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

MLB Player News

Rotoworld

  • ATH Relief Pitcher
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Athletics sent LHP Jay Marshall outright to Triple-A Sacramento.
    Marshall, who was claimed by Boston in October and then reclaimed by Oakland last week, cleared waivers on his third try. He’ll be invited to camp as a non-roster player.
  • FA 3rd Baseman #5
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Independent journalist Francys Romero reports that several teams have expressed interest in signing free agent infielder Yoán Moncada.
    Romero notes that the Angels, Pirates, White Sox and Blue Jays have all inquired on the veteran infielder. The former top prospect spent the 2025 season with the Halos where he slashed .234/.336/.448 with 12 long balls, 35 RBI and a 75/32 K/BB ratio across 289 plate appearances in his 84 games. Wherever he ultimately signs, it’s likely to be in a reserve role and Moncada won’t have much value from a fantasy perspective.
    Red Sox land first baseman Contreas from Cardinals
    With the Boston Red Sox swinging a big trade for St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Willson Contreas, Eric Samulski breaks down the deal for both sides and the fantasy baseball significance of the move.
  • CLE Relief Pitcher #60
    Guardians signed RHP Pedro Avila to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    It’s a split contract for the 28-year-old hurler, who will earn a larger salary if he cracks the Guardians’ roster at any point during the 2026 campaign. Avila spent the 2025 season pitching for the Yakult Swallows of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball. There, he registered a 3.33 ERA, 1.21 WHIP and a 74/42 K/BB ratio across 102 2/3 innings in 21 appearances.
  • STL Right Fielder #41
    Cardinals president Chaim Bloom said earlier this week that Alec Burleson is expected to move to first base next season.
    Burleson figures to move to the cold corner full-time next season after the Cardinals shipped Willson Contreras to the Red Sox earlier this week. The 27-year-old hit .279/.328/.439 with 39 homers, 147 RBI and 14 steals in 291 games over the past two seasons. He’s a decent bet to reach the 20-homer plateau with double-digit steals and a respectable batting average. That makes him a borderline mixed-league starter at first base, especially in deeper formats, heading into drafts next spring.
  • CIN Center Fielder #54
    Reds acquired OF Dane Myers from the Reds for OF Ethan O’Donnell.
    There was no avenue for Myers to play regularly next season in Miami with Kyle Stowers and Jakob Marsee emerging as core building blocks and Griffin Conine coming back from shoulder surgery. The 29-year-old, who posted a pedestrian .617 OPS with six homers and 19 steals over 333 plate appearances across 106 games for the Marlins last season, provides the Reds with a decent insurance policy behind center fielder TJ Friedl. He’ll enter spring training in competition with Will Benson and JJ Bleday for a corner-outfield role, with a bench assignment the most probable outcome.
    Stay up to date with the MLB free agent market this offseason, including player signings, contract details, and team fits as the 2025-26 Hot Stove heats up.
  • MIA Center Fielder
    Marlins acquired OF Ethan O’Donnell from the Reds for OF Dane Myers.
    O’Donnell heads to Miami after batting .236/.327/.325 with seven homers and 20 steals across 503 plate appearances over 125 games at Double-A Chattanooga last year. The 23-year-old outfielder was Cincinnati’s sixth-round selection in the 2023 MLB Draft out of the University of Virginia. He fits the profile of the kind of low-probability gamble rebuilding clubs can afford to make — a bet on upside, where above-average speed gives him a plausible path to becoming an everyday center fielder down the line.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #72
    Reds designated RHP Lyon Richardson for assignment.
    Richardson loses his spot on Cincinnati’s 40-man roster after the club finalized a trade for center fielder Dane Myers. The 25-year-old righty posted a serviceable 4.54 ERA – 4.06 FIP – and 30/21 K/BB ratio across 37 2/3 innings over a career-high 34 appearances this past season at the big-league level. He should attract some interest on waivers as a middle relief depth pickup.
  • INT Starting Pitcher #35
    Kohei Arihara has signed a four-year, $15.4 million contract with the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball.
    Arihara flirted with the idea of a potential return to the majors earlier this offseason. However, that speculation seems in retrospect linked to generating additional leverage during negotiations for a lucrative multi-year deal to remain in Japan. At 33 years old, it seems highly unlikely that he’ll return to the majors at some point down the road. He made 15 appearances (14 starts) for the Rangers from 2021-2022, finishing with a lackluster 7.57 ERA across 60 2/3 innings of work.
  • NYY Right Fielder
    Yankees signed OF Nick Torres to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Torres hasn’t appeared in affiliated ball since 2018, when he logged 25 games at the Triple-A level. The 32-year-old reigning Mexican League MVP earned the hardware after slashing a video-game esque .347/.425/.730 with 27 homers across 86 games for Algodoneros de Unión Laguna. He’s likely to open next season at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and represents a pure zero-risk lottery ticket for the Yankees.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #56
    The Cubs are signing reliever Hunter Harvey, reports The Athletic’s Will Sammon and Sahadev Sharma.
    Chicago continues fortifying its bullpen with Harvey becoming the latest experience high-leverage arm entering the stable. The 31-year-old is more of a lottery ticket after being limited to just 12 appearances due to adductor and shoulder issues this past season with the Royals. He holds a strong 3.11 ERA — 3.16 FIP — and 26.8 percent strikeout rate across 185 innings since 2019. He projects as an impact late-inning arm for the Cubs, with the only real question being whether his health allows him to play a significant role.
  • CIN Center Fielder #33
    Reds signed OF JJ Bleday to a one-year, $1.4 million contract.
    The deal is now official. Bleday heads to Cincinnati as a relatively low-risk reclamation project after being non-tendered by the Athletics last month with top prospects Denzel Clarke and Colby Thomas taking over in center field with Tyler Soderstrom and Lawrence Butler in the corners. The 28-year-old former top-five pick figures to compete with Will Benson in spring training for playing time in a platoon role for the Reds next season. At a bare minimum, he’ll occupy a bench role as an insurance policy behind TJ Friedl in center field. His fantasy appeal is strictly limited to NL-only formats based on his pedestrian plate skills and lack of stolen base upside. He’s an extremely streaky hot-and-cold power hitter that will have stretches of fantasy relevance, especially in Cincinnati’s favorable offensive environment.