Author Archive

Roto Riteup: April 1, 2026

This was not an April Fool’s Day prank:

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Roto Riteup: March 31, 2026

Me getting ready for April Fools Day:

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Justin Mason’s Baseball Chat – March 30, 2026

Here is today’s chat transcript:
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Roto Riteup: March 30, 2026

Diving into the work week like:

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Mason’s Musings – 2026 Full Disclosure

Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Ryne Nelson (19) pitches against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second inning at Dodger Stadium.
Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

I heard someone say, “$30…” as I pressed the phone closer to my ear as if that would make it easier to hear. 

“$31,” I responded

“36!” someone yelled in the background. 

I was sweating, not because the bidding on Alex Rodriguez was getting over $35, but because on one of the hottest days at Ft. Meade, Maryland, in 2004, I was sitting in a glass phone booth trying to draft my home AL-Only auction league team. The temperature outside the booth was 85 degrees but the reflection of the sun made it feel 25 degrees warmer inside of that booth. 

I could have been thinking about the guard duty I had later that night and that I wouldn’t be sleeping until the next night because of it. I could have been thinking about the friends of mine that had already deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan and what it might be like if I joined them there. However, the only thing I was thinking about at that moment was the fact that A-Rod just went for $46 and there was no way he was worth that. 

Spoiler Alert: He was. 

Fantasy baseball has been a part of my life for the last 25 years and even though it has been a long time since I played in just one league, it’s the moments like this where I probably lost ten pounds of water weight drafting from a telephone booth in Maryland that are among my favorite memories. I didn’t win that league in 2004, but I will never forget that draft. I did stumble away from the phone booth with a $1 Alex Rios which was a nice consolation prize for 2005. 

Fast forward a decade and I began playing in multiple fantasy baseball leagues in 2014, branching out from my home league a little. By the time I entered the fantasy baseball industry the following year, I was playing in five leagues. This number would reach its high water mark 2022 when I played in 29 leagues. 

The thing I began to discover as I played in more and more leagues was how often I ended up with a lot of the same guys. I also discovered that while I love drafting a ton of teams, I became a real jerk by the end of the season because of the in-season workload I was having to manage. I had some good years and some terrible ones, but even in my best years, by the time August or September rolled around, I was unbearable to be around because my stress level was through the roof. This year, I decided to cut back on leagues. 

For the first time in about a decade, I am playing in just 10 redraft leagues and four of those are bestball leagues where there is no in-season management. I also decided to not play in any high stakes leagues this year just to give myself a bit of a break. Did I miss the enormous amount of drafts I would normally do this offseason? Absolutely! However, fantasy baseball is supposed to be fun and while the drafts are a ton of fun, the management of all of those leagues come summer wasn’t as fun the last few years so it made sense to take a step back. 

That being said, when I did my ten drafts, there were a few names that stuck out to me and kept popping up on my rosters. In this article I will discuss my most rostered players for 2026. 

Ryne Nelson, SP, ARI (70% rostered) – If there was one pitcher I had circled on my draft sheets every time I sat down at the draft table, it was Ryne Nelson. After years of bouncing between the bullpen and the rotation, he is entering 2026 fully cemented in the Diamondbacks rotation for the first time. I have been a fan of his for years and believed that at some point his stuff would start to get more swings and misses. We saw it begin to happen this spring with the further development of his breaking stuff. Though his price rose towards the end of spring, his ADP most of draft season was around pick 250 and that was too easy of a price to not go all in on for me. 

Corey Seager, SS, TEX (60% rostered) – If you followed my writing or listened to my podcasts the last few years, this one may be a bit shocking for you. I have been a Corey Seager hater for years, but that was mostly due to the price attached to drafting him. Seager is elite when he is on the field, but health has been elusive throughout his career. He only has one season since 2018 where he reached 600+ plate appearances and he routinely goes in the top 60 picks. However, this year his price dropped significantly. His ADP in the NFBC Online Championship was 96.4 and he would often fall outside the top 100. This was too good of a price for me to pass up, especially in leagues where I would miss out on the elite shortstops early in a draft or auction. I am not going to project him for 600+ plate appearances this year, but if he can return 500-550 PAs at his normal production, it will be well worth the gamble. 

