Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up
Odds by

Rotoworld

  • SEA Starting Pitcher #22
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Bryan Woo recorded five strikeouts and allowed one run – zero earned – over three innings on Wednesday against the Royals.
    Woo averaged 94.8 mph on his fastball and threw a whopping 37 of 51 pitches for strikes over three nearly flawless frames. The 25-year-old righty has yet to eclipse 125 innings at the big-league level, but he’s been borderline elite from a ratio standpoint, when healthy. The lack of volume limits his ceiling for fantasy purposes, but he’s easily a top-40 range starter in drafts this spring.
  • SD 2nd Baseman #0
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Samad Taylor knocked in three runs with a pair of singles, one of them a bunt, as the Padres topped the Reds 6-2 on Monday.
    Taylor also swiped his first bag in his third game since being called up Wednesday. In another timeline, Taylor is a well-established MLB bench player thanks to his speed, versatility and modest on-base skills. It hasn’t worked out in this one, but as lacking as the Padres are at the moment, maybe he’ll play enough to offer some NL-only value.
    LAD 'don't have a reason' to rush Glasnow return
    Eric Samulski reacts to Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow being moved to the 60-day IL with back spasms and offers advice for fantasy managers on how to manage his absence.
  • SD Starting Pitcher #10
    Walker Buehler allowed one run and eight hits over 4 2/3 innings Monday against the Reds.
    He’s probably not getting a plaque for it, but Buehler is the first pitcher this year to allow eight hits in an outing of fewer than five innings and allow only one run. He struck out four and walked two before coming out a 1-1 game with two on and two out in the fifth. Buehler deserves credit for keeping the Padres in the game every time he takes the mound, but he’s shown little in the way of upside while going 3-3 with a 4.33 ERA. He’ll face the Orioles on Sunday.
  • CIN Starting Pitcher #41
    Andrew Abbott surrendered three runs in six-plus innings Monday against the Padres.
    Abbott took a 2-1 lead into the seventh, when he gave up back-to-back doubles to start the inning and was pulled. Tejay Antone came in and allowed the inherited runner to score before preventing further damage. Abbott, who has now allowed three runs while getting exactly 18 outs in three consecutive starts, fell to 4-4 with a 4.10 ERA. He’s doing solid work, but the Cincinnati offense hasn’t been good enough to make it pay off in victories. He’ll face the D-backs on Sunday.
  • SD Catcher #54
    Freddy Fermin, who was without a homer this season until Saturday, went 2-for-3 and homered in a third straight game Monday against the Reds.
    Fermin hadn’t started three straight days all year, so it’s safe to say he was only in there tonight because he homered Saturday and Sunday. Now we’ll wait and see whether the Padres will make it four games in a row. They could always DH him if they think he needs a break from catching.
  • CIN 2nd Baseman #9
    Matt McLain went 2-for-3 with a walk against the Padres in Monday’s loss.
    The walk against Jason Adam in the eighth was well earned. McLain challenged three pitches in the at-bat and got all of them overturned. It was actually rather stunning to see a player with a career strikeout rate of 28 percent and three times as many strikeouts as walks express such confident knowledge of the strike zone.
  • WSH Shortstop #5
    CJ Abrams had a two-run single in the bottom of the ninth as the Nationals came back to edge the Giants 4-3 on Monday.
    Abrams’ hit off Keaton Winn tied the game. He then stole second base and scored the go-ahead run on a Daylen Lile single. Abrams is batting .289/.382/.533 while making a strong bid for his second All-Star appearances. He’s second in the majors with 51 RBI. Last year, he finished tied for 130th place with 60 in 144 games
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #36
    Miles Mikolas pitched 4 2/3 scoreless innings in his bulk role Monday against the Giants.
    It’s the third time in his eight bulk appearances that Mikolas has gone without allowing a run. He entered the season looking like the best 20-loss candidate in many years and then dropped each of his first three starts, amassing a 12.41 ERA in the process. However, since becoming primarily a bulk guy, he’s 1-2 with a 4.28 ERA in 48 1/3 innings over 11 appearances. He’s due to next pitch against the Mariners on Sunday.
  • WSH Relief Pitcher #47
    Gus Varland turned in a scoreless ninth with a one-run lead for his fifth save Monday against the Giants.
    Clayton Beeter, who has reemerged as the favorite for saves in D.C., entered in the seventh and wound up with the win despite allowing two runs in the eighth, giving the Giants a 3-1 lead. The Nationals, though, came back with three in the top of the ninth, and Varland shut the door from there. We’re not sure any Nationals reliever is worth rostering in 10- or 12-team leagues at the moment, but Beeter is probably still the best bet of the group. Varland’s save was his first since May 7.
  • SF Starting Pitcher #62
    Logan Webb was denied a win after limiting the Nationals to one run in eight innings on Monday.
    Webb struck out seven and walked none before leaving with a 3-1 lead that got blown by Keaton Winn in the ninth. At least it’s Webb’s second straight outstanding start, as he pitched seven scoreless innings with one hit allowed last week against the Brewers. Given how shaky he was in April, casting some doubt on how he’d perform while losing that extra margin for error he seemed get from umpire pre-ABS, before spending much of May on the IL, there’s suddenly a lot more to be encouraged about here. He’ll face the Cubs on Sunday.
  • SF Relief Pitcher #67
    Handed a two-run lead in the ninth, Keaton Winn gave up three runs and three hits in two-thirds of an inning to take a blown save and a loss Monday against the Nationals.
    This is a big failure for Winn, who was trying for his second save of the year and instead saw his ERA jump from 2.40 to 3.23. Give the advantage back to Caleb Kilian in the San Francisco pen.