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Mining the News (3/2/26)


Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

American League

Angels

Mike Trout is feeling better and wants to run fast.

Mike Trout wants to let you know he’s aiming to reach 30 feet per second, which is considered an elite sprint speed by Statcast.

Trout showed that he still has plenty of speed on Saturday, when he reached 29.9 feet per second trying to beat out an infield single against the D-backs. It was Trout’s fastest sprint speed since he first sustained his meniscus tear in his left knee in late April 2024, which he believes is a good sign.

For context, Trout, 34, averaged 27.9 feet per second last year, which ranked in the 62nd percentile and his fastest sprint speed was 29.7 feet per second. It was a drop off for Trout, who averaged 29.5 feet per second in ’23 (96th percentile) and 28.9 in ’24 (90th percentile) and regularly hit 30 feet per second.

But the drop was due to his issues with his left knee, as he tore his meniscus twice and had surgery twice in ’24. He returned last season but sustained a bone bruise in his left knee on April 30 when he stepped awkwardly on the first-base bag in Seattle. His fastest sprint speed of the season also came on that play. He returned May 30 but his speed wasn’t at his usual level.

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Mining the News (2/27/26)

Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

American League

Angels

Robert Stephenson hopes he can manage his thoracic outlet syndrome symptoms.

RHP Robert Stephenson
Injury: Right elbow inflammation
Expected return: 2026
Status: Dealt with a nerve issue and thoracic outlet syndrome symptoms in the offseason after ending last year on the injured list, but believes he can manage it. Has been throwing bullpens with no issues this spring and said on Feb. 23 he expects to be ready for Opening Day.

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Outfield 2026 Fantasy Rankings


David Banks-Imagn Images

Changelog

  • 12/19/2025 – First Release
  • 1/7/2026 – Update with summaries for Harris, Pages, Anthony, Lile, Burleson, Trout, Wood, Rooker, Langford, and Chourio.
  • 1/22/2026 – Update with summaries for Schwarber, Alvarez, Buxton, Yelich, Arozarena, Duran, Garcia, Bellinger, Altuve, and Hernandez.
  • 2/02/2026 – Update and summaries for Cowser, Steer, Frelick, Carter, Soderstrom, Garcia, Friedl, and Laureano
  • 2/10/2026 – Small update
  • 2/12/2026 – Several items
    • Summaries for Abreu, Varsho, Springer, and Lowe
    • Updated ADP data from NFBC Draft Champions to NFBC Online Championships.
    • Changed the threshold for the amount a player moved in the rankings to 5 spots.
  • 2/24/2026 – Small update, no real changes.

Ranking Methodology

  • ADP is based on 30-day rolling NFBC Online Championship Leagues.
  • $ Values are based on a 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.

Five-Category Studs

These hitters provide value in every aspect of the game with speed, power, and batting average. There are no flaws in their game.
Five-Category Studs
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
1 Aaron Judge NYY OF 2 $37
2 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $36
3 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 11 $30
4 Kyle Tucker LAD OF 14 $30
5 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 15 $28
6 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 6 $34
10 Corbin Carroll ARI OF 12 $27

Four-Category Studs

Some of these hitters may be better real-life players than those in the above tier, but lack in one roto category, usually steals.
Four-Category Studs
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
9 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 31 $24
11 Brent Rooker ATH OF 52 $24
12 James Wood WSN OF 32 $19
14 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF 35 $20

Pete Crow-Armstrong is going to be a divisive player in drafts. First, he’s way better in Roto using batting average with the extra emphasis on stolen bases and no downgrade for a sub-300 OBP. He has the potential to be a platoon bat(career .769 OPS vs RHP, .591 OPS vs LHP), but his elite defense will keep him on the field. Running some comps, they point to a career similar to Javier Báez and Rougned Odor.

Brent Rooker is no longer an enigma; he’s a steady source of 30 HR or more with 180 Runs+RBI. This past season, he seems to have traded off a hit of power (91.9 avgEV to 90.7) for more contact (68% Contact% to 72%). He even throws in a half dozen stolen bases.

Which James Wood will show up this season? The one who hit 24 HR with a .915 OPS in the first half or the one with just 7 HR and a .690 OPS (39% K%) in the second half. I dug and could not find why his Contact% dropped from 72% to 65%. Think of the hype if the halves were switched. Wood’s bat speed and the subsequent batted balls are comparable to the league’s best hitters. Depending on his Contact%, his range of outcomes could be a 50 HR hitter or a frustration who will dominate for a few weeks but be a drag for the rest of the season (see Oneil Cruz).

After three straight seasons of 30+ home runs, Yordan Alvarez’s injured ankle caused him to miss most of last season. I’m worried it’s not 100% healthy, since the team says he will be the primary DH. Besides the injury, his home run per flyball rate has dropped in each of the last three seasons (25% to 21% to 16% to 10%). High risk play. Note: Could be Util-only in league with a 20-game minimum.

Five-Category Pillars

These hitters are good across the board, but don’t match up to those in the first tier.
Five-Category Pillars
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
7 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 20 $24
13 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 41 $19
15 Byron Buxton MIN OF 72 $15
17 Jarren Duran BOS OF 73 $10
21 Michael Harris II ATL OF 101 $14
26 Christian Yelich MIL OF 129 $13

Jackson Chourio has almost the exact same stats over the last two seasons, down to the seven caught stealings, four triples, and three hit-by-pitches. Some growth should be expected from the 21-year-old, but how much and when are the keys. One issue is that he might be slowing down with a 0.5 ft/s loss in Sprint Speed and only six stolen base attempts in the second half compared to 22 in the first half. In 2024, he was the 40th overall player and 59th last year, according to our player rater. That’s a nice floor. The key will be if he can improve on the 20 HR power AND continue to steal bases.

The arrows are heading in all directions with Wyatt Langford. He improved his power (43% HardHit% to 48%), but his contact rate got worse (80% Contact% to 76%). He stole more bases (19 SB to 22) with a slower Sprint Speed (29.8 ft/s to 28.9). Additionally, he missed time twice for oblique injuries while playing through them before taking time off. He quit running as much in the second half (15 SB vs 7), and maybe he didn’t want to re-injure the oblique. It’s tough to evaluate him with so many moving parts. The 24-year-old will be useful, but the way and amount are still up in the air.

Byron Buxton finally stayed “healthy” (126 games, highest since 2017) and posted the season everyone hoped he could (35 HR, 24 SB, .264 AVG). Besides health, there was no real skill improvement or degradation.

Jarren Duran regressed a bit after a career year in 2024, but still hit 24 HR with 24 SB. I’m not sure there is another gear for the 29-year-old. He seemed to sell out for power, with his average exit velocity up 1 mph and his average launch angle up 2.5 degrees. At the same time, his Contact% dropped over 4% points.

The projections love Michael Harris II as a 20/20 talent with a positive batting average. Those projections are of no help to the fantasy managers who started the 24-year-old when he hit .210/.234/.317 with 6 HR in the first half last season. Around the All-Star game, he changed his swing and hit .299/.315/.530 in the second half. One factor keeping his fantasy value down is that he’ll be hitting at the bottom of the Braves lineup, thereby suppressing his plate appearances.

Christian Yelich hit over 20 HR (29) for the first time since 2019. At 34-years-old, no one seems to be buying a breakout with a full season, career high 26% K%, and career-low 90.2 mph Average Exit Velocity. Besides not hitting the ball as hard, his 2 degree Launch Angle was the lowest since his rookie season. Note: He might only be Utility-only in leagues that require 20 games for a position.

Elite Power Bat, Nothing Else

These bats have 40+ home run power with a ton of counting stats. They provide very little in speed and batting average.
Elite Power Bat, Nothing Else
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
8 Kyle Schwarber PHI OF 24 $23

Kyle Schwarber knocks the crap out of the ball. Since the shift was banned, he’s been posting better batting averages, removing his one weakness.

Balanced 2nd Division Bat (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

This tier and the next six tiers comprise the point in the draft where the talent starts to level off, and fantasy managers can focus on category specialists. Some of the unbalanced bats may provide some other category juice, but most of their value is wrapped up in a single category. This is another balanced tier, but in these instances, their trait is not being a drag in any category. They won’t allow a manager to catch up in any category.
Balanced 2nd Division Bat (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
18 Cody Bellinger NYY 1B/OF 78 $16
19 George Springer TOR OF 95 $14
20 Roman Anthony BOS OF 55 $12
22 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF 69 $13
27 Andy Pages LAD OF 141 $13
28 Steven Kwan CLE OF 167 $11
29 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 149 $10
30 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF 96 $13
32 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 141 $11
34 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF 119 $10
35 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 148 $7
39 Ian Happ CHC OF 190 $9
40 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 222 $10
45 Brenton Doyle COL OF 162 $7
46 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 135 $4
51 Daylen Lile WSN OF 199 $4
55 Ramon Laureano SDP OF 220 $4
56 TJ Friedl CIN OF 258 $2
66 Jurickson Profar ATL OF 191 $8
70 Harrison Bader SFG OF 367 $1
74 Austin Hays CHW OF 648 -$4
83 Josh Smith TEX 1B/3B/SS/OF ▲16 577 -$8
84 Lars Nootbaar STL OF 713 -$2
89 Jonathan India KCR 2B/3B/OF 602 -$7
96 Cam Smith HOU OF 407 -$9
98 Luis Rengifo MIL 2B/3B/OF ▲7 660 -$11
105 Alek Thomas ARI OF -$12
107 Jasson Dominguez NYY OF ▼5 324 -$26
109 Kyle Isbel KCR OF -$8

Cody Bellinger raised his launch angle and hit for more power, leading to a six-year high of 29 HR. The problem is that he’s had similar power strokes, and they’ve quickly disappeared. Additionally, last season was the first time he accumulated over 600 PA since 2019. With such variance, pay for the projection, knowing the results are hopefully better but could be way worse.

