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  • ATH Relief Pitcher #80
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    Athletics signed LHP Donnie Hart to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    The 29-year-old Hart spent most of last season at the Triple-A level between the Mets and Brewers. Still, he’s enjoyed some success in the past and makes sense as a depth addition from the left side.
  • MIN Center Fielder #25
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    Byron Buxton went 2-for-4 with two solo home runs and a walk on Wednesday against the Marlins.
    When Buxton is hot, he gets really, really hot. This pair of home runs gave him 15 on the season. Seven of those have come in the 11 games he’s played in May. Zoom back a little bit further, and he has 10 over his last 15 games. Stretch it back a little bit further again, and all 15 of Buxton’s home runs have come in his last 26 games. That power surge has tied him with Munetaka Murakami for the third-most long balls in the league while Aaron Judge and Kyle Schwarber are the only hitters with more.
    Twins' Ober worth streaming in 'right matchups'
    Though he's fresh off a complete game shutout, Bailey Ober's underlying metrics suggest he shouldn't be relied on as a set-and-forget fantasy start, but rather as a streamer in ideal matchups.
  • MIN Starting Pitcher #24
    Simeon Woods-Richardson allowed seven hits and eight runs – six earned – with four walks and one strikeouts across three-plus innings in a loss to the Marlins on Wednesday.
    It’s another day that ends in “y” and another awful outing for Woods-Richardson. The Marlins had a run on the board against him before he recorded an out, partially due to an error, and he never settled in. After the Twins tried to stretch him through the fourth inning, he let the first four batters of the inning reach safely, was yanked, and both inherited runners he left came around to score. This latest blowup pushed him to an abhorrent 7.71 ERA on the season with 20 strikeouts and 20 walks through 42 innings. The Twins are likely thinking about anyone in the organization that could possibly take his rotation spot.
  • ATH 1st Baseman #16
    Nick Kurtz had a grand slam and a double Wednesday in the Athletics’ 6-2 victory over the Cardinals.
    The slam off Matthew Liberatore was Kurtz’s third in 15 career at-bats with the bases loaded. It was also his first homer in 63 plate appearances against lefties this season. He’s previously gone 7-for-43 with two RBI in his 12 games in which the opposition started a lefty. Fortunately, he’s done plenty of damage against righties along the way, and he’s currently sporting a .267/.418/.453 line for the year.
  • ATH Starting Pitcher #35
    Despite allowing nine hits, J.T. Ginn limited the Cardinals to an unearned run over six innings to win Wednesday.
    Ginn gave up at least one hit each inning, but eight were singles and only four came on hard-hit balls. He induced a double play ball in the first, and the Cardinals went on to make outs on the basepaths in the fourth and sixth. Ginn, who opened 0-1 in five starts and three relief appearances, has pitched 14 innings with one earned run allowed while winning his last two starts. He’ll take his next turn in Anaheim against the Angels. It’s a two-start week, as he’ll also face the Padres on the road, but he’d make for a risky streaming pick.
  • ATH Relief Pitcher #50
    Jack Perkins worked a scoreless ninth with a four-run lead to finish off the Cardinals on Wednesday.
    It’s obviously not a save, but it would have been one if the A’s hadn’t expanded their lead from three runs to four in the bottom of the eighth. The ninth is wide open again in Sacramento after Perkins blew his most recent opportunity on May 6, but he’s clearly still very much in the mix after having gone 3-for-3 last month.
  • STL Starting Pitcher #32
    Matthew Liberatore surrendered four runs and nine hits in five innings Wednesday in a loss to the A’s.
    Liberatore’s velocity was a little better than usual tonight and he had great success in amassing a 58 percent CSW on the 19 curveballs he threw, but thanks to Nick Kurtz’s grand slam in the fifth, the results just weren’t there in the end. The loss leaves him 2-2 with a 4.40 ERA. That’s not much different than his 4.21 ERA from last year, but his strikeout and walk rates are both significantly worse now than they were then. If he’s just going to be a fifth starter, it might be worth dropping his changeup and cutter and taking another look at him as a reliever at some point.
  • ATH Center Fielder
    Henry Bolte went 2-for-2 with a sac fly and a walk in his major league debut Wednesday against the Cardinals.
    Both of his singles came on grounders, one hard and one soft. That was probably to be expected from a guy with a 58 percent groundball rate in Triple-A. Being tied for the highest batting average of all-time (although not the highest OBP of all-time) should earn Bolte another start Thursday against righty Michael McGreevy. He’s only guaranteed to play against lefties after getting the call Tuesday, but the A’s definitely need to see if they can catch lightning in a bottle here.
  • STL Center Fielder #11
    Victor Scott II went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts before being lifted for a pinch-hitter Wednesday against the Athletics.
    If Lars Nootbaar can pull off a successful comeback later this month, Scott is probably going to find himself in Triple-A for a spell. He’s hitting just .178/.243/.228, dropping his career line to .202/.277/.283. He’s even disappointed a bit on the basepaths, getting caught on three of his nine steal attempts. Last year, he was 34-for-38.
  • NYM Right Fielder #3
    Carson Benge went 3-for-5 with a walk-off single plus a stolen base and was caught stealing as well in a 3-2 win over the Tigers on Wednesday.
    Benge had his finger prints all over this game for a variety of different reasons. First, he misjudged a line drive from Colt Keith amidst heavy winds at Citi Field that clanked off his glove, turned into a double, and set-up a two-run first inning for the Tigers. Then, he knocked a couple singles and stood at third base as the go-ahead run in the seventh. The Mets ran a cheeky first and third double steal, but Benge hesitated every so slightly and was thrown out at the plate. Finally, he stepped to the plate in the 10th inning and poked a walk-off single up the middle. After a disastrous first two weeks of his career, Benge has maintained a .271 batting average over his last 30 games and found some more power lately with an .817 OPS over his last 15 games. He’s also hit lead-off in two straight games, including here against a left-handed pitcher. It’s officially time to put him back on our radars.
  • NYM Starting Pitcher #45
    Christian Scott allowed seven hits and two runs with two walks and five strikeouts across 4 2/3 innings in a no-decision against the Tigers on Wednesday.
    It was a grind for Scott in nearly every inning he pitched, but he dug deep to hold the Tigers to just two runs. Both scored in the first inning after heavy wind blew a line drive from Mets’ right fielder Carson Benge before Riley Greene knocked a liner over a drawn-in infield. Why the infield would be in during the first inning is a valid question, but Scott stopped the bleeding right there. The Tigers struggled to square him up, but he also struggled to put hitters away. Especially left-handers as Scott continues to search for the splitter that was supposed to be his new weapon against them. Nevertheless, his fastball, sweeper, and cutter are all nasty and keep him at least mildly effective on most nights. He’s scheduled for a two-start week coming up against the Nationals and Marlins.