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Rotoworld

  • HOU Relief Pitcher #71
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    Josh Hader (biceps) fired a scoreless inning on Tuesday in a minor league rehab appearance for Triple-A Sugar Land.
    It’ll go in the books as an encouraging rehab debut for Hader, who threw nine of 16 pitches for strikes, and averaged 94 mph on his sinker. He finished with one strikeout and wound up facing just three batters after a one-out walk was erased on a caught stealing. The 32-year-old upper-echelon closer will return to Houston’s bullpen sometime around mid-to-late May after making a couple additional rehab outings.
  • WSH Relief Pitcher #79
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    Nationals optioned RHP Andre Granillo to Triple-A Rochester.
    Granillo was shipped back to the minors after allowing four runs over two innings of work during Tuesday’s blowout loss to the Twins. The Nationals will make a corresponding move prior to Wednesday evening’s showdown.
    Target Red Sox’ Anthony for trade amid injury
    Provided he doesn't get bad news about his hand, Roman Anthony could be a good buy-low candidate in fantasy baseball.
  • BOS Center Fielder #3
    Ceddanne Rafaela went 3-for-5 with a home run, two runs scored, and four RBI in a 10-3 win over the Tigers on Tuesday.
    There has been some steady progress in the underlying metrics for Rafaela this season. He’s chasing less outside of the zone and making more contact, but the impactful swings have not been there, so it was nice to see this game from him today. He took Framber Valdez deep in the first inning for his second home run of the year and then added an RBI single in the third inning as well. He’s getting caught stealing too much to begin the season, but new Red Sox manager Chad Tracy has been hitting Rafaela near the middle of the lineup, so that should be a real boon to his counting stats. He remains a hold in all fantasy formats.
  • CIN Relief Pitcher #15
    Emilio Pagán was removed from Tuesday’s relief appearance against the Cubs with an apparent left leg injury.
    This didn’t look good at all. Pagán hobbled off the mound and went to the ground clutching his left hamstring after throwing his first pitch of the ninth inning of a tie ballgame. The 34-year-old was carted off the field after several minutes. There should be an update on his status after the contest. Tony Santillan or Graham Ashcraft would likely be next up for saves in Cincinnati.
  • BOS Right Fielder #52
    Wilyer Abreu went 3-for-4 with a walk, a home run, two runs scored, and a stolen base against the Tigers on Tuesday.
    Abreu got the start against left-hander Framber Valdez and has been getting far more playing time against lefties this season. He delivered too, with his fifth home run and second stolen base of the season. The 26-year-old is slashing .311/.393/.485 on the season and is a fixture in the middle of the Red Sox lineup. He looks like a major steal from fantasy baseball draft season.
  • DET Center Fielder #8
    Matt Vierling went 2-for-4 with a solo home run in a loss to the Red Sox on Tuesday.
    Vierling started the game with a solo home run off of Red Sox opener Jovani Moran and then added a single later in the game. Since Moran is a lefty, Vierling was at the top of the order, but the 29-year-old is hitting .221/.279/.390. It remains to be seen if the return of Zach McKinstry from the injured list will impact Vierling’s playing time against right-handed pitching going forward.
  • BOS Starting Pitcher #66
    Brayan Bello allowed one run on four hits in seven innings while striking out seven and walking one in a win over the Tigers on Tuesday.
    For the first time this season, the Red Sox used an opener ahead of Brayan Bello this season. However, Jovani Moran struggled in that role, so when Bello entered the game in the second inning, he began with the ninth hitter and then immediately faced the top of the order. Perhaps it was more about facing a Tigers team that was downtrodden after losing their ace pitcher. Whatever it was, this was easily Bello’s best outing of the season. He threw 70 percent strikes and attacked lefties with more four-seam fastballs and fewer cutters. He also went to the sweeper more than usual against righties, and it had a 21 percent swinging strike rate on the day. The strikeouts are a bit unsustainable considering he only had 10 whiffs all game, so we wouldn’t go ahead and say that Bello is “fixed,” but he may be on the radar in the deepest formats this weekend against the Rays.
  • MIN Shortstop #22
    Brooks Lee finished 3-for-5 with two doubles and three RBI as the Twins bested the Nationals 11-3 on Tuesday.
    Lee’s exit velocity numbers remain pretty weak and he’s striking out more than usual (though still a bit less than the league average) this year, but he’s thus far produced a nice .270/.323/.435 line anyway. His .302 BABIP wouldn’t be particularly notable for most, but he’d come in at just .254 in 189 games over his first two seasons. Statcast thinks it’s actually this year’s mark that’s the bigger fluke, given his modest hard-hit rates.
  • MIN Starting Pitcher #26
    Taj Bradley held the Nationals to two runs through six innings and struck out eight in a victory Tuesday.
    Bradley’s velocity was up about one mph in this one, and he wound up generating 16 whiffs and finishing with a 36 percent CSW. He’s allowed two runs or fewer in all but one of his eight starts to open the year 4-1 with a 2.87 ERA. He’ll try to keep it going against the Guardians on Sunday, likely in a battle with Gavin Williams.
  • WSH Starting Pitcher #24
    Cade Cavalli yielded six runs — three earned — in four innings Tuesday in a loss to the Twins.
    Cavalli, who entered with a 38/14 K/BB in 30 2/3 innings, struck out just two and walked three tonight. He also hit a batter for the fifth time in eight starts. The defeat leaves him 1-2 with a 4.15 ERA. Cavalli’s talent is obvious, but some inconsistency had to be expected, given that he entered the season having pitched a total of 82 innings over the last three seasons.
  • MIN 2nd Baseman #15
    Luke Keaschall singled, walked three times, stole a base and scored twice versus the Nationals on Tuesday.
    Keaschall is batting .313 with four doubles, six walks and three steals in his last 10 games. It’s been just enough to push his OPS up to .600 for the first time all season. The bat should continue to come around, which would make him pretty valuable if he keeps running; he’s 8-for-8 stealing bases so far.