After a career-best season, George Springer is hoping for a repeat, and if so, it would be a historic first.

Usually, top prospects get all the love, but that doesn’t seem to be the case with Roman Anthony going after pick 50. While he only hit 8 HR in just over 300 PA, signs point to elite power. He led the league with a 60% HardHit%. He was fifth in the league with a 94.5% avgEV. He hit 27 Barrels, but only 8 of them went for HR (normally 1 HR for every two Barrels). The 21-year-old’s only weakness was a 28% K%.Upside of 30 HR.

After being a speed-only option in his first two seasons, Maikel Garcia hit 16 HR in 2025. He didn’t hit the ball harder, but he started elevating (6 deg to 10 deg LA, 49% GB% to 43% GB%) and pulling (33% Pull% to 39% Pull%) the ball more. Hopefully, he keeps or improves on those gains. In most leagues, he will only qualify at third base.

The last memory of Andy Pages is of his post-season struggles (.078 AVG) and benching. I examined similar players and found that a horrible postseason doesn’t affect the hitter’s next season’s production (article coming later this week). The market disagrees on his projection (.255 AVG, 25 HR, 10 SB), so take the discount and roster away.

Steven Kwan is a consistent source of batting average and steals with at least double-digit home runs.

After a breakout 2024 campaign, Lawrence Butler took a step back, likely because of a couple of knee injuries, one chronic. Additionally, he started getting platooned to end the season. Mute expectations because his talent and playing time could be at risk.

Seiya Suzuki’s power took a step forward with 35 HR being a possible outcome if he can stay on the field. The rest of his profile shows no signs of aging.

While his surface stats don’t show it, Ceddanne Rafaela took a major step forward in 2025.

Jose Altuve posted a career-low (excluding 2020) batting average (.262 AVG) along with his lowest stolen base total in four years (10 SB). He posted nearly the same line in three of the past four seasons. I expect the same or worse results as he ages.

Boring, old Brandon Nimmo has shown no signs of slowing down, and the change in home park could boost his production.

While Ian Happ’s hitting skills should repeat, his stolen base skills are deteriorating, and 5 SB might be his upside.

Heliot Ramos has settled into 20 HR to 25 HR with a half dozen stolen bases and a .260 AVG. He was able to post a career-low 23% K% to help keep his batting average up. Otherwise, he hasn’t changed, and he become a consistent productive player.

The 2025 season was a turbulent season for Brenton Doyle on and off the field. I’m going to give him a mulligan and rewind to his 2025 projections.

Over his first three seasons, Noelvi Marte showed several different versions of himself, with any narrative having an explanation. His value is tough to set beyond a basic projection.

Daylen Lile may not have one standout trait, but he doesn’t seem to have a weakness besides being on the Nationals. Projections have him around a 15/15 guy with a .270 AVG (Jeremy Pena/Otto Lopez production, but 100 picks later). He ended the season hitting cleanup and sat against just one of the last seven lefties the team faced. Nice sleeper.

If Ramón Laureano can keep the contact and power gains he made in 2025 while playing a full season, he becomes a solid sleeper

TJ Friedl is a high-variance play in home runs and stolen bases. When looking at his projections, I would take the over in home runs and the under in stolen bases.

While still productive, Jurickson Profar tried to hit more home runs last season, but a drop in raw power kept him from any home run improvement, with his batting average taking a hit.

Jasson Domínguez has struggled to live up to the hype surrounding him. In 2025, he was better than an average hitter (103 wRC+), but wasn’t good enough to crack a healthy Yankees outfield. With Bellinger gone, he is back in the outfield mix even after being the fifth-worst fielding outfielder according to Baseball Savant’s Out-Above-Average. (Note: As of December 18th, he is just hitting .184/.304/.263 in the Dominican Winter League).

Power and Average but zero Speed (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contributions from these hitters are home runs and batting average, but no stolen bases.
Power and Average but zero Speed (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
25 Jackson Merrill SDP OF 70 $15
41 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF 180 $11
48 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF 206 $6
59 Jordan Beck COL OF 236 $5
77 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF 324 -$11
81 Jeff McNeil ATH 2B/OF 622 $2
93 Andrew Benintendi CHW OF -$3
114 Miguel Andujar SDP 3B/OF ▼19 -$11

I was fully invested in Jackson Merrill last season, and that idea did not go as planned. After being a five-category contributor in 2024 (24 HR, 16 SB, .292 AVG), he was barely replacement-level in 2025 (16 HR, 1 SB, .264 AVG). He ranked as the 59th outfielder, just ahead of Gavin Sheets. Before a June concussion, he was batting .304/.349/.474 with 5 HR and 1 SB (2 CS) in 186 PA. After returning from the concussion and until an ankle injury, he hit just .219/.286/.354. And when he returned from the ankle injury, he hit .275/.320/.626 with 7 HR in September. I’m not sure the steals will return, so pay or a .280 AVG with 25 HR. A Yandy Díaz or Corey Seager clone.

With the trade of Willson Contreras to the Red Sox, Alec Burleson takes over first base duties for the Cardinals. The 27-year-old improved both his Contact% (83% to 84%) and Hardhit% (41% to 43%) last year. The increase in hard contact led to a career-high .290 AVG and .169 ISO. While he didn’t get platooned to end last season, it is a possibility (career .606 OPS vs LHP, .775 OPS vs RHP).

If Bryan Reynolds’s shoulder heals, I could see him return to 25 HR and double-digit steals instead of the projected 20 HR/6 SB. I want to see him playing in the field and attempting steals in Spring Training to show that his shoulder is no longer an issue.

A shoulder injury ruined the first two months of Spencer Steer’s season, but he turned it around. With his current projections, I might expect a higher batting average and home runs but fewer stolen bases.

Power Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contribution from these hitters is home runs. The major contribution from these hitters is stolen bases.
Power Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
23 Riley Greene DET OF 79 $18
24 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 138 $15
36 Jo Adell LAA OF 122 $12
37 Taylor Ward BAL OF 157 $12
43 Kyle Stowers MIA OF 129 $8
47 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF 206 $2
50 Daulton Varsho TOR OF 209 $9
63 Mike Trout LAA OF 173 $4
68 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF 210 $1
69 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF 252 -$5
72 Trent Grisham NYY OF 261 $0
75 Kody Clemens MIN 1B/2B/OF 704 -$22
95 Jorge Soler LAA OF 716 -$4
102 Tyler O'Neill BAL OF 727 -$6
106 Owen Caissie MIA OF 634 -$10

Riley Greene has transitioned into a solid power option against righties (32 HR vs RHP, 4 HR vs LHP). Even as the 25-year-old struggled against lefties (career .680 OPS vs LHP, .825 OPS vs RHP), the Tigers started him in 157 games. The 30 HR power is legit, but he has a couple of flaws. He struckout 31% of the time last year as he struggled with fastballs (12% SwStr%). Additionally, I don’t expect him to start stealing bases with his Sprint Speed dropping from 28.1 ft/s (71st percentile) to 27.7 ft/s (59th percentile) to 26.7 ft/s (31st percentile) over the past three seasons.

Teoscar Hernandez is more well-rounded than just a power bat by chipping in a few stolen bases and ~.250 AVG. The 33-year-old’s power has been on a steady five-year decline. If the decline continues, he could be closer to 20 HR than his projected mid-to-high 20 HR totals.

Jo Adell may have improved his plate discipline enough to be a consistent home run threat.

Taylor Ward is projected for ~25 HR, 5 SB, and a .245 AVG. I could see bumping the home run number up to 30, but not any more.

Kyle Stowers turned his career around with career bests in power and contact metrics. He should be good for 25 HR to 35 HR. His batting average could dip as his BABIP regresses downward, but at least the average isn’t a major drain like in his first two seasons.

After coming off shoulder surgery, Daulton Varsho traded off contact for more power. He could be a source of 30+ HR and dozen or so stolen bases but a drain in batting average.

Over the past three seasons, Mike Trout has averaged 18 HR, 3 SB, and a .232 AVG. Those results are similar to those of Max Kepler and Kody Clemens. And I’m not sure of Trout’s upside at this point. He’s not running. A ballooning strikeout rate (32% last season) limits his batting average. Maybe managers will latch onto his late-season swing changes to make him more than a bench streamer.

