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Rotoworld

  • PIT Starting Pitcher #23
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    Mitch Keller was torched for a season-high eight runs over five innings on Wednesday in a loss to the Padres.
    It was a second consecutive implosion for Keller after serving up seven runs over four innings last Friday against the Dodgers. He was once again burned by the long ball, coughing up a three-run homer to Jake Cronenworth in the opening frame to fall behind early. He wound up being shelled for a staggering eight hits, including an additional two-run shot by David Peralta in the third inning. He struck out two and also issued a pair of walks. The lone positive here was that he was somehow able to still complete five frames to mostly spare Pittsburgh’s bullpen as his ERA ballooned from 3.56 to 3.95 in the process. He’ll attempt to turn things around on Tuesday when he faces the defending World Series champion Rangers.
  • NYM Relief Pitcher #57
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    Mets designated LHP Richard Lovelady for assignment.
    The Mets will try to sneak Lovelady through waivers three months after signing him to a one-year deal as a free agent. Lovelady gave up seven earned runs in 10 innings for the Mets last season. He has a career 5.35 ERA in 111 innings since debuting in 2019.
    Mets make big moves with Peralta and Robert
    Eric Samulski reviews the big trades made by the New York Mets this week and how they will contribute to the team.
  • NYM 2nd Baseman #17
    Mets acquired INF Vidal Bruján from the Twins for cash considerations.
    It’s Bruján’s third organization in two weeks and sixth since the Rays traded him to the Marlins two years ago. The Mets have a potential utility opening after trading Luisangel Acuña in the Luis Robert Jr. deal, and given that Francisco Liriano, Marcus Semien and Bo Bichette will hardly ever sit or come out of games, it might make sense to carry someone like Bruján and send down Ronny Mauricio to play regularly. Still, that’s assuming Bruján remains with the club for more than a few days.
  • FA 1st Baseman #69
    John Nogowski has retired from playing and accepted a job as a bench coach/assistant hitting coach with the Mets’ Triple-A Syracuse affiliate.
    Nogowski’s major league action came in 2020 and ’21, when he hit .233/.299/.308 in 53 games for the Cardinals and Pirates. It’s funny that his first job is with the Mets, given that he’s best known for trading words with Marcus Stroman and touching off a little brouhaha in a Pirates-Mets game in 2021. A right-handed-hitting first baseman with a history of nice OBPs, the Florida State product didn’t offer quite enough power to stick, but he still far exceeded expectations for a guy drafted in the 34th round in 2012.
  • WSH Catcher #15
    Nationals designated C Riley Adams for assignment.
    This is the countermove for the Gus Varland waiver claim. Adams was thought to be a non-tender candidate two months ago, but the Nationals wanted him back as a reserve catcher option and signed him to a cheap one-year deal. He’ll probably clear waivers and stick around as a potential backup to Keibert Ruiz. He presumably would be squeezed out if Harry Ford makes the team.
  • PHI Relief Pitcher #54
    Phillies re-signed LHP Tim Mayza to a minor league contract.
    Mayza missed much of last season with a lat strain, posting a 2.89 ERA in 9 1/3 innings for the Pirates before the injury and a 4.91 ERA in 7 1/3 innings for the Phillies after being picked up for the stretch run. The 34-year-old lefty has a career 3.87 ERA in 382 relief appearances. He figures to have a difficult time making the Phillies out of spring training.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #34
    Mariners signed RHP Dane Dunning to a minor league contract.
    The Mariners made a mistake last winter in failing to secure starting pitching depth behind their vaunted rotation, but it didn’t wind up hurting them much, as Emerson Hancock and Logan Evans were able to hold their own in their 31 starts. Dunning will add to their alternatives this year after a bumpy 2025 in which he was let go by the Rangers and was limited to 12 relief appearances in the majors. The 31-year-old has a career 4.44 ERA in 102 starts and 34 relief appearances, most of those coming with Texas.
  • CHC Left Fielder #20
    Cubs signed OF Chas McCormick to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    It’s a little surprising McCormick couldn’t get a guaranteed deal, given that there were so few free agent outfielders available capable of handling center field. Still, he has a clear path to a roster spot on the Cubs. McCormick started out strong with the Astros in 2021, putting together three nice years as a semi-regular before struggling and missing times the last two seasons. The 30-year-old is a lifetime .247/.321/.413 hitter, though he’s at .211/.273/.301 in 383 plate appearances since the beginning of 2024. He should be the Cubs’ fourth outfielder, unless Matt Shaw perhaps overtakes him.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #1
    Rangers acquired LHP MacKenzie Gore from the Nationals for INF Gavin Fien, INF Devin Fitz-Gerald, RHP Alejandro Rosario, 1B Abimelec Ortiz and OF Yeremy Cabrera.
    Gore’s career 4.19 ERA went mostly unchanged last season, but he did seem to take a step forward with his 27.2% strikeout rate while being held back by one of the game’s worst defenses and, in particular, one of its worst catching situations. Things will get quite a bit better in Texas, which offers the additional perk of boasting one of the game’s toughest ballparks for right-handed hitters to homer in the last two years. If it holds up — and it may not, as Globe Life Field really has been all over the map since opening in 2020 — it’s a particularly good match for a flyball lefty in Gore. He’ll join Jacob deGrom and Nathan Eovaldi atop the Rangers rotation, with Jack Leiter as the heavy favorite for the fourth spot and likely Jacob Latz and Kumar Rocker competing for the fifth spot. The Rangers will pay him $5.8 million this year, and he’ll also be under control for 2027 before becoming a free agent.
  • WSH Shortstop
    Nationals acquired INF Gavin Fien, INF Devin Fitz-Gerald, RHP Alejandro Rosario, 1B Abimelec Ortiz and OF Yeremy Cabrera from the Rangers for LHP MacKenzie Gore.
    Fien is on the move a mere six months after the Rangers made him the 12th overall pick in the 2025 draft. He played just 10 games afterwards, batting .220/.267/.341 in Low-A. Prior to the draft, he was often connected with the Red Sox, who picked 15th, making it no surprise that the Nationals, now being run by former Red Sox scouting VP Paul Toboni, targeted him here. Fien isn’t a lock to last at shortstop, but he has an advanced offensive approach that should make him a regular somewhere in the infield a few years from now. He just might not quite offer All-Star-type upside.
  • WSH Shortstop
    2024 fifth-round pick Devin Fitz-Gerald was picked up by the Nationals from the Rangers in the MacKenzie Gore trade.
    The switch-hitting Fitz-Gerald, a teammate of Roman Anthony in high school in Florida, missed the end of last season but impressed with a .318/.423/.542 line in 31 games in Rookie ball. He opened the season sharing time between second, third and short, but the Rangers had committed to him at short just before injury struck. Between 2025 first-rounders Eli Willits and Gavin Fien and 2024 picks Seaver King (10th overall), Luke Dickerson (second round) and Fitz-Gerald, the Nationals are truly loaded with infield prospects, though none figure to contribute this year.