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  • NYY Right Fielder
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    Yankees signed OF Nick Torres to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    Torres hasn’t appeared in affiliated ball since 2018, when he logged 25 games at the Triple-A level. The 32-year-old reigning Mexican League MVP earned the hardware after slashing a video-game esque .347/.425/.730 with 27 homers across 86 games for Algodoneros de Unión Laguna. He’s likely to open next season at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and represents a pure zero-risk lottery ticket for the Yankees.
  • ATH Shortstop #94
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    Athletics reassigned SS Leo De Vries, LHPs Gage Jump and Matt Krook, C Chad Wallach, 3B Tommy White, 2B Michael Stefanic, OFs Cade Marlowe and Henry Bolte, RHPs Nick Hernandez, Brooks Kriske and Wander Suero to minor league camp.
    De Vries put together an extremely impressive showing in Cactus League play, hitting .409 (18-for-44) with three homers and 11 RBI in 17 contests. The switch-hitting 19-year-old prodigy was the centerpiece of the Mason Miller blockbuster at the trade deadline last July and will open the minor league season at Double-A Midland. It wouldn’t be shocking at all if he reached the big leagues as a teenager in the second half. He’s one of the top 10 prospects in the entire fantasy landscape entering 2026.
    Snell 'a really risky pick' in fantasy drafts
    Eric Samulski reacts to news that Los Angeles Dodgers' starting pitcher Blake Snell will miss at least six weeks due to a shoulder injury and why fantasy managers should exercise caution with drafting him.
  • LAD Center Fielder #65
    Finally making his spring debut, Jack Suwinski hit a three-run homer off Jameson Taillon and walked Sunday in the Dodgers’ 14-8 win over the Cubs.
    Suwinski was DFA’d by the Pirates on Feb. 16 and claimed by the Dodgers on Feb. 21, but he went right back on waivers again afterwards and cleared this time. As a result, he hadn’t gotten to play in a major league spring game until today. It doesn’t seem likely that the Dodgers will ever have much use for him, but if he thrives in Triple-A, another club might trade for him.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #80
    Emmet Sheehan surrendered two runs in 3 2/3 innings Sunday in a win over the Cubs.
    Sheehan struck out four on a bad velocity day. He averaged 95.6 mph with his fastball for the Dodgers last season and 94.6 mph last week in his spring debut, but he was down to 93.3 mph today. His changeups were off by 3.4 mph from last year. Many people are very excited about Sheehan’s potential as a starter this year, and it’s easy to understand why, given that he had an 89/22 K/BB in 73 1/3 innings over 12 starts and three relief appearances last year. Still, he’s going to need to rediscover that velocity if he’s going to maintain anything close to a 30% strikeout rate.
  • CHC Starting Pitcher #50
    Jameson Taillon was torched for 10 runs in 3 1/3 innings by the Dodgers on Sunday.
    This is getting a little concerning. Taillon did fine against Panama while pitching for Team Canada last week, but he’s given up eight homers and 23 runs over 9 1/3 innings in his four official outings this spring. His velocity is down about one mph from last year, which isn’t unusual, but nothing in his arsenal is working quite the way it should be. That he’s historically a pretty good spring pitcher and that he had extra incentive to get ready for WBC makes it just a little more worrisome that he’s pitching this horribly.
  • LAD Shortstop #50
    Mookie Betts hit his first spring homer Sunday against the Cubs.
    It was a 414-foot shot off Jameson Taillon. Betts, who missed two days last week for the birth of his child, is 6-for-19 this spring.
  • PHI Right Fielder #24
    Phillies optioned OF Pedro León to Triple-A Lehigh Valley.
    León will open the regular season back in the minors after going 6-for-26 with three RBI in 16 games this spring. The 27-year-old former top prospect was claimed off waivers from the Astros last November. His departure makes it abundantly clear that Dylan Moore and Otto Kemp will have bench roles with the Phillies to kick off the season.
  • CLE 1st Baseman #12
    Rhys Hoskins had a two-run homer and two walks Sunday in the Guardians’ 12-6 defeat of the Athletics.
    Hoskins is hitting .222/.343/.481 in nine games after his late signing with the Guardians. He seems like a lock for Cleveland’s roster as a sure starter against lefties and maybe the primary DH against righties, too.
  • CLE Starting Pitcher #28
    Tanner Bibee gave up six runs and 13 hits in 5 2/3 innings against the A’s on Sunday.
    Bibee had been looking pretty strong this spring, but his fastball was down one mph today and the A’s really punished him for hanging around the strike zone. He threw 85 pitches to 30 hitters, with 25 of those getting put into play for 15 hard-hit balls and three homers. Hopefully, his velocity will return next time out.
  • ATH Right Fielder #32
    Colby Thomas went 2-for-4 and hit his second spring homer Sunday against the Guardians.
    The A’s gave Zack Gelof a start in the outfield today, so he might be a potential alternative to Thomas as a platoonmate for Lawrence Butler. Thomas, though, projects to be the better player of those two right now. He didn’t excel in hitting .225/.267/.417 in 132 plate appearances as a rookie last year, but the pop is legit and he’s a quality defender. We also don’t know for sure that Butler will be platooned, but given that he’s being slowplayed this spring while coming off knee surgery, it’d make sense to go that route initially.
  • CLE Shortstop #13
    Gabriel Arias singled twice as the Guardians’ No. 2 hitter Sunday against the A’s.
    His two hits left the bat at 113 and 109 mph. The Guardians still haven’t used Arias anywhere other than short this spring, even though they indicated months ago that the plan was to treat him as more of a utilityman. It’s good news for his chances of lasting as a regular that he’s ahead of Brayan Rocchio on the depth chart defensively. Rocchio is seemingly going to start at second base initially, but one imagines Travis Bazzana will get a chance there sometime this summer. Arias still seems like a poor bet offensively and should lack value outside of deep AL-only leagues.