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  • SEA Starting Pitcher
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    Rangers released RHP Cody Buckel.
    Buckel was ranked a top-100 prospect by MLB.com back in 2013, but he had dreadful showings in 2014 and 2015. The right-hander will turn 24 years old in June.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #22
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    Jack Leiter allowed five earned runs over five innings while striking out three in Friday’s loss to the Red Sox.
    Leiter ran into trouble early in this one. After walking the first batter of the game, Cedanne Rafaela would later reach on a fielder’s choice and then come around to score on a sacrifice fly by Wilyer Abreu. Willson Contreras would hit a solo homer in the next at-bat to put the Red Sox up 2-1. Leiter would settle in to pitch three straight scoreless frames after that, but surrendered four more runs in the fifth inning. Leiter’s night would end after that, as the Red Sox did enough to spoil what was otherwise a decent outing for the righty. Leiter has now allowed five earned runs in back-to-back games and has struggled to get through the fifth inning in both of those starts. We’ll see if he can turn it around in his next start, which is scheduled for Thursday against the Twins.
    'Fire up' Skubal after quick recovery from injury
    Returning from a remarkably quick recovery timeline, Tarik Skubal takes the mound once again this weekend. James Schiano shares what fantasy managers should expect from one of the game's true aces.
  • SD 1st Baseman #30
    Gavin Sheets went 2-for-4 with a double and two RBI on Friday evening as the Padres fell to the Orioles in Baltimore.
    Sheets got the Padres on the board first with an RBI double off of Shane Baz in the top half of the first. He then capped off the scoring in the ballgame with an RBI single in the fifth. The 30-year-old is now hitting .230/.317/.449 with 10 homers, 29 RBI and three stolen bases in 221 plate appearances on the season.
  • MIA Left Fielder #28
    Kyle Stowers went 2-for-4 with a run scored and an RBI in Miami’s win over the Pirates on Friday.
    It’s Stowers’ first multi-hit game of the month — the power has still mostly been there for Stowers this year, but he’s hitting .220 on the season and his expected batting average of .228 isn’t screaming fluke. The strikeout rate has climbed back to the 30 percent range and his barrel rate has fallen from 19.1 percent in 2025 to just 8.8 percent this year. In other words: He’s not a must-roster player in shallow leagues at this point, even if he is hitting in the middle of Miami’s lineup.
  • SD Starting Pitcher #17
    Griffin Canning was hit hard during Friday’s loss to the Orioles, surrendering seven runs on six hits in his five innings of work.
    Canning also issued five walks on the evening while striking out six. The Orioles got to him early in this one, as Samuel Basallo blasted a two-run homer as part of a three-run first inning. They added another pair in the second before Gunnar Henderson swatted a solo homer in the fourth. Canning generated eight swings and misses on 93 pitches on the day, posting a CSW of 32 percent. He now sports an unsightly 7.17 ERA, 1.57 WHIP and a 39/22 K/BB ratio over 37 2/3 innings in eight starts with the Padres this season. He’ll try once again to earn his first victory when he takes on the Cardinals in St. Louis on Wednesday.
  • MIA Starting Pitcher #22
    Sandy Alcantara pitched eight innings and picked up his sixth win against the Pirates on Friday, allowing three earned runs and striking out seven.
    Strong work from the veteran in lowering his ERA to 4.25. Alcantara did allow a pair of solo homers — one to Endy Rodríguez and another to Brandon Lowe late as the score was out of hand — but continued to pump gas as he averaged 98.1 mph on the fastball. The whiff rates continue to be pretty low and batters simply aren’t chasing anything against him anymore, but Alcantara gives the Marlins length and should be in line for plenty of wins if the Marlins can put up runs like this. He’ll get a matchup against the Phillies next week.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #32
    Rockies’ manager Warren Schaeffer confirmed Friday that right-hander Chase Dollander (elbow) is likely heading for surgery to repair his UCL.
    Whether that winds up being the full Tommy John surgery or the internal brace procedure remains to be seen, but it sounds like we have seen the last of Dollander for 2026. He still has an appointment on the books in the coming days in which that decision will likely be made. He shouldn’t be expected back until the second half of the 2027 season.
  • CLE Catcher #16
    Patrick Bailey went 2-for-3 with a run scored and an RBI on Friday night, propelling the Guardians to a 3-2 victory over the visiting Tigers.
    Bailey opened the scoring in the ballgame with an RBI single off of Jack Flaherty in the second inning. He then raced around to score on Brayan Rocchio’s RBI triple. With his two-hit attack, the 27-year-old backstop is now hitting a cringe-inducing .165/.222/.248 with just two homers and 10 RBI in 144 plate appearances. For at least one night though, Bailey got to feel like an integral part of the Guardians’ offense on Friday.
  • CLE Shortstop #4
    Brayan Rocchio went 1-for-3 and smacked an RBI triple on Friday night, helping to lead the Guardians to a one-run victory over the Tigers.
    Rocchio drove in Patrick Bailey with his run-scoring triple off of Jack Flaherty in the second inning, extending the Guardians’ early lead to 2-0. That would be his only hit in three at-bats on the evening. For the season, the 25-year-old shortstop is slashing a solid .277/.357/.405 with five homers, 32 RBI and 11 stolen bases.
  • PIT Starting Pitcher #35
    Braxton Ashcraft pitched five innings and struck out four while allowing two earned runs in a no-decision against the Marlins.
    He left with the score knotted at two, but Pittsburgh’s bullpen allowed six earned runs in the final three innings to make this a laugher. Miami was sitting on his fastballs, getting five of their seven hard-hit balls against Ashcraft’s sinker and 4-seamer. Nothing under the hood is all that concerning about this outing and Ashcraft has earned the benefit of the doubt with his strong start to the year, as his ERA sits at 3.30 in 14 starts. Still, facing the Sacramento A’s on the road is not exactly an easy matchup next week.
  • CLE Relief Pitcher #36
    Cade Smith slammed the door on the Tigers in the ninth inning on Friday night, retiring all three hitters that he faced to preserve a one-run advantage.
    Smith notched his 22nd save of the season for his efforts. The 27-year-old flame-thrower got Gleyber Torres on a ground ball to second base, Riley Greene on a swinging third strike and Dillon Dingler on a fly ball to left to end it, needing just 13 pitches (10 strikes) to get the job done. He now boasts a 2.59 ERA, 1.02 WHIP and a 47/5 K/BB ratio over 31 1/3 innings on the season while converting 22 of his first 24 save chances.