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Rotoworld

  • MIA Starting Pitcher
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    Dustin Moseley held the Brewers to one run on four hits over four innings of work Thursday.
    He recorded a pair of strikeouts. Moseley wasn’t so good in his first spring outing, but he’s now given up just one run over his last seven frames while sporting a 5/0 K/BB ratio. He posted a 3.30 ERA and 64/36 K/BB ratio over 120 innings last season and could be a decent plug-and-play fantasy option for home starts.
  • BAL Relief Pitcher #49
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    Orioles designated RHP Albert Suárez for assignment.
    It was assumed that 27th man Grant Wolfram would be returned to Triple-A after Sunday’s doubleheader, but he’ll stick around and Suárez will go back on waivers for the third time this season. Suárez pitched four scoreless innings today, giving him a 2.75 ERA in 19 2/3 innings over the course of seven relief appearances.
    HLs: Angels walk off Rangers after Detmers dazzles
    The Angels used Reid Detmers' masterclass, some well-timed offense and a few good breaks to complete their first sweep of the 2026 season in a 2-1 win over their AL West-rival Texas Rangers.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #22
    Foster Griffin earned the win on Sunday in Atlanta, tossing six scoreless while striking out six.
    Griffin allowed three hits and one walk, lowering his ERA to 3.63 on the year. He began the season on an unsustainable pace before allowing 14 earned runs in his past two starts. Then he blanked one of baseball’s best offenses in their own park. Griffin’s ERA is now right in line with his 3.75 xFIP, and he next lines up for a home start versus the Padres.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #33
    Martín Pérez took the loss on Sunday against the Nationals, allowing one earned run on five hits over 5 2/3 innings.
    Pérez struck out two and walked two. His top-prospect days are well behind him at 35 years old, but he’s managed to carve out quite the sustainable career following some early struggles. The soft-tossing southpaw will be a difficult start in Cincinnati next time out.
  • WSH Right Fielder #29
    James Wood went 0-for-2 with two walks, a run scored, and a stolen base as the Nationals defeated the Braves on Sunday.
    The theft was his eighth of the season. While Wood’s stolen-base attempt rate is slightly below last year, he’s making up for it with extra times on base. He’s also been more efficient on the base paths. He’s currently 8-for-9 after going 15-for-22 last year. He’s becoming a true fantasy superstar in his age-23 campaign.
  • ATL 2nd Baseman #1
    Ozzie Albies picked up three singles and scored a run as the Braves fell to the Nationals 2-1 on Sunday.
    Albies has been the team’s everyday cleanup hitter this week following the return of Ronald Acuña Jr. The second baseman has one of the highest wRC+ marks of his career, though he finishes the afternoon just 14% better than league average. It’s still a bounce-back from the past two years. The only flaw in his roto profile this year is that he hasn’t yet stolen a base and has been caught three times.
  • LAA 2nd Baseman #2
    Oswald Peraza singled and was at the plate for the Angels’ game-winning run in a 2-1 win over the Rangers on Sunday Night Baseball.
    Peraza was the awkward hero tonight. With runners on first and second and one out in a tie game in the bottom of the ninth, he hit a weak line-drive one-hopper right to the second baseman for what looked like a particularly easy double play. Justin Foscue, though, bobbled the ball while taking it out of his glove after touching second and made a poor throw that Jake Burger couldn’t handle at first. As the ball bounced away from Burger, Jo Adell scored from second, creating a strange end to a fun pitcher’s duel. It went as a forceout and an error on Foscue, though Burger definitely deserved a share of the blame as well.
  • LAA Starting Pitcher #48
    Reid Detmers was brilliant in a no-decision Sunday, striking out 14 while allowing one run and one hit over eight innings against the Rangers.
    Jake Burger hit a homer to start the second inning, but aside from that, Detmers retired all 24 batters he faced. He’s the first pitcher this year to retire 21 in a row in a game, and his 14 strikeouts matched the MLB season high for a pitcher, which was established by Seattle’s Emerson Hancock against the Royals on May 2. Detmers previous high for strikeouts was 12, which he’d done four times. It’s the ninth time in his career that he’s pitched at least seven innings and allowed no more than one earned run. Four of those have come against the Rangers. Detmers, currently 1-5 with a 4.57 ERA, will face the Rays next.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #1
    MacKenzie Gore allowed one run and one hit over six innings Sunday in a no-decision against the Angels.
    On the night, Gore walked two and allowed a single, but unfortunately for him, that happened in a four-batter sequence in the third, with Mike Trout driving in the run. Gore, who left his last start with lat tightness, threw 99 pitches tonight and ended up with seven strikeouts and 17 whiffs. His ERA is back down to 4.42, and he’s slated to make his next start Friday versus the Royals.
  • LAA Shortstop #9
    Zach Neto struck out all four times up against the Rangers on Sunday.
    Things got even worse late in the game, as Neto got banged up on a diving play at shortstop. He was able to stay in the game, though. Neto came into the night 4-for-7 with two homers in the series against Texas. It was his second four-strikeout game of the year.
  • TEX Designated Hitter #4
    Andrew McCutchen went 0-for-3 before being lifted for a pinch-hitter Sunday night against the Angels.
    McCutchen is 6-for-37 with no RBI over the last month, leaving him at .200/.288/.271 for the year. He also has some of the worst contact and exit velocity numbers of his career at age 39. Unfortunately, it seems like it’s going to be really difficult for the Rangers to stick with him for much longer.