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

Rotoworld

  • NYM 2nd Baseman #11
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Jorge Polanco (Achilles) is absent from the lineup for Tuesday’s game against the Cardinals.
    Polanco will get some extra rest in this one while playing through a relatively minor Achilles issue that flared up last weekend. The 32-year-old veteran should be considered day-to-day for now. He’s likely to be limited to DH for the immediate future. It’ll be Mark Vientos taking over at DH with Jared Young covering first base.
  • PIT Starting Pitcher #36
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Bubba Chandler threw 4 1/3 hitless innings, allowing one unearned run, against the Reds on Tuesday.
    Chandler was perfect in the first, second and fourth innings, striking out two each frame. In between that, he walked three in the third and gave a run because Oneil Cruz and Bryan Reynolds collided on a fly to left. That frame also featured TJ Friedl bunting into a double play. The fifth was like the third inning minus the hijinks; Chandler walked three out of four and got pulled in favor of Yohan Ramirez, who did Chandler a huge favor by striking out Matt McLain and Elly De La Cruz to strand the bases loaded. Chandler’s wildness still cost him a win. There’s no denying a stuff, but he’s lost the strike zone a handful of times since the beginning of the spring. He won’t be all that valuable in fantasy leagues until he can get a handle on that.
    Messick's start vs. LAD puts him on fantasy radars
    After Parker Messick spun six scoreless innings against the Dodgers' ferocious lineup, Eric Samulski says fantasy managers should be "buying into" the Guardians starting pitcher.
  • PIT Relief Pitcher #31
    Gregory Soto worked a scoreless ninth with a five-run lead against the Reds on Tuesday.
    Dennis Santana was called in to bail out Hunter Barco with the Reds up 6-3 in the eighth and wound up throwing a scoreless inning. That temporarily set up Soto for his first save chance, but that was denied after the Pirates scored twice in the top of the ninth. Soto came in anyway and did make things interesting before pitching around a single, a walk and a HBP. Soto is enough of a threat for saves in Pittsburgh to perhaps warrant a spot in deep leagues, but Santana would seem to be quite a bit more trustworthy in the ninth.
  • CIN Starting Pitcher #55
    Brandon Williamson was tagged for six runs and three homers in 4 2/3 innings against the Pirates on Tuesday.
    Williamson, who is returning from Tommy John, was making his first start since 2024, and by giving up three homers to the Pirates, he accomplished something that no pitcher had done since that season. Ryan O’Hearn and Bryan Reynolds hit back-to-back homers off him in the second before Oneil Cruz chimed in with another in the fourth. Williamson was supposed to be part of some odd hybrid gig for the Reds before Nick Lodolo’s blister meant there was room for all three of him, Chase Burns and Rhett Lowder in the rotation. Instead of going back to whatver was the original plan, they should probably just send down Williamson once Lodolo returns.
  • PIT Designated Hitter #24
    Marcell Ozuna went 0-for-4 with a strikeout Tuesday and is 1-for-16 to start the season.
    It’s largely just been popups from Ozuna so far. His launch angles on his two flies tonight were 52 and 55 degrees. He has only two hard-hit balls and none of his nine balls to the outfield have traveled more than 315 feet. The Pirates paid him too much this winter to give up on him quickly, but the early returns are simply bad. Even in spring training, he managed just one barrel in 44 at-bats.
  • TEX Catcher #9
    Danny Jansen went 3-for-5 with a three-run homer in the Rangers’ 8-5 defeat of the Orioles on Tuesday.
    It’s his first three-hit game since last July 5. Jansen started the Rangers’ first two games, sat in favor of Kyle Higashioka in the next two and then was back in there tonight. The Rangers made it sound like the plan was for Jansen to get a bit more playing time than Higashioka behind the plate, but neither seems like an option outside of two-catcher AL-only leagues.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #48
    Jacob deGrom was charged with three runs and six hits over 4 2/3 innings in a no-decision against the Orioles on Tuesday.
    It would have been one run in five innings if Wyatt Langford hadn’t terribly misread Gunnar Henderson’s shot to left with two outs in the fifth. DeGrom struck out seven and walked none while throwing 79 pitches, which is right where the Rangers said they wanted him before the game. He was making his first start of the season after being scratched Saturday with neck stiffness.
  • TEX Relief Pitcher #31
    After coming in with a five-run lead, Chris Martin surrendered two runs in the ninth Tuesday against the Orioles.
    The Rangers couldn’t resist using their three best relievers, Martin, Robert Garcia and Cole Winn, for the third time in four game tonight, so like they were Monday, they’ll be shorthanded against Wednesday unless they’re willing to use those guys four times in five days. Martin would seem to be very easy to rule out. If Garcia is unavailable, too, maybe Tyler Alexander will get his third save chance already.
  • BAL Left Fielder #3
    Taylor Ward went 4-for-5 with a double and two RBI versus the Rangers in Tuesday’s loss.
    Ward didn’t seem like the ideal choice to open as the Orioles’ leadoff hitter, but he done just fine there so far, batting .300 with a 4/3 K/BB. He is still looking for his first homer. Last year, he had 36 of those for the Angels, though he hit .228 with 175 strikeouts in the process.
  • BAL 1st Baseman #25
    Pete Alonso went 2-for-4 and hit his first homer for the Orioles in Wednesday’s loss to Jacob deGrom and the Rangers.
    Alonso and deGrom, obviously former Mets teammates, had a little interaction after Alonso’s single in the first, as deGrom made a pickoff throw that nearly hit Alonso while he wasn’t being held on (Jake Burger did scoot over to catch it). Alonso had the last laugh in the fourth, hitting a shot 400 feet to left center. He’s 6-for-19 for his new team.
  • MIA Right Fielder #17
    Owen Caissie delivered a go-ahead RBI single on Tuesday, leading the Marlins to a decisive 9-2 win over the White Sox.
    Caissie put Miami ahead with a run-scoring single against White Sox starter Erick Fedde as part of a four-run outburst in the fourth inning. He also brought home an additional insurance run with an eighth-inning sacrifice fly. The 23-year-old corner outfielder was the highest-profile prospect to change teams over the offseason and is off to an outstanding start in his Marlins debut, hitting .400 (6-for-15) with one homer, six RBI and one steal through five contests.