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Rotoworld

  • MLB Starting Pitcher #33
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    Dodgers activated LHP David Price from the 15-day injured list.
    There have been speculative reports that Price plans on retiring at the conclusion of the year, but those haven’t been confirmed by the veteran southpaw himself. The 37-year-old lefty will rejoin the Dodgers’ bullpen mix on Tuesday evening in San Diego following a nearly one-month absence due to left wrist inflammation. He’s compiled a strong 2.58 ERA, 1.17 WHIP and 37/8 K/BB ratio across 38 1/3 innings (38 appearances) this season for Los Angeles.

  • MIL Relief Pitcher #29
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    Sources told MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand that the Brewers are likely to trade either Trevor Megill or Freddy Peralta, with Megill being the better bet to go.
    Megill is arguably the best reliever available in trade talks or free agency at the moment, and it can’t hurt the Brewers that Robert Suarez just signed with a team that already had a closer. A trade would make things easier on fantasy leagues who wouldn’t have to decide whether to rank Megill or Abner Uribe higher on draft day. If Megill is dealt, both could enter 2026 as top-15 RPs, with Uribe potentially going in the top five.
    Fallout of Alonso's reported signing with BAL
    Eric Samulski dives into Pete Alonso's reported signing with the Baltimore Orioles and what fantasy managers can expect as he shifts to Camden Yards.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #75
    The Braves are signing Robert Suarez to a three-year, $45 million deal, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan.
    The three biggest relievers are now off the board, with Suarez joining a Braves team that already re-signed Raisel Iglesias to a one-year, $16 million deal. The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal says the plan is for Suarez to set up for Iglesias next season. That Suarez picked the Braves probably means that it’s now safe to look at Devin Williams as a top-10 RP, since there’s no one else the Mets could sign to rival him. The Jays were also thought to be in the mix for Suarez, so this makes Jeff Hoffman a little safer, too. Suarez, who turns 35 in March, led the NL with 40 saves while posting a 2.97 ERA for the Padres last season. He also had 36 saves and a 2,77 ERA in 2024.
  • COL 3rd Baseman #12
    The Rockies’ Paul DePodesta said he’s looking to add veterans with defensive versatility to the major league roster.
    With any luck, he’ll make better picks than the likes of Thairo Estrada and Kyle Farmer. DePodesta will want to leave paths for Kyle Karros, Adael Amador, Ryan Ritter, Zac Veen, Yanquiel Fernández and Sterlin Thompson to contribute next season, but he might want most of them in Triple-A initially. That could mean adding two infielders and one outfielder.
  • NYY Relief Pitcher
    Yankees signed RHP Bradley Hanner to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Hanner, who turns 27 in February, joins the Yankees after finishing last season with a 4.74 ERA and a 62/25 K/BB in 49 1/3 innings out of the pen for the Guardians’ Triple-A affiliate. His low arm angle and big sweeper make him pretty tough against righties. Lefties, though, had six homers and a 1.078 OPS against him last season.
  • FA Relief Pitcher #56
    Mark Leiter Jr. has a deal with the Athletics, according to The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal.
    ESPN’s Jesse Rogers says it’s a one-year contract worth about $3 million. Leiter was non-tendered by the Yankees after putting up a 4.84 ERA in 48 1/3 innings last season. He also had a 4.50 ERA in 2024, but between the two seasons, he’s struck out 140 batters in 106 1/3 innings. He’d become the immediate favorite to close in a pretty barren A’s pen, but we imagine they’ll add a better candidate prior to spring training.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #29
    USA TODAY’s Bob Nightengale said the Tigers “surprised teams by engaging in serious talks” about a Tarik Skubal trade at the winter meetings.
    He added that the Tigers were intrigued by the possibility of a deal with the Dodgers, though he still doesn’t think Skubal will be traded this winter. It’s going to be very difficult to come up with a deal that makes sense for both the Tigers, who very much want to contend in 2026, and a suitor that knows it would only be getting baseball’s best pitcher for one year prior to free agency.
  • FA Left Fielder #31
    David Dahl, who didn’t play in 2025, announced his retirement from baseball at age 31.
    In another timeline, Dahl is probably signing a $100 million contract this winter. In this one, though, he was never able to stay healthy enough to play in more than 100 major league games in a year. Colorado’s first pick in the 2012 draft, he hit .297/.346/.521 through his first three big-league seasons and made an All-Star appearance in 2019, but the Rockies gave up on him after a rough 2020 season, and he went on to play in just 86 more major league games for the Rangers, Padres and Phillies.
  • CHC 2nd Baseman #2
    Teams have asked about Nico Hoerner in trade conversations with the Cubs, according to The Athletic.
    It seems highly unlikely that the Cubs will trade Hoerner, unless it comes after a move to sign Alex Bregman or Bo Bichette. Matt Shaw would seem to be the odd man out in such a scenario, but the Cubs might then be open to trading Hoerner, who is one year away from free agency, and keeping Shaw in the lineup. Hoerner, 28, had a career-high 114 OPS+ last season and won his second Gold Glove at second base. He could also slot in at shortstop on another team.
  • CHC Relief Pitcher #52
    Cubs signed RHP Collin Snider to a minor league contract.
    Snider busted out in 2024, posting a 1.94 ERA and a 47/13 K/BB in 41 2/3 innings for the Mariners, but he showed up with diminished velocity last spring and struggled for two months before going on the IL with a flexor strain. He resumed pitching in mid-July, but the Mariners never activated him, and he cleared waivers before finishing the season in Triple-A. If his stuff comes back, he could be of a lot of help in the Cubs pen.
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #44
    Blue Jays signed RHP Cody Ponce to a three-year, $30 million contract.
    The deal, agreed to nine days ago, is now official. It sounds like Ponce is pretty much guaranteed a rotation spot, which could get awkward unless José Berríos is traded. The former Brewers prospect is coming off one of the best seasons in KBO history, having gone 17-1 with a 1.89 ERA and a 252/41 K/BB in 180 2/3 innings for Hanwha. In a nice situation in Toronto, he’ll be worth trying late in mixed-league drafts.