Redraft players got a brief look at Jobe over four regular-season innings and 1.2 innings in the postseason before having to decide whether to pay the price for a potential full season of the electric young righty in the majors. His stuff is simply outstanding from both a velocity and movement standpoint, with upwards of four plus pitches at the age of 22. Jobe showed some control issues for the first time at Double-A, where he walked 38 batters in 73.2 innings (12.7 BB%). He only made two starts at Triple-A, but he walked five batters in nine innings there before issuing just one walk in his 5.2 MLB innings (including playoffs). With pitchers who are as young as Jobe and have that type of electric repertoire where all four pitches have outlier movement characteristics, it can sometimes take time to hone the strike throwing. Assuming his control comes around, the only issue with Jobe is workload. His 91.2 innings were a career high, as he dealt with a lumbar spine injury in 2023 and a hamstring strain in 2024. He's not a lock to make the big-league rotation, but he'll likely be given every opportunity to win a spot this spring. Read Past Outlooks