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Rotoworld

  • BOS 3rd Baseman #5
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    Caleb Durbin is batting second for the first time this season Saturday against the Cardinals.
    The Red Sox tried just stacking lefties at the top of the lineup after removing Trevor Story from the second spot in the lineup on Monday, but this figures to work better, assuming that Durbin starts performing more like he did last year. He’s still just 4-for-39 on the season, though at least all four hits have come in his last seven games after an 0-for-18 start.
  • SD Left Fielder #30
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    Gavin Sheets hit a three-run homer to give the Padres the lead in the top of the ninth in a 10-8 win over the Rockies on Thursday.
    Sheets was taking his second at-bat off the bench after replacing Ty France when he homered off Victor Vodnik to complete a ninth-inning rally that saw the Padres go from down 8-5 to up 10-8. It was his third homer in 79 plate appearances this year. He’s batting .227/.266/.467 as the Padres’ usual first baseman against right-handers. Today’s game was actually the first of the year in which he didn’t get the nod versus a righty.
    Should referees get interviewed during playoffs?
    The Numbers on the Board crew analyzes Dillon Brooks' comments after a Game 2 loss to the Thunder, debating if referees should be interviewed after playoff games and laying out why Oklahoma City always gets the calls.
  • SD Starting Pitcher #61
    Matt Waldron was tagged for six runs in five innings by the Rockies on Thursday.
    The thin air of Colorado did Waldron’s knuckler no good today, so he threw the pitch just half as often as he did last time out. He has a 12.46 ERA after two starts, which might lead to a Triple-A demotion. If not, he’ll face the Cubs on Wednesday.
  • SD Relief Pitcher #22
    Mason Miller protected a two-run lead in the ninth for a save Thursday against the Rockies.
    Miller’s record stayed perfect today, but he actually went without a strikeout. Tyler Freeman grounded out and Troy Johnston singled before Ezequiel Tovar grounded into a double play. It’s the first strikeout-free inning of the season for Miller, who had fanned 25 of 38 batters he’d faced this year. Last year, he went without a strikeout in four of 60 appearances and just once after joining the Padres.
  • COL Relief Pitcher #38
    Trying to close out a three-run lead, Victor Vodnik gave up five while getting two outs Thursday against the Padres.
    Vodnik came in with two on and two out in the eighth and struck out Fernando Tatis Jr. The ninth, though, opened with a walk, three singles and a homer to plate five runs. Vodnik then struck out Freddy Fermin before being pulled. It’s the second blown save for Vodnik, who saw his ERA jump from 3.60 to 7.59. It might open the door for Antonio Senzatela or Seth Halvorsen to get save chances in Colorado, but we’d suggest continuing to avoid the entire situation.
  • SD Shortstop #2
    Xander Bogaerts homered, singled and walked twice versus the Rockies on Thursday.
    Bogaerts and Ramón Laureano, who had three hits and two RBI today, have been the Padres’ most productive regulars this season, but while that got Laureano a promotion to the leadoff spot, Bogaerts still isn’t batting any higher than fifth. It’s kind of funny, since the Padres initially thought about using Bogaerts in the leadoff spot and dropping Fernando Tatis Jr. to cleanup this year. Bogaerts, though, keeps hitting below Tatis, Jackson Merrill and Manny Machado despite having the better OPS by 150-200 points.
  • COL Right Fielder #22
    Mickey Moniak finished 4-for-5 with two homers and three runs scored against the Padres on Thursday.
    Moniak homered off Matt Waldron in the first, which wasn’t much of a surprise. However, taking Adrian Morejon deep in a lefty-lefty matchup in the eighth was very impressive. Before that, Moniak, a platoon player, was 0-for-10 with five strikeouts against lefties this season. He’s batting .368/.393/.825 with seven homers in 57 at-bats against righties.
  • COL Shortstop #14
    Ezequiel Tovar went 0-for-5, grounded into a game-ending double play and committed an error at shortstop Thursday against the Padres.
    Well, he made contact against Mason Miller. That’s not nothing. Tovar is batting .204/.245/.323 in 98 plate appearances. Statcast thinks he’s been unlucky not to hit closer to his career averages, but it’s not like his career averages are anything special. Tovar was a quality player as a 22-year-old sophomore in 2024, but he took a major step backwards last season and hasn’t shown any signs of rebounding. It’s really disappointing, especially for a Rockies team committed to him through 2030.
  • CWS Left Fielder #23
    Andrew Benintendi went 2-for-5 and hit a go-ahead three-run homer in the top of the ninth as the White Sox downed the Diamondbacks 4-1 on Thursday.
    Benintendi’s 410-foot fly off Paul Sewald was his second homer of the season. He’s hitting just .216/.266/.392 with a 35 percent strikeout rate, but the White Sox have been letting him lead off and DH against right-handers. It’s quite the long shot, but they’d love to see him get hot and open up the possibility that someone might want him in trade, even if the White Sox would surely have to pick up most of the ~$28 million remaining on his contract to make it happen.
  • CWS Starting Pitcher #65
    Davis Martin limited the Diamondbacks to one run through 6 1/3 innings in a no-decision Thursday.
    Martin fanned seven, besting his previous season high by one. It’s his fourth straight quality start, and he’s now 3-1 with a 2.01 ERA. It still seems like something of a fluke; his 22 percent strikeout rate is just average, and his 51 percent hard-hit rate against is one of the highest marks in the leagues. He’s been a flyball pitcher, too. He’ll get the Angels at home next time out. We’d continue to avoid him in mixed leagues.
  • CWS Relief Pitcher #31
    Grant Taylor picked up his first win after getting five outs in the seventh and eighth Thursday against the D-backs.
    He allowed two hits and struck out three. After opening four times earlier this month, Taylor has been a traditional reliever in his last three outings, which is definitely best for his AL-only value. He came into the day with no decisions, no saves and one hold in nine appearances this season.