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Rotoworld

  • MIL Left Fielder #22
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    Christian Yelich was removed from Sunday’s game against the Nationals in the fifth inning due to a possible injury.
    No word yet on what occurred, but Yelich was lifted for pinch-hitter Gary Sanchez in the fifth inning of a one-run ballgame, which is never a good sign. Expect Brewers’ skipper Pat Murphy to provide an update on Yelich’s status after the game if we don’t hear anything before then.
  • WSH Left Fielder #29
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    James Wood delivered his fifth homer and walked twice Sunday in the Nationals’ 8-6 win over the Brewers.
    The shot to right off Brandon Woodruff was his first pulled homer of the year. He’d previously hit two to straightaway center and two to left-center. It’d be nice if he could go the short way more often, but no one is complaining while he’s hitting .274/.392/.613.
    Acuña Jr. caps off Braves' big second vs. Bibee
    After the bottom of the Braves' lineup got things going, Ronald Acuña Jr. made sure to put the cherry on top for Atlanta in the second with a laser double to left.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #18
    Zack Littell gave up three runs — all on solo homers — over five innings Sunday in a no-decision against the Brewers.
    Brice Turang homered twice and Jake Bauers got him once. Littell has surrendered five homers but just seven total runs in 15 innings for the Nationals, leaving him with an adequate 4.20 ERA. He’ll face the Giants on Friday.
  • WSH Relief Pitcher #47
    Gus Varland recorded his first career save with a perfect ninth Sunday against the Brewers.
    Clayton Beeter was off today after working the previous two days. Cole Henry seemed like he might be the primary fallback, but he came in mid-batter in the seventh today after a Ken Waldichuk injury and finished off a walk to Brice Turang before walking William Contreras and giving up a homer to Gary Sánchez. So, that won’t help his stock. The interesting thing there is that he was allowed to be removed after the homer, even though he officially faced just two batters; the initial walk was credited to Waldichuk yet still counted as far as the three-batter rule for Henry. PJ Poulin got four outs after replacing Henry, and Varland did a fine job in retiring Joey Ortiz, Turang and Contreras. Varland, who has allowed three runs in five innings, probably will be a factor in the ninth for the Nationals if Beeter struggles or gets hurt.
  • MIL Starting Pitcher #53
    Brandon Woodruff allowed two runs — one earned — in six innings and struck out six against the Nationals on Sunday.
    He left with a one-run lead that disappeared right away in the seventh. Woodruff surely would have liked to have still been pitching at that point; it took him just 70 pitches to get his 18 outs. His velocity is creeping back up some, and signs point to him being plenty valuable in mixed leagues while healthy. He’ll face the Marlins next.
  • MIL 2nd Baseman #2
    Brice Turang went 3-for-4 with two homers, a walk and three runs scored Sunday against the Nationals.
    Turang’s hardest-hit ball through his first two big-league seasons (2023 and ’24) was 108.3 mph. He topped 104 mph on three percent of his balls in play. Today, he came in at 109.6 and 104.0 mph on his homers and 106.9 mph on a line-drive single. He’s hitting .298/.441/.617 with three homers and five steals in 13 games.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #17
    Shohei Ohtani hit a leadoff homer and drew two walks in a loss to the Rangers on Sunday.
    This makes back-to-back games for Ohtani hitting leadoff dingers, with this one coming off Jacob deGrom. He’s now hit five homers over 15 games — a 54-homer pace — and he’s slashing a very Ohtani-like .286/.425/.571. Special stuff.
  • TEX Center Fielder #32
    Evan Carter hit a solo homer in a victory for the Rangers over the Dodgers on Sunday.
    Carter smoked a 388-foot shot off Roki Sasaki to tie the game at 1-1 in the third inning. He also drew a pair of walks, and the 23-year-old has improved his slash to .233/.365/.442. If he can stay healthy, Carter could be in for a big 2026 campaign, and fantasy managers have obviously seen what he’s capable of when healthy and at his best.
  • TEX Relief Pitcher #16
    Jakob Junis held the Dodgers scoreless to get the save for the Rangers on Sunday.
    Jakob Junis is the closer of the Texas Rangers. Weird. That’s the third save of the season for the right-hander, and he’s gotten the ninth inning in his last three appearances. The 33-year-old has looked the part thus far, and did so again Sunday with a pair of strikeouts versus one walk and not allowing a hit. It seems like the leash for Junis will be thin, but for those hunting for saves, if he’s still unrostered, there it is.
  • LAD Starting Pitcher #11
    Roki Sasaki gave up two runs over four innings with six strikeouts in a loss versus the Rangers on Sunday.
    Sasaki had quality stuff in Sunday’s loss, which isn’t a surprise. He was able to procure 15 swings and misses among his 94 pitches, and his slider was particularly effective; generating five whiffs on 11 swings. The issue was once again control, as he walked five hitters and threw just 51 of those 94 pitches for strikes. There’s no denying that Sasaki has the swing-and-miss stuff to be one of the best fantasy starters in baseball, but until he figures out how to locate it, there are going to be more outings like this that frustrate more than satisfy. He’s scheduled to face the Rockies in Colorado next Sunday.
  • TEX Starting Pitcher #48
    Jacob deGrom struck out nine over six innings of one-run baseball to get the win in a 5-2 victory for the Rangers on Sunday over the Dodgers.
    After giving up a homer to Cal Raleigh in the first inning in his last outing, deGrom gave up another solo dinger early, this time to Shohei Ohtani. From that point on, the 37-year-old was fantastic, allowing only three more hits and generating 15 swings and misses in the contest before exiting. His fastball averaged 97.2 mph, so the minor knee discomfort he was dealing with clearly didn’t have a major affect during Sunday’s bout. He’ll have a good chance to miss more bats when he faces the Mariners on Friday in Seattle.