Fantasy managers need to have a reality check when it comes to Jac Caglianone. Since he’s only shown the ability to hit for power in the majors, he’s just an accumulator. There is no hope for more than 1 or 2 SB, but he could be a positive contributor in batting average. Or he could repeat 2025 and be nearly unplayable. Gamble away.

Trent Grisham improved in two ways to help him the most: make more contact (80% Contact%, 2nd highest of his career) and hit the ball harder (career-high Barrel% and HardHit%). The 34 HR were double his previous high in 2022, and now all signs point to some downward regression. His 51 Barrels would normally produce 27 HR. Projections tag him with ~25 HR. Baseball Savant has him with 27.9 xHR, and had him with 29 HR if all his batted balls were in Yankee Stadium. Also, I would not expect any stolen bases after he stole a total of four over the past two seasons. I see him around a .230 AVG, 25 HR, and 2 SB.

Speed Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contribution from these hitters is stolen bases.
Speed Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
33 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 147 $5
57 Victor Scott II STL OF 375 $0
90 Jake Meyers HOU OF -$5
103 Victor Robles SEA OF ▼12 623 -$13

Jakob Marsee should be amongst the league leaders in stolen bases with double-digit home runs if given a full-time role. The biggest disagreement will be with his batting average. Will it be closer to the projections, .200 AVG to .220 AVG, or the nearly .300 AVG hitter he was in 2025.

Average Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contribution of these hitters is batting average.
Average Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
65 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 335 $3
71 Brendan Donovan SEA 2B/SS/OF 279 -$1
100 Lourdes Gurriel Jr. ARI OF ▲6 695 -$1

Jung Hoo Lee: Before the season began, Lee dealt with a back issue that flared up in mid-June. His back could have bothered him for a while but after resting at the All-Star break, he hit .293/.345/.414 from then on. While he should post a great batting average, all signs point to 10 HR and 10 SB. Also, he could end up getting platooned with a career .610 OPS against lefties and .756 OPS against righties.

Speed and Power but Average Sink (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

These hitters provide a combination of home runs and stolen bases, but are a major drag on batting average.
Speed and Power but Average Sink (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
16 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 89 $12
31 Luis Robert Jr. NYM OF 105 $10
38 Adolis Garcia PHI OF 226 $12
42 Dylan Crews WSN OF 162 $8
44 Oneil Cruz PIT OF 94 $9
49 Colton Cowser BAL OF 264 $1
73 Willi Castro COL 2B/3B/SS/OF 282 -$1
91 Isaac Collins KCR OF ▲5 518 -$7
94 Wenceel Perez DET OF ▼5 -$6
97 Jordan Walker STL OF 378 -$4
104 Christopher Morel MIA OF -$14

During his age-30 season, Randy Arozarena may have posted his career year with highs in plate appearances (709 PA) and home runs (27 HR). At the same time, his .238 AVG was a drag. Besides the $7 he earned in 2024, he’s earned at least $17 in every season since 2021. Steady add.

While Luis Robert has been a 30/30 “full-time” player over his career, he doesn’t play enough to reach that level. Roster only if getting an extreme discount.

The 32-year-old Adolis Garcia has struggled for two straight seasons while dealing with several injuries. He’s going to need to stop and reverse several negative trends as he ages into his mid-30’s.

As Dylan Crews enters in age-24 season, he needs to show improvement with his power and/or contact skills to take a step forward to be at least a league-average hitter (77 wRC+ in ’15). His steals can be valuable as long as he’s not a drain in other categories. If he were on a better team, there would be a risk of a demotion, but the Nationals will have nothing to play for and will keep sending him out.

Oneil Cruz needs to improve in several areas (health, platoon issues, strikeout rate) while not backtracking in any other area. He is a solid source of power and speed. Just make sure to have a solid batting average in place before adding him.

It’ll be tough to target Colton Cowser since he’s a platoon bat with major contact issues. If a fantasy team is set on batting average, he could be an option for his home run and stolen bases.

Speed and Average (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

These hitters provide a combination of speed and batting average.
Speed and Average (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
58 Chandler Simpson TBR OF 171 $3
60 Sal Frelick MIL OF 211 $0
118 Jake Mangum PIT OF ▼9 648 -$12

Only a narrow roto build will fully utilize Chandler Simpson’s skills. He does feel like a corrective action if a team misses on steals and needs to catch up.

Sal Frelick took a positive step forward in both his contact and hard hit rates last season. The key for him going forward is maintaining or improving on them … and not regressing backwards.

Platoon Bats

These guys are strong-side platoon bats who will max out around 400 to 500 plate appearances.
Platoon Bats
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
52 Kerry Carpenter DET OF 238 $6
53 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF 220 $4
54 Evan Carter TEX OF 283 -$3
61 Josh Lowe LAA OF 261 $1
62 Mickey Moniak COL OF 252 $6
64 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 705 -$1
67 Ryan O'Hearn PIT 1B/OF 297 $1
76 Cedric Mullins TBR OF 316 -$4
79 Matt Wallner MIN OF 378 -$1
80 Parker Meadows DET OF -$3
82 Dominic Canzone SEA OF 548 -$7
85 Jesus Sanchez TOR OF ▼9 574 -$5
86 Tommy Edman LAD 2B/3B/OF ▼7 537 -$2
87 Trevor Larnach MIN OF -$8
92 Nick Castellanos SDP OF 623 -$12
99 Mike Yastrzemski ATL OF -$8
101 Gavin Sheets SDP 1B/OF 669 -$7
116 Jake Fraley TBR OF -$9
117 Javier Baez DET 2B/3B/SS/OF -$14
119 Nathan Lukes TOR OF ▼5 -$15

While a strong-side platoon bat, the consistent Kerry Carpenter is a solid bet to hit around a .265 AVG with 25 HR.

Wilyer Abreu is a solid platoon bat whose upside is limited until he can prove that he can hit lefties.

A significant platoon disadvantage and checkered injury history limits Evan Carter’s upside.

Hopefully, Josh Lowe improves from his 2025 season, where he struggled in all aspects of his game, but I have little hope the Angels can help him rebound.

Mickey Moniak has turned into a solid platoon bat (career .497 OPS vs LHP, .760 OPS vs RHP) with some decent road numbers (career .745 OPS at home, .701 on the road, 92 wRC+ for both). He took a step forward in 2025 with a 74% Contact% and 45% HardHit%, both career highs. With more and harder contact, he hit 24 HR with a .270 AVG. I could see a repeat of the 25 HR with a solid .260 AVG with six to 12 stolen bases.

Parker Meadows is heading in the wrong direction. His HardHit% and Contact% have dropped every season. Prorating his 213 PA (missed time due to arm and quad injuries) to 639 PA, he is at 12 HR and 12 SB with a .215 AVG. The team has sat him against lefties (.502 OPS in ’25), but he’s not been good against righties (.653 OPS in ’25). I’d prefer to add him late and use him as a bench streaming option.

Time Shares

These hitters don't have a set role just yet, but have the skills to be positive fantasy contributors.
Time Shares
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
78 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 207 -$13
88 Dylan Beavers BAL OF 437 -$7
108 Tyler Freeman COL 2B/OF 740 -$13
110 Zach McKinstry DET 2B/3B/SS/OF 514 -$9
111 Gavin Lux TBR 2B/3B/OF -$13
112 Jake McCarthy COL OF 659 -$9
113 Garrett Mitchell MIL OF 739 -$8
115 Brooks Baldwin CHW 2B/3B/SS/OF -$9

Combining his minor league and major league numbers, Dylan Beavers accrued 22 HR and 25 SB. Steamer600 puts him at 17 HR and 16 SB with a .243 AVG, which seems reasonable. Accruing full-time at-bats will be the biggest issue for him since the Orioles have four regular outfielders and several options at the DH spot. His 26% K% could be a drag on his batting average, like in September when he hit .167 AVG.