Taylor Rogers, RP, MIN (60% rostered) – The prices this year on closers were insane. Especially if you were in competitive leagues, if you missed out on the top 5-8 closers you were likely going to regret it and everyone felt that pressure to make sure they walked away from the first 4-5 rounds with one of those guys. I ended up trying to get one of those guys myself, but when I missed out on them, I would often target Taylor Rogers late. Rogers is one of the few relief pitchers in Minnesota with the “closing experience” that managers tend to covet. With a new manager for the Twins, I thought there was a chance they would just go with the “proven guy” for the ninth inning. He never got expensive in drafts either so he will be an easy drop if it becomes clear he isn’t the closer or if they move towards a committee in Minnesota. 

Andrew Vaughn, 1B, MIL (50% rostered) – Vaughn looked like a failed prospect with the White Sox, but after getting called up by the Brewers last season, he hit nine home runs with a .308/.375/.493 triple slash in 254 plate appearances. I still do not understand why he was going around pick 277 in leagues this season. This is a former top tier prospect that many loved when he was coming up. He is just 28-years-old and there is still plenty of upside available in the bat. 

Max Muncy, 3B, LAD (50% rostered) – Muncy really struggled at the start of the 2025 season, hitting .194/.309/.301 with one home run. However, he was diagnosed with an astigmatism in his right eye and got glasses. After getting the glasses, he hit .262/.403/.541 with 18 home runs in just 278 plate appearances. He struggled with injuries, missing a month in the summer with a knee injury, but the glasses let him cut his strikeout rate to 17%. He is healthy to start the season and was fantastic in spring. His price was too good to pass up in drafts going at pick 237 in the NFBC Online Championship. 

Nasim Nuñez, SS, WAS (50% rostered) – If you read my Bold Predictions article you already knew I was a massive fan of Nuñez. Last season, he stole 45 bases in just 324 plate appearances between Triple-A and the Majors. He doesn’t have the best hit tool, but he was able to walk at a double-digit rate throughout the minor leagues and maintained a good contact rate in his small sample in the Majors. Most importantly, he is a great defender and the Nationals have made a choice to improve their defense up the middle with Nuñez, moving Luis Garcia Jr. to first base. He should play every day and rack up a lot of stolen bases. 

Royce Lewis, 3B, MIN (50% rostered) – Sometimes in fantasy baseball we are like Charlie Brown kicking a football and falling on our butt over and over again with certain players. For me, it’s with Royce Lewis. Lewis is an elite talent. A former top prospect, Lewis has the ability to hit for power and steal bases, but he just cannot stay healthy. He has yet to register more than 403 plate appearances in a Major League season. I am dreaming of a year where he will put it all together and stay on the field, but I am likely just wishcasting. 

Here is the full list of all the players I drafted this season: 

