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Rotoworld

  • FA Catcher #28
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    Padres released C Pedro Severino.
    Severino has spent the entire season at Triple-A El Paso and has only played in four contests since April 25. The 29-year-old backstop, who served an 80-game suspension last season with the Brewers after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance, has presumably been let go to pursue another opportunity. He’s appeared in just eight games in the majors over the last two years.

  • LAA Relief Pitcher #64
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    Angels designated RHP Shaun Anderson for assignment.
    The 31-year-old hurler joined the roster once again on Wednesday and now gets the boot without appearing in a game. He holds a 5.94 ERA, 1.50 WHIP and 12/8 K/BB ratio across 16 2/3 innings of work with the Angels this season. He’ll probably pass through waivers unclaimed again and continue to serve as extra bullpen depth at Triple-A Salt Lake.
    PCA showing signs of offensive breakout in June
    James Schiano discusses the improvement that Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong has made on offense in recent weeks, including the .455 batting average and 1.409 OPS he has posted in his last five games.
  • LAD 3rd Baseman #13
    Max Muncy (nose) is not in the Dodgers’ starting lineup for Friday’s series opener against the Angels.
    That was the expectation all along after Muncy exited Thursday’s game following a violent collision with Ildemaro Vargas at first base. Fortunately, he avoided any serious injuries. The 35-year-old slugger is expected to return to the Dodgers’ lineup on Saturday. Santiago Espinal will start in his place at third base and bat ninth against Angels’ left-hander Reid Detmers on Friday evening.
  • LAA Shortstop #9
    Zach Neto (neck) returned to the Angels’ starting lineup for Friday’s series opener against the Dodgers.
    Neto missed each of the team’s previous three games due to symptoms of whiplash following a collision at home plate on Saturday. He’s starting at shortstop and hitting atop the Halos’ lineup against Dodgers’ right-hander Roki Sasaki.
  • FA Right Fielder #21
    Padres released OF Nick Castellanos.
    Castellanos was designated for assignment earlier in the week and went unclaimed. He’s now free once more to explore the open market. The 34-year-old slashed just .191/.221/.339 with four homers and 20 RBI in 122 plate appearances with the Padres and seems to have lost the ability to mash left-handed pitching, which used to be his calling card. He can be had for the league minimum if any teams are interested.
  • FA Left Fielder
    Astros released OF Rhylan Thomas.
    The 26-year-old outfielder had been designated for assignment on Thursday and passed through waivers unclaimed. He’s now free to peddle his wares on the open market. Thomas has hit .253/.304/.307 with two homers and 12 RBI in 185 plate appearances at the Triple-A level this season.
  • WSH 1st Baseman #45
    Curtis Mead is not in the Nationals’ starting lineup for Friday night’s contest against the Diamondbacks.
    Mead has settled in as the Nationals’ regular third baseman and has been hitting third in the lineup over the past few weeks. He’ll get a breather in this one though with Jorbit Vivas starting in his place at the hot corner and batting sixth against Merrill Kelly and the Diamondbacks on Friday evening in Arizona.
  • SF 3rd Baseman #26
    Matt Chapman went 2-for-3 with two homers and eight RBI as the Giants handily put down the Cubs 18-3 on Friday.
    Chapman started with a grand slam off Edward Cabrera in the fourth inning, knocking a hanging curve just barely into the left-center nets at Wrigley for a 382-foot blast. He added a three-run shot off Ethan Roberts in the sixth, denting a sign in left field to keep it from heading out on to Waveland at 432 feet. His other RBI came on a sacrifice fly. This is an MLB-best RBI total for this season so far, topping Luke Raley’s seven against the White Sox on May 8. Chapman is starting to heat up (obviously), with a .309/.381/.564 line and three homers over his last 15 games. He’s still trying to recover from a frigid late April-early May stretch where he went hitless for seven games, but his .241 season average is now in line with what we’d generally expect from him going forward.
  • SF Shortstop #2
    Willy Adames went 2-for-4 with two homers and four RBI in San Francisco’s win over the Cubs on Friday.
    Adames absolutely clobbered a homer against Edward Cabrera in the first inning, sending a four-seamer 427 feet, out of Wrigley Field entirely. He added a second off Hoby Milner that landed about halfway up the bleachers in San Francisco’s seven-run sixth inning. Adames is now hitting .311/.362/.588 over his last 30 games with eight homers, enough to push his seasonal line to .250/.296/.460. He’s walking much less than usual, but otherwise this is about what you’d have expected from him through the first few months of the season.
  • CHC Right Fielder #27
    Seiya Suzuki homered and scored two runs in Chicago’s loss to the Giants on Friday.
    He also added three walks. Suzuki’s doubles have evaporated this year -- he has just five in 182 at-bats -- but he’s still hitting homers at his 2025 pace and fantasy managers who aren’t in slugging percentage leagues probably don’t mind if he wants to focus exclusively on the long ball.
  • CHC Starting Pitcher #30
    Edward Cabrera gave up three homers and eight earned runs in his return from the injured list on Friday.
    Yikes. Cabrera’s velocity was well up from where it was all season and he managed a 31 percent whiff rate, but he allowed eight hard-hit balls, including four off his difference-making change-up. His ERA is now 4.99. Cabrera doesn’t exactly look trustworthy for the moment, and either way you probably have some pause about risking Coors Field with him next week, but nothing under the hood looks dramatically rough.