Author Archive

Predictiveness of MLB Pipeline Executive Poll: Rookie of the Year


Rich Storry-Imagn Images

In my latest Mining the News, I referenced MLB.com’s Rookie of the Year Poll. MLB.com polled team executives to find who they think will win each league’s Rookie of the Year award. I figured it would be a prospect list for fantasy managers to become familiar with. The narrative would be that these inside sources would know the players who would be productive and play enough to win the award. Production and playing time are the two traits needed to be a solid fantasy option. Since this is the poll’s fourth year, I examined previous editions to determine how these executives performed.

The information in the polls is scarce, so all the small sample caveats apply. The results have been collected over the past three seasons (2023, 2024, 2025). In each one, a percentage of executive votes is included. The full list of previous players is at the end of the article.

To each player, I included our Fantasy Player Rater 12-team end-of-season dollar value. Then, I began grouping away. First, here is a plot of all the values.

Besides the four players polled at 50% or higher, the values seem to be fairly random. I grouped the values into four groups based on their polled percentage. Also, I combined the three low-polled groups.

Fantasy Production Based on Polled%
Polled% Avg EOS Fantasy Value % over $0 % over $5 Count
>= 50% $12 75% 75% 4
15% to 49% -$5 11% 22% 9
5% to 15% -$3 33% 50% 12
1% to 5% -$4 27% 45% 22
1% to 49% -$4 26% 42% 43

That top group (n=4) seems to be productive, with the rest of the values being a complete crap shoot. The final line is the most useful. There is a 25% chance of these players contributing more than $5 and a 40% chance of being positive.

With the historical results, here are this year’s lists.

Fantasy Production Based on Polled%

None of the players meet the 50% threshold, so no one is on the must-target list.

Fantasy managers should spend a few minutes on each of those players and track their results. Who knows which one will stand out? Nick Kurtz received just one vote last year and was a league winner.

MLB Pipeline Poll by MLB Executives
Name League Season % Polled EOS Value
Roman Anthoy AL 2025 19% -$4
Jackson Jobe AL 2025 19% -$5
Jasson Domínguez AL 2025 17% $3
Coby Mayo AL 2025 15% -$13
Kristian Campvell AL 2025 9% -$15
Jacob Wilson윌슨 AL 2025 9% $9
Jac Caglianone AL 2025 3% -$20
Nick Kurtz AL 2025 3% $20
Kumar Rocker AL 2025 3% -$9
Kyle Teel AL 2025 3% $3
Dylan Crews NL 2025 50% -$8
Matt Shaw NL 2025 19% -$2
Bubba Chandler NL 2025 10% UNK (issue with player rater)
Jordan Lawlar NL 2025 6% -$21
Dalton Rushing NL 2025 7% -$8
Thomas Saggese NL 2025 7% -$14
Evan Carter AL 2024 36% -$17
Jackson Holliday AL 2024 30% -$16
Junior Caminero AL 2024 15% -$15
Wyatt Langford AL 2024 11% $12
Heston Kjerstad AL 2024 2% -$18
Brooks Lee AL 2024 2% -$18
Curtis Mead AL 2024 2% -$21
Austin Wells AL 2024 2% $3
Yoshinobu Yamamoto NL 2024 51% $7
Jackson Chourio NL 2024 17% $19
Noelvi Marte NL 2024 9% -$15
Pete Crow-Armstrong NL 2024 6% $1
Jordan Lawlar NL 2024 4% DNP
Paul Skenes NL 2024 4% $25
Michael Busch NL 2024 2% $5
Kyle Harrison NL 2024 2% -$6
Jacob Hurtubise NL 2024 2% -$22
James Wood NL 2024 2% -$2
Gunnar Henderson AL 2023 73% $17
Hunter Brown AL 2023 9% -$4
Triston Casas AL 2023 9% $6
Anthony Volpe AL 2023 6% $2
Josh Jung AL 2023 3% $8
Corbin Carroll NL 2023 66% $32
Francisco Álvarez NL 2023 9% $7
Elly De La Cruz NL 2023 3% $5
Sal Frelick NL 2023 3% -$13
Matt Mervis NL 2023 3% -$21
Bobby Miller NL 2023 3% $11
Jared Shuster NL 2023 3% -$10
Ezequiel Tovar NL 2023 3% $8
Miguel Vargas NL 2023 3% -$16
Jordan Walker NL 2023 3% $2

Mining the News (1/9/26)


Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

MLB.com surveyed several front office personnel for rookie of the year candidates. I’d recommend going through the picks since these are likely to be solid options to be productive with an early promotion.