Justin Mason’s Most Rostered Players
Player Pos Team Shares PCT
Ryne Nelson P ARZ 7 70%
Corey Seager SS TEX 6 60%
Taylor Rogers P MIN 6 60%
Andrew Vaughn 1B MLW 5 50%
Max Muncy 3B LAD 5 50%
Nasim Nuñez SS WAS 5 50%
Royce Lewis 3B MIN 5 50%
Brenton Doyle OF COL 4 40%
Chad Patrick P MLW 4 40%
Nico Hoerner 2B CHC 4 40%
Shota Imanaga P CHC 4 40%
Spencer Strider P ATL 4 40%
TJ Friedl OF CIN 4 40%
Austin Wells C NYY 3 30%
Brett Baty 2B,3B NYM 3 30%
Dennis Santana P PIT 3 30%
Drew Rasmussen P TB 3 30%
Jack Leiter P TEX 3 30%
Jacob deGrom P TEX 3 30%
Jakob Marsee OF MIA 3 30%
Jhoan Duran P PHI 3 30%
Jo Adell OF LAA 3 30%
Kazuma Okamoto 3B TOR 3 30%
Kirby Yates P LAA 3 30%
Matthew Boyd P CHC 3 30%
Nolan McLean P NYM 3 30%
Parker Messick P CLE 3 30%
Zach Eflin P BAL 3 30%
Adley Rutschman C BAL 2 20%
Andrés Muñoz P SEA 2 20%
Brandon Sproat P MLW 2 20%
Chandler Simpson OF TB 2 20%
Clay Holmes P NYM 2 20%
Coby Mayo 1B BAL 2 20%
Colt Keith 2B,3B DET 2 20%
Connelly Early P BOS 2 20%
Corbin Carroll OF ARZ 2 20%
Cristopher Sánchez P PHI 2 20%
Francisco Lindor SS NYM 2 20%
Freddy Fermin C SD 2 20%
Hunter Goodman C COL 2 20%
Jackson Merrill OF SD 2 20%
James Wood OF WAS 2 20%
Jarren Duran OF BOS 2 20%
Joey Ortiz SS MLW 2 20%
Junior Caminero 3B TB 2 20%
Lawrence Butler OF ATH 2 20%
Lucas Erceg P KC 2 20%
Mick Abel P MIN 2 20%
Paul Skenes P PIT 2 20%
Riley O’Brien P STL 2 20%
Ryan Walker P SF 2 20%
Ryan Weiss 와이스 P HOU 2 20%
Sal Stewart 1B CIN 2 20%
Seiya Suzuki OF CHC 2 20%
Shea Langeliers C ATH 2 20%
Steven Kwan OF CLE 2 20%
Tanner Bibee P CLE 2 20%
Tyler Soderstrom OF,1B ATH 2 20%
Victor Robles OF SEA 2 20%
Victor Scott II OF STL 2 20%
William Contreras C MLW 2 20%
Yoshinobu Yamamoto P LAD 2 20%
Zach Neto SS LAA 2 20%
Zebby Matthews P MIN 2 20%
Aaron Judge OF NYY 1 10%
Aaron Nola P PHI 1 10%
Abner Uribe P MLW 1 10%
Alejandro Kirk C TOR 1 10%
Alex Bregman 3B CHC 1 10%
Anthony Santander OF TOR 1 10%
Aroldis Chapman P BOS 1 10%
Bailey Ober P MIN 1 10%
Ben Rice C,1B NYY 1 10%
Bobby Witt Jr. SS KC 1 10%
Brent Rooker OF ATH 1 10%
Brice Turang 2B MLW 1 10%
Bryan Reynolds OF PIT 1 10%
Bryce Harper 1B PHI 1 10%
Bryce Miller P SEA 1 10%
Cade Horton P CHC 1 10%
Cedric Mullins OF TB 1 10%
Chase DeLauter OF CLE 1 10%
Chris Sale P ATL 1 10%
Christian Walker 1B HOU 1 10%
Cody Bellinger OF NYY 1 10%
Cole Sands P MIN 1 10%
Colton Cowser OF BAL 1 10%
Dalton Rushing C LAD 1 10%
Daulton Varsho OF TOR 1 10%
Dylan Beavers OF BAL 1 10%
Edouard Julien 1B,2B COL 1 10%
Emilio Pagan P CIN 1 10%
Hunter Brown P HOU 1 10%
Ian Happ OF CHC 1 10%
Isaac Collins OF KC 1 10%
Iván Herrera UT STL 1 10%
Jake Mangum OF PIT 1 10%
Jasson Domínguez OF NYY 1 10%
Jeff Hoffman P TOR 1 10%
Jeremy Pena SS HOU 1 10%
JoJo Romero P STL 1 10%
Jordan Westburg 3B BAL 1 10%
Jorge Polanco 2B NYM 1 10%
Jose Ramirez 3B CLE 1 10%
Joshua Baez OF STL 1 10%
Jung Hoo Lee 이정후 OF SF 1 10%
Justin Sterner P ATH 1 10%
Kenley Jansen P DET 1 10%
Kevin McGonigle SS DET 1 10%
Kris Bubic P KC 1 10%
Kyle Manzardo 1B CLE 1 10%
Kyle Stowers OF MIA 1 10%
Kyle Tucker OF LAD 1 10%
Marcelo Mayer 3B BOS 1 10%
Marcus Semien 2B NYM 1 10%
Mark Leiter Jr. P ATH 1 10%
Matt Wallner OF MIN 1 10%
Max Fried 1 10%
Michael Busch 1B CHC 1 10%
Mike Trout OF LAA 1 10%
Mookie Betts SS LAD 1 10%
Noah Cameron P KC 1 10%
Pablo López P MIN 1 10%
Paul Sewald P ARZ 1 10%
Rafael Devers 1B SF 1 10%
Reid Detmers P LAA 1 10%
Robbie Ray P SF 1 10%
Robert Garcia P TEX 1 10%
Ryan Jeffers C MIN 1 10%
Salvador Perez C,1B KC 1 10%
Sandy Alcantara P MIA 1 10%
Shane Smith P CHW 1 10%
Shohei Ohtani UT, P LAD 1 10%
Spencer Horwitz 1B PIT 1 10%
Spencer Schwellenbach P ATL 1 10%
Spencer Torkelson 1B DET 1 10%
Tarik Skubal P DET 1 10%
Taylor Ward OF BAL 1 10%
Teoscar Hernández OF LAD 1 10%
Trevor Rogers P BAL 1 10%
Tyler Glasnow P LAD 1 10%
Tyler Stephenson C CIN 1 10%
Vinnie Pasquantino 1B KC 1 10%
Willy Adames SS SF 1 10%
Wyatt Langford OF TEX 1 10%
Xavier Edwards 2B, SS MIA 1 10%
Yusei Kikuchi P LAA 1 10%
Francisco Alvarez C NYM 1 10%
Ha-Seong Kim 김하성 SS ATL 1 10%
Jac Caglianone OF KC 1 10%
Jackson Holliday 2B BAL 1 10%

