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Rotoworld

  • WSH Starting Pitcher #70
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    Nationals recalled LHP Mitchell Parker from Triple-A Rochester.
    He’ll replace Jackson Rutledge after Rutledge was optioned to Triple-A by Washington on Monday. The Nationals don’t have an off day until April 27th, so having Parker up could enable them to use him as a spot starter or perhaps provide length out of their bullpen over these 13 days. In three Triple-A starts this season, Parker has allowed nine runs on 17 hits in 13 1/3 innings while striking out 16 and walking just three.
  • PHI Left Fielder #12
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    Kyle Schwarber went 3-for-4 with two solo shots in the Phillies’ 6-0 win over the Rockies on Sunday.
    Schwarber is tied with Aaron Judge for the MLB lead at 16 homers, with Munetaka Murakami right behind the duo at 15. Schwarber is striking out a little more than typical to begin 2026, but he’s also barreling the ball at a higher-than-normal clip. The Phillies open a three-game series at Fenway Park on Tuesday.
    Marlins throw Nats off with pressure on basepaths
    Matt Vasgersian, Jeff Nelson and Kevin Frandsen share their biggest takeaways from the Marlins' 5-2 win over the Nationals, where Miami used pressure on the basepaths to fuel their Mother's Day win over Washington.
  • PHI Starting Pitcher #61
    Cristopher Sánchez earned his fourth win of 2026 on Mother’s Day against the Rockies, twirling seven shutout innings while striking out seven.
    Sánchez needed 103 pitches in the outing, allowing six hits and walking none. In a weekend where neither Jesus Luzardo nor Aaron Nola could take advantage of facing the Rockies on the road, Sánchez made sure to. The 29-year-old southpaw is sporting a career-best K% so far this season and continues to be worth every penny of the big extension he signed before Opening Day. He visits the Pirates next.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #11
    Tomoyuki Sugano took the loss in Sunday’s game against the Phillies, allowing five earned runs on seven hits and a walk over five innings pitched.
    He struck out two and allowed three homers, including back-to-back blasts by Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper in the first inning. It was the third time in eight starts he’s allowed four or more runs, but he’s given up two or fewer in all the rest. The right-hander isn’t a recommended streaming option in his next appearance, currently scheduled to be at home against the Diamondbacks.
  • PHI Relief Pitcher #59
    Jhoan Duran pitched a clean ninth in the Phillies’ 6-0 victory over the Rockies on Sunday.
    Duran struck out two, needing 15 pitches (10 strikes) to get through the inning. It was his third appearance since returning from the injured list earlier this week, but he still hasn’t earned a save. Patience is encouraged as his skills are as dominant as ever, with a career-best K%. Brad Keller is the handcuff in Philadelphia.
  • PHI 1st Baseman #3
    Bryce Harper hit his 10th homer of the year as the Phillies shut out the Rockies on Mother’s Day.
    Harper went 1-for-4 in the contest, and he’s now batting .281/.376/.562 for the season, with nearly as many walks (23) as strikeouts (26). The star first baseman exited Saturday’s game in the first inning due to a migraine and showed no ill effects by homering in his first game back. It was part of a back-to-back effort alongside Kyle Schwarber in the first. Harper and the Phillies will visit the Red Sox at Fenway Park, kicking off a three-game set on Tuesday.
  • MIL 2nd Baseman #2
    Brice Turang went 2-for-4 with a walkoff homer in the ninth as the Brewers edged the Yankees 4-3 on Sunday.
    Turang’s first career walkoff homer came off David Bednar with the game one out away from going to extras. He has six homers this year, so he’s on pace to top last year’s total of 18. After improving his slugging percentage from .300 as a rookie to .349 as a sophomore to .435 last year, he’s all of the way up to .511 right now.
  • MIL Starting Pitcher #43
    Logan Henderson allowed two runs over five innings Sunday in a no-decision against the Yankees.
    Henderson struck out five of the 19 batters he faced. He came out after 74 pitches, as the Brewers didn’t want to take their chances of him pitching to Ben Rice, Aaron Judge (who had homered) and Cody Bellinger for a third time. Henderson has allowed four runs in 11 innings since joining the rotation last week. It’s not entirely certain that he’ll stick around after Brandon Woodruff returns, but he should. He’ll likely face the Twins next weekend.
  • MIL Relief Pitcher #45
    Abner Uribe worked a hitless top of the ninth in a tie game and was rewarded with a victory Sunday.
    Trevor Megill, Aaron Ashby and Uribe all had easy innings in a tie game today, even though Ashby was pitching again after throwing two innings last night. For once, the win went to someone other than Ashby after Brice Turang’s walkoff homer in the bottom of the ninth. Uribe’s appearance was his ninth straight to come in the ninth inning of a game.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #55
    Carlos Rodón yielded three runs in 4 1/3 innings Sunday against the Brewers in his season debut.
    All of the runs came in the fourth, an inning that started with two walks and a HBP. Rodón walked five batters in all. He had very good velocity — his fastball average of 95.7 mph was up 1.6 mph from his 2025 mark — so that’s quite encouraging for the future. It might be a couple of more outings before he’s truly ready to help fantasy leaguers, but he’ll get there.
  • NYY Relief Pitcher #53
    Pitching in a tie game, David Bednar took his third loss after giving up a walkoff homer to Milwaukee’s Brice Turang on Sunday.
    Bednar struck out back-to-back batters before Turang went deep. It’s the first homer Bednar has given up in 17 innings this year. He’s still looking quite a bit better of late than he was at the start of the year.