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Rotoworld

  • MIA 1st Baseman #29
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    The Twins selected OF/1B Chris Parmelee with the 20th overall pick in the 2006 draft.
    The owner of elite left-hander power, Parmalee immediately becomes one of Minnesota’s top hitting prospects. He’ll likely end up at first base or in left field due to a lack of athleticism, but his bat could make him an impact fantasy player down the road.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
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    Tanner Bibee (shoulder) will start on Tuesday against the Dodgers.
    Bibee completed a 26-pitch bullpen session over the weekend without any issues and has been cleared to take the ball against the two-time defending World Series champions in Los Angeles. It’s such a tough matchup that fantasy managers were likely already considering alternatives this week. The positive news is that Bibee won’t require a trip to the injured list.
    Look to add Mariners SP Hancock off waiver wires
    Eric Samulski reacts to Emerson Hancock's "impressive" season debut for the Seattle Mariners against the Cleveland Guardians and breaks down how he looks like a "different version" of himself in his first start.
  • HOU Relief Pitcher #52
    Bryan Abreu’s diminished velocity on Sunday was the result of a mechanical issue, according to Astros manager Joe Espada.
    “We spotted a few things and we’ll be able to get him back on track here for his next outing,” Espada told reporters on Monday. He also confirmed that Abreu isn’t dealing with any physical issues, which is an encouraging development. The 28-year-old high-leverage specialist, who is filling in for injured Astros closer Josh Hader (biceps), averaged just 93.2 mph on his fastball during Sunday’s outing against the Angels in a save situation after averaging 97.3 mph last year. He was ultimately pulled in favor of lefty Bryan King after issuing a pair of walks and recording only one out. It doesn’t sound like the Astros are overly concerned. King would be the clear stash for fantasy managers in the event that Abreu doesn’t turn things around.
  • PHI Manager
    Rob Thomson was ejected from Monday’s game against the Nationals.
    Thomson was served an automatic ejection for arguing a first-inning call that was overturned by replay review. The Phillies were trailing 4-0 already when he was booted from the contest. It’s worth noting here because the challenge extended Joey Wiemer’s remarkable on-base streak to nine consecutive plate appearances.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #99
    Spencer Strider (oblique) is expected to face hitters in a live batting practice session within the next week.
    Strider remains without a definitive return timeline after hitting the injured list at the conclusion of spring training with an oblique strain. The polarizing 27-year-old former fantasy ace will need at least a handful of minor league rehab starts to build up his pitch count and stamina before he’s ready to rejoin Atlanta’s injury-ravaged rotation. It’s possible he’ll be ready by the end of April, but that might be an optimistic assumption.
  • KC Starting Pitcher #50
    Kris Bubic limited the Twins to one run and two hits over six innings to secure the win in the Royals’ 3-1 victory Monday.
    Matt Wallner’s homer accounted for the only damage, even though Bubic surrendered seven other hard-hit balls, walked three and threw a wild pitch. Fortunately, he was facing a Twins lineup that figures to have problems against lefties all season long. Bubic finished with four strikeouts, generating 12 whiffs on 34 swings. He will make another start at home this weekend against the Brewers.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #46
    John Schreiber protected a two-run lead in the ninth Monday against the Twins for his 13th career save.
    Lucas Erceg and Matt Strahm were both given the day off after pitching the last two days, and Carlos Estévez went unused, presumably due to his ankle injury. Those are supposed to be the Royals’ top three relievers, but the team still got scoreless innings from Daniel Lynch IV, Nick Mears and Schreiber to finish off the Twins. Erceg figures to be the choice to close if the Royals have another save chance Wednesday after the odd day Tuesday.
  • MIN Starting Pitcher #24
    Simeon Woods Richardson allowed two runs over five innings Monday in a loss to the Royals.
    He gave up five hits, walked one and struck out two. Woods Richardson has shown himself over the last two years to be perfectly competent at pitching five innings at a time, but he just hasn’t demonstrated much upside beyond that, and given that the Twins have a mediocre offense and seemingly a well below average bullpen, pitching five solid innings at a time doesn’t figure to produce many wins. He’ll make his next start Sunday against the Rays.
  • KC Center Fielder #28
    Kyle Isbel went 2-for-3 with a two-run homer versus the Twins in Monday’s victory.
    Isbel settled for just four homers in 135 games last season, but he’s already on the board this year after taking Simeon Woods Richardson deep. And it even came with a man on base! Isbel hit a respectable .272/.314/.386 with the bases empty last year, but that dropped all of the way to .229/.279/.300 with runners on. It’s been an issue throughout his career, which is why he entered the day with just 144 career RBI in 1,516 plate appearances over 498 games.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #70
    Justin Wrobleski will be available to pitch in a bulk relief situation on Monday against the Guardians, reports The Athletic’s Katie Woo.
    Woo adds that the Dodgers haven’t explicitly stated it publicly, but the expectation is that Wrobleski will be ready to pick up the slack, if Sasaki struggles out of the gate in his season debut. The lack of a clear-cut rotation spot limits Wrobleski’s appeal to extremely deep mixed leagues and NL-only formats, but there’s some definite win potential pitching the middle innings with Los Angeles’ loaded lineup providing run support.
  • SD Relief Pitcher #40
    Jason Adam (quad) will face hitters on Tuesday in a simulated game.
    It was a bit of a surprise when Adam hit the injured list at the end of spring training considering he looked sharp in a handful of late-spring relief outings coming off last year’s quad surgery. He’ll make a couple appearances for Double-A San Antonio later this week before presumably heading to San Diego to make his season debut.