Roto Riteup: March 25, 2026

Today is the day!!!

On the Agenda: 

  1. Closer Chaos
  2. Quick Hits
  3. Various News and Notes
  4. Streaming Pitchers

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Roto Riteup: March 24, 2026

We are so back!

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The Sleeper and the Bust Episode: 1489 – The Beat Justin Mason Livestream

3/22/26

The latest episode of “The Sleeper and the Bust” is live. Support the show by subscribing to our Patreon!!

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PATREON

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Justin Mason’s Baseball Chat – March 23, 2026

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Catcher 2026 Fantasy Rankings

Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

Changelog

  • 12/15/2025 – First Release
  • 1/8/2026 – Dalton Rushing and Sean Murphy updates
  • 1/26/2026 – J.T Realmuto and Victor Caratini signings.
  • 2/2/2026 – Projections and ADP update.
  • 2/10/2026 – ADP Update.
  • 2/18/2026 – ADP Update
  • 2/25/2026 – ADP and Projections Update
  • 3/3/2026 – ADP and Projections Update
  • 3/19/2026 – Kyle Teel injury and Harry Ford demotion update

Ranking Methodology

  • Updated ADP data from NFBC Draft Champions to NFBC Online Championships.
  • $ Values are based on standard 5×5 12-team league using the FanGraphs Depth Charts and these Auction Calculator settings. They default to a player’s most valuable position, so if the first base list includes a catcher, it will show that player’s value at catcher.
  • ADP and $ Values are updated as of the last update date on this post.
  • 5-game eligibility was used for these lists to cast the widest net.

