
#32 SP · Brewers
Height
6'7"
Weight
201 lbs
Age
24
College
N/A
Experience
1 yrs
Bats/Throws
R/R
Grade this player:
| Year | Team | GP | ERA | W-L | K | WHIP | IP | SV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Career | ![]() | 20 | 3.9820144 | 6-5 | 129 | 1.1978418 | 0.0 | 0 |
Length
1 year
AAV
$780K/yr
Jacob Misiorowski is currently a below-average starting pitcher by production standards, though his rookie-season trajectory is trending upward after earning a C+ performance grade that has been climbing over the past month. The undeniable strength of his early 2026 campaign is his elite strikeout stuff — he set an Opening Day Brewers record with 11 strikeouts and was part of a historic 20-strikeout team performance against the White Sox, the kind of premium velocity and swing-and-miss arsenal that scouts and fans rightfully get excited about. The core weakness, however, is the gap between his raw stuff and actual results: the media framing makes clear that dominant material hasn't consistently translated into dominant outings, and for a 24-year-old still finding his footing at the major league level, harnessing elite weapons into sustained efficiency remains the central developmental challenge. That disconnect is precisely why his Contract Value Index (CVI) has been trending downward despite the hype — a rookie scale contract looks excellent when the performance matches the promise, and right now the production hasn't fully caught up to the price of the narrative. The A+ sentiment grade tells you everything about how Milwaukee fans and media have responded to his early flashes, but that enthusiasm reflects a bet on projection and potential rather than a body of proven work over months. With the Brewers sitting at 13-9 and firmly in the playoff picture at the #6 seed in the National League Central, Misiorowski's development from electric arm to reliable rotation piece could matter enormously as the season stretches toward September — but right now, the hype is running well ahead of the receipts.
| Date | OPP | Result | AB | H | R | HR | RBI | BB | SO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fri, 5/8 | vs NYY | W 6-0 | - | - | - | 0 | - | - | - |
| Fri, 5/1 | @ WAS | W 6-1 | - | - | - | 0 | - | - | - |
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Jacob Misiorowski is a player on a rookie-scale contract listed at SP for the Brewers. FanVerdicts maintains four independent grades for every MLB player on an active roster — Contract Value Index for the deal itself, Performance for on-field production, Sentiment for media and fan reaction, and Fan Verdict for community voting. Current grades for Jacob Misiorowski: Contract Value Index pending, Performance C+, Sentiment A, Fan Verdict pending.
Every grade refreshes on its own cadence as new data lands. Performance recalculates when MLB game stats post; Sentiment updates with new media coverage and fan discussion; Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change; Fan Verdict reflects live community voting on this profile. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) the Contract Value Index grade is computed against.
For league-wide context, the MLB hub has team rankings, GM report cards, the transactions feed, and live scoreboards. The MLB player rankings page sorts every active player by performance and contract value within their position.
At 24 years old and barely into his rookie season, Jacob Misiorowski has become one of the most compelling storylines in baseball right now, and the sentiment around him reflects exactly that — a clear A grade that signals genuine national excitement. The engine driving this narrative is his elite raw stuff, punctuated by nine-strikeout outings that have forced the broader baseball world to pay attention, and a Brandon Woodruff-issued Jacob deGrom comparison that immediately elevated the ceiling conversation from "promising prospect" to franchise cornerstone territory. His custom Pokémon Gengar glove has added a layer of cultural magnetism that makes him the kind of player casual fans latch onto, a rare combination of performance and personality that franchises spend years trying to cultivate. The gap between that A sentiment and his C+ performance grade is real and worth noting — the hype is running meaningfully ahead of what he has produced on the mound so far, which is typical for young fireballers whose raw talent inspires more optimism than their early results strictly justify. The timing of his recent injury scare — pulled during a no-hitter bid against the Nationals with what the Brewers are calling a cramp — adds a layer of anxiety to an otherwise electric narrative, and the early read from the organization is cautiously optimistic. Milwaukee has also been active in roster construction around him, adding pieces at multiple positions and bringing Brandon Woodruff back into the fold, signaling that the front office is building rather than standing pat. The bottom line: Misiorowski is operating at peak buzz with a $0.8M rookie contract making him an extraordinary organizational asset on paper, but the sentiment grade will need on-field consistency to hold — right now, the narrative is ahead of the results, and the injury situation will be the next real test of whether the excitement stays elevated or begins to cool.