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Rotoworld

  • BAL Center Fielder #31
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    ESPN’s Jeff Passan lists Cedric Mullins as one of the most likely players to be traded at the deadline.
    The 30-year-old is a free agent at the end of the season, so it makes sense for an Orioles team that is falling out of the playoff race to see what they can get for him at the deadline. That would open up playing time for Heston Kjerstad, Ramon Laureano, and Dylan Carlson this season, but also Jud Fabian or Dylan Beavers in 2026. Mullins is hitting just .220/.306/.430 in 62 games but has 12 home runs and eight steals, which could provide some fantasy juice if he lands in a good spot. Passan lists the Mets, Guardians, and Phillies as the best fits for the center fielder.
  • AZ Shortstop #0
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    Jacob Amaya had a grand slam and an RBI single Saturday as the Diamondbacks came back to beat the Giants 8-7.
    The homer off Keaton Winn was Amaya’s second this spring. Coming into 2026, Amaya had never homered in 154 major league plate appearances or 104 plate appearances during spring training, though he does surprisingly have 71 homers in 3,103 minor league plate appearances. A defensive-minded utilityman, he’s trying to beat out local favorite Ildemaro Vargas for a spot on Arizona’s bench. It’s probably not going to happen, but he might be the team’s best choice to play short if anything ever happens to Geraldo Perdomo.
    Snell 'a really risky pick' in fantasy drafts
    Eric Samulski reacts to news that Los Angeles Dodgers' starting pitcher Blake Snell will miss at least six weeks due to a shoulder injury and why fantasy managers should exercise caution with drafting him.
  • AZ Starting Pitcher #23
    Zac Gallen yielded three runs and seven hits through 2 2/3 innings Saturday versus the Giants.
    Gallen was pulled after giving up three hits in the third. He returned for the fourth, only to immediately surrender a homer to Daniel Susac and get yanked again. Gallen’s velocity has been great this spring; his 94.8-mph average on his fastball today was a gain of 1.3 mph from last year. His career-high average fastball velocity was 94.1 mph in 2022, and he’s been above that all three outings this spring. In spite of the results today, his stock is up a bit.
  • AZ Relief Pitcher #37
    Kevin Ginkel surrendered four runs in two-thirds of an inning of relief work Saturday against the Giants.
    Ginkel gave up three singles, none of which were hard-hit balls, and then a three-run homer to Rafael Devers before exiting. Ginkel entered the game having allowed three runs — one earned — over 3 2/3 innings in four appearances. He’s struck out four and walked one, and his velocity has been fine after he missed the final two months of 2025 with a shoulder strain. He should be in the running for saves in Arizona’s pen at the start of the year, but it doesn’t seem likely that the team will name a closer initially.
  • SF Starting Pitcher #12
    Adrian Houser pitched five innings of two-run ball and struck out six Saturday against the Diamondbacks.
    Houser had a 36% CSW today, getting 10 whiffs and 16 called strikes in the 73-pitch outing. The velocity bump he enjoyed last year has held up this spring, and there could be some fringy mixed-league potential here. The Giants just might want to use Casey Schmitt at second base and Luis Arraez at DH when Houser and Logan Webb are on the mound.
  • SF Designated Hitter #16
    Rafael Devers finished 2-for-2 with a three-run homer Saturday against the Diamondbacks.
    Devers, who missed 10 days with hamstring tightness before returning earlier this week, had been 0-for-18 this spring coming into the day. He struck out against Zac Gallen in his first at-bat, but he connected on a 104-mph liner for his first hit in the third and then followed with a 406-foot blast in the fourth.
  • SF Catcher #6
    Daniel Susac went 2-for-3 and homered off the D-backs’ Zac Gallen in Saturday’s loss.
    Susac is hitting .345/.406/.517 in 32 plate appearances this spring, so if he doesn’t make the Giants as a Rule 5 pick, it won’t be because of his offense. The determining factor, though, always figured to be his defense. Eric Haase is his main competition for a job as Patrick Bailey’s backup.
  • ATH Catcher #23
    Shea Langeliers hit solo homers all three times up Saturday as the A’s crushed the Royals 12-1.
    The third of those was the second of back-to-back shots with Nick Kurtz in the fourth. The A’s are poised to have Langeliers bat second in between Kurtz and Tyler Soderstrom at the beginning of the season, even though he’d seem to be the clearly worst bet of their top six hitters when it comes to OBP. He did come in at a respectable .325 there last year, but he was at .276 through his first 2 1/4 big-league seasons. Of course, it’ll be fine if he maintains that 2025 performance, and he’s looking the part with his six homers this spring.
  • ATH Starting Pitcher #57
    Jacob Lopez kept the Royals hitless for four innings and struck out seven in a victory Saturday.
    Lopez walked one, but 36 of his 52 pitches today were strikes. Given his success for the A’s last year (4.08 ERA in a rotation that came in at 4.85 overall, 113/37 K/BB in 92 2/3 IP), it was surprising that Lopez entered spring training without a rotation spot locked up. Still, he’d seem to be in good shape now, and he could remain useful in AL-only leagues.
  • KC Starting Pitcher #38
    Ryan Bergert was lit up for four homers while allowing five runs in 3 2/3 innings Saturday against the A’s.
    Shea Langeliers hit three of those, with Nick Kurtz also chiming in. Bergert entered the day having allowed two runs in six innings this spring, and the one bad game probably won’t change much for him. His only real hope of making the Royals is if a starter goes down.
  • LAA 2nd Baseman #26
    Adam Frazier went 1-for-2 with a double and two RBI on Saturday as the Angels bested the Mariners 6-2 in their Cactus League affair.
    The 34-year-old infielder delivered a two-run double in the eighth inning of this one that capped off the scoring. Frazier has not only played his way onto the Angels’ roster this spring, but it seems like he could wind up being the team’s starting second baseman on Opening Day. He’s hitting .368 (7-for-19) with five RBI and a stolen base during Cactus League play.