Catcher Overview

The catcher position is about as deep as it’s been after an influx of young talent to the position over the last few seasons. The additions of young studs to the crop of older, aging veterans give the position some beef, but also add to it’s volatility as we have seen with a number of the players who entered the Majors over previous seasons have shown us.

The biggest issue with the position is dependent on the format you are drafting for. In shallower one catcher leagues, it’s often best to wait as long as possible unless a player you covet drops. In deeper two catcher formats, the back end the pool offers negative value giving you more reasons to draft one or both of your catchers early. Knowing how your format and league values the position is crucial to your draft strategy.

Today’s Discussion

With the injury to Kyle Teel and demotion of Harry Ford, they move down the ranks as we head into the final drafts of the season.

The Franchise

The top guy at the position stands alone
The Franchise
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
1 Cal Raleigh SEA C/DH 18 $30

Cal Raleigh is coming off of an historic season where he hit the most home runs ever by a catcher and was the #2 player on the player rater. There is no where to go but down but even with regression, he should be the first catcher off the board. He is a great bet for power and counting categories, but the contact skills gives him an average floor is much lower than what we saw in 2025.

Cornerstone Backstops

A ton of high upside talent and Sal Perez!
Cornerstone Backstops
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
2 William Contreras MIL C/DH 55 $22
3 Shea Langeliers OAK C 55 $21
4 Ben Rice NYY C/1B/DH 54 $19
5 Hunter Goodman COL C/DH 64 $23
6 Drake Baldwin ATL C 81 $19
7 Agustin Ramirez MIA C 84 $13
8 Salvador Perez KC C/1B/DH 92 $19

A year after his breakout season, William Contreras took a step back, hitting just .260/.355/.399 with 17 home runs and six stolen bases. Some of that regression was likely injury related as he played through a finger fracture that is now been fixed through surgery. He should rebound now that he is healthy and return to being an elite option.

Shea Langeliers has made massive gains in each of the last two seasons in contact skills going from 78% to 83% to 85% while not sacrificing power or his approach. Hitting in Sacramento is a dream location for him and the A’s should continue to improve.

You can make the argument that Ben Rice should be the #2 catcher in fantasy since he isn’t actually catching this season. While the Yankees have brought back Paul Goldschmidt, I don’t see that hurting Rice long term this season as the Yankees are full of guys that get hurt. His combination of power and contact skills along with the home park could make for a massive season.

Hunter Goodman has elite power but the approach and swing and miss can be a problem for him. Hitting in Colorado will help because of the BABIP inflation and the lack of competition for the role, but the batting average downside is real and he will regress there in 2026.

Drake Baldwin is coming off of winning Rookie of the Year in the National League and there is more upside in the bat. He showcased his great approach and contact skills, but with a launch angle tweak, he could have a massive breakout. His bat speed, average exit velocity, and hard hit percentage were all in the top 85 percentile so if he could elevate some, he could push his homers in the mid twenties which would be some nice upside for a high floor catcher.

Agustin Ramirez showed a better hit tool than expected and the power was as advertised. We can’t sleep on the speed, either, as he went a very solid 16-for-19 on the basepaths. He is not a very good catcher defensively and likely will lose eligibility there at some point, but that is a problem for future seasons. He will get extra PAs at DH which will allow him to rack up plate appearances, but the Marlins supporting cast is meager which will hurt the runs and RBIs.

Being the old man of the group isn’t a bad thing. Salvador Perez is about as consistent as can be. He has back-to-back healthy season with at least 27 home runs and 100 RBIs. The ceiling may not be as high as the rest of the tier, but you don’t get much safer than Sal.

Last Year’s Favorites

Last year’s draft favorites that could jump up a tier!
Last Year’s Favorites
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
9 Yainer Diaz HOU C/1B/DH 111 $14
10 Will Smith LAD C ▲1 98 $13
11 Ivan Herrera STL C/DH ▼1 171 $22
12 Adley Rutschman BAL C/DH 151 $13

When Yainer Diaz hit 23 home runs in just 377 plate appearances in 2023, people thought a full season breakout was coming, but in the last two seasons he has shown that power output was likely an outlier. He still has a high floor because of his fantastic contact ability, but the ceiling dropping a bit is why he is no longer in higher tiers.

