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Rotoworld

  • COL Relief Pitcher #29
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    Rockies designated RHP Matt Carasiti for assignment.
    Carasiti has been jettisoned from Colorado’s 40-man roster after surrendering five runs over his last two relief appearances this week against the Cardinals. The 32-year-old righty reliever holds a calamitous 10.38 ERA, 2.19 WHIP and 7/3 K/BB ratio across 8 2/3 innings (seven appearances) this season in the majors.
  • CWS Center Fielder #92
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    Braden Montgomery went 2-for-4 with two doubles and one run scored on Wednesday against the Braves.
    It was always going to be difficult for Montgomery to follow up his magic debut from Tuesday where he hit a walk-off home run. He did a decent job though with two doubles – each hit at least 98 mph – and the first of which came off Chris Sale. He looks like an exciting young player who could hit his way into a big league role for the foreseeable future.
    Inside May's resurgence for Cardinals this season
    Eric Samulski dives into Dustin May's turnaround for the St. Louis Cardinals with changes in his pitch mix to make his arsenal more effective and become more valuable in fantasy lineups.
  • ATL Shortstop #2
    Jorge Mateo went 2-for-4 with a double and one run scored on Wednesday against the White Sox.
    Mateo had both the only extra-base hit and scored the only run for the Braves in this one. He also had three hard-hit balls and should find himself back in a starting role with Ronald Acuña Jr. headed back to the injured list and Mauricio Dubón shifting to the outfield, as he did in this game.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #51
    Chris Sale allowed six hits and two runs with one walk and six strikeouts across 5 2/3 innings in a loss to the White Sox on Wednesday.
    Sale pitched well in this game, just not well enough to take down Davis Martin. There’s a sentence I never thought I’d write. Nevertheless, Sale’s velocity was up about two ticks across the board in his homecoming to the south side. While that helped his fastball miss bats, it may have also made it a bit erratic as he struggled more than usual to find the zone with it. In the end, this wound up as more of a good start than a great one for the Braves’ ace. He’s scheduled for a two-start week coming up against the Giants and Brewers with both starts at home.
  • TEX 1st Baseman #21
    Jake Burger went 2-for-2 with a home run, two RBI, and a walk in a 6-4 win over the Royals on Wednesday.
    It was amazing to see Burger play such a huge role in a game that he didn’t even start. Pinch-hitting for Joc Pederson when a lefty reliever came in for the fifth inning, he wound up reaching base three times and drove home the tying run in each the seventh and eighth innings. The first of which came on a solo home run, Burger’s 11th of the season to go along with 41 RBI in what’s been a nice bounceback campaign.
  • TEX Relief Pitcher #67
    Jacob Latz allowed one hit and walked one batter with one strikeout in a scoreless 10th inning to secure the save against Royals on Wednesday.
    Even with a two-run lead, it’s always scary to go for a save with the ghost runner looming on second base. After a lead-off single by Jac Caglianone, Latz tightened up and saved the game for his squad. He now has a sparkling 1.80 ERA as one of the more underrated closers over the first half.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #1
    MacKenzie Gore allowed eight hits and two runs with three walks and six strikeouts across five innings in a no-decision against the Royals on Wednesday.
    Gore continues to frustrate. Six strikeouts and two earned runs is totally solid, sure. Yet, the Royals laced 11 hard-hit balls and the eight hits he allowed led to constant traffic on the bases. He didn’t have a single clean inning and as usual, didn’t have great command. He did work his cutter a bit more against right-handers, but too many weren’t in competitive spots. Still, that’s a fun development and something to watch moving forward. He’ll take a 4.18 ERA with 76 strikeouts and 33 walks over 71 innings into a two-start week coming up against the Twins and Padres.
  • KC Right Fielder #14
    Jac Caglianone went 4-for-5 with a double, one RBI, and two runs scored on Wednesday against the Rangers.
    This was a great back and forth game with Caglianone in the middle of a good chunk of the action. That’s easy to say when a player has four hits, but Caglianone doubled and then scored the first run, drove home the second, scored the go-ahead in the seventh, and singled in the 10th which would’ve drove home another if the Royals weren’t trailing by two and playing it safe. Suddenly, Caglianone has a .275 batting average and .802 OPS on the season and is hitting .360 over his last 15 games.
  • STL Starting Pitcher #53
    Andre Pallante allowed three hits and two runs over six innings with two walks and five strikeouts to earn the win in a lopsided 9-2 win over the Mets on Wednesday.
    Pallante settled into this one nicely after being spotted a big lead early. He consistently challenged the Mets hitters with fastballs in the zone and they could not do much with them. In all, he forced 10 ground balls out of 16 total balls in play in his third quality start out of his last five outings. He now has a 3.88 ERA to go along with 56 strikeouts and 25 walks through 69 2/3 innings this season. Next up, Pallante is scheduled to face the Padres at home.
  • STL Right Fielder #18
    Jordan Walker went 2-for-4 with a home run and four RBI on Wednesday against the Mets.
    Walker got the Cardinals going early with a run-scoring single in the first inning. Later, he broke this game open with a three-run homer in the fourth to stretch the Cardinals lead out to 7-0. That home run was 17th of the season, which set a new career-high. His 52 RBI after this game also set a new career-high. Both of those marks were set in Walker’s rookie 2023 when he played 117 games. He’s played just a touch more than half that in what’s been a magical breakout season so far for the young slugger.
  • NYM Catcher #4
    Francisco Alvarez went 1-for-4 with a two-run home run on Wednesday against the Cardinals.
    Alvarez launched a two-run homer here in just his second game off the injured list following a torn meniscus. Most amazingly, that injury only occurred four weeks ago and generally has a six to eight week recovery timeline. He will be a big boost to the Mets’ poor offense and his two-run shot here represented the only two runs they scored in this entire game.