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  • MIN Center Fielder #25
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    Byron Buxton is day-to-day with a forearm contusion after getting hit by a pitch Friday against the Rays.
    The Kevin Kelly offering hit him near his back elbow. X-rays were negative, though as we saw with Jordan Lawlar, that’s not necessarily everything. James Outman replaced him as a pinch-runner and in center field. He would be his primary replacement if Buxton misses some time.
  • HOU Relief Pitcher #58
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    Cody Bolton will start for the Astros on Sunday afternoon against the Mariners.
    The Astros are dealing with a plethora of injuries in their rotation at the moment and need all the help that they can get, so it sounds like Bolton will have an opportunity to stick around if he pitches well. He allowed just two runs over 4 1/3 innings in a spot start against the Rockies on Monday.
    'No one can touch' Miller right now
    James Schiano outlines just how impressive Mason Miller has been for the Padres.
  • CWS 2nd Baseman
    Noah Phalen of Sox Showdown reports that the White Sox plan to promote Sam Antonacci from Triple-A Charlotte prior to Tuesday’s contest against the Rays.
    Antonacci has been seeing time in the outfield at the Triple-A level and could potentially step right into an everyday role there for the White Sox. The 23-year-old has hit .317/.509/.488 with two homers, six RBI, four stolen bases and a remarkable 6/14 K/BB ratio through his first 12 games this season. He’ll immediately make for an intriguing addition in deeper mixed leagues.
  • HOU Right Fielder #11
    Cam Smith went 4-for-5 with two doubles and two runs driven in, but the Astros fell to the Mariners on Saturday.
    Smith blistered a pair of doubles and singled twice. The 23-year-old was in a mini-slump with a 1-for-11 mark over his last three games, but this is more inline — to a higher extent, of course — to what we’ve seen to begin the 2026 season. He’s now up to an OPS of .941, and it’s a wonderful reminder of why fantasy managers were so excited to see what he can do in 2025.
  • SEA Shortstop #3
    J.P. Crawford singled in the winning run while driving in three total in a win for the Mariners over the Astros on Saturday.
    Crawford lashed a single with the bases loaded to give him his third RBI of the night and the Mariners a comeback win. The 31-year-old hit at the top of the lineup with Brendan Donovan (illness) unavailable, although Donovan did appear as a pinch-hitter in the ninth and drew a walk. Crawford has hit .217/.419/.261 since coming off the injured list last week.
  • HOU Left Fielder #26
    Taylor Trammell went 2-for-4 with three RBI in a loss to the Mariners on Saturday
    Trammell just missed a grand slam with a three-run double off Luis Castillo in the second. The 28-year-old isn’t all that far removed from being one of the top prospects in baseball, but at this point, he’s much more likely to be organizational depth than a consistent fantasy producer.
  • HOU Left Fielder #44
    Yordan Alvarez homered while going 3-for-5 in a loss to the Mariners on Saturday.
    Alvarez is just scorching hot over the first two-plus weeks of the year, and he shellacked a Luis Castillo offering for his sixth homer of the season. He’s hitting .316 with an .800 slugging percentage, but it is worth noting he popped out with the bases loaded in the ninth inning in a time game. Still, fantasy managers have to be thrilled with the early production from Alvarez, who remains as good of hitter as there is in baseball when he’s healthy enough to show off those skills.
  • HOU Relief Pitcher #52
    Bryan Abreu walked three and allowed the winning run to take a loss Saturday to the Mariners.
    Abreu has been awful to begin the 2026 season, and it just continued Saturday. He walked three, and while he did pick up a strikeout, he gave up a scorching line drive to J.P. Crawford with the bases loaded to take the loss. His ERA is now a reprehensible 20.25, and no matter how small the sample, it’s at least a smidgen concerning. Josh Hader isn’t far behind, and to say he doesn’t have to worry about his closer job being usurped is an understatement. Not now, anyway.
  • SEA Catcher #29
    Cal Raleigh hit a two-run homer in a victory over the Astros for the Mariners on Saturday.
    Raleigh also drove in a run on a sacrifice fly for a three-RBI night. The 29-year-old backstop has “only” homered twice this year, and is well off the 60-homer mark he reached last year. Expect plenty more roundtrippers for Big Dumper going forward, and 40-plus homers are well within reason for a player with his pop.
  • SEA Center Fielder #44
    Julio Rodríguez homered and doubled in an 8-7 win for the Mariners over the Astros on Saturday.
    Not only did Rodríguez get his first homer of the season with a 426-foot tank to center, it was a big one as it tied the game at 7-7. He also doubled for his first multi extra-base hit game of the season. Rodríguez has been a notorious — maybe the most notorious — slow starter in baseball, but there’s simply no denying that he’s among the best talented players regardless of position. Cal Raleigh also homered, and it appears the big boys for Seattle are starting to pick it up.
  • SEA Relief Pitcher #75
    Andrés Muñoz worked a scoreless inning to get a win against the Astros on Saturday.
    Muñoz should have been able to get out of the inning without allowing a hit, but Leo Rivas flailed on a play he should have made that turned into a double. He then walked two batters to load the bases for Yordan Alvarez, but he was able to get Alvarez to pop out to second base. It’s the second win of the season for Muñoz, and his ERA drops to 3.60 with the scoreless — albeit busy — inning.