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Rotoworld

  • DET Starting Pitcher #38
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    Michael Pineda was knocked around in his return to the Tigers rotation on Saturday, surrendering five runs on six hits over his four innings of work.
    The right-hander walked two and struck out three on the night. Most of the damage done against him came via the long ball -- with Nick Pratto blasting a solo homer in the first inning and Bobby Witt Jr. adding a three-run bomb in the third. Pineda got seven swings and misses on 80 pitches in the contest, posting a CSW of 24 percent. He’ll look to get back on track and improve upon a disappointing 5.79 ERA and 1.41 WHIP when he takes on these same Royals in Kansas City on Friday.

  • BOS 3rd Baseman #39
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    Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow said Marcelo Mayer (wrist) underwent a follow-up exam last week.
    Everything went really, really well in terms of recovery,” added Breslow. “He’s doing really well, stronger, he’s put on some weight. He looks more physical.” The 22-year-old former top prospect, who underwent wrist surgery back in August, is the odds-on favorite to open next season as Boston’s starting third baseman assuming they’re unable to re-sign veteran Alex Bregman. He batted just .228/.272/.402 with four homers in 136 plate appearances over 44 games, but it’s simply too small of a sample to draw any firm conclusions, especially given his prospect pedigree. He’ll enter spring training at just 23 years old and represents an interesting buy-low candidate for fantasy managers in dynasty formats.
    Konnor Griffin and Kevin McGonigle headline the next wave of prospects set to reach the majors in 2026.
    What Williams' deal means for Mets' bullpen plans
    Eric Samulski unpacks the reports of Devin Williams signing a three-year deal for the New York Mets and how it impacts his fantasy stock, along with the team's bullpen plans.
  • TB Starting Pitcher #11
    The Astros are targeting Rays starter Shane Baz as a potential trade target, reports Athletic’s Chandler Rome and Ken Rosenthal.
    Rome and Rosenthal add that a potential deal is not believed to be close with some league sources characterizing Baz as unlikely to be traded but other sources indicated that the two sides discussed the framework of a potential deal. The 26-year-old former top prospect finished last season with a lackluster 4.87 ERA (4.37 FIP) but did post an encouraging 24.8 percent strikeout rate over 166 1/3 innings across a career-high 31 starts.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #75
    FanSided’s Robert Murray reports the Dodgers, Blue Jays and Mets are among teams interested in signing closer Robert Suarez.
    Suarez has been linked to the Dodgers and Mets in recent weeks based on reporting from The Athletic’s network of beat reporters. The Blue Jays have an established closer in Jeff Hoffman, but they’re clearly still looking to upgrade the back-end of their bullpen in an effort to make it back to the Fall Classic after coming up just short. The 34-year-old former Padres stopper has been one of the better closers in the fantasy landscape over the past few seasons and will likely remain an elite option regardless of where he ends up.
  • NYM Starting Pitcher #45
    Christian Scott (elbow) will enter spring training without any limitations.
    Scott’s path to a rotation spot with the Mets got a lot more complicated with the meteoric rises of top pitching prospects Nolan McLean, Jonah Tong and Brandon Sproat while he was recovering from Tommy John surgery. The 26-year-old figures to open the season back at Triple-A Syracuse given his extended layoff but could factor into New York’s pitching plans at some point next season when injuries take their inevitable toll.
  • NYM Relief Pitcher #33
    A.J. Minter (lat) is on track to be ready in the early portion of next season.
    Minter is officially questionable to be ready for Opening Day, but is not expected to miss too much additional time. The 32-year-old southpaw underwent surgery to repair a torn left lat muscle back in May. He figures to pitch in high-leverage spots helping bridge the gap to newly-added stopper Devin Williams in the event that the Mets are unable to re-sign Edwin Díaz.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #21
    Tigers president of baseball operations Scott Harris said at the Winter Meetings that they’re hopeful Jackson Jobe (elbow) will resume pitching in games by next September.
    Jobe entered last spring as one of the top pitching prospects in baseball before struggling to a lackluster 4.22 ERA and 39/27 K/BB ratio across 49 innings over 10 starts before hitting the injured list with a flexor strain in late May and ultimately undergoing Tommy John surgery a few weeks later. The hard-throwing 23-year-old won’t be an option for Detroit until at least 2027 given his recovery timetable, which limits his fantasy appeal to dynasty formats where he’s a borderline top-200 overall range stash candidate.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #17
    Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said at the Winter Meetings that Shohei Ohtani will be used as a traditional starting pitcher next season.
    Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes said during an interview with MLB Network shortly afterwards that Roki Sasaki will return to the rotation mix once spring training rolls around after an impressive closer cameo during the postseason. Roberts hinted the Dodgers will get “creative” early in the season with their pitching staff — code for something that looks and behaves like a six-man rotation without actually calling it one — as they look to preserve Ohtani, Yamamoto, Snell and Glasnow for the long haul. Nearly every contender has adopted some version of this strategy by now, and it’s the logical path for Los Angeles. We expect Emmet Sheehan to grab a spot with Sasaki also factoring into the mix during the early portion of the year.
  • TB 3rd Baseman #13
    Junior Caminero and Geraldo Perdomo will play for the Dominican Republic in the upcoming World Baseball Classic.
    Dominican Republic general manager Nelson Cruz and manager Albert Pujols confirmed that both infielders will be part of the club’s roster for the impending international showcase. Caminero clobbered 45 round-trippers in his full-season debut last year while Perdomo blossomed into one of the most impactful all-around shortstops in baseball, delivering a sublime 7.0-WAR age-25 campaign.
  • DET Relief Pitcher #57
    Tigers signed RHP Drew Anderson to a one-year, $7 million contract with a $10 million club option for 2027.
    The deal is now official. Anderson returns stateside after spending the past two seasons overseas in Korea where he pitched to a sparkling 2.91 ERA across 287 1/3 innings over 54 starts. The journeyman righty, who turns 32 years old in late March, figures to open next year in Detroit’s rotation mix as a back-end stabilizer. He’s a name to watch in spring training but will likely go undrafted in most fantasy leagues outside of AL-only formats.
    Stay up to date with the MLB free agent market this offseason, including player signings, contract details, and team fits as the 2025-26 Hot Stove heats up.
  • LAD Relief Pitcher #66
    Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told reporters at the Winter Meetings that Tanner Scott dealt with physical issues throughout last season.
    Roberts added that he believes last season was an outlier since Scott never felt right from a physical standpoint all year. The 31-year-old southpaw’s sudden decline after establishing himself as one of the premier late-inning relievers in baseball over the past couple seasons certainly feels like it was injury-related. We’re anticipating a bounce-back campaign, assuming he enters spring training with a clean bill of health, but his role remains a bit unclear, especially since the Dodgers have been linked to several prominent free agent closers. Stay tuned.