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    Tanner Bibee shuts out White Sox through six

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    CLE Starting Pitcher #28
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    Tanner Bibee blanked the White Sox for six innings in a no-decision Wednesday.

    Wins have not been easy to come by for Bibee, who remained 2-8 despite leaving with a two-run lead today. It wound up being blown by Cade Smith in the ninth. Bibee lowered his ERA to 3.78. He’s allowed five earned runs and just 12 hits over 26 1/3 innings in his four starts this month. He’ll pitch at home against the Rangers and White Sox next week.
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With Mike Trout back for the Los Angeles Angels, Eric Samulski analyzes Trout's fantasy value and how his return may affect playing time and fantasy production for some of his teammates.

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  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
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    Bibee surrendered a two-run homer to Joc Pederson in the third. The other run came in the seventh after Cooper Ingle made a routine catch in left and threw the ball into the stands, not realizing that it was only the second out of the inning and giving the Rangers a run because Ezequiel Duran was on second base. It went as Bibee’s ninth loss, tying him with Michael Lorenzen for most in the majors, even though it’s the 15th time in his 18 starts that he allowed three runs or fewer. He’ll face the White Sox next.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee dealt with a bit of poor luck in this outing. The first run he gave up was unearned due to a throwing error from rookie Khalil Watson. Then, Jeremy Peña hit a solo home run that cleared the Crawford boxes in left field by about one inch. Lastly, Bibee let two hitters reach base in the sixth inning before being yanked with one out. Reliever Matt Festa instantly – literally on the first pitch he threw – gave up a three-run home run to Jose Altuve that put Bibee on the wrong side of this decision. Things are just not going right for Bibee right now who will take a 4.03 ERA into his next scheduled start against the White Sox.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee allowed just two hits and a pair of walks on the evening. Both of the hits that he did allow were solo homers — to James Outman in the third and to Spencer Torkelson to lead off the eighth. The 27-year-old hurler got 15 swings and misses on 91 pitches on the night — five on his sinker — while posting a strong CSW of 34 percent. Now 2-7 on the season, he’ll carry a 3.94 ERA, 1.18 WHIP and a 71/26 K/BB ratio (84 innings) into Thursday’s showdown against the Brewers in Milwaukee.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee put together his best start of the season on Saturday, holding the Rangers scoreless over eight innings. He scattered three hits and two walks, tossing an efficient 54 of 87 pitches for strikes. He struck out three. The 27-year-old right-hander knocks a half run from his ERA, coming into the day with a 4.57 mark and ending with a 4.09 with a 1.23 WHIP and a 63/24 K/BB ratio across 77 innings. He’ll look to keep it going against the Tigers in Cleveland on Friday.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee struck out five and walked one. He allowed an early homer to Jarren Duran but made it through six efficiently, finishing at 90 pitches. The 27-year-old hasn’t matched the sub-3 ERA he showed as a rookie in 2023, but his peripherals are mostly consistent year-to-year. A high HR/9 rate is hurting him this season. He’ll visit the Rangers’ pitching-friendly home park in his next start.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    This one wasn’t pretty. Bibee got off to a rocky start, serving up first-inning homers to James Wood and Curtis Mead. Things went further downhill from there as Jacob Young, Luis García Jr. and CJ Abrams also took him deep over the next two frames. Amazingly, both times he’s allowed more than four runs this season came against NL East opponents in the Nationals and Braves. The five home runs allowed were a career high for Bibee. The odds of him rebounding are high with a favorable home matchup against the Red Sox on tap to finish off a two-start week on Sunday.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee carried a shutout into the seventh inning before Detroit pulled ahead of a sacrifice fly from Matt Vierling following a leadoff walk by Kevin McGonigle and a single from Riley Greene. He finished with four strikeouts and allowed just five baserunners, needing 104 pitches (67 strikes) to navigate eight frames in his longest outing of the year. He’s been relatively consistent this season, allowing three earned runs or fewer in nine of his 11 starts so far. He’ll face the Nationals on Monday in his next outing to kick off a two-start week.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee’s fastballs are just getting pulverized right now. Six of his ten hard-hit balls allowed were on his four-seamer or sinker, and his hard-hit rate has spiked from 36.6 percent in 2025 to 46.2 percent this year. He’s got enough guile to pitch decently for the Guardians, but the trends here have him feeling hard to start in shallow leagues. He’ll be a 15-team stream option against the Kerry Carpenter-less Tigers next week.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee gave up a leadoff homer to Byron Buxton in the first and then no more hits the rest of the way. It’s probably not a coincidence that Bibee’s best effort of the year came the very first time that he got to work with Austin Hedges (Bo Naylor caught him seven times and David Fry did so once). Now that he’ll presumably be paired with Patrick Bailey most of the time, his value could get a significant boost. He’s due to face the Reds at home next Friday.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Bibee faced just one over the minimum through three, but the fourth started with a Bobby Witt Jr. homer and just kept going from there. The Royals managed four more hits, two of them on grounders. One of those skidded off the second base bag and went right between the legs of Travis Bazzana. Bibee was then pulled before the start of the fifth. He struck out four tonight and had a 31 percent CSW. He just couldn’t stop the bleeding when he needed to. He’ll take a 4.58 ERA into his start against the Twins this weekend.

