season. He got stronger as the season progressed, something that is typical for pitchers on the mend from Tommy John surgery. He was shut down in September because he reached his innings limit. Zimmermann’s control was impeccable (1.73 BB/9IP) locating his fastball (93.3 mph), slider, curveball and occasional change-up. However, he was somewhat lucky concerning his HR/FB ratio (5.9 percent). His flyball tendencies should lead to more home runs next season, and a slightly higher ERA will likely follow.
Zimmermann's return from Tommy John surgery was a resounding success, as other than a spike in his HR/9IP rate his numbers were remarkably similar in seven 2010 starts to what he put up before getting hurt. In short, the surgery just put his career on pause for 12 months and didn't appear to set back his development, which is excellent news for a team trying to build around its young rotation. With Stephen Strasburg taking his own turn under the knife, Zimmermann will likely be the Nationals' No. 1 starter in 2011, which means you should expect solid numbers everywhere but in the wins category.
Zimmermann posted exceptional numbers for a rookie, even if his ERA didn't reflect it. Any kid who can strike out better than a batter an inning with a better than 3.0 K/BB ratio, and who isn't particularly flyball prone to boot, has a chance to be someone very special. Unfortunately, he won't get a chance to show how special until at least late 2010 thanks to Tommy John surgery, but assuming he eventually regains his form he'll pair up with Stephen Strasburg down the road to give the Nats a truly scary young pitching duo at the head of their rotation.
Zimmermann had no problem adjusting to full season ball in 2008, making it all the way up to Double-A and maintaining a strikeout-an-inning pace, while keeping the ball down in the strike zone and not walking too many batters. Given their recent history with their top pitching prospects you can expect Zimmermann to make his big league debut in 2009 but unlike previous hurlers like Ross Detwiler, Zimmermann might actually be ready to hold his own in the majors. He's got three quality pitches including a plus slider, and it's entirely possible that he'll head into spring training camp in 2010 as the Nationals de facto ace.
The second-round pick had a great 2007 debut in Rookie ball, displaying better-than-expected control to go along with a very good slider and two other quality pitches. He's a few years away from regular major league duty, but as the Nationals showed last year with Ross Detwiler, the organization isn't afraid to give its top prospects a late-season cup of coffee to let them know what's ahead of them. Assuming Zimmerman doesn't suffer a setback in his first exposure to full season ball, he could make his big league debut this September even if he's not ready for a regular spot until 2010.
More Fantasy News
Contract selected Thursday
PMilwaukee Brewers  
April 29, 2021
Zimmermann had his contract selected from the alternate site Thursday.
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Signs minor-league deal
PMilwaukee Brewers  
March 27, 2021
Zimmermann signed a minor-league contract with the Brewers on Saturday.
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Cut by Brewers
PFree Agent  
March 26, 2021
Zimmermann was released by the Brewers on Friday, Adam McCalvy of MLB.com reports.
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Joining Brewers' camp
PMilwaukee Brewers  
February 9, 2021
Zimmermann signed with the Brewers as a non-roster invitee Tuesday.
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Opening Sunday's game
PDetroit Tigers  
September 26, 2020
Zimmermann will open Sunday's season finale against the Royals, Evan Woodbery of MLive.com reports.
ANALYSIS
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