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Rotoworld

  • MIA Starting Pitcher #22
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    Sandy Alcantara allowed six hits and two runs with two walks and three strikeouts across seven-plus innings in a 6-2 win over the Mets on Friday.
    Alcantara had to shake off some rust after waiting eight days since his last start for this one. Francisco Lindor took him deep on the second pitch of the game and then Juan Soto and Pete Alonso quickly put another run on the board with consecutive hits. Then, he locked in. The Mets didn’t manage a hit against him after the third inning and Alcantara forced a ground ball on 11 of the final 12 balls they put in play. In the end, the 12 ground ball outs he forced were his most in a single game since 2022 and a 3.44 ERA and 1.03 WHIP in the second half lets him go into the offseason with serious positive momentum.
  • PIT Outfield #15
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    Sportsnet Pittsburgh reported that Oneil Cruz hired a left-handed batting practice pitcher this offseason
    The comment was made by Matt Hague during the broadcast of Monday’s spring training game. Cruz hit just .102/.224/.176 in 125 plate appearances against left-handed pitchers last season, so it’s certainly an issue that Cruz needs to address. Cruz hit .224/.226/.400 against lefties in 2024, so even if Cruz were able to get back to that level, he could remain a full-time player and a major value in fantasy drafts.
    Schiano: It's 'impossible' to draft Westburg
    Eric Samulski and James Schiano react to Jordan Westburg's latest injury and why fantasy managers should not be drafting him.
  • ATL Pitcher #51
    ESPN’s Jeff Passan reports that the Braves signed have signed left-hander Chris Sale to a one-year, $27 million contract extension.
    The contract includes a team option for $30 million in 2028. Sale was going to be a free agent after this season, so this extension now means the 36-year-old will remain in Atlanta for the next two years. Sale has been tremendous when he’s been on the mound for the entirety of his career. After throwing 177 2/3 innings in his first season in Atlanta, he was limited to just 125 2/3 last season due to injury. While he has all the talent to be a fantasy ace, he’s best relied on as an SP2 due to his potential innings concerns.
  • WSH 1st Baseman #36
    Matt Mervis drilled a two-run double and stole a base as the Nationals and Phillies played to a 5-5 stalemate during Monday’s Grapefruit League nightcap.
    Mervis made the most of his opportunity off the bench, drawing a walk, swiping a base, and later scorching a game-tying two-run double to right-center in the eighth inning. The 27-year-old former top first-base prospect never found sustained footing in a pair of brief stints with the Cubs and struggled to a .175 average with seven homers over 42 games for the Marlins last season. A strong spring could put him in the mix for a spot on Washington’s Opening Day roster, but from a fantasy standpoint, the bar is steep – especially in an era where the first-base pool is deeper than it used to be.
  • PHI Right Fielder #53
    Adolis García went 1-for-3 with a double on Monday against the Nationals in Grapefruit League action.
    García’s move to Philadelphia represents a much-needed environment shift that could restore some of the over-the-fence thunder. The underlying indicators – exit velocity and barrel rate – never truly abandoned him last season, even as injuries and rising swing-and-miss tendencies chipped away at his on-base percentage. The power still lives in the bat; the question is how consistently it shows up. The speed, however, has quietly receded. At 33, projecting double-digit steals feels optimistic rather than expected. There’s still usable tread on these tires, but the version of García who threatened 30/20 seasons may belong to a previous chapter. What remains is a hitter whose value will increasingly hinge on how often the ball leaves the yard.
  • SD Left Fielder #21
    Padres sent OF Tirso Ornelas outright to Triple-A El Paso.
    Ornelas remains with San Diego after passing through waivers unclaimed following his removal from the club’s 40-man roster earlier this week. The 25-year-old slugging outfielder got into seven games for the Padres this past season, going 1-for-14 with an RBI during that span. He’ll stick around as emergency organizational depth on the doorstep of the big leagues.
  • CLE 3rd Baseman #11
    José Ramírez went 2-for-4 with a three-run homer and four RBI on Monday, powering the Guardians to a 9-5 win over the Diamondbacks in Cactus League action.
    Ramírez looks like he skipped the ramp-up phase entirely this spring, taking minor leaguer Antonio Menendez deep for a three-run homer in the fifth inning to cap a multi-hit performance that also featured a run-scoring ground-rule double earlier in the contest. The 33-year-old franchise icon remains the top fantasy option at the hot corner after returning first-round fantasy value in each of the past two seasons. He’ll be a top 10 pick in all fantasy drafts this spring.
  • AZ 3rd Baseman #10
    Jordan Lawlar went 3-for-4 with a solo homer on Monday against the Guardians in Cactus League play.
    Lawlar’s torrid spring continued in this one, punctuating a three-hit effort with an eighth-inning solo shot that left the bat at 104.1 mph and traveled 364 feet, per Statcast. The 23-year-old top prospect hasn’t yet translated his minor-league resume into sustained big-league production across a few abbreviated stints, but the tools have never been the question. With Arizona evaluating him as a potential everyday option in center field, a strong spring could force the issue for an Opening Day roster spot. In shallow mixed leagues, we’ve reached wait-and-see territory — but this is the type of elite talent that tends to resurface the moment consensus drifts too far toward doubt.
  • CLE Center Fielder #14
    Chase DeLauter scalded an RBI double on Monday against the Diamondbacks in Cactus League action.
    DeLauter is vying for a spot on Cleveland’s season-opening roster as the club’s starting center fielder after making his big-league debut during last year’s postseason. The 24-year-old top prospect has struggled to stay healthy the last few seasons, mostly due to lingering foot issues, but he hasn’t dealt with any physical issues this spring and is off to a nice start at the dish. He offers enough consistent hard contact and quality plate skills to envision an immediate fantasy impact but he’s more of a late-round lottery ticket for fantasy purposes.
  • AZ Left Fielder #73
    Ryan Waldschmidt drilled a two-run homer on Monday against the Guardians in Cactus League play.
    Waldschmidt’s seventh-inning blast came against big-league reliever Pedro Avila and was his first round-tripper of the spring. The 23-year-old is one of the more intriguing prospects with a chance to break camp in the majors this spring after hitting .289/.419/.473 with 18 homers and 29 steals in 134 games between Double-A Amarillo and High-A Hillsboro this past season. He’ll need to beat out someone like fellow top prospect Jordan Lawlar this spring, which seems a bit unlikely. He’ll likely open the year back in the upper minors with a chance to arrive sooner than later.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Tanner Bibee fired two scoreless innings on Monday in his Cactus League debut against the Diamondbacks.
    Bibee recorded one strikeout and allowed just one baserunner, needing 32 pitches (17 strikes) to spin a pair of frames. His fastball velocity – 94.6 mph – was right in line with last year’s average, which is a positive sign. The 26-year-old righty underwhelmed last season with a 4.24 ERA – 3.62 xERA – and 162/54 K/BB ratio across 182 1/3 innings over 31 starts. He projects as a low-upside top 60 range starting pitcher that will go right around pick 200 in most fantasy drafts this spring.