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Rotoworld

  • MIL Starting Pitcher #41
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    Brewers acquired RHP Jake Woodford from the Rays for RHP prospect K.C. Hunt.
    Woodford was with the Rays as a non-roster invitee to spring training and did not make the Opening Day roster, so the Brewers swooped in before he was released. Woodford has some experience as a starter, but he made 22 appearances out of the bullpen for the Cardinals in 2025. He has a career 5.10 ERA in 256 MLB innings, so he could just be some healthy insurance for a Brewers staff that is dealing with a few injuries.
  • KC Starting Pitcher #55
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    Royals manager Matt Quatraro said he’s optimistic Cole Ragans (elbow) will make his next start.
    Quatraro added that Ragans was lifted for precautionary reasons after experiencing triceps and elbow soreness while throwing three scoreless innings on 58 pitches on Wednesday against the Guardians. The 28-year-old southpaw, who dealt with some diminished fastball velocity in this outing, will undergo additional evaluation and imaging to ensure that he’s not dealing with anything serious. It sounds like there’s a chance he avoids the injured list and takes the ball against the White Sox on Tuesday.
    Can Okamoto turn hot streak into consistency?
    Kazuma Okamoto is scorching the ball. What does that mean for his long-term fantasy abseball outlook?
  • WSH Shortstop #5
    CJ Abrams went 3-for-5 with two doubles, a grand slam, five RBI, and two runs scored in a 15-2 blowout win over the Twins on Wednesday.
    Funny enough, the Nationals trailed this game 3-2 entering the bottom of the fifth before unleashing their wrath on the Twins’ bullpen. Abrams was at the center of the onslaught with a double that helped chase Bailey Ober and then a late grand slam when the rout was on. That was already Abrams’ ninth home run of the season and his five RBI brought him to 33 total, which tied him with both Matt Olson and Andy Pages for most in the league. Here’s to hoping that Abrams’ breakout is finally here and he can sustain something near this power production moving forward.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #36
    Miles Mikolas allowed three hits and two runs with three strikeouts and didn’t walk a batter across 5 1/3 innings to earn the win against the Twins on Wednesday.
    It’s almost shocking to see Mikolas wind up with such a clean final line. He pulled it off though! His often good location was great here, especially with his sinker and slider against the Twins’ right-handed batters. While encouraging, definitely don’t get used to this. He’ll take a still unsightly 7.11 ERA into a two-start week against the Reds – in Cincinnati – and Orioles.
  • MIN Right Fielder #38
    Matt Wallner went 2-for-3 with a two-run home run on Wednesday against the Nationals.
    Wallner’s fourth home run of the season briefly gave the Twins a lead in the fifth inning before they allowed 14 unanswered runs by the Nationals. Alas, Wallner obliterated that homer 420 feet and it was nice to see his raw power shine through in what’s otherwise been a disastrous season so far with a .189 batting average and .613 OPS through 30 games.
  • MIN Starting Pitcher #17
    Bailey Ober allowed six hits and five runs with two walks and three strikeouts over five-plus innings in a loss against the Nationals on Wednesday.
    Ober nearly had his fourth straight quality start in a row before getting chased in the fifth inning. To that point, he’d allowed just four hits and three runs with a pitch count at 77. Then, he gave up back-to-back doubles, was pulled, and the inherited runner he left came home one pitch later. He got a bit fortunate too, leaving far too many of his changeups in the heart of the plate and somehow avoiding more damage. On the season, he has a 32:14 strikeout to walk ratio with a 4.19 ERA across 43 innings and has a two-start week coming up against the Marlins and Brewers.
  • NYY Relief Pitcher #73
    Yankees optioned RHP Herry De los Santos to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
    De los Santos bailed out New York’s bullpen by tossing 3 1/3 shutout innings on 54 pitches after starter Will Warren lasted just four innings during Wednesday’s contest against the Rangers. The Yankees will bring up a fresh bullpen arm for Thursday’s series finale.
  • NYY Shortstop #72
    Yankees manager Aaron Boone said X-rays on José Caballero’s elbow came back negative for any fractures.
    Boone added that Caballero is dealing with some swelling and could wind up sitting out Thursday’s series finale. The 29-year-old shortstop was hit by a pitch during Wednesday’s contest but managed to remain in the game. Fantasy managers should consider him day-to-day for now.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #40
    Ryan Weathers has been scratched from Thursday’s start against the Rangers due to illness.
    Yankees manager Aaron Boone told reporters Weathers has been sick recently and will slot back into the rotation against the Orioles on Monday. The 26-year-old told reporters he lost nearly 10 pounds due to a viral infection that threw off his typical routine between starts. It’ll likely be a bullpen game on Thursday against the Rangers with long reliever Paul Blackburn taking the ball to kick things off.
  • BOS Starting Pitcher #54
    Sonny Gray pitched four-hit ball for five innings and combined with three relievers on a 4-0 shutout of the Tigers on Wednesday.
    Tyler Samaniego, Zack Kelly and Greg Weissert finished up for the Red Sox. Gray had just two strikeouts and two swings-and-misses tonight in his return from the injured list, but most of the contact was soft, and when got into big trouble by loading the bases in the second, Wilyer Abreu bailed him out with a terrific sliding catch on a Jace Jung liner to right. Gray moved to 3-1 with a 3.54 ERA in six starts. He’ll get the Phillies next week.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #9
    Jack Flaherty struck out 10 while allowing four runs — two earned — in five innings Wednesday in a loss to the Red Sox.
    The two runs in the fourth were unearned because of a Colt Keith error. The two runs in the third could have been unearned, too, but no error was given to Spencer Torkelson for botching a foul popup prior to Caleb Durbin’s RBI double. Flaherty wound up dropping to 0-3 with a 5.56 ERA tonight, but it was probably his best performance of the season. He allowed three hits and walked one. The 10-strikeout game was his first since Aug. 2024 and 14th overall. He’ll face the Mets next.