Defensive Specialist

The only reason these guys are playing is because of their defense. They should only contribute in Runs and RBI … maybe.
Defensive Specialist
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
120 Jacob Young WSN OF 740 -$13

Full Rankings Without Tiers

No tiers. Just the rankings.
Full Rankings Without Tiers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
1 Aaron Judge NYY OF 2 $37
2 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $36
3 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 11 $30
4 Kyle Tucker LAD OF 14 $30
5 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 15 $28
6 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 6 $34
7 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 20 $24
8 Kyle Schwarber PHI OF 24 $23
9 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 31 $24
10 Corbin Carroll ARI OF 12 $27
11 Brent Rooker ATH OF 52 $24
12 James Wood WSN OF 32 $19
13 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 41 $19
14 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF 35 $20
15 Byron Buxton MIN OF 72 $15
16 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 89 $12
17 Jarren Duran BOS OF 73 $10
18 Cody Bellinger NYY 1B/OF 78 $16
19 George Springer TOR OF 95 $14
20 Roman Anthony BOS OF 55 $12
21 Michael Harris II ATL OF 101 $14
22 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF 69 $13
23 Riley Greene DET OF 79 $18
24 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 138 $15
25 Jackson Merrill SDP OF 70 $15
26 Christian Yelich MIL OF 129 $13
27 Andy Pages LAD OF 141 $13
28 Steven Kwan CLE OF 167 $11
29 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 149 $10
30 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF 96 $13
31 Luis Robert Jr. NYM OF 105 $10
32 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 141 $11
33 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 147 $5
34 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF 119 $10
35 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 148 $7
36 Jo Adell LAA OF 122 $12
37 Taylor Ward BAL OF 157 $12
38 Adolis Garcia PHI OF 226 $12
39 Ian Happ CHC OF 190 $9
40 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 222 $10
41 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF 180 $11
42 Dylan Crews WSN OF 162 $8
43 Kyle Stowers MIA OF 129 $8
44 Oneil Cruz PIT OF 94 $9
45 Brenton Doyle COL OF 162 $7
46 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 135 $4
47 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF 206 $2
48 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF 206 $6
49 Colton Cowser BAL OF 264 $1
50 Daulton Varsho TOR OF 209 $9
51 Daylen Lile WSN OF 199 $4
52 Kerry Carpenter DET OF 238 $6
53 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF 220 $4
54 Evan Carter TEX OF 283 -$3
55 Ramon Laureano SDP OF 220 $4
56 TJ Friedl CIN OF 258 $2
57 Victor Scott II STL OF 375 $0
58 Chandler Simpson TBR OF 171 $3
59 Jordan Beck COL OF 236 $5
60 Sal Frelick MIL OF 211 $0
61 Josh Lowe LAA OF 261 $1
62 Mickey Moniak COL OF 252 $6
63 Mike Trout LAA OF 173 $4
64 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 705 -$1
65 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 335 $3
66 Jurickson Profar ATL OF 191 $8
67 Ryan O'Hearn PIT 1B/OF 297 $1
68 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF 210 $1
69 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF 252 -$5
70 Harrison Bader SFG OF 367 $1
71 Brendan Donovan SEA 2B/SS/OF 279 -$1
72 Trent Grisham NYY OF 261 $0
73 Willi Castro COL 2B/3B/SS/OF 282 -$1
74 Austin Hays CHW OF 648 -$4
75 Kody Clemens MIN 1B/2B/OF 704 -$22
76 Cedric Mullins TBR OF 316 -$4
77 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF 324 -$11
78 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 207 -$13
79 Matt Wallner MIN OF 378 -$1
80 Parker Meadows DET OF -$3
81 Jeff McNeil ATH 2B/OF 622 $2
82 Dominic Canzone SEA OF 548 -$7
83 Josh Smith TEX 1B/3B/SS/OF ▲16 577 -$8
84 Lars Nootbaar STL OF 713 -$2
85 Jesus Sanchez TOR OF ▼9 574 -$5
86 Tommy Edman LAD 2B/3B/OF ▼7 537 -$2
87 Trevor Larnach MIN OF -$8
88 Dylan Beavers BAL OF 437 -$7
89 Jonathan India KCR 2B/3B/OF 602 -$7
90 Jake Meyers HOU OF -$5
91 Isaac Collins KCR OF ▲5 518 -$7
92 Nick Castellanos SDP OF 623 -$12
93 Andrew Benintendi CHW OF -$3
94 Wenceel Perez DET OF ▼5 -$6
95 Jorge Soler LAA OF 716 -$4
96 Cam Smith HOU OF 407 -$9
97 Jordan Walker STL OF 378 -$4
98 Luis Rengifo MIL 2B/3B/OF ▲7 660 -$11
99 Mike Yastrzemski ATL OF -$8
100 Lourdes Gurriel Jr. ARI OF ▲6 695 -$1
101 Gavin Sheets SDP 1B/OF 669 -$7
102 Tyler O'Neill BAL OF 727 -$6
103 Victor Robles SEA OF ▼12 623 -$13
104 Christopher Morel MIA OF -$14
105 Alek Thomas ARI OF -$12
106 Owen Caissie MIA OF 634 -$10
107 Jasson Dominguez NYY OF ▼5 324 -$26
108 Tyler Freeman COL 2B/OF 740 -$13
109 Kyle Isbel KCR OF -$8
110 Zach McKinstry DET 2B/3B/SS/OF 514 -$9
111 Gavin Lux TBR 2B/3B/OF -$13
112 Jake McCarthy COL OF 659 -$9
113 Garrett Mitchell MIL OF 739 -$8
114 Miguel Andujar SDP 3B/OF ▼19 -$11
115 Brooks Baldwin CHW 2B/3B/SS/OF -$9
116 Jake Fraley TBR OF -$9
117 Javier Baez DET 2B/3B/SS/OF -$14
118 Jake Mangum PIT OF ▼9 648 -$12
119 Nathan Lukes TOR OF ▼5 -$15
120 Jacob Young WSN OF 740 -$13


Top-200 Hitters 2026 Fantasy Rankings

Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

Overview

As usual, my rankings have a heavy projection base and, for now, will closely mirror the auction calculator.  I suspect more changes as I receive feedback and dive further into the player pool.

Two items. The rank is not specific to the tier order. For the tiers, I grouped batters by their skill type (e.g., power, speed, etc). Also, the placement of the catchers in the overall ranks will be league-specific, especially between one and two-catcher leagues. I need to dive into the current market on them. I’ll write a full analysis in a future update or separate article.

Changelog

    • 12/5/2025 – First release
    • 1/5/2026 – Post-holiday update.  A few movers.
    • 1/21/2026 – Update with a few players on new teams.
    • 2/2/2026 – Update, little movement
    • 2/10/2026 – Update
    • 2/12/2026 – Spring Training update. I have bullets of the bullets
      • Dinged Lindor, Corbin Carroll, and Jackson Holliday on plate appearances and a 5% talent reduction.
      • Kyle Schwarber and Ivan Herrera should take a round or two hit in leagues where they are Utility-only.
      • Previously, for a player to be in the “Change” column, they needed to move 20 or more spots. I dropped the minimum mark down to 10 spots.
      • Updated ADP data from NFBC Draft Champions to NFBC Online Championships.

Ranking Methodology

  • ADP is based on 30-day rolling NFBC Online Championship Leagues.
  • $ Values are based on a 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.

Five-Category Studs

These hitters provide value in every aspect of the game with speed, power, and batting average. There are no flaws in their game.
Five-Category Studs
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
1 Shohei Ohtani LAD DH 1 $48
2 Aaron Judge NYY OF 2 $37
3 Bobby Witt Jr. KCR SS 3 $34
4 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $36
5 Jose Ramirez CLE 3B 6 $31
6 Elly De La Cruz CIN SS 8 $27
7 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 11 $31
8 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 6 $34
9 Kyle Tucker LAD OF 14 $30
10 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 15 $28
11 Gunnar Henderson BAL SS 13 $26
18 Corbin Carroll ARI OF ▼10 12 $27
30 Francisco Lindor NYM SS ▼19 23 $19

Four-Category Studs

Some of these hitters may be better real-life players than those in the above tier, but lack in one roto category, usually steals.
Four-Category Studs
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
13 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. TOR 1B 18 $31
17 Junior Caminero TBR 3B 16 $29
20 Nick Kurtz ATH 1B 17 $23
22 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 31 $24
23 Brent Rooker ATH OF 52 $24
25 Pete Alonso BAL 1B 25 $25
31 James Wood WSN OF 33 $19
36 Matt Olson ATL 1B 51 $18
39 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF 35 $20
47 Rafael Devers SFG 1B 56 $17

Five-Category Pillars

These hitters are good across the board, but don’t match up to those in the first tier.
Five-Category Pillars
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
14 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 20 $24
16 Trea Turner PHI SS 28 $20
19 Zach Neto LAA SS 26 $21
21 Jazz Chisholm Jr. NYY 2B/3B 21 $16
26 Josh Naylor SEA 1B 65 $18
27 Manny Machado SDP 3B 39 $15
28 Bryce Harper PHI 1B 51 $23
29 Ketel Marte ARI 2B 33 $18
32 Mookie Betts LAD SS 56 $19
34 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 41 $19
38 Christian Yelich MIL OF 128 $13
40 Byron Buxton MIN OF 71 $15
43 Brice Turang MIL 2B 53 $11
49 Geraldo Perdomo ARI SS 78 $14
50 Jarren Duran BOS OF 73 $10
51 Michael Harris II ATL OF 100 $14

Elite Power Bat, Nothing Else

These bats have 40+ home run power with a ton of counting stats. They provide very little in speed and batting average.
Elite Power Bat, Nothing Else
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
15 Kyle Schwarber PHI OF 25 $23

