Posted by PhantomRushXx PhantomRushXx
Filed in Card Games 24 views
In short: starters rarely go nine innings in competitive play.
On All-Star and above, even a good starter will run into trouble by the fifth or sixth inning. PCI placement is strong, foul balls drain stamina, and pitch counts climb fast. If you don’t have reliable relievers, you’ll either:
Leave a tired starter in too long
Burn through random arms with no clear roles
Give up late-game home runs
In MLB The Show 26, energy and confidence swing games. A reliever entering with full energy and high confidence can dominate for an inning. The same pitcher used three games in a row becomes unreliable fast.
So your bullpen isn’t just backup. It’s how you close games.
Most competitive players run:
5 starting pitchers
7–8 bullpen arms
The exact number depends on the mode (Ranked, BR, Franchise), but in Diamond Dynasty Ranked play, I recommend at least:
2 long relievers
3 middle relievers
2 setup arms
1 closer
You don’t need labels in-game. But mentally, you should know who fills which role.
If you go into a game without defined roles, you’ll hesitate in big moments. That hesitation costs runs.
Overall rating doesn’t tell the full story. I look at four things:
A two-pitch reliever can work in lower ratings. At higher levels, players adjust fast.
Strong bullpen arms usually have:
A fastball with good velocity (95+ helps)
A horizontal breaking pitch (slider or cutter)
A vertical breaking pitch (curve or slurve)
A speed differential (changeup or splitter)
Pitch tunneling matters. A fastball and slider that look similar out of the hand will get more swings and misses than random high-rated pitches.
H/9 affects PCI size. The higher it is, the smaller your opponent’s PCI becomes.
BB/9 matters more than people think. In MLB The Show 26, pinpoint and analog aren’t perfect. High BB/9 gives you more room for error on edges.
Late innings often have runners on base. High Clutch shrinks PCI in those situations. For setup men and closers, this is important.
If you can’t consistently hit spots, the card won’t play well. Some pitchers look good on paper but feel wild in-game.
Sometimes, yes.
In Ranked Seasons, using a starter as a long reliever can stabilize your middle innings. But stamina regenerates slower for starters. If you use your ace in relief, he may not be ready for his next scheduled start.
I prefer using one durable, lower-rotation starter as an emergency long reliever. That way you protect your top two starters.
Here’s how I approach it in practice:
Used when:
Starter gets knocked out early
Game goes into extra innings
This pitcher needs 40–50 stamina and at least three solid pitches.
These are matchup tools. I bring them in during:
Sixth or seventh inning
Tough part of opponent’s lineup
I usually carry:
One lefty specialist
One righty with a good cutter or sinker
Eighth inning. High H/9. Reliable command. This pitcher must be someone you trust.
If you hesitate when warming him up, he’s not your setup arm.
Your best swing-and-miss pitcher. Ideally:
High velocity
Strong slider
High Clutch
Confidence builds quickly in clean innings. If your closer gives up two hits, his effectiveness drops fast.
Still very important.
Even though PCI skill reduces the gap, handedness affects timing windows and pitch movement.
I try to carry:
At least two reliable lefties
At least three righties with good reverse splits
But don’t overload lefties. Many players stack right-handed hitters. A bad lefty will get crushed regardless of matchup.
In Ranked Seasons, energy management matters across games.
If you use your closer for 25 pitches in Game 1, he may not be full in Game 2. Many players ignore this and bring in half-energy relievers.
What I do:
Avoid using the same setup/closer combo back-to-back if possible
Spread innings across middle relievers
Don’t waste elite arms in blowouts
If you’re down five runs, save your top bullpen arms. Conceding strategically can help you win the next game.
This depends on your roster stage.
Early on, you might be deciding how to spend your stubs and whether you need lineup upgrades first. Some players look for the best place to buy MLB 26 stubs to accelerate roster building, but even with more currency, bullpen investment should be balanced.
A dominant lineup won’t matter if you give up leads every game. At the same time, having three expensive closers is unnecessary.
I recommend:
One elite closer
One elite setup arm
Fill the rest with solid, affordable cards that fit your style
Bullpen depth wins more games than one flashy reliever.
This is where many players make mistakes.
If your starter hits 70–80 pitches, begin warming someone. Don’t wait until he gives up two hits.
Warm-up time matters. Cold relievers have worse command.
If you warm up two pitchers and only use one, the other loses energy anyway. Plan ahead before warming multiple arms.
Bringing in a reliever mid-inning with runners on base is risky unless he has high Clutch. Whenever possible, start them fresh at the top of an inning.
From what I’ve seen, the most common errors are:
Leaving a tired starter in because “he’s pitching well”
Ignoring confidence drops
Spamming fastballs late in games
Using the closer in non-save situations early
Confidence is huge in MLB The Show 26. Once a reliever gives up hard contact, their confidence circle shrinks. At that point, mixing pitches and slowing the game down becomes critical.
Pay attention to opponent behavior.
If they:
Chase sliders low and away → keep feeding it
Sit high fastball → change eye level with sinkers or changeups
Struggle with inside cutters → keep attacking hands
A bullpen arm is only as good as how you sequence pitches.
The best relievers in MLB The Show 26 are not just stat leaders. They are pitchers whose pitch mix matches your sequencing style.
Building a competitive bullpen in MLB The Show 26 is about structure, balance, and in-game management.
You need:
Defined roles
Reliable pitch mixes
Smart stamina management
Awareness of matchups
Most games at higher levels are decided in the seventh, eighth, and ninth innings. If you consistently protect leads, you’ll climb the rankings faster than someone who only focuses on offense.