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Rotoworld

  • DET 3rd Baseman #39
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    Zach McKinstry went 1-for-2 with a two-run homer against the Yankees on Thursday.
    McKinstry hit out a Will Warren sweeper to raise his spring OPS to .929 in 17 at-bats. He figures to be a super-sub again and should see plenty of time at both third base and shortstop, as he did in 2025.
  • AZ Starting Pitcher #29
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    Merrill Kelly (back) will make a rehab start with Triple-A Reno on April 3rd.
    Kelly will begin the season on the IL, but he returned to the mound for the final spring training game on Tuesday and pitched two innings against the Guardians. He’s still working his way back from nerve issues with his back, but his velocity was close to normal in that outing, which is good news. He will likely need more than one rehab start to build up to a pitch count that will allow him to go five innings in an MLB game. He should return in mid-April, which would push either Michael Soroka or Brandon Pfaadt out of the rotation.
    Rays say Pepiot injury not a cause for concern
    Eric Samulski looks into Rays SP Ryan Pepiot's surprise issue with hip inflammation, but notes Tampa Bay says it's nothing to be concerned about.
  • SF Center Fielder #51
    Jung Hoo Lee launched a three-run homer Tuesday as the Giants defeated the Monterey Sultanes 8-2.
    Lee’s homer, which was nearly a splash hit, came off former big leaguer Justus Sheffield. The Giants experimented with Lee leading off and Luis Arraez hitting fifth on Saturday, but Lee has batted fourth and fifth, both times with Arraez in the leadoff spot, in his two starts since. He improved as last year went along, and his excellent exit velocity numbers this spring suggest he still might have something better in store. However, we’d like him a lot more hitting in the top third of the Giants order.
  • SF Starting Pitcher #65
    Landen Roupp pitched 5 1/3 innings of two-run ball against the Monterrey Sultanes on Tuesday.
    Roupp struck out six and was really effective with the cutter he’s been using more this spring; the 21 times he threw it tonight produced five whiffs, five called strikes, three fouls and no balls in play. If the cutter turns into a quality pitch this season, he might prove useful in mixed leagues. Roupp is expected to make his first start early next week against the Padres.
  • HOU Shortstop #0
    Brice Matthews went 3-for-3 with a walk, a steal and two runs scored as the Astros barely beat their Triple-A Sugar Land affiliate 6-5 on Tuesday.
    That’s the good news for Matthews. The bad is that Jeremy Peña came back from his finger injury and homered in the game. If Peña is on the Opening Day roster, that’ll probably take away Matthews’ spot, since even though he might be worth keeping as a speedy option off the bench, the team is going to want him getting regular playing time.
  • HOU Starting Pitcher #43
    Lance McCullers Jr. yielded two runs in 4 2/3 innings and struck out seven against Triple-A Sugar Land on Tuesday.
    McCullers gave up six hits but just three hard-hit balls tonight, albeit against a Triple-A lineup. His upside isn’t nearly what it was and the chances of him making 25-30 starts are pretty slim, but the Astros will be content if he’s just an average starter when he’s able to take the mound. He’s expected to face the Red Sox next week in his first outing.
  • HOU Shortstop #3
    Jeremy Peña hit a two-run homer against Triple-A Sugar Land in his return to Houston’s lineup on Tuesday.
    Pena also had a 361-foot flyout to go along with his 394-foot homer. Expectations were that he’d open up on the IL after suffering a finger injury in the WBC, but he made his case to start at shortstop on Opening Day tonight. If he was successful, that means the Astros will need to play Yordan Alvarez in left if they want to include both Isaac Paredes and Christian Walker in their initial lineup.
  • LAA 3rd Baseman #17
    Oswald Peraza singled in one of the Angels’ three runs Tuesday in a 3-0 win over the Dodgers.
    With Vaughn Grissom on the IL and temporarily out of the mix, the Angels will have Adam Frazier and Peraza split time at second base initially. Although Frazier is a lefty and Peraza is a righty, it won’t be a straight platoon initially, which is good. We don’t know that Peraza will turn out to be a quality option, but we can be pretty well sure that Frazier won’t be.
  • LAA Starting Pitcher #41
    Jack Kochanowicz pitched three perfect frames and struck out four in his start against the Dodgers on Tuesday.
    With his velocity up by 1.5 mph and some extra movement on his sinker, Kochanowicz might rank as one of the Cactus League’s most improved players. Still, he was so bad last year that he could take two steps forward and still be below average for the Angels. He’s in line to start in Houston against the Astros on Sunday.
  • LAA Starting Pitcher #32
    Ryan Johnson tossed four scoreless innings and notched five strikeouts against the Dodgers in a relief outing Tuesday.
    The 74th overall pick in the 2024 draft, Johnson is going to make the Angels for the second year in a row, even though he spent the rest of the year in High-A ball after his demotion last May. He ends a nice spring with a 3.05 ERA and a 23/5 K/BB in 20 2/3 innings. We still doubt he’s ready to be an adequate major league starter this year, but he might get there someday.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #17
    Shohei Ohtani fanned 11 while giving up three runs in four-plus innings Tuesday against the Angels.
    All of the runs came in the fifth, when he allowed three straight singles to open the inning and then got pulled. None of the singles were hard-hit. Through the first four innings, he’d allowed just one hard-hit ball and struck out more than two-thirds of the batters he faced, even though his velocity was down about two mph from last year. He’ll make his season debut as a pitcher Tuesday against the Guardians.