Elite Catchers

These catchers are the best available, and drafting one will provide a team with a nice anchor at the position.
Elite Catchers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
12 Cal Raleigh SEA C 18 $30
24 William Contreras MIL C 53 $22
33 Shea Langeliers ATH C 54 $21
37 Hunter Goodman COL C 65 $23
44 Ivan Herrera STL C 158 $22
46 Ben Rice NYY C/1B 51 $19
52 Salvador Perez KCR C/1B 94 $19
61 Agustin Ramirez MIA C 83 $11
74 Yainer Diaz HOU C 112 $14
77 Drake Baldwin ATL C 88 $16
78 Samuel Basallo BAL C 175 $7
84 Will Smith LAD C 104 $13

Balanced 2nd Division Bat (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

This tier and the next six tiers comprise the point in the draft where the talent starts to level off, and fantasy managers can focus on category specialists. Some of the unbalanced bats may provide some other category juice, but most of their value is wrapped up in a single category. This is another balanced tier, but in these instances, their trait is not being a drag in any category. They won’t allow a manager to catch up in any category.
Balanced 2nd Division Bat (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
35 CJ Abrams WSN SS 61 $14
41 Freddie Freeman LAD 1B 70 $21
45 Trevor Story BOS SS 106 $14
53 Cody Bellinger NYY 1B/OF 78 $16
54 Jeremy Pena HOU SS 92 $13
55 George Springer TOR OF 95 $14
58 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF 70 $13
64 Roman Anthony BOS OF 54 $12
65 Andy Pages LAD OF 141 $13
67 Steven Kwan CLE OF 167 $11
68 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 150 $10
69 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF 96 $13
73 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 140 $11
76 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF 119 $10
80 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 148 $7
89 Ian Happ CHC OF 189 $9
92 Luke Keaschall MIN 2B 132 $5
94 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 222 $10
100 Ezequiel Tovar COL SS 205 $10
101 Ozzie Albies ATL 2B 158 $6
105 Xander Bogaerts SDP SS 243 $4
106 Brenton Doyle COL OF 162 $7
109 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 136 $4
110 Otto Lopez MIA 2B/SS 229 $3
120 Daylen Lile WSN OF 198 $4
123 Caleb Durbin BOS 2B/3B ▼15 236 $4
125 Masyn Winn STL SS 278 $5
130 Ramon Laureano SDP OF 221 $4
133 Royce Lewis MIN 3B 172 $7
134 Andres Gimenez TOR 2B/SS 431 $3
135 TJ Friedl CIN OF 260 $2
154 Jackson Holliday BAL 2B/SS ▼42 169 -$6
155 Joey Ortiz MIL SS 741 $1
159 Jurickson Profar ATL OF ▼74 190 $8
164 Connor Norby MIA 3B ▲11 695 -$2
168 Harrison Bader SFG OF 374 $1
177 Austin Hays CHW OF 623 -$4
178 J.P. Crawford SEA SS 741 -$6

Power and Average but zero Speed (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contributions from these hitters are home runs and batting average, but no stolen bases.
Power and Average but zero Speed (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
57 Vinnie Pasquantino KCR 1B 79 $14
60 Bo Bichette NYM SS 100 $16
79 Corey Seager TEX SS 99 $10
83 Yandy Diaz TBR 1B 135 $15
88 Tyler Soderstrom ATH 1B/OF 87 $11
90 Alex Bregman CHC 3B 121 $10
95 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF 180 $11
96 Jackson Merrill SDP OF ▼30 71 $15
111 Jonathan Aranda TBR 1B 191 $9
114 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF 205 $6
115 Gleyber Torres DET 2B 251 $7
140 Jordan Beck COL OF ▲14 235 $5
151 Jordan Westburg BAL 2B/3B ▼62 201 $1
162 Carlos Correa HOU 3B/SS 276 $2
165 Nolan Schanuel LAA 1B 534 $4
173 Nolan Arenado ARI 3B 707 $2
181 Josh Bell MIN 1B 675 $1
190 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF 323 -$11
199 Jeff McNeil ATH 2B/OF 600 $2

Power Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contribution from these hitters is home runs.
Power Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
48 Eugenio Suarez CIN 3B 105 $13
59 Riley Greene DET OF 79 $18
62 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 138 $15
63 Austin Riley ATL 3B 68 $17
81 Michael Busch CHC 1B 109 $11
82 Jo Adell LAA OF 122 $12
85 Taylor Ward BAL OF 157 $12
93 Spencer Torkelson DET 1B 186 $10
102 Willson Contreras BOS 1B 175 $8
103 Christian Walker HOU 1B 205 $4
107 Kyle Stowers MIA OF 129 $8
113 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF ▲57 206 $2
118 Daulton Varsho TOR OF ▲10 208 $9
122 Jake Burger TEX 1B 255 $6
126 Brandon Lowe PIT 2B 185 $1
131 Jorge Polanco NYM 2B/3B 218 $5
132 Isaac Paredes HOU 3B 227 -$2
146 Marcell Ozuna PIT DH 390 -$1
150 Mike Trout LAA OF 174 $4
160 Andrew Vaughn MIL 1B 334 $0
163 Miguel Vargas CHW 1B/3B 319 $2
166 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF 209 $1
167 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF 252 -$5
169 Josh Jung TEX 3B 467 $0
172 Trent Grisham NYY OF 259 $0
176 Colson Montgomery CHW 3B/SS 228 $3
184 Max Muncy LAD 3B 253 -$4
185 Kazuma Okamoto TOR 3B $6
200 Nolan Gorman STL 1B/2B/3B 646 -$3

Speed Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contribution from these hitters is stolen bases.
Speed Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
75 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 147 $5
138 Victor Scott II STL OF 370 $0
193 Chase Meidroth CHW 2B/SS 570 -$6
196 Luisangel Acuna CHW 2B/3B/SS 510 -$11

Average Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

The major contribution of these hitters is batting average.
Average Focused (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
97 Jacob Wilson ATH SS 186 $11
108 Luis Arraez SFG 1B/2B 281 $7
137 Ernie Clement TOR 1B/2B/3B/SS 333 $6
145 Alec Bohm PHI 1B/3B 273 $8
157 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 333 $3
171 Brendan Donovan SEA 2B/SS/OF 279 -$1

Speed and Power but Average Sink (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

These hitters provide a combination of home runs and stolen bases, but are a major drag on batting average.
Speed and Power but Average Sink (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
42 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 89 $12
66 Oneil Cruz PIT OF 94 $9
70 Willy Adames SFG SS 133 $11
71 Luis Robert Jr. NYM OF ▲11 105 $10
72 Dansby Swanson CHC SS 154 $9
86 Adolis Garcia PHI OF ▲13 225 $12
91 Matt Chapman SFG 3B 168 $12
98 Dylan Crews WSN OF 162 $8
112 Matt McLain CIN 2B/SS 183 $4
116 Colton Cowser BAL OF 263 $1
117 Munetaka Murakami CHW 1B ▲10 $10
153 Marcus Semien NYM 2B ▼16 251 $5
187 Anthony Volpe NYY SS 666 -$6

Speed and Average (Pick Your Poison Tiers)

These hitters provide a combination of speed and batting average.
Speed and Average (Pick Your Poison Tiers)
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
56 Nico Hoerner CHC 2B/SS 107 $11
87 Bryson Stott PHI 2B/SS 185 $7
99 Xavier Edwards MIA 2B/SS 185 $5
139 Chandler Simpson TBR OF ▼74 172 $3
141 Sal Frelick MIL OF 211 $0
192 Justin Crawford PHI OF -$2

Acceptable Catchers

The catcher position talent drops off after this tier. Expect to be streaming catchers if waiting after this point.
Acceptable Catchers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
104 Adley Rutschman BAL C 152 $13
119 J.T. Realmuto PHI C 216 $8
121 Alejandro Kirk TOR C 159 $9
124 Gabriel Moreno ARI C 178 $8
136 Kyle Teel CHW C 186 $4
144 Austin Wells NYY C 246 $5
147 Ryan Jeffers MIN C 310 $7
152 Francisco Alvarez NYM C 176 $8
158 Dillon Dingler DET C 256 $2
170 Logan O'Hoppe LAA C 257 $2
174 Tyler Stephenson CIN C 269 $1
175 Willi Castro COL 2B/3B/SS/OF 280 -$1
186 Carter Jensen KCR C $1
189 Bo Naylor CLE C 634 $2
191 Patrick Bailey SFG C 741 $0
198 Carlos Narvaez BOS C 538 -$2

Platoon Bats

These guys are strong-side platoon bats who will max out around 400 to 500 plate appearances.
Platoon Bats
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
127 Kerry Carpenter DET OF 238 $6
128 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF 219 $4
129 Evan Carter TEX OF 283 -$3
142 Luis Garcia Jr. WSN 2B 241 $4
143 Josh Lowe LAA OF 261 $1
149 Mickey Moniak COL OF 253 $6
156 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 698 -$1
161 Ryan O'Hearn PIT 1B/OF 296 $1
180 Cedric Mullins TBR OF 314 -$4
182 Kyle Manzardo CLE 1B ▼21 235 -$1
188 Colt Keith DET 1B/2B/3B ▲12 475 -$2
195 Matt Wallner MIN OF 373 -$1
197 Parker Meadows DET OF -$3

