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Rotoworld

  • TB 2nd Baseman #7
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    Ha-Seong Kim is not in the Rays’ starting lineup for Friday night’s battle against the Red Sox.
    It looks to be just a routine night off for Kim as the continues to get eased into full-time action following his return from the injured list. Taylor Walls will start in his place at shortstop and will bat sixth for the Rays against Red Sox’ right-hander Hunter Dobbins on Friday evening at Fenway Park.
  • TB Relief Pitcher #47
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    Bryan Baker recorded the final out to get a save against the White Sox on Tuesday.
    Is there larger issue with Crochet's performance?
    Eric Samulski discusses Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet's disastrous outing against the Twins and whether fantasy managers should be worried about his performance moving forward.
  • TB Starting Pitcher #18
    Shane McClanahan allowed two earned runs — three total — over five innings while picking up a win over the White Sox on Tuesday.
  • CWS Starting Pitcher #76
    Noah Schultz allowed four runs — three earned — in 4 1/3 inning to pick up a loss against the Rays in an 8-3 defeat for the White Sox on Tuesday.
  • AZ 2nd Baseman #4
    Ketel Marte is day-to-day with lower back tightness.
    Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo offered an encouraging postgame update after Marte was a late scratch from Tuesday’s contest against the Orioles, telling reporters he’s optimistic he’ll be ready for Wednesday’s series finale. It would be Ildemaro Vargas making another start in his place if he needs additional time off.
  • AZ 2nd Baseman #6
    Ildemaro Vargas, inserted into the lineup after Ketel Marte was a late scratch, hit a three-run homer off Tyler Rogers to help the Diamondbacks best the Orioles 4-3 on Tuesday.
    Vargas is in the midst of a crazy stretch that’s seen him bat .381/.409/.667 with two homers to start the year. Even though this is his 10th big-league season, the 11-game hitting streak has been sufficient to raise his career OPS from .647 to .660. He was supposed to sit tonight, but with the Diamondbacks being this banged up, he’ll surely be in the lineup most of the time until he cools off.
  • AZ Starting Pitcher #29
    Merrill Kelly pitched 5 1/3 innings of two-run ball to pick up a win over the Orioles in his 2026 debut.
    Returning from a nerve issue in his back, Kelly looked like his typical self tonight, though he was a little rusty in the control department. His fastball velocity was down 0.5 mph from last year, but the velocities on his secondary pitches were right at 2025 levels. He allowed five hits, walked four and struck out two. Kelly should offer value in deeper mixed leagues, and he’s usable in all formats with the White Sox next on the schedule.
  • AZ Relief Pitcher #38
    Paul Sewald notched his sixth save with a perfect ninth against the Orioles on Tuesday.
    Sewald probably isn’t an above average reliever at this stage of his career, but he’s getting the job done in Arizona right now. He has a 2.45 ERA through nine appearances, and though he’s given up two homers, he’s yet to blow a save chance.
  • BAL Starting Pitcher #28
    Trevor Rogers surrendered four runs in 4 2/3 innings to take his first loss of the season Tuesday against the Diamondbacks.
    Rogers got through four scoreless despite allowing one or two baserunners each frame. The Diamondbacks finally got to him in the fifth, starting a second rally following Ildemaro Vargas’s three-run homer with one out. Rico Garcia eventually took over to strand Jose Fernandez on second base. Rogers finished with six strikeouts tonight, and though he gave up nine hits, he allowed just five hard-hit balls. He’ll take a 2-1 record and a 3.04 ERA into his next start against the Guardians.
  • BAL Relief Pitcher #50
    Rico Garcia retired all four batters he faced Tuesday to up his total to nine hitless innings to start the season.
    Garcia, who picked up his first career save last week, struck out Nolan Arenado to strand one in the fifth and then pitched a perfect sixth with the Orioles down by one. The relief no-hitter to start the year doesn’t set any records, but it’s pretty neat, especially for a 32-year-old journeyman still trying to establish himself.
  • BAL Catcher #29
    Samuel Basallo went 2-for-3 with a homer and a walk against the Diamondbacks on Tuesday.
    Everything worked out for Basallo tonight, even when he was caught napping in the first. Basallo failed to hustle to the backstop to handle a Trevor Rogers wild pitch, so Geraldo Perdomo thought he could go first to third. However, while he beat the throw from Basallo, he overslid the bag, resulting in an out. Basallo’s homer was a 431-foot shot off Merrill Kelly. Both that and his single left the bat at 109.3 mph. They were the two hardest-hit balls of the game.