Cardinals infielder JJ Wetherholt (MLB No. 5) had an outstanding first full season of pro ball after being the No. 7 overall pick in the 2024 Draft, splitting the year between Double-A and Triple-A and posting a combined .306/.421/.510 slash line with 17 homers and 23 steals. Some were surprised he didn’t get a late-season audition in St. Louis, but you have to figure his bat will work its way into that lineup sooner rather than later. He’s played three infield positions, which should help give the big league staff options for him to make the Opening Day roster.

American League

Guardians

• A reminder that Bo Naylor tweaked his swing towards the end of last season.

Manager Stephen Vogt has insisted the tweaks Naylor made to his swing started to bear fruit by September. That month, he posted a .290/.324/.548 slash line. Hedges, who signed a $4 million deal for the third straight winter, is in line to be the club’s fifth-highest-paid player.

Rangers

Jacob Latz will get stretched out as a starter.

GM Ross Fenstermaker said at the Winter Meetings that [Latz is] building up to be a starter, but potentially continue to be used in a swingman type role by the time Opening Day rolls around. I think he’ll be one of the more interesting players to watch in Spring Training as the staff figures out the best way to use him.

Red Sox

Wilyer Abreu will get a chance to face lefties to start the season.

“I truly believe that this year … and I probably said it before … with Willy and some of the lefties, we have to see if they can do it,” said Red Sox manager Alex Cora.

By “do it,” Cora means getting the job done against left-handed pitchers. Refsnyder was a security blanket of sorts for the Sox.

Though Romy Gonzalez has become almost as effective as a platoon lefty masher, he gets most of his reps in the infield. Refsnyder’s departure clearly leaves an opportunity in the outfield.

“It’s about that time, especially with Abreu,” said Cora. “And if he can hit lefties and hit for power and play defense the way he’s done the last few years, he can be the guy.”

“We need to have Wilyer figure out lefties. We’re going to push him to do that and I truly believe he can do that,” Cora told the Section 10 podcast earlier this offseason.

Twins

Eric Wagaman will be a short-side platoon bat.

There are a few things that likely drew the Twins to Wagaman, not the least of which is that he’d be minimum-salaried in the majors and still has minor-league options, meaning he can be stashed at Triple-A St. Paul as in-season depth if he doesn’t make the Opening Day roster.

And within last year’s poor overall production, Wagaman hit .283/.321/.462 against left-handed pitching. It was a similar story in the minors, where he hit .328/.379/.541 off lefties in 2024. For a lineup that’s always long on lefty corner bats, the righty-swinging Wagaman could fit in a platoon role.

Wagaman is 6-foot-4 with below-average speed, so he’s limited defensively, but he does have experience playing all four corner spots. He could platoon at first base with Kody Clemens, pushing the weak-gloved Bell to DH, and he could be paired with Matt Wallner or Trevor Larnach in the outfield.

White Sox

Sean Newcomb will get a shot to make the rotation.

To take that idea one step further, Newcomb will have the Spring Training chance to feature that same unofficial position as part of the White Sox rotation.

“He’s going to come in and compete for a starting job, a job in the rotation I should say, which we are really excited about,” said manager Will Venable during a Wednesday Zoom. “We know he had some success in both the starting role and the reliever role, so he is capable of doing both, but he’s going to be in that mix for a starting-rotation job, and we are excited to help support him.”

“I’ve always been a starter, starter mentality,” said Newcomb on the Zoom call. “Over the past few years up in the big leagues, I’ve done a lot out of the ‘pen, but even those outings I’ve had a lot of three-, four-plus innings outings. So, it’s kind of the same mentality for me, just be ready to attack a lineup once or twice, three times through if it gets to that point with five or six innings.”

National League

Cubs

Jordan Wicks is working on a curveball.

Giants

Tyler Mahle has been dealing with shoulder issues since 2021

Mahle missed three months with right shoulder fatigue last year, but he returned to make two starts in September and said he hasn’t felt this healthy since 2021, when he recorded a 3.75 ERA over a career-high 33 starts for the Reds.