Time Shares

Time Shares
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
148 Sal Stewart CIN 1B/3B 198 $4
194 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 207 -$13

Top Prospects, No MLB Experience

These touted prospects have a clear role to start the season.
Top Prospects, No MLB Experience
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
179 Jonathan Wetherholt STL SS -$2
183 Konnor Griffin PIT SS $2

Full Rankings Without Tiers

No tiers. Just the rankings.
Full Rankings Without Tiers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
1 Shohei Ohtani LAD DH 1 $48
2 Aaron Judge NYY OF 2 $37
3 Bobby Witt Jr. KCR SS 3 $34
4 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $36
5 Jose Ramirez CLE 3B 6 $31
6 Elly De La Cruz CIN SS 8 $27
7 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 11 $31
8 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 6 $34
9 Kyle Tucker LAD OF 14 $30
10 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 15 $28
11 Gunnar Henderson BAL SS 13 $26
12 Cal Raleigh SEA C 18 $30
13 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. TOR 1B 18 $31
14 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 20 $24
15 Kyle Schwarber PHI OF 25 $23
16 Trea Turner PHI SS 28 $20
17 Junior Caminero TBR 3B 16 $29
18 Corbin Carroll ARI OF ▼10 12 $27
19 Zach Neto LAA SS 26 $21
20 Nick Kurtz ATH 1B 17 $23
21 Jazz Chisholm Jr. NYY 2B/3B 21 $16
22 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 31 $24
23 Brent Rooker ATH OF 52 $24
24 William Contreras MIL C 53 $22
25 Pete Alonso BAL 1B 25 $25
26 Josh Naylor SEA 1B 65 $18
27 Manny Machado SDP 3B 39 $15
28 Bryce Harper PHI 1B 51 $23
29 Ketel Marte ARI 2B 33 $18
30 Francisco Lindor NYM SS ▼19 23 $19
31 James Wood WSN OF 33 $19
32 Mookie Betts LAD SS 56 $19
33 Shea Langeliers ATH C 54 $21
34 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 41 $19
35 CJ Abrams WSN SS 61 $14
36 Matt Olson ATL 1B 51 $18
37 Hunter Goodman COL C 65 $23
38 Christian Yelich MIL OF 128 $13
39 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF 35 $20
40 Byron Buxton MIN OF 71 $15
41 Freddie Freeman LAD 1B 70 $21
42 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 89 $12
43 Brice Turang MIL 2B 53 $11
44 Ivan Herrera STL C 158 $22
45 Trevor Story BOS SS 106 $14
46 Ben Rice NYY C/1B 51 $19
47 Rafael Devers SFG 1B 56 $17
48 Eugenio Suarez CIN 3B 105 $13
49 Geraldo Perdomo ARI SS 78 $14
50 Jarren Duran BOS OF 73 $10
51 Michael Harris II ATL OF 100 $14
52 Salvador Perez KCR C/1B 94 $19
53 Cody Bellinger NYY 1B/OF 78 $16
54 Jeremy Pena HOU SS 92 $13
55 George Springer TOR OF 95 $14
56 Nico Hoerner CHC 2B/SS 107 $11
57 Vinnie Pasquantino KCR 1B 79 $14
58 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF 70 $13
59 Riley Greene DET OF 79 $18
60 Bo Bichette NYM SS 100 $16
61 Agustin Ramirez MIA C 83 $11
62 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 138 $15
63 Austin Riley ATL 3B 68 $17
64 Roman Anthony BOS OF 54 $12
65 Andy Pages LAD OF 141 $13
66 Oneil Cruz PIT OF 94 $9
67 Steven Kwan CLE OF 167 $11
68 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 150 $10
69 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF 96 $13
70 Willy Adames SFG SS 133 $11
71 Luis Robert Jr. NYM OF ▲11 105 $10
72 Dansby Swanson CHC SS 154 $9
73 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 140 $11
74 Yainer Diaz HOU C 112 $14
75 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 147 $5
76 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF 119 $10
77 Drake Baldwin ATL C 88 $16
78 Samuel Basallo BAL C 175 $7
79 Corey Seager TEX SS 99 $10
80 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 148 $7
81 Michael Busch CHC 1B 109 $11
82 Jo Adell LAA OF 122 $12
83 Yandy Diaz TBR 1B 135 $15
84 Will Smith LAD C 104 $13
85 Taylor Ward BAL OF 157 $12
86 Adolis Garcia PHI OF ▲13 225 $12
87 Bryson Stott PHI 2B/SS 185 $7
88 Tyler Soderstrom ATH 1B/OF 87 $11
89 Ian Happ CHC OF 189 $9
90 Alex Bregman CHC 3B 121 $10
91 Matt Chapman SFG 3B 168 $12
92 Luke Keaschall MIN 2B 132 $5
93 Spencer Torkelson DET 1B 186 $10
94 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 222 $10
95 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF 180 $11
96 Jackson Merrill SDP OF ▼30 71 $15
97 Jacob Wilson ATH SS 186 $11
98 Dylan Crews WSN OF 162 $8
99 Xavier Edwards MIA 2B/SS 185 $5
100 Ezequiel Tovar COL SS 205 $10
101 Ozzie Albies ATL 2B 158 $6
102 Willson Contreras BOS 1B 175 $8
103 Christian Walker HOU 1B 205 $4
104 Adley Rutschman BAL C 152 $13
105 Xander Bogaerts SDP SS 243 $4
106 Brenton Doyle COL OF 162 $7
107 Kyle Stowers MIA OF 129 $8
108 Luis Arraez SFG 1B/2B 281 $7
109 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 136 $4
110 Otto Lopez MIA 2B/SS 229 $3
111 Jonathan Aranda TBR 1B 191 $9
112 Matt McLain CIN 2B/SS 183 $4
113 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF ▲57 206 $2
114 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF 205 $6
115 Gleyber Torres DET 2B 251 $7
116 Colton Cowser BAL OF 263 $1
117 Munetaka Murakami CHW 1B ▲10 $10
118 Daulton Varsho TOR OF ▲10 208 $9
119 J.T. Realmuto PHI C 216 $8
120 Daylen Lile WSN OF 198 $4
121 Alejandro Kirk TOR C 159 $9
122 Jake Burger TEX 1B 255 $6
123 Caleb Durbin BOS 2B/3B ▼15 236 $4
124 Gabriel Moreno ARI C 178 $8
125 Masyn Winn STL SS 278 $5
126 Brandon Lowe PIT 2B 185 $1
127 Kerry Carpenter DET OF 238 $6
128 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF 219 $4
129 Evan Carter TEX OF 283 -$3
130 Ramon Laureano SDP OF 221 $4
131 Jorge Polanco NYM 2B/3B 218 $5
132 Isaac Paredes HOU 3B 227 -$2
133 Royce Lewis MIN 3B 172 $7
134 Andres Gimenez TOR 2B/SS 431 $3
135 TJ Friedl CIN OF 260 $2
136 Kyle Teel CHW C 186 $4
137 Ernie Clement TOR 1B/2B/3B/SS 333 $6
138 Victor Scott II STL OF 370 $0
139 Chandler Simpson TBR OF ▼74 172 $3
140 Jordan Beck COL OF ▲14 235 $5
141 Sal Frelick MIL OF 211 $0
142 Luis Garcia Jr. WSN 2B 241 $4
143 Josh Lowe LAA OF 261 $1
144 Austin Wells NYY C 246 $5
145 Alec Bohm PHI 1B/3B 273 $8
146 Marcell Ozuna PIT DH 390 -$1
147 Ryan Jeffers MIN C 310 $7
148 Sal Stewart CIN 1B/3B 198 $4
149 Mickey Moniak COL OF 253 $6
150 Mike Trout LAA OF 174 $4
151 Jordan Westburg BAL 2B/3B ▼62 201 $1
152 Francisco Alvarez NYM C 176 $8
153 Marcus Semien NYM 2B ▼16 251 $5
154 Jackson Holliday BAL 2B/SS ▼42 169 -$6
155 Joey Ortiz MIL SS 741 $1
156 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 698 -$1
157 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 333 $3
158 Dillon Dingler DET C 256 $2
159 Jurickson Profar ATL OF ▼74 190 $8
160 Andrew Vaughn MIL 1B 334 $0
161 Ryan O'Hearn PIT 1B/OF 296 $1
162 Carlos Correa HOU 3B/SS 276 $2
163 Miguel Vargas CHW 1B/3B 319 $2
164 Connor Norby MIA 3B ▲11 695 -$2
165 Nolan Schanuel LAA 1B 534 $4
166 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF 209 $1
167 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF 252 -$5
168 Harrison Bader SFG OF 374 $1
169 Josh Jung TEX 3B 467 $0
170 Logan O'Hoppe LAA C 257 $2
171 Brendan Donovan SEA 2B/SS/OF 279 -$1
172 Trent Grisham NYY OF 259 $0
173 Nolan Arenado ARI 3B 707 $2
174 Tyler Stephenson CIN C 269 $1
175 Willi Castro COL 2B/3B/SS/OF 280 -$1
176 Colson Montgomery CHW 3B/SS 228 $3
177 Austin Hays CHW OF 623 -$4
178 J.P. Crawford SEA SS 741 -$6
179 Jonathan Wetherholt STL SS -$2
180 Cedric Mullins TBR OF 314 -$4
181 Josh Bell MIN 1B 675 $1
182 Kyle Manzardo CLE 1B ▼21 235 -$1
183 Konnor Griffin PIT SS $2
184 Max Muncy LAD 3B 253 -$4
185 Kazuma Okamoto TOR 3B $6
186 Carter Jensen KCR C $1
187 Anthony Volpe NYY SS 666 -$6
188 Colt Keith DET 1B/2B/3B ▲12 475 -$2
189 Bo Naylor CLE C 634 $2
190 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF 323 -$11
191 Patrick Bailey SFG C 741 $0
192 Justin Crawford PHI OF -$2
193 Chase Meidroth CHW 2B/SS 570 -$6
194 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 207 -$13
195 Matt Wallner MIN OF 373 -$1
196 Luisangel Acuna CHW 2B/3B/SS 510 -$11
197 Parker Meadows DET OF -$3
198 Carlos Narvaez BOS C 538 -$2
199 Jeff McNeil ATH 2B/OF 600 $2
200 Nolan Gorman STL 1B/2B/3B 646 -$3


