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Rotoworld

  • ATH Center Fielder #1
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    Esteury Ruiz is not in the Athletics’ starting lineup for Monday night’s contest against the Mariners.
    The speedy center fielder will take a seat with right-hander Bryan Woo toeing the slab for the Mariners. Lawrence Butler will start in his place and will bat sixth for the A’s on Monday evening in Oakland.
  • LAA 3rd Baseman #2
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    Oswald Peraza went 3-for-4 with a solo homer in a loss to the Astros on Saturday.
    Can Marlins progress towards competing in 2026?
    The Dan Le Batard show debates how the Miami Marlins can get fans back into the good graces of the Miami fanbase and why 2026 might be the beginning of resurrecting that enthusiasm.
  • LAA Right Fielder #12
    Jorge Soler homered and walked three times in a loss Saturday to the Astros.
  • HOU 3rd Baseman #15
    Isaac Paredes drove in a pair of runs to help the Astros to an 11-9 win over the Angels on Saturday.
  • LAA 1st Baseman #18
    Nolan Schanuel hit a three-run homer in a loss to the Astros on Saturday.
    Schanuel’s homer came in the ninth inning off Bryan Abreu, but it came with the Angels down by five runs. Garbage time roundtrippers deserve love, too. Schanuel is off to a nice first series, as he’s homered twice and driven in four runs.
  • HOU Relief Pitcher #52
    Bryan Abreu allowed three runs in his inning of work Saturday against the Angels.
    Not only did Abreu struggle with the punctuation coming on a three-run homer from Nolan Schanuel, but it came in a non-save situation, so fantasy managers get nothing but a hit to the ERA and WHIP. Abreu will remain the closer for Houston while Josh Hader (biceps) recovers, but it’ll take a few outings to make up for this one.
  • LAA Relief Pitcher #48
    Reid Detmers allowed three runs while striking out nine over 4 2/3 innings in a no-decision versus the Astros on Saturday.
    Detmers was given a six-run cushion, and while he didn’t give up the majority of the damage, his struggles in the fifth opened up the floodgates. There were some solid moments for the southpaw prior to that, with Detmers generating 16 swings and misses on 95 pitches, and the command looked solid over the first four frames. An ugly end, but enough good things to be intrigued. His next start is scheduled for Friday at home against the Mariners.
  • NYY Right Fielder #99
    Aaron Judge homered in a second straight game Saturday as the Yankees downed the Giants 3-1.
    At least the Giants got on the board for the first time this year. They even outhit the Yankees 9-7. Still, the Yankees made there’s count for more. Judge’s homer off Tyler Mahle was one of his lesser blasts, traveling a projected 383 feet after leaving his bat at 102.1 mph. His homers are still his only hits in 13 at-bats and he has a 7/0 K/BB, so he’s not nearly at the peak of his powers just yet.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #29
    Will Warren pitched 4 1/3 innings of one-run ball Saturday against the Giants.
    This probably would have been a win for Warren a few weeks from now, but the Yankees opted to lift him at 82 pitches with two outs to go in the fifth. Warren seems like a significant improved pitcher in year two, which might complicate things for the Yankees in a good way once Carlos Rodón and Gerrit Cole come back. He’s a decent mixed-league play for now, particularly with the Marlins up next.
  • NYY Relief Pitcher #53
    David Bednar threw a scoreless ninth with a two-run lead for his second save Saturday against the Giants.
    Bednar’s five fastballs tonight averaged 96.3 mph, an exact match for where he was last year. He was at 94.6 mph during the spring, but he was already back up to 95.6 mph last night. He’s probably going to be a top-10 fantasy closer if he remains healthy.
  • SF Starting Pitcher #54
    Tyler Mahle worked four innings and gave up two runs Saturday in a loss to the Yankees.
    Mahle struck out five. His velocity has been holding steady at last year’s level since the beginning of the spring. We were hoping he might be a little stronger — the 92.0 mph he averaged last year was down about two mph from when he did his best work in Cincinnati — but he was, of course, very successful when healthy last season, and he’s in a nice ballpark for covering up his main weakness, the home run ball. He’ll take on the Mets next week.