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

MLB Player News

Rotoworld

  • NYY Relief Pitcher #38
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Devin Williams needed seven pitches to retire the Mariners in the top of the 10th and wound up with a win Thursday.
    Williams struck out Randy Arozarena and then got soft outs from Jorge Polanco and Luke Raley in the tie game. Even though it was just seven pitches, it probably will rule Williams out for Friday, since he also worked Wednesday and the Yankees generally don’t use relievers three days in a row. Luke Weaver might close then.
  • CWS General Manager
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    The White Sox won the MLB Draft Lottery and will pick first overall in the 2026 MLB Draft.
    The ping pong balls came through for the White Sox as they secure the top selection in next year’s MLB Draft after having the highest odds — 27.73 percent — of landing the first overall pick. Chicago hasn’t picked first overall since taking future Hall of Famer Harold Baines in 1977. Their likely prize: UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky is one of the best collegiate shortstop prospects in recent memory and is considered a slam-dunk to be taken first overall. Texas high school shortstop Grady Emerson is widely-regarded as the top prep player in the draft class. The Giants and Royals were the big movers in this year’s lottery, jumping up double-digit spots into the top six overall, while the Rays also made a massive leap, going from seventh to second overall. Here are the full draft lottery results: (1) White Sox, (2) Rays, (3) Twins, (4) Giants, (5) Pirates, (6) Royals, (7) Orioles, (8) Athletics, (9) Braves, (10) Rockies, (11) Nationals, (12) Angels, (13) Cardinals, (14) Marlins, (15) Diamondbacks, (16) Rangers, (17) Astros and (18) Reds.
    Schwarber remains elite power source with new deal
    Eric Samulski unpacks ripple effects from Kyle Schwarber reportedly returning to the Phillies on a five-year, $150M contract, sharing why the deal should "age well" and bode well for fantasy purposes.
  • ARI Relief Pitcher #48
    Diamondbacks signed RHP Isaiah Campbell to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Campbell will compete for a spot in Arizona’s bullpen next spring after getting lit up to the tune of an inflated 11.30 ERA (6.36 FIP) across 14 1/43 innings over 14 appearances for the Red Sox over the past two seasons. The 28-year-old righty was a notable relief prospect a couple years ago with the Mariners but hasn’t quite panned out at the highest level.
  • COL Relief Pitcher #63
    Rockies signed RHP Eiberson Castellano to a minor league contract.
    Castellano was shipped back to the Phillies last spring after the Twins made him the ninth overall pick in the offseason Rule 5 Draft. The 24-year-old reliever posted a pedestrian 5.14 ERA (4.18 FIP) and 24.2 percent strikeout rate over 35 innings over 20 appearances for Double-A Reading last season. He’s a low-risk dice roll for Colorado’s new-look front office.
  • PIT 2nd Baseman #63
    Pirates re-signed INF/OF Ronny Simon to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Simon fortifies Pittsburgh’s bench depth heading into next season after being non-tendered last month. The 25-year-old former prospect hit .234/.299/.273 with seven RBI and one steal in 27 games this past season between the Pirates and Marlins. He figures to have a decent shot at making the club’s season-opening roster in a versatile utility role.
  • LAA Relief Pitcher #52
    Angels signed LHP Angel Perdomo to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Perdomo represents a worthwhile low-risk flyer for the Angels after making four relief appearances this past season for the division-rival Athletics. The hard-throwing 31-year-old lefty has compiled a robust 34.2 percent strikeout rate across 52 innings over 56 career appearances in the big leagues since the pandemic-shortened 2020 campaign.
  • LAA Catcher #38
    Angels re-signed C Sebastián Rivero to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Rivero is back in the fold as emergency catching depth for the Halos after getting into 11 games this past season, his first stint back in the majors since the 2022 campaign.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #35
    Reds re-signed RHP Roddery Muñoz to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Muñoz sticks around with the Reds as extra relief depth after being non-tendered last month by the club. The 25-year-old was scooped up off waivers from the division-rival Cardinals earlier this offseason after posting an underwhelming 6.73 ERA over 93 2/3 innings across 27 appearances (17 starts) in the big leagues since the start of 2024.
  • CIN Catcher #49
    Reds re-signed C Will Banfield to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Banfield returns as extra catching depth at Triple-A Louisville after going 1-for-10 over seven games this past season in his first opportunity at the highest level. He projects as an emergency backup at this stage of his development and can be safely ignored for fantasy purposes.
  • ATH Relief Pitcher #73
    Athletics signed RHP Luis Contreras to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Contreras will enter Athletics camp vying for a spot in their bullpen after making 14 relief appearances for the Astros over the past two seasons, finishing with a lackluster 7.50 ERA (4.15 FIP) and 19/10 K/BB ratio across 18 innings. The 29-year-old righty has a lengthy track record of missing bats in the upper minors and represents a low-risk lottery ticket.
  • ATL Starting Pitcher #40
    Reynaldo López will be employed as a starter at the beginning of the spring but is a “nice fallback option” for the bullpen, Braves manager Walt Weiss said.
    It seems like an odd way to put it. López, who missed almost all of 2025 following shoulder surgery, has a 2.11 ERA in 26 starts and one relief appearance for the Braves, so if the team thinks he can stay healthy in the rotation, he obviously deserves to be there. But it’s quite possible the Braves believe they’d get more out of him as a reliever and are trying to soften the blow. For the moment, the Braves have Chris Sale, Spencer Strider and Spencer Schwellenbach guaranteed rotation spots if healthy. That would leave two openings for López, Grant Holmes, Hurston Waldrep, Bryce Elder, Osvaldo Bido, Joey Wentz and José Suarez. Of that group, only Waldrep has options remaining.