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Rotoworld

  • INT Relief Pitcher #66
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    Dovydas Neverauskas has signed with the Hiroshima Toyo Carp of Nippon Professional Baseball.
    He’ll net a $625,000 salary and a $250,000 bonus, per Sports Hochi. Neverauskas holds a career 6.81 ERA over parts of four major league seasons.

  • FA 1st Baseman #20
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    The Orioles and Pete Alonso are finalizing a five-year, $155 million contract, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan.
    The Orioles finally did it. Matching the Phillies’ five-year, $150 million offer to Kyle Schwarber didn’t work out, but the Mets probably weren’t similarly motivated to pay Alonso quite this much, at least not for so long. The 31-year-old Alonso is coming off perhaps his most impressive season since his rookie campaign, having hit .272/.347/.524 with 38 homers and 126 RBI. His average exit velocity off the bat was 93.5 mph, which is about four mph ahead of where he was from 2022-24, and his .385 xwOBA was a career high. His 89 barrels were 23 more than he’d ever collected before. With Alonso slotting in at first base, one imagines the Orioles will seek to move Ryan Mountcastle and Coby Mayo, though it’s possible they could keep one as a DH option.
    Schwarber remains elite power source with new deal
    Eric Samulski unpacks ripple effects from Kyle Schwarber reportedly returning to the Phillies on a five-year, $150M contract, sharing why the deal should "age well" and bode well for fantasy purposes.
  • COL Center Fielder #9
    The Padres, Mets, Phillies and Yankees are among the teams to have inquired about the Rockies’ Brenton Doyle, a source told 7News’s Ari Alexander.
    The Rockies might be selling low on Doyle to move him now after a tough season in which he dealt with a family tragedy, but there’s still evidentially a pretty strong market for a 27-year-old who rates as one of the game’s top defensive center fielders and who flashed some legitimate offensive potential in 2024. It’d still might make more sense to keep him; he’s four years away from free agency and the organization doesn’t have anyone else capable of handling center field in Coors.
  • TOR Right Fielder #38
    The Blue Jays are considering dealing from their outfield depth to address their bullpen, The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal reports.
    Nathan Lukes, Myles Straw and Joey Loperfido are the names being mentioned. Lukes, who played a big role in the Jays’ postseason run, currently tops the team’s depth chart in left field, but expectations are that the Jays will add a bat, turning him back into a bench player (if it’s an infielder, then Addison Barger would likely start in the outfield). Straw was also a key bench guy last season, so the team would surely prefer to move Loperfido, all things being equal. Still, it’s unclear what kind of trade value Loperfido currently possesses; he’s not hopeless, but he wouldn’t seem to project as a regular at this point.
  • COL Relief Pitcher #44
    Jimmy Herget, who threw 83 1/3 innings out of the Rockies’ pen last season, will be tried as a starting pitcher next spring.
    The 32-year-old Herges hasn’t been a starter since his Junior year at the University of South Florida in 2015. The Reds made him a sixth-round pick that year and immediately moved him to the pen in the minors. He was outstanding for the Rockies last season, finishing with a 2.48 ERA and an 81/26 K/BB over 59 appearances. Even if the transition goes well, he certainly doesn’t figure to offer any fantasy value.
  • FA Right Fielder #60
    Twins released OF Carson McCusker.
    McCusker is going to play in Asia next year, according to The Athletic’s Dan Hayes. The 27-year-old made his major league debut last season, going 5-for-30 with no extra-base hits and a 16/1 K/BB. He hit .246/.316/.479 with a 34% strikeout rate in Triple-A. The timing of the move allows the Twins to make a pick in the Rule 5 draft, as they now have an open spot on the 40-man.
  • MIL Relief Pitcher #25
    The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal reports that Nick Mears is “another player generating trade interest from Milwaukee’s bullpen.”
    Mears, along with closer Trevor Megill, are being heavily sought after. Mears was a nice surprise for the Brewers in 2025, posting a 3.49 ERA in 56 2/3 innings with, as Rosenthal notes, a chase rate that ranked in the top seven in baseball, according to Baseball Savant. Mears is only projected to make around $1.6 million in arbitration so the Brewers don’t have to move him, but trading relievers for younger, controllable assets is often how smaller market teams like Milwaukee remain competitive.
  • TB 2nd Baseman #8
    MLB Network’s Jon Morosi reports that the Pirates have inquired about trading for Rays 2B Brandon Lowe.
    Lowe is due $11.5 million next season in the final year of his contract, and there are many reports that the Rays are interested in trading him away. The Pirates made an aggressive offer to Kyle Schwarber, and they do appear intent on at least making some upgrade to their lineup, which is a nice change of pace.
  • INT Starting Pitcher #79
    Bryan Mata signed a contract with the Yomiuri Giants of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball.
    One of the top pitching prospects in Boston’s system for nearly a decade, Mata struggled with injuries and never wound up making the big leagues despite triple-digit fastball velocity and a 29.9 percent strikeout rate across 67 1/3 innings over 42 relief appearances at Triple-A Worcester this past season. He seems like a strong candidate to put rebuild his long-term value overseas in Japan before returning stateside since he’s just 26 years old.
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #57
    Shane Bieber dealt with forearm fatigue at the end of the season, a person briefed on the matter told The Athletic.
    If Bieber didn’t think he would pass a physical, that could definitely explain why he surprisingly exercised a $16 million player option to stay with the Blue Jays. Hopefully, it’s not that bad, though. We probably won’t have much better of an idea until he starts tuning up for the Grapefruit League.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #64
    ESPN’s Jeff Passan reports the Tigers and closer Kyle Finnegan are in agreement on a two-year, $19 million contract.
    Finnegan returns to the Motor City after a dominant post-deadline stint in which he posted a microscopic 1.50 ERA (1.97 FIP) and a 34.8 percent strikeout rate across 18 innings over 16 appearances. That level of dominance is almost certainly a small-sample outlier compared to his larger career body of work, which includes a strong 3.66 ERA (4.17 FIP) and 108 saves across 329 1/3 innings for the Nationals over a six-year span since 2020. However, Detroit still offers his clearest path to a ninth-inning role — and, by extension, sustained fantasy relevance — as he enters his mid-30s. He’ll presumably have an opportunity to overtake incumbent stopper Will Vest as the Tigers’ primary closer and profiles as a top-20 range option at the position heading into next season.