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Rotoworld

  • MIL Shortstop
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    Brewers promoted SS prospect Luis Peña to High-A Wisconsin.
    Peña celebrated the promotion by homering in his first at-bat on Tuesday night. The 18-year-old prodigy has ascended top top-10 prospect status from a dynasty standpoint after batting .307/.374/.470 with six homers and 40 steals in 71 games for Low-A Carolina in his stateside debut. He projects as a future five-category impact fantasy contributor and is already one of the top prospects in baseball.
  • TB Outfield #31
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    Cedric Mullins went 2-for-2 with a solo homer and a sac fly as the Rays held off the Blue Jays 6-5 on Friday.
    The Rays traded for Jacob Melton in the hopes that he’ll be their long-term center fielder, but it’s Mullins’ job for now. The 31-year-old had 17 homers and 22 steals for the Orioles and Mets last season, though he hit just .216 in the process. Even with the homers and steals, he’ll probably be too much of a liability elsewhere to be of much use in mixed leagues.
    Target Abreu late for fantasy RP amid Hader injury
    Eric Samulski and James Schiano look at the 'landmine-y' world of fantasy relief pitchers and explain why Josh Hader's injury gives Bryan Abreu a massive boost in value.
  • TB Pitcher #44
    Ryan Pepiot allowed an unearned run through two innings in his start against the Blue Jays on Friday.
    Pepiot walked two in a row to open the second and then gave up an RBI single, but the run was declared unearned because the runner from second had advanced to third on a passed ball. Pepiot averaged 93.5 mph with his fastball today, down from 95.2 mph last year. That might be something to watch if it lingers into a middle of March.
  • TOR Pitcher #56
    Eric Lauer surrendered three runs in 1 2/3 innings Friday against the Rays.
    The first four batters reached against Lauer on three singles and a HBP. He retired five in a row from there, but the damage was done. A nice surprise in 15 starts and 13 relief appearances for the Jays last year, Lauer seems likely to spend most of 2026 pitching in middle relief with the team adding Dylan Cease and Cody Ponce and bringing back Max Scherzer.
  • DET Relief Pitcher #51
    Tigers reassigned RHPs Phil Bickford, Dugan Darnell, Tyler Owens and Troy Watson to minor league camp.
    As is the case with most of the early cuts at this time of the spring, there are no real surprises among the group. All four pitchers are dealing with injuries and will continue their rehab on the minor league side of camp. The Tigers are now down to 63 players remaining in major league camp.
  • NYM Left Fielder #1
    MJ Melendez homered twice to drive in four runs Friday in the Mets’ 14-3 drubbing of the Cardinals.
    Power isn’t the issue for Melendez, who was let go by the Royals after hitting .215/.297/.388 in parts of four seasons. He has a chance of making the Mets if Carson Benge opens up in Triple-A, but most likely, Melendez himself is going to have to go succeed in Triple-A for a spell before getting an opportunity.
  • NYM Pitcher #51
    Freddy Peralta was perfect for three innings and struck out three Friday against the Cardinals.
    Peralta had an easy day despite his velocity being down 2-3 mph from last year. He’d surely be further along now if hadn’t decided to skip the World Baseball Classic, but it seemed like the smart move as he enters his walk year while joining a new franchise.
  • NYM Pitcher #38
    Making his spring debut, Devin Williams gave up a homer on the first pitch he threw before retiring the next three hitters he faced Friday against the Cardinals.
    The homer from JJ Wetherholt came on the cutter that Williams has been working on this spring. Other than that, Williams looked fine in throwing five changeups and a couple of fastballs in his nine-pitch outing.
  • STL Starting Pitcher #60
    Quinn Matthews yielded one run in 2 2/3 innings Friday versus the Mets.
    Matthews opened the game with a HBP, a double, a run-scoring wild pitch and then a walk, leading to a mound visit. He was great after that, though, and he even picked off Juan Soto, who hit the double, from second base to end the first. Improved control would put Matthews in line to join the Cardinals rotation sometime this summer. Last year, he had a 107/74 K/BB in 94 innings in Triple-A.
  • NYM Outfield
    A.J. Ewing went 2-for-2 with a two-run homer and a walk off the bench Friday against the Cardinals.
    The homer came off Tink Hence. Ewing, a 2023 fourth-round pick, hit .315/.401/.429 with 70 steals between Low-A, High-A and Double-A last season. With Jett Williams gone and Carson Benge looking like more of a corner guy, Ewing has a chance to be the Mets’ center fielder of the future.
  • STL Shortstop #87
    JJ Wetherholt got his first homer of the spring Friday off the Mets’ Devin Williams.
    It was Williams’ experimental cutter than Wetherholt connected with, so it’s not quite as impressive as hitting his fastball or especially his changeup. Still, he hit the pitch 422 feet with 105.4 mph of exit velocity. Wetherholt has just the one hit this spring, but he’s walked four times and struck out only one in 10 plate appearances. He’s hoping to convince the Cardinals to take him north as their starting second baseman to begin the season.