Mining the News (2/24/26)


Eakin Howard-Imagn Images

• A solid article from Pitcher List on hitters who will add a new position.

American League

Astros

• The team wants Mike Burrows to throw his sinker and changeup more.

Burrows relied mostly on four pitches last year — four-seamer, changeup, slider and curveball — but the Astros are hoping he can throw his sinking two-seamer more and give him a weapon to right-handers, similar to what Hunter Brown did in 2024. Burrows threw the pitch just 5.6% of the time last season.

“We think it could be really even more effective to right-handers,” Brown said. “He’s got the good changeup. We’ll have him throw his changeup more to righties too at times. So there’s some things that we thought that we could do with him that could even get him to take another step forward.”

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Mining the News (2/20/26)


Syndication: Detroit Free Press

American League

Astros

• The team wants its young prospects to get full-time at-bats instead of sitting on the major league bench.

“I want some of these young players, if they’re not going to have the at-bats at the major-league level, going to Triple A and getting at-bats so we can finish their development,” manager Joe Espada said on Friday, reiterating a refrain he’s sung throughout his three-year managerial tenure. “I think that’s important.”

Houston’s current roster construction may not allow for such a luxury. Smith, Cole and Joey Loperfido — whom the Astros acquired in exchange for Sánchez — all have an inside track to the Opening Day roster, barring a total collapse during spring training. The three players have combined for 911 major-league plate appearances.

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Mining the News (2/18/26)


Syndication: Arizona Republic

American League

Astros

Isaac Paredes will practice fielding at first, second, and third base.

Any path for Paredes to play regularly must involve a true rotation at designated hitter. Paredes’ defensive versatility is limited, though Espada said Sunday he will see time at first base, third base and second base for however long he is in Astros camp.

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Mining the News (2/16/26)


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American League

Astros

Nate Pearson had his elbow cleaned up and is behind the other starters.

Pearson also underwent what Dana Brown described as an “elbow cleanup” this offseason, putting him slightly behind the rest of Houston’s pitchers in camp.

Orioles

Heston Kjerstad cleaned up his swing.

What Albernaz was alluding to was an adjustment made to Kjerstad’s swing mechanics since last season.

Kjerstad has abandoned his large leg kick, instead opting for more of a toe tap as his right foot lands upon his swing. It was a development that occurred as he went through offseason hitting drills. The move felt “pretty natural,” and it produced changes that Kjerstad thinks could help him better hit big league pitching.

Rangers

Robert Garcia and Chris Martin are the leading closer candidates.

Nathan Eovaldi had hernia surgery this offseason.

Eovaldi was the best pitcher on the best staff in baseball in 2025, posting a 1.73 ERA in 22 starts with 129 strikeouts over 130 innings. He was ultimately shut down in August due to a right rotator cuff strain, though he was working towards a potential return if the Rangers had made the postseason. That being said, he also underwent offseason surgery for a sports hernia.

Eovaldi said on Tuesday that he had been dealing with the hernia since 2024, but it was not a big deal at the time because it wasn’t affecting his pitching.

Jake Burger took up Pilates to help prevent soft tissue injuries.

This offseason, that meant Pilates.

Burger’s wife, Ashlyn, is a certified instructor, but he had never considered doing it himself, opting to stick with the bench presses and deadlifts. But after a trio of injured list stints last season, two of which were for soft tissue injuries, he decided something had to change.

“For me, the biggest thing is being healthy and just staying in that whole groove throughout the year,” Burger explained. “It’s really hard to get going and then go back on the IL, get going, go back on the IL. For me, [this offseason] was about addressing the soft tissue standpoint. I really dove into the Pilates and did it three times a week.”

Red Sox

Roman Anthony is expected to bat leadoff.

Cora hinted that Roman Anthony, who led off 27 games last season, might be penciled into the top spot this year, too.

“Putting pressure on the opposition from pitch one, that matters,” Cora said. “… He was amazing for us leading off. That means that he’s going to get the most at-bats of anybody, and he’s that type of hitter, so we’re talking top of the lineup. I’m not saying he’s going to lead off, but I like what George (Springer) did for Houston in ‘17. I like what Mookie (Betts) did for us in ’18, and I like what Roman did for us last year.”

Twins

Royce Lewis worked on his pre-swing setup to help with his “pitch recognition, his swing decisions, and ultimately the quality of his contact.”

Isenhower believes Lewis can get back to the heights of 2023 and early 2024. He raves about Lewis’ bat speed and feels that by simplifying things, Lewis can find his old form. The primary focus of their mechanical work has been pre-swing: getting Lewis into the best possible position, consistently, before he even begins his swing.

By doing that, Isenhower asserts, Lewis can let his natural talent and bat speed take over. Being in a better position will improve Lewis’ pitch recognition, his swing decisions, and ultimately the quality of his contact.

White Sox

Hagen Smith worked on his changeup this offseason.

Smith, 22, placed a focus on his changeup, a key pitch in his overall repertoire.

“I’m really just trying to work on the mechanics and kind of figure out when I was going good, what I was doing,” Smith said. “Kind of looked at the video and stuff like that. Really hammered away on the changeup.”

Yankees

Ryan Weathers hit 98.5 mph with his fastball (high was 97.7 mph last season) …

Weathers flashed a 98.5 mph four-seamer, his impressive changeup and some deception in a live batting practice at George M. Steinbrenner Field that saw him face several Yankees hitters, including Paul Goldschmidt and Aaron Judge, whom he struck out once.

… and has been working on staying loose with a foam roller.

Weathers said he’s been assured “there’s nothing in my throwing mechanics that are really troublesome or worrisome. So, why do I keep having these weird injuries?”

Well, he said, he’s learned with the help of the Yankees to address natural tightness in his lower body — particularly in his hips and ankles. He said it’s going to be about “working smarter” between starts. He said he even wants to be extra prepared for when he’s simply playing catch. He’s become good friends with his foam roller.

Amed Rosario is expected to play third base when facing lefties.

No. 14, Amed Rosario, 3B: Rosario was acquired at the trade deadline from the Washington Nationals. The Yankees then re-signed the veteran to a one-year deal in December. Rosario is likely to start at third base when the Yankees are facing left-handed starters. For his career, Rosario has a 120 wRC+ against lefties.

He would be taking at-bats away from Ryan McMahon (career 72 wRC+ vs LHP, 95 wRC+ vs RHP), who struggles against lefties. I saw some power upside for McMahon after examining his talent comps.

Rarely does a player have 30+ HR upside going at the end of drafts (if at all).

Another issue with the platoon is that the AL East is projected to have the 2nd most left-handed innings, so McMahon could get platooned more than other platoon players.

National League

Braves

Ha-Seong Kim 김하성 could return in early May.

Cubs

Cade Horton’s fastball is “sitting 96 and touching 98”.

Yeah, but [Horton is] sitting 96 and touching 98 in the middle of February.

This is right in line with his previous fastball velocities.

Diamondbacks

Justin Martinez is on the 60-day IL.

• RHP Justin Martinez: Placed on 60-day injured list (recovery from right ulnar collateral ligament surgery)

The key takeaway here is that Martinez got the 60-day IL designation before A.J. Puk did. The team must either expect Puk back in the first two months or at least before Martinez.

Dodgers

Brusdar Graterol’s velocity is down and behind in his ramp-up.

Righty reliever Brusdar Graterol will slow-play his ramp-up during Spring Training, manager Dave Roberts said Saturday, creating uncertainty around his availability for Opening Day.

Graterol missed all of last year after undergoing right shoulder labrum surgery in November 2024. He remained a distant possibility to return in ’25, but he was unable to ramp up fully by season’s end. The Dodgers thought he would be full go coming into camp, but Graterol wasn’t where the team expected him to be when he threw off the mound Friday.