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  • SF Designated Hitter #8
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    Bryce Eldridge went 2-for-3 with his eighth homer and two walks Thursday in leading the Giants past the Rockies 8-2.

    Eldridge had three of the four hardest-hit balls of the game, coming in at 106.1 mph on his homer in the fourth, 108.5 mph on a lineout in the fifth and 108.1 mph on a single in the eighth. Hopefully, it means he’s escaping the drought that saw him hit .177 with one homer in his previous 17 games. That previous homer also came against Rockies pitching.
  • SF Starting Pitcher #88
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    Carson Whisenhunt held the Rockies to two runs and three hits over 5 2/3 innings to win Thursday in his return to the majors.

    Both runs came in the second. Whisenhunt gave up a single and a walk to begin the inning, but he got a double play ball afterwards. He then got ahead of Willi Castro 1-2, only to miss with a bad changeup that was deposited into the stands in left center. Whisenhunt walked three more batters over the course of the outing, but the homer was the only damage. He’s won both of his starts for the Giants this season, and he’ll probably get a longer look in the second half. First, though, he might return to Triple-A until one or two spots open up at the trade deadline.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #18
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    Ryan Feltner yielded four runs and walked four in 4 1/3 innings Thursday in a loss to the Giants.

    Getting pushed back a day to face the Giants, rather than the Dodgers, seemed like a good thing for Feltner, but it wound up not really mattering. He gave up solo homers in the first and fourth innings and then four hits and a walk before leaving in the fifth. Fortunately for Feltner, Victor Vodnik was able to strand the bases loaded after coming in with one out in the frame. Feltner will enter the second half 3-3 with a 4.55 ERA. That’s pretty good for a Coors pitcher, but his 47/24 K/BB in 63 1/3 innings isn’t impressive at all. He’s also given up 11 homers already.
  • COL 2nd Baseman #3
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    Willi Castro homered to account for the Rockies’ only two runs Thursday against the Giants.

    With Mickey Moniak back from the IL and Kyle Karros establishing himself as the everyday third baseman, Castro has been losing playing time against righties lately. Fortunately for him, the Rockies have faced lefties in four of their last six games, getting him some extra playing time. He’s batting .265/.337/.385 in the first season of a two-year, $12.8 million contract. One imagines he’ll be very much available at the trade deadline if anyone wants to take on the rest of his deal.
  • AZ Starting Pitcher #29
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    Merrill Kelly allowed only a Manny Machado solo homer over seven innings Thursday in the Diamondbacks’ 3-1 win over the Padres.

    Kelly struck out six, matching his season high. After averaging a season-high 93.4 mph with his fastball last time out against the Brewers, he came in at 93.2 mph tonight. He averaged 92.0 and topped out at 92.7 mph in his first 14 starts this season. If his velocity stays up, he might be of use in deeper formats during the second half. Kelly figures to face the Cardinals in the D-backs’ first or second game after the break.
  • AZ Relief Pitcher #38
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    Paul Sewald struck out two in a perfect ninth for his 21st save Thursday against the Padres.

    Sewald sandwiched strikeouts of Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado around a Jackson Merrill flyout. He’s still blown just one save opportunity this season.
  • SD Starting Pitcher #17
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    Griffin Canning lost to the Diamondbacks after allowing two runs in 4 2/3 innings on Thursday.

    Canning struck out five and walked none, but the D-backs got to him for single runs in the fourth and fifth and the Padres offense failed to respond. Canning ends the first half 1-7 with a 6.47 ERA, so he could be bumped from the rotation if the Padres rotation gets healthier and/or if A.J. Preller can make an addition or two.
  • SD 2nd Baseman #24
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    Sung-Mun Song went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts against the D-backs on Thursday.

    With Jake Cronenworth back and Luis Rengifo up, Song is probably on thin ice at this point. He’s hitting .213/.308/.288 through 91 plate appearances. It seems like he has the bat speed to get around on major league fastballs, but his exit velocity numbers thus far are ugly.
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    The Diamondbacks plan to recall Ryan Waldschmidt and designate Pavin Smith for assignment prior to Friday’s game.

    Waldschmidt didn’t seem ready the first time around, but he had dragged his strikeout rate under 20 percent in the three weeks since he returned to Triple-A. He’s probably not ready to hit homers in the majors, but if the Diamondbacks want to play him regularly, he might steal enough bases to be useful in 12-team leagues. Tommy Troy, Max Kepler and Lourdes Gurriel Jr. could all lose at-bats with Waldschmidt back.
  • LAA Starting Pitcher #21
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    Grayson Rodriguez (back) will return from the injured list to start against the Twins on Friday.

    That was the expectation all along, but the Angels finally confirmed it on Thursday. Rodriguez looked strong in his latest minor league rehab start, hurling 5 1/3 innings of one-run baseball at Triple-A Salt Lake. Fantasy managers may want to see how he looks one turn through the rotation before throwing him right back to the wolves.