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Rotoworld

  • CLE 2nd Baseman #87
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    Guardians 2B prospect Travis Bazzana is dealing with left oblique soreness.
    The injury potentially eliminates the possibility of Bazzana joining Cleveland’s postseason roster. There should be an update on the severity of the issue at some point in the coming days. The 23-year-old top prospect was in the midst of an extended hot streak at the Triple-A level, batting .290 with four homers in nine games since the start of September.
  • LAD 1st Baseman #5
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    Freddie Freeman went 2-for-3 and drove in three runs on Friday night as the Dodgers bested the Royals in Cactus League play.
    Freeman opened the scoring in the ballgame with an RBI single off of Mitch Spence before an out had been recorded in the home half of the first. He then smacked a two-run single in the fourth that extended the Dodgers’ lead to 5-0. The 36-year-old slugger has looked as good as ever this spring, hitting .455 (5-for-11) with seven RBI and a 0/1 K/BB ratio. He remains a steady producer for fantasy purposes and a strong foundation piece on any team.
    Pitchers to watch in fantasy draft early rounds
    Eric Samulski and James Schiano provide drafting tips for fantasy baseball managers in the market for star pitchers and reveal which pitcher should be passed over in the first round.
  • LAD 2nd Baseman #72
    Miguel Rojas went 3-for-3 with a run scored and a stolen base as the Dodgers crushed the Royals on Friday evening in Arizona.
    The 37-year-old infielder led off the home half of the first inning with a single, swiped second base and scored the game’s first run on an RBI single by Freddie Freeman. Rojas also singled in the second inning and again in the fourth. He’s a candidate to start at second base with Tommy Edman (ankle) sidelined to begin the season, or he could remain in his regular utility infielder role while Hyesong Kim or Santiago Espinal get the call there.
  • LAD Relief Pitcher #80
    Ryder Ryan pitched well during Friday’s Cactus League start against the Dodgers, allowing just two walks over two scoreless innings.
    The 30-year-old hurler struck out one batter on the evening and did not allow a hit. Ryan got just one whiff on 21 pitches in the contest, posting a CSW of 29 percent. Regardless of how well he pitches this spring, he’s likely ticketed for a spot in the bullpen at Triple-A Oklahoma City to begin the 2026 campaign.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #54
    Mitch Spence struggled in a losing effort against the Dodgers on Friday night, surrendering three runs on seven hits across three innings.
    The 27-year-old hurler didn’t walk a batter or record a strikeout in the ballgame. The Dodgers jumped on him in the opening inning with consecutive RBI knocks from Freddie Freeman, Mookie Betts and Teoscar Hernandez pushing three runs across. Spence then settled in and worked a pair of scoreless innings to end his day. He got three swings and misses on 42 pitches on the night, registering an uninspiring CSW of only 17 percent. The expectation is that Spence will begin the season in a long relief role for the Royals, which saps him of any late-round fantasy appeal that he may have had if he were in the rotation.
  • TB 3rd Baseman #13
    Junior Caminero hit a go-ahead two-run homer in the sixth inning to help the Dominican Republic beat Nicaragua 12-3 on Friday.
    It was a 3-3 game until Caminero hit a Steven Cruz offering 414 feet to give the Dominican Republic a lead it wouldn’t give up. Julio Rodríguez added a solo shot in the seventh, and Oneil Cruz came off the bench to put away the game with a three-run, 116.8-mph blast in the eighth. The Dominican Republic also got two-hit games from Fernando Tatis Jr., Juan Soto and Manny Machado.
  • PHI Starting Pitcher #61
    Cristopher Sánchez gave up three runs — two earned — and six hits in 1 1/3 innings Friday against Nicaragua.
    Sánchez actually struck out four (of seven batters) in the first inning tonight, with a wild pitch allowing the leadoff man to reach on the first one. He just didn’t have much help or luck in the outing, and he gave up the six hits despite not allowing a single hard-hit ball. Barring something pretty unexpected, he’ll make another start for the Dominican Republic next week.
  • MIN Center Fielder #25
    Byron Buxton left Friday’s game against Brazil after being by a pitch.
    Buxton appeared to get hit on the back elbow during the fifth inning. He stayed in to run afterwards and then came out in favor of Pete Crow-Armstrong the following inning. This probably won’t prove to be anything significant.
  • MIA 3rd Baseman #1
    Connor Norby went 2-for-3 and slugged his first home run of the spring on Friday night, powering the Marlins to a 2-0 victory over the Mets.
    Norby did his damage off of Mets’ starter Sean Manaea in the opening inning, belting a 360-foot (97.3 mph EV) solo shot that would prove to be all the offense that the Marlins would need. He also singled and struck out in the contest. With the two-hit attack, the 25-year-old infielder is now hitting .211 (4-for-19) with one homer, one RBI and one stolen base through his first seven spring contests.
  • MIA Left Fielder #13
    Heriberto Hernández went 1-for-2 with a solo home run and a stolen base on Friday night as the Marlins shut out the Mets in Grapefruit League action.
    Hernández drew a walk to start the fourth inning and swiped second base, but the Marlins couldn’t cash him in from there. He then provided an insurance run with his 356-foot (99.0 mph EV) solo shot off of Bryan Hudson in the sixth inning. The 26-year-old outfielder is having a strong spring so far, hitting .286/.375/.786 with a pair of homers, three RBI and three stolen bases.
  • MIA Starting Pitcher #23
    Max Meyer was terrific in Friday night’s Grapefruit League victory over the Mets, piling up four strikeouts over three innings of shutout baseball.
    Meyer scattered two hits on the night and didn’t allow a base on balls. Both of the hits that he allowed in the contest were singles and the Mets never mounted a serious scoring threat against him. The 26-year-old right-hander generated five whiffs on 39 pitches on the night — three of those on his slider — while posting a strong CSW of 33 percent. He has been terrific through his first two appearances this spring, posting a 0.50 WHIP and a 6/0 K/BB ratio over his first four innings of work. He’s locked into a spot in the Marlins’ rotation and as a post-hype sleeper he makes for an intriguing fantasy option in the endgame stages of drafts.