“It’s still kind of the velocity’s not near where it’s going to be,” Roberts said. “So I think that it’s a slow progression. I just don’t know where that puts us. But it’s a slow process for Brusdar.”

Mets

Kodai Senga touched 92 mph with his fastball.

Manager Carlos Mendoza was unusually upbeat when asked about Kodai Senga earlier this week, saying he took note as Senga flashed 92 mph on the radar gun.

Last year, Senga was sitting at 93.8 mph. It looks like he’s got some ramping up to do.

Sean Manaea worked on the perfect arm slot over the offseason.

Over the winter, Manaea worked with Tread Athletics, a private pitching facility, on an offseason assessment.

Manaea, who said he feels completely healthy, revised his arm slot while working with Tread after things got too extreme last season. He liked the changes he made in 2024. Maybe too much. In 2025, he took the change to another level, going even lower with his arm slot. It didn’t work. He is closer to where he was at his best in 2024.

“It’s definitely cleaned up and feels a lot better now,” Manaea said.

Phillies

Aaron Nola is NOT adding a new pitch.

“I can make my curveball into a sweeper,” Nola said. “I can make it go left a little bit more because of my arm angle. It just depends on if I use my thumb on it a little bit more. The more thumb I use, the more depth-y it gets. I’ve been grateful to stay healthy for a little while. The last thing I want to do is tinker with another pitch. I know it’s not a for-sure thing [that a pitcher will get hurt] throwing a new pitch. A lot of guys don’t. I just want to crisp up my pitches.”

Pirates

Jhostynxon Garcia is working on his swing decisions.

“The main thing I’m working on this spring, hitting-wise, is swing decisions,” said Garcia, who had 75 RBIs and 21 homers in 114 games between Double-A and Triple-A last season but also struck out 131 times against just 45 walks.

He’s taken his newest assignment to heart so far, stepping in the box on Friday for a live BP session against Pittsburgh ace Paul Skenes. Battling one of baseball’s best pitchers is no small task, but doing so also gives Garcia early practice addressing his biggest challenge: Lowering his strikeout rate, which jumped to 26.8 percent last season.

Rockies

Antonio Senzatela plans on throwing his sinker more.

But during recent informal sessions facing Rockies hitters at the complex, Senzatela has opened eyes with his two-seam sinking fastball, a pitch he hasn’t used more than 5.8 percent of the time over a full season.

Both of our STUPH models grade his sinker as below average. The results this past year were decent (10% SwStr%, 47% GB%).

Tyler Freeman has a sore back and is not in camp.

OF-INF Tyler Freeman
Injury: Back soreness
Expected return: A week or so into camp
Status: Began running on Feb. 12 and started taking grounders on Feb. 13. Underwent an anti-inflammatory injection weeks before camp began. (updated Feb. 13)


Mining the News (2/13/26)


Syndication: Worcester Telegram

• To keep current on all injuries, MLB.com has a single page linked to all the team reports. Here is the report on Ryan Bliss possibly not being ready by Opening Day.

2B Ryan Bliss
Injury: Right meniscus tear
Expected return: Potentially by Opening Day
Status: Injured while running bases during rehab assignment last September, when returning from a left biceps tear five months earlier. Underwent surgery on Sept. 8 but reported early to Spring Training. (Last updated: Feb. 11)

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Mining the News (2/10/26)


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Free Agents

Griffin Canning touched 93 mph in his showcase.

Considering his fastball was sitting 94 mph (touching 96.6 mph) last season, he’s still got a ways to go to be all the way back.

American League

Guardians

• Here is MLB.com’s projected rotation.

Starting Pitchers (5): Gavin Williams, Tanner Bibee, Slade Cecconi, Logan Allen로건, Joey Cantillo

The rotation is expected to drop back down to five starters after the Guardians rode a six-man staff to the AL Central title in 2025. Someone will be the odd man out. Parker Messick made a strong impression down the stretch last year, and he’ll certainly factor in at some point. But he has Minor League options remaining and could open the season with Columbus. Cantillo has relief experience, though he was stellar over five starts in September (1.55 ERA in 29 innings). He’s out of options.

Of Cecconi, Cantillo, Allen, and Messick, Cantillo is the only one out of options. As long as he’s healthy, he should make the rotation while one of the other three will be relegated to AAA or the bullpen.

Rays

Shane McClanahan will be ready by Opening Day, but his innings will be capped.

Rays fans have been waiting two years to see Shane McClanahan on a big-league mound. The electric lefty missed all of 2024 while recovering from Tommy John surgery, then lost another season to a nerve issue in his triceps. McClanahan is on track to be ready for the 2026 campaign, according to Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times, though the southpaw will likely have his workload capped in some fashion.

Red Sox

• Even after trading for Caleb Durbin, the team doesn’t know who will play second or third base.

Cora says Sox won’t commit yet to how they’ll handle 2B and 3B. They’ll figure out how they want to use Mayer, Durbin, and Kiner-Falefa (who offers SS protection for Story). “We’ve got enough.” Cora would like to have a stable 2B/SS combo.

Alex Speier (@alexspeier.bsky.social) 2026-02-09T18:00:55.575Z

Romy Gonzalez dealt with a setback in his shoulder rehab, but plans to be ready by Opening Day.

White Sox

Andrew Benintendi will get some DH at-bats.

The White Sox still like Benintendi’s left-handed power bat, but Getz admitted Benintendi’s legs leading to him not being able to cover ground he once did has held him back. Benintendi feels good physically, per Getz, but will get at-bats at designated hitter.

The Benintendi at-bats will cut into the playing time of Edgar Quero and Lenyn Sosa at DH. If anyone on the White Sox isn’t playing every game, they won’t be fantasy relevant.

Mike Vasil will be a multi-inning reliever.

The same goes for Vasil, although Getz said the right-hander will be working toward a multi-inning role.

“We’re still kind of open-minded on that,” said Getz of Vasil. “It is nice now that the Rule 5 handcuffs are off, so that allows us to be perhaps a little bit more creative with him.”

Yankees

• According to the manager, Max Fried, Cam Schlittler, Will Warren, Ryan Weathers, and Luis Gil are in the Opening Day rotation.

The Yanks can’t wait to get those first two frontline pitchers back in the fold soon, but there will be no rush, according to manager Aaron Boone. The club’s rotation is in a pretty good spot as is.

“We’re talking about probably [Max] Fried, [Cam] Schlittler, [Will] Warren, [Ryan] Weathers and [Luis] Gil to start the season in the rotation,” Boone said Sunday on MLB Network Radio. “And you always have [Ryan] Yarbrough and [Paul] Blackburn there that can fill that role very capably.”

National League

Braves

Hurston Waldrep might start the season in the minors because he is the only backend starter with options.

Where is Hurston Waldrep? The talented young hurler has the ability to be one of the team’s top starters. But Holmes, Bryce Elder and Joey Wentz are out of options. So, to protect the club’s depth, they would likely begin the season in the Majors, as long as they aren’t traded before Opening Day.

Cardinals

Thomas Saggese could get some outfield reps for injured Lars Nootbaar.

And Saggese, who has been a utility infielder, could get some reps in the outfield this spring, especially since Nootbaar won’t be ready on Opening Day.

Marlins

• Lots of competition for the first base job with Christopher Morel, Griffin Conine, and Liam Hicks being mentioned.

Phillies

Zack Wheeler will not be ready by Opening Day.

The Phillies do not expect Zack Wheeler to be ready by Opening Day.

It’s not a huge surprise as the ace continues his rehab from his Sept. 23 thoracic outlet decompression surgery. Still, manager Rob Thomson essentially confirmed as much for the first time on Monday afternoon.

“He’s doing well; I don’t think he’ll be ready for Opening Day,” Thomson said. “But it’s not going to be too far behind that.”

Reds

TJ Friedl will leadoff with Elly De La Cruz batting third.

Now that the cleanup spot is figured out, Francona is trying to determine who might bat second behind TJ Friedl and ahead of De La Cruz.

“To me, that’s the biggest [question], because we want to have somebody break up Elly and TJ, so it needs to be somebody that bats right-handed. My first thought was [Noelvi] Marte, but he struggled so bad against lefties. We’ve got to figure some things out. We haven’t played a game. Those are things I think about.”

Rockies

Chase Dollander reworked his mechanics this offseason to throw more strikes.

The ideas flowed when he described bad habits that crept into his motion, and the process of fixing things this offseason started with T.J. Galenti, a Tampa, Fla.,-based data scientist, certified strength and conditioning expert and baseball performance coach.

“I was a little bit more cross-body — I was pulling off everything,” Dollander said. “We figured out that I have a ton of external rotation in my hips, and that’s usually for guys that are more linear toward the plate. So I went to figure out what works. There were a bunch of different things we tried, with leg kicks, with setups, with thought processes. I think we found something that works.

“My fastball is in the zone more. My slider is in the zone more. I’m getting the ‘vert’ (induced vertical break) back on my fastball.”