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MLB Player News

Rotoworld

  • FA Starting Pitcher #28
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    Corey Kluber announced his retirement from professional baseball on Friday after a 13-year career.
    Kluber spent the first nine seasons of his big-league tenure in Cleveland where he evolved into a two-time Cy Young Award winner, made three All-Star Game appearances, and was also one of the most impactful fantasy contributors of his era at his absolute apex. The 37-year-old righty split the last few years between the Rangers, Yankees, Rays and Red Sox, never quite coming close to returning to form, mostly due to injuries. He finishes with a 116-77 record to go along with a 3.44 ERA, 1.13 WHIP and 1,725/368 K/BB ratio across 1,641 2/3 innings (271 appearances, 260 starts) in the majors since 2011.
  • ATL Infield #7
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    Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulos said, “There is hope shortstop Ha-Seong Kim (right middle finger) returns in early May.”
    Kim tore a tendon in his right middle finger in January, and the initial prognosis is that he would be out for four-to-five months. This would put him on schedule or slightly ahead of it. He has not yet started hitting, and we don’t know what the injury will do to his power production, so he is still be left undrafted in all redraft formats.
    Carroll, Lindor, Holliday all injure hamate bones
    Eric Samulski dives into the rash of hamate bone injuries affecting MLB stars, sharing the latest news regarding Corbin Carroll, Jackson Holliday and Francisco Lindor, who all will miss time with hamate bone injuries.
  • HOU Outfield #10
    Astros acquired OF Joey Loperfido from the Blue Jays in exchange for OF Jesús Sánchez.
    Loperfido was originally an Astros prospect but was traded to Toronto in 2024 as part of the Yusei Kikuchi deal. He is not back in Houston after hitting .333/.379/.500 with four home runs in 104 plate appearances for the Blue Jays last year. Loperfido also cut his strikeout rate to 21.4 percent in 91 Triple-A games in 2025 after posting a 28 percent mark in Triple-A in 2024. Improved plate discipline would help Loperfido utilize his plus raw power, and there’s a real chance that Houston gives him a chance to be their starting left fielder against right-handed pitching.
  • TOR Outfield #4
    Blue Jays acquired OF Jesús Sánchez from the Astros in exchange for OF Joey Loperfido.
    This trade came together very quickly. Sánchez should start against all right-handed pitchers and hit near the middle of a solid Blue Jays lineup. His inability to hit lefties is going to make it hard to roster him in fantasy leagues with weekly lineup locks, but he should have lots of value in daily moves leagues or leagues with mid-week roster changes.
  • ATL Pitcher #40
    Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulos confirmed that Reynaldo López and Grant Holmes will be in the team’s starting rotation.
    This was to be expected, with Spencer Schwellenbach needing elbow surgery and AJ Smith-Shawver also sidelined after elbow surgery. Despite being limited to just one start last season, we’d much rather gamble on López in fantasy drafts, who posted a 1.99 ERA, 1.11 WHIP, and 148/42 K/BB ratio in 2024. Holmes is also coming off a late-season UCL injury that he did not have surgery for in the offseason, so he remains a huge risk in fantasy leagues.
  • HOU Outfield #4
    The Athletic’s Chandler Rome reports that the Blue Jays acquired OF Jesús Sánchez from the Astros for OF Joey Loperfido.
    This move seems to be directly connected to Anthony Santander being out for six months. Sánchez should slot in as a starter against right-handed pitching since he is a career .253/.324/.450 hitter against RHP with a 111 wRC+. Davis Schneider would then likely platoon with him and start against lefties. Loperfido also has minor league options remaining while Sánchez doesn’t, and, as Chandler Rome points out, Sánchez is owed $6.8 million while Loperfido is making the league minimum. This allows the Astros to save money for future potential moves.
  • FA Left Fielder #33
    Free agent Chris Taylor is re-signing with the Angels, according to the New York Post’s Jon Heyman.
    We assume this will be a minor league deal. Taylor hit .186/.256/.301 in 58 gams for the Dodgers and Angels last season, and he wasn’t much better in batting .202/.298/.300 in 2024. A bounce back at age 35 would be pretty surprising.
  • MIA Relief Pitcher #47
    Marlins signed LHP John King to a one-year, $1.5 million contract.
    King was non-tendered by the Cardinals in November after posting a 4.66 ERA last year. The sinkerballer had come in at 3.47 over the previous four seasons, and the Marlins are making a small bet that he’ll get back into that territory. If it works out, he’ll probably be flipped for a prospect in July.
  • MIA Relief Pitcher #66
    Marlins designated LHP Josh Simpson for assignment.
    Simpson, 28, had a 7.34 ERA and a 36/22 K/BB in 30 2/3 innings as a rookie last season. That he throws fastballs only about one-third of the time contributes to his control woes, but it’s also probably his only hope of surviving as a major leaguer.
  • NYY Relief Pitcher #99
    Yankees signed RHP Rafael Montero to a minor league contract.
    He’ll earn $1.85 million if he wins a spot. Montero, 35, had a 4.48 ERA in 60 1/3 innings for three teams last year, which was his best mark since 2022. He finished up nicely with the Tigers, posting a 2.86 ERA in 22 innings, but that came with a poor 19/14 K/BB. At best, he’s probably a 50/50 shot to make the Yankees.
  • NYY 1st Baseman #48
    Yankees signed 1B Paul Goldschmidt to a one-year, $4 million contract.
    Clarke Schmidt went on the 60-day IL to open up a spot. Goldschmidt joined the Yankees as their starting first baseman last year, but he’ll mostly be asked to play against lefties this season after faring far better against them than righties last season. Ben Rice will surely lose a few at-bats as a result of the move, but it seems like Austin Wells might fare worse with Rice set to do some catching this year.