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Rotoworld

  • ATH Relief Pitcher #63
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    Athletics recalled LHP Hogan Harris from Triple-A Las Vegas.
    Harris provides Oakland with some extra length and versatility moving forward after spending the last month in the minors. The 27-year-old southpaw holds a strong 2.98 ERA, 1.44 WHIP and 42/25 K/BB ratio across 54 1/3 innings (11 appearances, nine starts) this season in the big leagues.
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #17
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    José Berríos has been added to Puerto Rico’s roster for the quarterfinals of the World Baseball Classic.
    Puerto Rico manager Yadier Molina told reporters Berríos has received clearance to pitch and will be available for the remainder of the international tournament. The 31-year-old veteran’s arrival provides a significant lift for Puerto Rico heading into the quarterfinals. They wrap up pool play against Canada on Tuesday night following three straight victories.
    Ohtani, Judge shining in WBC amid peak of careers
    Dan Le Batard reflects on the days of United States-Japan exhibition games before debating Shohei Ohtani vs. Aaron Judge and the World Baseball Classic's place among international competitions.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #11
    Roki Sasaki recorded nine strikeouts over four shutout innings on Tuesday in a minor league B-game against the White Sox.
    Sasaki continued building up his pitch count and stamina out of the Cactus League spotlight after some mixed results in a handful of early-spring outings. The 24-year-old’s velocity has been there but his fastball command remains elusive. With both Blake Snell and Gavin Stone (shoulder) opening the season on the injured list, the Dodgers are probably going to need Sasaki in their early-season pitching mix even if starting the year at Triple-A might benefit his long-term development. It certainly feels like both Sasaki and dynamic pitching prospect River Ryan, who has looked phenomenal this spring, are going to make Los Angeles’ season-opening roster.
  • NYY Left Fielder #24
    Jasson Domínguez went 2-for-3 and hit his second homer Tuesday in the Yankees’ 4-2 defeat of the Phillies.
    Dominguez is hitting .333/.344/.600 in 32 plate appearances, though his 10/1 K/BB isn’t very inspiring. It probably doesn’t matter at this point; unless an outfielder ahead of him gets hurt, Domínguez is almost surely Triple-A bound. Randal Grichuk makes a lot more sense as a fourth outfielder, since the Yankees would just need someone to face lefties on occasion.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #81
    Luis Gil yielded two runs — one earned — in 3 1/3 innings and struck out four Tuesday against the Phillies.
    Gil’s own error on a pickoff throw led to the unearned run. Still, he had another fine outing, which included working around an error in the first and starting a double play to end the second. He’s not promised anything in the long run, but he should certainly be locked into the Yankees’ season-opening rotation with his 2.38 ERA and 15/3 K/BB in 11 1/3 innings to date.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #58
    Paul Blackburn tossed four scoreless innings to pick up a save Tuesday against the Phillies.
    Blackburn struck out four and lowered his spring ERA to 1.48 in 12 1/3 innings. It’d be rather odd if the Yankees employed both Blackburn and Ryan Yarbrough in middle relief — a lot of teams won’t even carry one true long man — but that would seem to be the initial play. One of the two would likely sub in if a starter goes down in the short term, but if the current rotation stays healthy, things will get very cramped once Carlos Rodón and Gerrit Cole are back.
  • PHI Catcher #10
    J.T. Realmuto went 2-for-3 and hit his first homer Tuesday versus the Yankees.
    That’s probably his one for the month. Realmuto has participated in 15 Grapefruit League seasons and has hit 15 homers in 161 games. He’s off to a 4-for-17 start this time around as he enters the first year of a three-year, $45 million contract he received to re-sign with the Phillies in January.
  • TOR Relief Pitcher #68
    Blue Jays signed RHP Caleb Freeman to a minor league contract.
    Freeman heads north of the border as additional relief depth for the defending American League champions. The 28-year-old righty was jettisoned from Chicago’s 40-man roster last June following five appearances for the White Sox at the highest level. He’ll presumably open the year at Triple-A Buffalo.
  • MIN Right Fielder #38
    Matt Wallner hit his first spring homer Tuesday as the Twins topped the Rays 6-5.
    Wallner was hitting sixth today against lefty Steven Matz. In his previous three starts against righties, he hit cleanup twice but also sixth once, with Trevor Larnach hitting cleanup then. One hopes Wallner will be hitting ahead of Larnach against righties in the regular season. Even in a down 2025, Wallner still out OPS+'d Larnach 110 to 99. Wallner has a 129 OPS+ the last three years, compared to 104 for Larnach. Wallner should also have a better chance of remaining in the Twins lineup than Larnach when the team is facing a lefty.
  • MIN Starting Pitcher #41
    Although he went without a strikeout, Joe Ryan kept the Rays scoreless for three innings on Tuesday.
    Ryan was making his spring debut after getting scratched due to back tightness just before his original opener on Feb. 21. He fared well today, but he was down 1.5-2.5 mph on his pitches after the layoff. One imagines he’ll get that back in the coming weeks.
  • TB Relief Pitcher #32
    Steven Matz shut out the Twins for four innings on Tuesday, striking out three.
    Matz averaged 93.5 mph with his fastball, which is down one mph from a 2025 season in which he worked almost exclusively as a reliever. So, really, that’s right about where he should be. In a fine situation in Tampa Bay, he should provide some utility in deeper leagues.