Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up
Odds by

Rotoworld

  • CHC 3rd Baseman #2
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Cubs signed 3B Alex Bregman to a five-year, $175 million contract.
    The deal was reported over the weekend and is now official. Bregman will also get a full no-trade close and have no opt-outs in the contract, which includes $70 million in deferrals. Bregman is a fantastic defensive addition next to shortstop Dansby Swanson, but unless the Cubs make another offensive signing, he will be asked to essentially replace the offensive production of Kyle Tucker, which would be a tall task.
  • ATH 1st Baseman #16
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Nick Kurtz hit a three-run homer Friday as the A’s topped the Giants 5-2.
    Kurtz has homered in three straight games after going 15 in a row without one. Tonight’s was a 417-footer off Tyler Mahle. Since debuting last April, Kurtz has 44 homers, 115 RBI, 118 runs scored and 103 walks in 160 games. He’s fanned 210 times, too, but that doesn’t seem like much of a concern at this point.
    What has made Bleday so successful lately?
    Eric Samulski discusses how Cincinnati Reds' J.J. Bleday has been "one of the hottest hitters in baseball" recently, going over key statistics that speak to his success and why fantasy managers should look out for him.
  • ATH Starting Pitcher #45
    Aaron Civale yielded two runs in five innings Friday in a win over the Giants.
    Civale fanned only two and allowed homers to Luis Arraez and Harrison Bader, but nothing else did any damage. He’s a pretty stunning 5-1 with a 2.70 ERA to date. It still seems like a good idea to stay away from him in mixed leagues, but for those interested, he’ll face the Angels on the road next time out.
  • ATH Relief Pitcher #36
    Hogan Harris picked up his third save with a scoreless ninth in a three-run game against the Giants on Friday.
    Jack Perkins has blown two save chances in a row, so the ninth is again wide open in Sacramento. Since Harris is the team’s top lefty, it’s not always going to make sense to save him for the ninth inning. Still, he figures to remain very much in the mix for saves. He has a 2.45 ERA despite having walked 17 in 22 innings.
  • SF Starting Pitcher #54
    Tyler Mahle fell to 1-5 after allowing five runs and 10 hits in five innings Friday against the A’s.
    Nick Kurtz hit a three-run homer off Mahle tonight, bringing Mahle’s total of homers allowed to nine in nine starts. Last year, it was five in 16 starts, but that already seemed like a fluke at the time. Mahle does have 42 strikeouts in 41 2/3 innings, so his rotation spot shouldn’t be in jeopardy just yet. He’ll due to face the Diamondbacks in each of his next two starts.
  • ATH Center Fielder
    Henry Bolte went 2-for-4 with an RBI but was caught stealing Friday against the Giants.
    Bolte has started three straight games and gone 5-for-10 with two RBI and a walk. He’s not assured of playing against righties, but the A’s used him over Lawrence Butler on Thursday and Carlos Cortes tonight. The A’s face three more right-handers before their next game against a lefty, and it will be interesting to see if the A’s keep rotating out Butler and Cortes in order to keep Bolte in the lineup. Everything so far is pretty encouraging.
  • SF 2nd Baseman #1
    Luis Arraez went 4-for-5 and hit his first homer against the A’s on Friday.
    Arraez doesn’t have a barrel yet, but he’s on the board with a homer after a 350-foot fly to right off Aaron Civale tonight. The ball was hit 98.2 mph at a 43-degree launch angle. The four-hit game was also his first of the season, pushing his average up to .317.
  • SD Starting Pitcher #98
    Randy Vásquez allowed four hits over six innings in the Padres’ 2-0 shutout of the Mariners on Friday.
    He struck out three and walked none. Vásquez surrendered 11 hard-hit balls, including nine over 100 mph, but nothing much fell in against him. In the fifth, Jhonny Pereda hit a liner to left with a .960 xBA, only to watch Ramón Laureano make a diving catch in left field and then double Cole Young off second base. Vásquez improved to 5-1 with a 2.68 ERA. He has a home start against the Dodgers coming up next week.
  • SD Relief Pitcher #22
    Mason Miller got four outs for his 14th save Friday against the Mariners.
    Miller came into a 2-0 game with two outs in the eighth and gave up an infield single before striking out Connor Joe to end the rally. In the ninth, he walked J.P. Crawford to lead off the inning and gave up a one-out single to Cole Young, but he struck out the other three batters he faced. On the last of those, he retired Brendan Donovan on five pitches, only one of which was in the strike zone. Miller threw 34 pitches tonight, so he might get Saturday off. That would probably put Jason Adam in line for a save opportunity.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #26
    Emerson Hancock pitched six innings of one-run ball and struck out six Friday against the Padres.
    Hancock gave up 11 hard-hit balls, but the Padres managed only four singles and a double against him. It was a performance worthy of a win, but since the Mariners failed to score in the 2-0 loss, Hancock dropped to 3-2 with a 3.02 ERA. He’ll make his next start Wednesday at home against the White Sox.
  • SD 2nd Baseman #24
    Sung-Mun Song singled and knocked in one of the Padres’ two runs Friday against the Mariners.
    The RBI came on a groundout in the seventh, making in a 2-0 game. Song had a basehit earlier, though, and he had a nice drive to the warning track for a flyout in the ninth. If only the game had been played in GABP or Yankee Stadium, rather than Petco, that might have been good for his first MLB home run. Song is batting .176/.300/.235 through his first 20 plate appearances.