Will Smith is about as safe as they come. You can can bank on high teens/low 20s home runs with a good average and great counting stats hitting in the top half of the Dodgers lineup. He actually had the second best barrel rate and hard hit percentages of his career, but it didn’t translate into more power. The downside is that he will never accumulate like other catchers because Ohtani blocks off the designated hitter spot.

Ivan Herrera won’t even be catcher eligible in most formats because he missed so much time with an elbow injury. He is expected to catch some, but will likely reside mostly at DH. After a further deep dive, I am becoming more convinced on his upside. He has great contact skills and the power metrics are way above average. We need to see him show some health, but there is reason to be optimistic that he can take a massive step forward if he is healthy.

Adley Rutschman lost a lot of time last year to injury and really struggled when he was on the field. If healthy, then he is likely to rebound to the levels we saw in 2023 and 2024 at least. There is still upside in the bat from his prospect pedigree and initial call up, but we can no longer project he will automatically get there.

Safe Backstops

Guys that do not have a ton of upside, but arent going to hurt you
Safe Backstops
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
13 Alejandro Kirk TOR C 158 $9
14 Gabriel Moreno ARI C 179 $8

Alejandro Kirk makes a lot of contact and there is some power in the bat, but that makes it a high floor profile rather than one that is super enticing for shallower one catcher formats.

When Gabriel Moreno hit four home runs in the 2023 postseason people got really excited that a massive breakout was coming. That was a mistake, but he is a great defensive catcher with a very good hit tool. He did show a bit more pop with a career-high .433 SLG and 9 HRs, but his .281 AVG points to his high floor as even his career-low .266 from 2023 was tied for 5th-highest at Catcher (min. 350 PA).

Why Is This Position Like This?

Talent with red flags
Why Is This Position Like This?
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
15 Samuel Basallo BAL C/DH 173 $7
16 Francisco Alvarez NYM C 170 $8
17 Austin Wells NYY C 257 $5
18 J.T. Realmuto PHI C 214 $8
19 Ryan Jeffers MIN C/DH 308 $7

Samuel Basallo is a top tier prospect that made his debut in 2025. There is a ton of power in the bat and the question is whether he will make enough contact to unlock at the Major League level. the minor league numbers say he should, but there may be some growing pains, but the upside is tremendous. With the addition of Pete Alonso, he will need to hit to keep his spot, but I believe he will.

Francisco Alvarez has been great when he is on the field, but he has struggled with that since 2023. If he can stay healthy, there is 25-30 homer power. There are few catchers that have his power profile at the position, but he is best served for shallower formats where there is replacement value on the wire.

Austin Wells is built for Yankees Stadium where he can pull the ball in the air to the short porch. He makes better in-zone contact than his average suggests, so there is a chance that he could begin to make gains there, but I wouldn’t project that.

I love J.T. Realmuto, but the skills have been degrading for a while. That being said, ending back in Philly was the best case scenario for him. There is still a safe floor up the ceiling is lowering quickly.

Deep League Intrigue

Most useful for 2-Catcher leagues but have the talent to jump up a tier or two
Deep League Intrigue
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
20 Tyler Stephenson CIN C/DH 282 $1
21 Carter Jensen KC C $1
22 Logan O’Hoppe LAA C 245 $3
23 Carlos Narvaez BOS C 414 -$2
24 Carson Kelly CHC C ▲1 613 -$2
25 Dillion Dingler DET C ▲1 268 $2

If Tyler Stephenson had not missed so much time with injury, his line would have looked a lot more similar to his good 2024 season as opposed to his paltry 2023 one. However, his contact skills took a hit with his swinging strike rate rising and his Z-Contact dropping to its lowest mark of his career. He should bounceback some if healthy, but there are red flags here.

