Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up
Odds by

    Emerson Hancock to piggyback with Logan Gilbert

    Link copied to clipboard!

    SEA Starting Pitcher #26
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    Emerson Hancock will piggyback with Logan Gilbert on Saturday against the White Sox.

    It sounds like the Mariners will continue with this odd piggybacking arrangement through the All-Star break to keep all six of their starters happy. That means George Kirby will start on Sunday with Bryan Woo set to take the ball for Tuesday’s series opener against the Marlins in Miami.
Brewers travel to Pittsburgh for Sunday Leadoff
Looking to stay alive in the NL Wild Card race, the Pirates welcome the NL Central-leading Brewers to PNC Park for a divisional showdown on MLB Sunday Leadoff at 12pm ET on Peacock and NBCSN.

Related Player News

  • SEA Starting Pitcher #26
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    It’s the fourth straight Mariners game to end in a shutout, and they were on the right side of three of them. (They beat the Angels 1-0 on Thursday, lost to the Jays 2-0 on Friday and won 11-0 on Saturday.) Hancock was originally supposed to piggyback with Logan Gilbert on Saturday, but the Mariners scratched that the night before and Gilbert went out and pitched one-hit ball for seven innings. Now, Hancock has gone seven scoreless for the first time. He previously pitched six scoreless innings twice and seven innings of one-run ball once. He struck out five and generated 14 whiffs today, finishing with a 32 percent CSW. The Mariners probably won’t engage in any funny business in the rotation this week with six games in a row after the off day on Monday. Just like this weekend, they’ll likely go with Luis Castillo on Friday, Gilbert on Saturday and Hancock on Sunday against the Rays.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #36
    Gilbert retired 22 of 23 batters, and Cole Wilcox was a perfect 5-for-5 after coming on in an 11-0 game. Gilbert, originally due to piggyback with Emerson Hancock today, seemed pleased to have the start entirely to himself. His velocity was again up; he’s come in at 96.8, 97.1 and 97.0 mph with his fastball in his last three starts after averaging 95.5 mph in his first 15 outings. He got 18 whiffs today, including 12 with the fastball, and he allowed just three hard-hit balls. The win makes him 7-5 with a 3.19 ERA. He’s fourth in the majors with a 0.95 WHIP and tied for 12th with 114 strikeouts. He’ll get the Rays in his final start before the break.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #36
    To the surprise of absolutely nobody, the Mariners are abandoning their ill-fated piggyback experiment with Gilbert making his usual start before Emerson Hancock takes the ball against Toronto on Sunday. It doesn’t sound like the organization has any plans to continue the unorthodox arrangement beyond the All-Star break, especially with the trade deadline looming and top prospects like Kade Anderson and Ryan Sloan looking like they could pitch in the majors down the home stretch. Hopefully this is the last time fantasy managers need to incorporate the phrase piggyback into our vocabulary.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #26
    Hancock came into this one needing a good start with 11 runs allowed over his last two appearances. He delivered with a solid day on the mound, holding the Guardians to one run into the sixth inning. He scattered five hits and three walks while collecting six strikeouts. The 27-year-old right-hander will look to keep it going when he takes a 3.47 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, and an 87/22 K/BB ratio across 90 2/3 innings into a start against the Blue Jays in Seattle next Sunday.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #36
    Gilbert gave up seven hits, walked none and struck out seven. He fell to 6-5 with the loss. Gilbert was victimized by the Guardians in a three-run third inning. The 29-year-old right-hander allowed a base hit to four of the first five hitters in the inning. Cleveland would tack on another run in the fifth inning against Gilbert and that was enough to give the Guardians the win. His ERA is 3.42. Gilbert is lined up to face the Blue Jays at home next weekend.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #36
    We need to come up with a better term than piggybacking. Seriously. Gilbert takes the ball for a traditional start with Hancock doing the same for Sunday’s series finale. The decision pushes George Kirby back to Monday’s opener against the Angels. The whole Mariners rotation situation is challenging to understand and remains a massive headache for fantasy managers. There have to be some changes coming from a personnel standpoint after next month’s All-Star break because this seems too chaotic to work as a strategic approach for an extended period.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #36
    Gilbert has been outstanding as of late, while Hancock has scuffled over his past two outings. The Mariners will be rotating hurlers in their piggyback situation rather than going to a six-man rotation for the foreseeable future, and it’s less than ideal from a fantasy perspective.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #36
    Gilbert posted 18 whiffs on the day, which was more than any other starting pitcher on Sunday. He struck out eight and walked two while throwing 70 percent of his pitches for strikes. He had good command of everything but the slider today, and the slider was still able to post a solid 13 percent swinging strike rate. The curve and splitter missed plenty of bats in limited usage, and his four-seam fastball was up over one mph, averaging 96.8 mph. He’ll look to keep it going against the Guardians next week.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #26
    Hancock had a 2.70 ERA in his seven home starts this season before his latest mediocre effort tonight. He allowed a season high six runs to the Nationals last Sunday, and the five runs he gave up tonight are two more than he’d allowed in any of his previous starts in Seattle. He might be on his way to being droppable in mixed leagues, but he does have a relatively generous assignment next week in Cleveland against the José Ramírez-less Guardians.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #36
    Gilbert surrendered a run on two hits in the first inning. He then settled in nicely, dominating over six more shutout frames while collecting a season-high ten strikeouts on an impressive 19 whiffs. The 29-year-old right-hander will take a 3.43 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, and a 92/20 K/BB ratio across 86 2/3 innings into a start against the Red Sox in Seattle on Sunday.

