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Rotoworld

  • BOS Relief Pitcher #75
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    Alex Speier of the Boston Globe reports that the Cardinals will acquire Nick Robertson and Victor Santos from the Red Sox in exchange for Tyler O’Neill.
    Robertson, 25, appeared in 18 contests between the Dodgers and Red Sox in 2023 — registering a 6.04 ERA, 1.75 WHIP and a 26/9 K/BB ratio over 22 1/3 innings of work. He should have a shot at competing for a spot in the club’s Opening Day bullpen in 2024.
  • ATL Center Fielder #23
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    Michael Harris II went 3-for-3 with a homer, a walk and two runs scored to lead the Braves past the Phillies 4-2 on Sunday Night Baseball.
    Harris has been hitting the ball hard since day one this season, but he wasn’t getting results before his trip to the paternity list on Apr. 11. Since returning Monday, he’s 8-for-18 with two homers and three walks, pushing up to .290/.338/.478 for the season. Statcast thinks he should be slugging up over .600, given his career-best exit velocity numbers. His hard-hit rate is 54 percent.
    Albies, small ball fuel Braves' three-run fifth
    The Phillies saw their slim lead evaporate in the top of the fifth on Sunday night, where the Braves used dribblers and a booming double to storm ahead of their division rival.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #66
    Grant Holmes yielded two runs in 4 2/3 innings Sunday against the Phillies.
    One out away from being in line to win the game, Holmes was lifted before he could face Kyle Schwarber for a third time in the fifth. It was probably the right call, especially since Schwarber had homered off him already. Aaron Bummer took over and gave up a double, but it didn’t score Trea Turner from first, and Bummer retired Bryce Harper afterwards to keep the game 4-2. Holmes is 1-1 with a 3.42 ERA after five starts. He’s slated for another showdown with the Phillies on Friday.
  • ATL Relief Pitcher #26
    Raisel Iglesias, who was unavailable Saturday after sleeping wrong on his shoulder, pitched a scoreless ninth for a save Sunday against the Phillies.
    Iglesias’s velocity was down a little, but it improved over the course of his inning; his two fastballs to Bryson Stott leading off the frame were 91.6 and 91.5 mph, while his two to Kyle Schwarber, who flew out with two out and two on, were 93.5 and 94.0 mph. It seems like he’ll be fine, but it’ll be interesting to see if he’s used on Monday. Robert Suarez, who saved Saturday’s game in Iglesias’s place before throwing a scoreless eighth tonight, would be pitching for a third straight day if he goes then.
  • PHI Starting Pitcher #24
    Andrew Painter allowed three runs in four-plus innings Sunday in a loss to the Braves.
    It was one run through four before the fifth starter with back-to-back singles from Michael Harris II and Ronald Acuña Jr. He was pulled then, and both runners came around to score in a three-run inning. Painter struck out four and walked one in the first four innings. He’s not ready to emerge as a big-time fantasy starter at age 23, but he’s held his own with a 4.42 ERA and a nice 20/4 K/BB in 18 1/3 innings over four appearances. He’s due to face the Braves again next weekend, making him a weak play in shallow leagues.
  • PHI Left Fielder #12
    Kyle Schwarber homered, doubled and walked Sunday in the loss to the Braves.
    Alas, he couldn’t do it again in the ninth. With the Braves down two and having two men on base, he lined out to right to end the game. Schwarber’s homer off Grant Holmes was his fifth of the year. He’s batting .227/.376/.560 through 21 games.
  • MIN Relief Pitcher #57
    The Twins are going to place Kody Funderburk on the paternity list and give Kendry Rojas his first MLB callup.
    Connor Prielipp is also coming up to join the taxi squad, according to The Athletic’s Dan Hayes. Rojas just made his season debut after missing time with a hamstring injury, so it’ll probably be a brief stay for him. Funderburk, who has allowed seven runs — two earned — in nine innings this year, will likely miss two or three days.
  • DET Catcher #13
    Dillon Dingler went 4-for-5 with a three-run homer and an RBI double as the Tigers topped the Red Sox 6-2 on Sunday.
    Dingler was already on the short list of 2026’s best hitters in terms of xwOBA a week ago, and now his actual numbers are catching up. With three homers in six games, he’s hitting .302/.380/.603 for the year. He has as many barrels as strikeouts this year, amassing 12 of each through 73 plate appearances.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #59
    Framber Valdez limited the Red Sox to one run and three hits in six innings and struck out seven in a win Sunday.
    Valdez’s strikeout rate has been way down — he’d fanned 12.5 percent of the batters he faced coming into the day — so it was nice to see him miss some bats today. He had 11 whiffs on the 29 curves and changeups he threw and then 22 called strikes on his sinker to finish up with a 39 percent CSW on the day. Valdez is 2-1 with a 3.30 ERA, and he’s set to get the Reds next.
  • BOS Starting Pitcher #35
    Garrett Crochet was tagged for five runs in five innings by the Tigers in another loss Sunday.
    It’s not good, but this isn’t nearly the same sort of disaster as his previous start against the Twins. Crochet looked fine for four innings today and then struck out the first two batters of the fifth before a homer, a walk, a single and another homer. Crochet’s velocity was back to his season norm today, even though it was a cold and rainy afternoon in Boston, and he struck out eight. It was just a standard off day, as opposed to whatever the heck it was that happened when he gave up 11 runs in 1 2/3 innings six days ago.
  • DET Right Fielder #46
    Wenceel Pérez went 0-for-4 with a strikeout versus the Red Sox on Sunday.
    Pérez is now 1-for-26 after not having any good at-bats today, but it’s still encouraging that he’s struck out only twice since his recall and 11 of his 23 balls in play have been hard-hit. Also, his one hit was an eighth-inning, go-ahead home run. The Tigers figure to stick with him.