Carter Jensen is a top 50 prospect that debuted in 2025 and looked the part in a very small sample. The problem is playing time. With Sal Perez locked in behind the plate and a number of players that will be rotating at DH in Kansas City, it’s hard to find 400 plate appearance for the rookie. If he can find those plate appearances, then there is some upside for a guy that went 20/10 with a .290/.377/.501 line at AAA last season.

 

Passed Balls

Probably best served for the deepest of leagues.
Passed Balls
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
26 Freddy Fermin SD C/DH ▲1 723 $0
27 Keibert Ruiz WAS C/DH ▲1 732 -$6
28 Edgar Quero CHW C ▲1 512 $1
29 Bo Naylor CLE C ▲1 653 $2
30 Victor Caratini MIN C/1B ▲2 692 -$2
31 Kyle Teel CHW C ▼7 228 $0
32 Sean Murphy ATL C ▲1 743 -$1
33 Patrick Bailey SF C ▲1 746 $0
39 Harry Ford WAS C ▼8 696 -$10

There isn’t a lot of upside in Freddy Fermin’s bat, but he has shown he can be a high floor accumulator when given playing time and now that he has escaped Sal Perez’s shadow and moved onto sunny San Diego, he should just get that.

Injuries derailed Keibert Ruiz’s season in 2025 and now there is competition for the role with Ford being acquired via trade this offseason. There wasn’t a ton of upside before and now there is a lower floor if he cannot accumulate as easily.

Edgar Quero is a former top 100 prospect, but he shares the role with Teel and is not as good of a defender. There isn’t much of a carrying tool for fantasy in the profile so he needs to get a lot of plate appearances in order to accumulate.

I understand why some people love Bo Naylor. While a good pop-good approach-no hit tool profile is not usually a problem in fantasy, but when you are on a team that loves Austin Hedges for his defense so much that you get stuck under 415 plate appearances, then the low ceiling/low floor combo isn’t as enticing.

Victor Caratini signed a deal to be the backup catcher in Minnesota. He will pick up added plate appearances at DH as well making him an interesting deep league third catcher or even a low end C2.

Kyle Teel is going to miss 4-6 weeks with a Grade 2 hamstring strain. Once he returns, he should go back to being the top catcher on the team, but you will have to stash him until then.

Sean Murphy has fallen off since coming to Atlanta and he likely isn’t regaining his pre-Braves form, but maybe if he gets a change of scenery via trade, he could become closer to the guy we saw in Oakland. There is a chance he misses time at the beginning of the season due to offseason hip surgery which is the reason for the drop. If we get a better timeline, he could move further down or back up.

Patrick Bailey is a premium defender behind the plate, but the offensive skills have never caught up to the defense. However, he will accumulate because he does not miss any games.

Harry Ford is a top 50 prospect who debuted in 2025, but was only given eight plate appearances in a small cup of coffee in the Majors. The 22-year-old was fantastic in AAA in 2025, hitting .283/.408/.460 with 16 home runs and seven stolen bases in 458 plate appearances. He was moved this offseason to Washington, but will begin the year in AAA. There is some decent upside, but his power is still developing some.

Emergency Catchers

Useful in draft and hold formats
Emergency Catchers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
34 Nick Fortes TBR C ▲1 -$8
35 Jonah Heim ATL C/DH ▲1 -$20
36 Miguel Amaya CHC C ▲1 735 -$7
37 Joey Bart PIT C/DH ▲1 -$9
38 Danny Jansen TEX C ▲1 -$4

Jonah Heim has signed a deal in Atlanta but he isn’t much more than depth until Sean Murphy returns.

Danny Jansen has never lived up to the early career hype, but he will play and can accumulate for deeper formats as long as he’s healthy.