Rotoworld

  • STL Relief Pitcher #47
    Player Stats
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Link copied to clipboard!

    Justin Bruihl was removed from Monday’s game against the Brewers with a left ankle sprain.

    It sounds like a potential injured list situation for Bruihl after he suffered the injury while recording the final out of the sixth inning during Monday’s contest. The 29-year-old southpaw has delivered a respectable 3.70 ERA across 41 1/3 innings this season in his Cardinals debut.
  • Link copied to clipboard!

    David Hamilton was removed from Monday’s game against the Cardinals with left hamstring tightness.

    Hamilton was lifted for a pinch-runner following a two-run double in the seventh inning that put Milwaukee ahead. He’ll undergo further evaluation to determine the severity of the issue. There should be an update on his status following the contest.
  • WSH Right Fielder #29
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    James Wood crushed a grand slam on Monday, leading the Nationals to a 12-11 victory over the Astros.

    Wood’s 446-foot grand slam off Astros reliever AJ Blubaugh traveled a staggering 446 feet to straightaway center field and gave Washington a commanding six-run lead that they wouldn’t relinquish. It was his 24th big fly of the year. He also walked three times and picked up his 14th stolen base of the season in this one. The 23-year-old rising star was named to his second consecutive All-Star Game over the weekend and continues to deliver first-round caliber fantasy value this season, hitting .268/.398/.541 with 81 runs scored, 24 homers, 60 RBI and 14 steals through 92 games.
  • HOU Center Fielder #0
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    Brice Matthews went 2-for-4 with a three-run homer in Monday’s loss to the Nationals.

    Matthews made things interesting with a three-run shot against Nationals reliever Cole Henry in the eighth inning that brought Houston within a single run at the time. It was his seventh big fly of the year and first time going deep since June 13.
  • WSH Shortstop #5
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    CJ Abrams went 3-for-5 with a three-run homer and a stolen base on Monday in a win over the Astros.

    Abrams took Houston starter Mike Burrows deep in the third inning for a game-tying homer to match his home run total from last season. He’s now one big fly shy of his previous career-high mark of 20 round-trippers set back in 2024. The 25-year-old speedster also picked up his 15th stolen base of the season in this one. He’s been arguable the most impactful fantasy shortstop this season with 19 homers, 64 RBI and 15 thefts through 88 games.
  • WSH 1st Baseman #45
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    Curtis Mead went 3-for-5 with a solo homer and three RBI on Monday in a win over the Astros.

    Mead put Washington ahead with a fifth-inning tater off Houston starter Mike Burrows. The 25-year-old former top prospect has put together a certifiable breakthrough campaign in his Nationals debut with a career-high 15 homers through 75 games.
  • WSH Relief Pitcher #39
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    Clayton Beeter recorded four outs on Monday against the Astros to collect his seventh save of the season.

    Beeter got the call to record the final out of the eighth inning, inducing a harmless ground ball from Jose Altuve. He came back out to face the heart of Houston’s lineup and spun an impressive perfect frame. He struck out Yordan Alvarez, got Isaac Paredes to ground out and coaxed a game-ending fly ball form Christian Walker. The 27-year-old appears to be the clear choice for saves in Washington heading into the All-Star break.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #36
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    Miles Mikolas was lit up for seven runs over six innings on Monday in a win over the Astros.

    Mikolas gave up nine hits, including a pair of homers. He struck out three and handed out a pair of free passes. He’s unlikely to take the ball again later this week as he’s facing a five-game suspension for his on-field actions during last week’s brawl with the Red Sox that will go into effect once the appeal process concludes. It’s possible he could start this weekend against the Yankees if his five-game ban is reduced on appeal. He’s obviously not a recommended fantasy option at this point.
  • HOU Starting Pitcher #50
    Player Stats
    Link copied to clipboard!

    Mike Burrows was charged with a season-high 10 runs — seven earned — over 4 1/3 innings on Monday in a loss to the Nationals.

    Burrows was staked to an early five-run lead and wound up giving it all back with a couple calamitous frames. He gave up a whopping nine hits, including a three-run homer to CJ Abrams and a solo shot to Curtis Mead. He struck out three and issued two walks. The unexpected implosion raises his full-season ERA from 5.58 to 5.99 across 94 2/3 innings. He’ll close out a two-start week with a road matchup against the Rangers on Sunday to put a bow on the first half of the season.
  • Link copied to clipboard!

    José Caballero launched two homers and tallied four RBI on Monday, lifting the Yankees to a 5-1 victory over the division-rival Rays.

    Caballero came back to haunt his former team with his first multi-homer performance of the season. He kicked things off by clobbering a tie-breaking three-run blast to left field off Rays starter Griffin Jax before adding a solo shot off reliever Chris Roycroft in the eighth. The versatile 29-year-old set a new career high, reaching double-digit homers for the first time since 2023. He has a legitimate shot at reaching both the 20-homer and 40-steal thresholds, which seemed unfathomable from a projection standpoint coming into the year.