Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up

MLB Player News

Rotoworld

  • OAK Shortstop #81
    Athletics signed first-rounder SS Max Muncy.
    Carlos Collazo of Baseball America reports that the deal is worth $2,850,000, which is $109,700 overslot for the 25th overall pick in last Sunday’s draft. Muncy, an 18-year-old shortstop out of Thousand Oaks HS in California, is a right-handed hitter with a solid overall skillset. Oddly enough, he has the same birthday (August 25) as the Dodgers’ Max Muncy and now both players were drafted by the Athletics. The baseball gods work in mysterious ways. We look forward to updating the wrong Max Muncy blurb for the next several years, at the very least.

  • TB Manager
    Tropicana Field’s roof suffered major damage Wednesday night due to the winds of Hurricane Milton.
    In spite of its seeming vulnerability, Tropicana Field was set up as a staging area for recovery efforts from Milton, with beds meant for responders lining the entire outfield area. Fortunately, though, no one was on the premises for the event, which pretty much shredded the entire roof of the domed stadium. Whether a fix is possible prior to the 2025 season is hard to say at the moment. The Rays might find themselves playing in an open-air stadium next year.
  • LAD Designated Hitter #17
    Shohei Ohtani drove in a run and reached base thrice in a blowout win over the Padres on Wednesday in Game 4 of the NLDS.
    Ohtani roped a grounder into right to give the Dodgers a 2-0 lead in the second inning. He also drew two more walks. In his first ever postseason series, Ohtani has driven in four runs with a slash of .250/.333/.438. He’ll have a chance to add to that total in Game 5 when the two teams meet Friday.
  • LAD Second Baseman #9
    Gavin Lux homered and reached three times in a blowout win over the Padres in Game 4 of the NLDS on Wednesday.
    Lux punctuated the blowout with a two-run shot in the seventh inning. He also singled and came around to score a second run. That was his first homer off a left-handed pitcher since he took Hoby Milner deep on Aug. 15, 2022. Lux has done a solid job over the first four games with a .357 average and .571 slugging mark with three RBI.
  • LAD Catcher #16
    Will Smith connected on a two-run homer in a win for the Dodgers over the Padres on Wednesday in Game 4 of the NLDS.
    Smith went hitless in the first three games of the series — although he did draw four walks — but saw that streak end with a two-run shot in the third off Bryan Hoeing. That roundtripper was scorched; estimated at 432 feet with 108.7 MPH exit velocity. It’s nice to see some success from Smith considering his struggles in the second half.
  • LAD Right Fielder #50
    Mookie Betts homered and drove in two runs in an 8-0 rout of the Padres for the Dodgers on Wednesday in Game 4 of the NLDS.
    And we’re tied. Betts homered for the second straight game — again in the first inning — and he’s Jurickson Profar away from making it three consecutive contests. The outfielder also drove in a run an inning later with a single. Betts has performed well in this series with a slash of .269/.387/.667 with the pair of homers and three RBI. Game 5 will take place on Friday in Los Angeles.
  • SD Starting Pitcher #84
    Dylan Cease allowed three runs in 1 2/3 innings in a loss to the Dodgers on Wednesday.
    Cease was working on three days’ rest, and it didn’t work out very well. He allowed four hits — including a homer to Mookie Betts — and a walk with just one strikeout. It’s hard to imagine Cease would go again in this series considering how much he’s struggled, so he’s likely the Game 1 starter if the Padres are able to win Game 5.
  • NYY Right Fielder #27
    Giancarlo Stanton went 3-for-5 with a homer and a double Wednesday as the Yankees edged the Royals 3-2 to take a 2-1 lead in the ALDS.
    Stanton even stole a base in his first attempt at one since 2020. He wasn’t being held on in the sixth, and he made it easily with John Schreiber paying no attention to him. Stanton’s homer came off Kris Bubic, breaking a 2-2 tie in the top of the eighth. The win means the Yankees can take the series when Gerrit Cole and Michael Wacha face off in Thursday’s Game 4. If they don’t do it then, they’ll have another chance Saturday at Yankee Stadium.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #36
    Clarke Schmidt yielded two runs in 4 2/3 innings and struck out four Wednesday in Game 3 against the Royals.
    The runs came in the fifth after Schmidt retired the first two batters of the inning. What followed was a soft infield single, a double the batter thought would go foul and then a triple past a diving Juan Soto. Clay Holmes took over at that point and prevented the go-ahead run from scoring. It was the first career postseason start for Schmidt. He pitched in relief three times between the ALDS and ALCS in 2022, giving up three runs in 2 1/3 innings and taking two losses.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #30
    Luke Weaver got a five-out save against the Royals in Wednesday’s Game 3.
    Weaver took over with the bases empty in the eighth and gave up a couple of hits before escaping the inning. The ninth, in comparison, was very easy, as he retired all three batters he faced on a total of seven pitches. He’s pitched 3 1/3 scoreless innings to date in his first ever postseason series.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #67
    Seth Lugo pitched five innings of two-run ball in Game 3 against the Yankees on Wednesday.
    Lugo issued four walks for just the second time in 35 starts this year and three of those contributed to the two runs scoring. Still, it was a solid enough outing, and though he left down 2-0, the Royals let him off the hook with two runs in the bottom of the fifth.