Bullpen Catchers

The Rest
Bullpen Catchers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
40 Pedro Pages STL C -$7
41 Dalton Rushing LAD C 743 -$13
42 Rafael Marchan PHI C -$17
43 Liam Hicks MIA C/1B 747 -$10
44 Connor Wong BOS C/1B/DH -$11
45 Joe Mack MIA C -$10
46 Mitch Garver SEA C/DH -$20
47 Kyle Higashioka TEX C -$8
48 Henry Davis PIT C 747 -$10
49 Jeferson Quero MIL C -$22
50 Korey Lee CHW C -$16

Dalton Rushing has talent, but he needs a trade more than anyone in baseball and in spite of early offseason rumors that the Dodgers could move him, it appears he will stay in LA for now. If he does get moved, he would shoot up the ranks further.

Joe Mack is a top 50 prospect that has power and is fantastic behind the plate. However, he really struggles with contact. His defense should prevent him from becoming a AAAA player, but there is a chance he spends the entire season in AAA trying to improve his hit tool.

Jeferson Quero is one of the Brewers top prospects and will be ready for the Majors at some point this season, but with Contreras in tow, I don’t know if there will be enough plate appearances to matter in 2026.


Full Rankings Without Tiers

No tiers. Just the rankings.
Full Rankings Without Tiers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
1 Cal Raleigh SEA C/DH 18 $30
2 William Contreras MIL C/DH 55 $22
3 Shea Langeliers OAK C 55 $21
4 Ben Rice NYY C/1B/DH 54 $19
5 Hunter Goodman COL C/DH 64 $23
6 Drake Baldwin ATL C 81 $19
7 Agustin Ramirez MIA C 84 $13
8 Salvador Perez KC C/1B/DH 92 $19
9 Yainer Diaz HOU C/1B/DH 111 $14
10 Will Smith LAD C ▲1 98 $13
11 Ivan Herrera STL C/DH ▼1 171 $22
12 Adley Rutschman BAL C/DH 151 $13
13 Alejandro Kirk TOR C 158 $9
14 Gabriel Moreno ARI C 179 $8
15 Samuel Basallo BAL C/DH 173 $7
16 Francisco Alvarez NYM C 170 $8
17 Austin Wells NYY C 257 $5
18 J.T. Realmuto PHI C 214 $8
19 Ryan Jeffers MIN C/DH 308 $7
20 Tyler Stephenson CIN C/DH 282 $1
21 Carter Jensen KC C $1
22 Logan O’Hoppe LAA C 245 $3
23 Carlos Narvaez BOS C 414 -$2
24 Carson Kelly CHC C ▲1 613 -$2
25 Dillion Dingler DET C ▲1 268 $2
26 Freddy Fermin SD C/DH ▲1 723 $0
27 Keibert Ruiz WAS C/DH ▲1 732 -$6
28 Edgar Quero CHW C ▲1 512 $1
29 Bo Naylor CLE C ▲1 653 $2
30 Victor Caratini MIN C/1B ▲2 692 -$2
31 Kyle Teel CHW C ▼7 228 $0
32 Sean Murphy ATL C ▲1 743 -$1
33 Patrick Bailey SF C ▲1 746 $0
34 Nick Fortes TBR C ▲1 -$8
35 Jonah Heim ATL C/DH ▲1 -$20
36 Miguel Amaya CHC C ▲1 735 -$7
37 Joey Bart PIT C/DH ▲1 -$9
38 Danny Jansen TEX C ▲1 -$4
39 Harry Ford WAS C ▼8 696 -$10
40 Pedro Pages STL C -$7
41 Dalton Rushing LAD C 743 -$13
42 Rafael Marchan PHI C -$17
43 Liam Hicks MIA C/1B 747 -$10
44 Connor Wong BOS C/1B/DH -$11
45 Joe Mack MIA C -$10
46 Mitch Garver SEA C/DH -$20
47 Kyle Higashioka TEX C -$8
48 Henry Davis PIT C 747 -$10
49 Jeferson Quero MIL C -$22
50 Korey Lee CHW C -$16