“It was big to make those last two starts and show that I was healthy going into the offseason,” Mahle said during a Zoom call with reporters. “I took a few weeks off after the season and then started throwing again, and it’s felt amazing since. I honestly haven’t felt this good — knock on wood — since probably that 2021 season.”

… and is working on a new breaking ball.

Mahle has a four-pitch mix that includes a four-seam fastball and a splitter, though he said he’s working on developing a new breaking ball that will help him become even tougher on right-handed hitters.

“We’ve been working on that,” Mahle said. “It’s looking good. I definitely think I can pick up where I left off [from 2025].”


Outfield 2026 Fantasy Rankings


David Banks-Imagn Images

Changelog

  • 12/19/2025 – First Release
  • 1/7/2026 – Update with summaries written for Harris, Pages, Anthony, Lile, Burleson, Trout, Wood, Rooker, Langford, and Chourio.

Ranking Methodology

  • ADP is based on 30-day rolling NFBC Draft Champions 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/DH 2 $42
2 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $38
3 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 11 $33
4 Corbin Carroll ARI OF 9 $31
5 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 14 $32
6 Kyle Tucker OF/DH 17 $26
7 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 8 $31

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 $
10 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 32 $22
11 Brent Rooker ATH OF/DH 55 $22
12 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF/DH 47 $24
13 James Wood WSN OF/DH 31 $19

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).

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 $
9 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 20 $21
14 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 53 $18
15 Christian Yelich MIL OF/DH 136 $12
16 Byron Buxton MIN OF/DH 84 $14
18 Jarren Duran BOS OF 84 $8
19 Michael Harris II ATL OF 94 $15

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.

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.

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/DH 24 $25

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.

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 $
20 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF/DH 84 $15
21 George Springer TOR OF/DH 107 $13
22 Andy Pages LAD OF 145 $14
23 Roman Anthony BOS OF/DH 65 $9
24 Cody Bellinger 1B/OF 85 $16
26 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 151 $9
28 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF/DH 130 $10
29 Steven Kwan CLE OF 166 $10
31 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF/DH 102 $13
33 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 162 $9
35 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 132 $7
37 Jurickson Profar ATL OF 183 $8
42 Jasson Dominguez NYY OF/DH 200 $4
43 Ian Happ CHC OF 184 $6
47 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 219 $9
48 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 136 $7
51 Daylen Lile WSN OF/DH ▲16 203 $3
52 Brenton Doyle COL OF 171 $5
55 Ramon Laureano SDP OF/DH 226 $2
63 TJ Friedl CIN OF 266 $0
78 Harrison Bader OF 323 -$3
80 Matt Wallner MIN OF/DH 319 -$2
81 Austin Hays OF/DH 421 -$5
84 Lars Nootbaar STL OF 376 -$2
90 Jonathan India KCR 2B/3B/OF/DH 390 -$11
101 Cam Smith HOU OF 353 -$12
105 Josh Smith TEX 1B/3B/SS/OF/DH ▼17 352 -$12
107 Alek Thomas ARI OF 570 -$12
110 Kyle Isbel KCR OF 728 -$10

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.

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.

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

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.

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

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).

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.

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.

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.

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 $
27 Jackson Merrill SDP OF 80 $14
36 Tyler Soderstrom ATH 1B/OF 102 $13
39 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF/DH 180 $13
46 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF/DH 201 $8
57 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF/DH 248 $1
64 Jordan Beck COL OF/DH 226 $2
87 Jeff McNeil ATH 2B/OF/DH 388 -$4
96 Andrew Benintendi CHW OF/DH 418 -$5
119 Miguel Andujar 3B/OF/DH 495 -$10

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).

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 $
25 Riley Greene DET OF/DH 78 $16
30 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 143 $12
32 Jo Adell LAA OF 126 $16
40 Taylor Ward BAL OF 162 $10
50 Kyle Stowers MIA OF/DH 138 $6
60 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF/DH 266 $1
62 Mike Trout LAA OF/DH 220 $4
65 Anthony Santander TOR OF/DH 241 $2
66 Daulton Varsho TOR OF 196 $3
69 Trent Grisham NYY OF 267 -$1
73 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF/DH 227 $2
75 Kody Clemens MIN 1B/2B/OF 384 -$23
76 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF 201 -$3
98 Jorge Soler LAA OF/DH 396 -$1
108 Tyler O'Neill BAL OF/DH 400 -$10
117 C.J. Kayfus CLE 1B/OF 458 -$13

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.

