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Rotoworld

  • FA Relief Pitcher #38
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    Kevin Barral and Isaac Azout report that the Marlins have interest in Devin Williams and Pete Fairbanks.
    The Marlins are not exactly known for splurging in free agency, but they may believe in the club enough to go get one of the more “high-priced” relievers. Williams first — and likely only — year with the Yankees was a mixed bag at best but his success well documented, while Fairbanks has had his ups and downs but has generally been effective as a closer. Either player would likely cost Miami a multi-year deal, and they’d be immediately among the higher paid players on the roster.
  • CLE Right Fielder #7
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    George Valera (calf) went 4-for-5 with six RBI on Tuesday in a minor league rehab game for Triple-A Columbus.
    Valera hit the injured list at the end of spring training with a left calf strain and figures to remain stationed on the doorstep of the majors once he wraps up his rehab assignment. The 25-year-old was one of the most promising prospects in Cleveland’s system a few years before injuries stalled his progress.
    Better late than never: Walker off to great start
    Eric Samulski analyzes Jordan Walker's hot start to the season, explaining what the 23-year-old is doing better and sharing why he "certainly has the power to hit 30 home runs if he continues to start for the Cardinals."
  • CIN 2nd Baseman #9
    Matt McLain drove in two runs and stole a base in a win for the Reds over the Marlins on Tuesday in 10 innings.
  • MIA Center Fielder #87
    Jakob Marsee stole four bases in an extra-inning loss to the Reds on Tuesday.
    Marsee went 2-for-4 with two runs scored and a walk, as well. The four steals brings his total to five, and the 24-year-old still hasn’t been caught in his MLB career after going 14-for-14 in 2025 over 55 games. Marsee has been awful prior to Tuesday, but the ability to swipe bases was readily apparent Tuesday.
  • MIA Relief Pitcher #37
    Anthony Bender blew a save despite allowing no earned runs in 2/3 of an inning versus the Reds on Tuesday.
    Bender came in with two runners on and one out, and the inherited runners from an otherwise-brilliant Sandy Alcantara both scored; one on a sac fly, one on a wild pitch. Pete Fairbanks is expected back shortly from the paternity list, and will resume closing duties once that takes place.
  • CIN Starting Pitcher #41
    Andrew Abbott gave up two runs over 5 1/3 innings in a no-decision versus the Marlins on Tuesday.
    Abbott allowed six hits, two walks and struck out two. It was far from a dominant effort from the 26-year-old with only six swing-and-misses generated, but a vast improvement from his scuffles against the Pirates on Wednesday (four runs, 5 2/3 innings). Abbott will look to continue to improve against the Angels over the weekend.
  • MIA Starting Pitcher #22
    Sandy Alcantara allowed two runs over 8 1/3 innings but didn’t pick up a decision against the Reds on Tuesday in a 6-3 loss for the Marlins in 10 innings.
    The box score doesn’t begin to tell the story, as once again, a vintage Alcantara outing. The 30-year-old wasn’t able to complete his second-consecutive shutout as he gave up a double and walk in the ninth, and two runs scored on a sac fly and a wild pitch in that frame after he exited. He struck out six, walked two, and wasn’t hit hard for the overwhelming majority of the game against a solid Cincinnati lineup. Alcantara will look to keep up this good run — good run seems like such an understatement — against the Tigers on Sunday. Fantasy managers who took a chance on Alcantara have to be thrilled.
  • MIL Relief Pitcher #55
    Shane Drohan will start Wednesday’s series finale against the Red Sox.
    Drohan will make his major-league debut against his former club after being shipped to Milwaukee as part of a six-player swap back in February. The 27-year-old lefty spent a half-decade in Boston’s system after being taken in the fifth round of the 2020 MLB Draft. It’ll likely be a one-and-done spot start for Drohan, who isn’t a viable streaming option outside of extremely deep formats.
  • PIT Starting Pitcher #30
    Paul Skenes held the Padres to one run and two hits through 6 1/3 innings in the Pirates’ 7-1 victory Tuesday.
    Skenes took a no-hitter into the sixth, when Fernando Tatis Jr. singled with one out. Jake Cronenworth had already walked to lead off the inning, so the Padres had a threat going in a 2-0 game. Jackson Merrill, though, grounded into a double play to end it. Skenes lost the shutout when Xander Bogaerts homered with one out in the seventh and was removed immediately afterwards. Skenes has allowed precisely one run in both of his starts since his Oneil Cruz-fueled Opening Day disaster against the Mets. He’ll likely make his next start Monday versus the Nationals.
  • PIT Relief Pitcher #31
    Gregory Soto gave the Pirates a scoreless eighth with a 2-1 lead against the Padres on Tuesday.
    This would have been a Dennis Santana blurb, as he was certainly going to follow Soto and close tonight, but the Pirates busted out for five runs in the bottom of the eighth and then used Yohan Ramírez to finish a 7-1 win. Santana will now almost certainly be in line to close again tomorrow, since Soto has worked back-to-back days and Santana hasn’t worked since Saturday.
  • SD Starting Pitcher #27
    Nick Pivetta pitched five innings of two-run ball and struck out eight Tuesday in a loss to the Pirates.
    Pivetta has bounced back nicely from a poor Opening Day start, striking out eight in consecutive outings. He took the L tonight, leaving him 1-2 with a 5.54 ERA, but little has changed in his outlook. He gets the Rockies at home next time out on Sunday.