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Rotoworld

  • MIN Starting Pitcher
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    Indians acquired RHP Loek Van Mil from the Angels for future cash considerations.
    Van Mil has registered an ugly 6.30 ERA and 1.70 WHIP in 10 innings this season at the Triple-A level. The 7-foot-1 right-hander may struggle to ever reach the bigs.
  • TEX 3rd Baseman #6
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    Josh Jung went 3-for-3 with a homer in the Rangers’ 12-3 rout of the Royals on Wednesday.
    Jung has nine total bases in two games since returning from an adductor strain that cost him 2 1/2 weeks. It’d certainly be great for the Rangers if he could bust out at age 26 after spending a fair amount of time on the IL in each of his first three full seasons. He hits the ball hard enough, and now he just needs to get his strikeout rate down some. It didn’t really happen last year, but his contact numbers were easily the best of his career.
    Fantasy pitchers to look out for after WBC Final
    Eric Samulski reacts to Venezuela's 3-2 win over the U.S. in the World Baseball Classic and highlights players to look out for in fantasy, including pitchers Eduardo Rodriguez, Nolan McLean and Daniel Palencia.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #80
    Kumar Rocker turned in four innings of one-run ball and struck out six versus the Royals on Wednesday.
    We were rather hoping Rocker might emerge as the Rangers’ closer at some point, but he’s making a strong case for a rotation spot right now. He topped out at 98.5 mph tonight, and his average fastball was up a bit more than one mph from last year. His slider generated nine whiffs on 12 swings, and both times it was put into play, it resulted in soft contact. He still doesn’t project as a mixed-league option at this point, but his stock is climbing.
  • KC Starting Pitcher #52
    Michael Wacha lost to the Rangers after giving up five runs in 3 1/3 innings on Wednesday.
    He allowed six hits, walked one and struck out four. Wacha’s four spring outings have produced an 8.44 ERA, and he gave up three runs in three innings in his lone WBC appearance for Team USA. On the brightside, he had a 7.64 ERA last spring and still opened up with a 2.98 ERA in his first eight starts.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #53
    Carlos Estévez walked three in a scoreless inning against the Rangers on Wednesday.
    Something just isn’t right here, though Estévez keeps pitching anyway. His average fastball was 89.2 mph tonight, down from 95.9 mph last year. His best outing so far saw him average 90.8 mph for the Dominican Republic against Team Israel. He’s been under 90 mph in all three outings in Royals camp. Obviously, he’s not complaining of anything, but it seems like a good idea to stay far away from him in drafts. Lucas Erceg, on the other hand, is worth a late-round pick, even though he hasn’t looked particularly strong himself this spring.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #25
    Matt Strahm is day-to-day with a leg contusion after getting hit by a comebacker Wednesday.
    Strahm was charged with a run after departing the game against the Rangers. He has a 3.38 ERA in six appearances this spring.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #54
    Max Fried will start on Opening Day against the Giants.
    It’s merely a formality as Fried will get the ball to kick off the regular season next Wednesday at Oracle Park in San Francisco with both Gerrit Cole (elbow) and Carlos Rodón (elbow) opening on the injured list. The 32-year-old southpaw was outstanding in his Yankees debut last year, posting an American League-leading 19 wins along with a 2.86 ERA across 195 1/3 innings over 32 starts. He’s a top 10-12 range fantasy starter in drafts this spring.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #54
    Royals optioned RHP Mitch Spence to Triple-A Omaha.
    Spence was a long shot to crack Kansas City’s season-opening roster this spring. He’ll open the year back in the upper minors after being acquired from the Athletics in a small trade earlier this spring. The 27-year-old holds a respectable 4.77 ERA (4.67 xERA), 1.40 WHIP and 192/70 K/BB ratio across 236 innings in the majors since 2024.
  • AZ Center Fielder #5
    Alek Thomas launched his first spring homer Wednesday off Edward Cabrera in the Diamondbacks’ 16-8 takedown of the Cubs.
    Interestingly, the Diamondbacks had Thomas in center and played Jordan Lawlar in left field for the first time today. Thomas is definitely Arizona’s safer option in center, but it has sounded like Lawlar was going get a chance to start there in the regular season. It has ramifications down the line, since the D-backs seem confident Lourdes Gurriel Jr. is going to make an earlier return from a torn ACL than originally expected. Of course, the D-backs could just use Gurriel primarily as a DH and keep playing both Lawlar and Thomas in the outfield.
  • AZ Starting Pitcher #29
    Making his second spring start after missing time with nerve issues in his back, Merrill Kelly allowed two runs and five hits over 2 2/3 innings Wednesday against the Cubs.
    With his velocity down 1-2 mph, Kelly got just one whiff on 23 swings today and finished with zero strikeouts. He’s due to pitch again Monday and then go on the injured list as he continues to get stretched out. He should still join the Arizona rotation two weeks into the season.
  • CHC Starting Pitcher #30
    Edward Cabrera was lit up for eight runs — seven earned — in three-plus innings by the Diamondbacks on Wednesday.
    The bottom of the first opened right away with a Matt Shaw error, leading to an unearned run. Cabrera sustained no additional damage through the second, but he gave up three runs in a third inning in which he was pulled with two outs and then four more while getting just one out in the fourth. The good news is that Cabrera walked only one. The bad is that his fastball averaged just 95.5 mph, down from 96.6 mph in his first three spring starts and 97.0 mph last year. His sinkers were closer to normal, averaging 96.8 mph, but his changeups were off by 1.8 mph from last year. Hopefully, it’s not a sign that something is wrong with the oft-injured right-hander.