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.

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.

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 $
34 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 145 $3
70 Victor Scott II STL OF 337 -$4
88 Victor Robles SEA OF 338 -$15
93 Jake Meyers HOU OF ▲17 449 -$8
112 Richie Palacios TBR 2B/OF 609 -$26

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 $
61 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 285 $2
72 Brendan Donovan STL 2B/SS/OF 282 $1
111 Lourdes Gurriel Jr. ARI OF/DH 617 -$10

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 $
17 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 99 $11
38 Luis Robert Jr. CHW OF 124 $10
41 Adolis Garcia PHI OF/DH 240 $7
44 Dylan Crews WSN OF 169 $8
49 Oneil Cruz PIT OF 105 $7
53 Colton Cowser BAL OF 250 $0
89 Willi Castro 2B/3B/SS/OF 398 -$6
95 Wenceel Perez DET OF 413 -$7
99 Luis Rengifo 2B/3B/OF 428 -$14
102 Isaac Collins KCR OF ▲12 338 -$13
106 Jordan Walker STL OF ▲12 342 -$4
113 Christopher Morel MIA OF/DH 509 -$18
118 Blaze Alexander ARI 2B/3B/OF 529 -$14

Oneil Cruz hits the ball hard and runs fast, but can be a major drag otherwise, especially if he repeats his .200 AVG from last season. With the limited contact and on-base skills (.298 OBP) while playing for an offensively challenged team, he barely broke 60 Runs and RBI. Besides being just a two-category contributor, he started to get platooned (career .560 OPS vs LHP, .795 OPS vs RHP) with his last start against a left-handed pitcher being on August 2nd. Being platooned might make him less of a batting average drag since he has a career .254 AVG against righties (.172 vs LHP).

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.

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 $
45 Chandler Simpson TBR OF 171 -$6
56 Sal Frelick MIL OF 201 -$2
104 Jake Mangum PIT OF 374 -$13

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.

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 $
58 Evan Carter TEX OF 317 -$7
59 Kerry Carpenter DET OF/DH 224 $2
67 Josh Lowe TBR OF 276 -$2
68 Ryan O'Hearn PIT 1B/OF/DH ▲11 282 $2
71 Mickey Moniak COL OF/DH 253 $1
74 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 348 -$6
77 Jesus Sanchez HOU OF 327 -$4
82 Tommy Edman LAD 2B/3B/OF 298 $1
83 Dominic Canzone SEA OF/DH ▲25 327 -$7
85 Cedric Mullins TBR OF 308 -$6
86 Trevor Larnach MIN OF/DH 393 -$11
91 Gavin Sheets SDP 1B/OF/DH 369 -$3
92 Parker Meadows DET OF 401 -$8
97 Nick Castellanos PHI OF 367 -$23
100 Mike Yastrzemski ATL OF ▼18 420 -$10
114 Max Kepler OF 575 -$10

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

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.

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 $
79 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 224 -$16
94 Dylan Beavers BAL OF 303 -$11
103 Tyler Freeman COL 2B/OF/DH 424 -$12
109 Gavin Lux CIN 2B/3B/OF/DH 592 -$17
115 Hyeseong Kim LAD 2B/SS/OF 474 -$16
116 Zach McKinstry DET 2B/3B/SS/OF 344 -$14
120 Tyrone Taylor NYM OF 730 -$14

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 $
54 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF ▲12 229 $3

Full Rankings Without Tiers

No tiers. Just the rankings.
Full Rankings Without Tiers
Rank Name Team Pos Change ADP $
1 Aaron Judge NYY OF/DH 2 $42
2 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $38
3 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 11 $33
4 Corbin Carroll ARI OF 9 $31
5 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 14 $32
6 Kyle Tucker OF/DH 17 $26
7 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 8 $31
8 Kyle Schwarber PHI OF/DH 24 $25
9 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 20 $21
10 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 32 $22
11 Brent Rooker ATH OF/DH 55 $22
12 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF/DH 47 $24
13 James Wood WSN OF/DH 31 $19
14 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 53 $18
15 Christian Yelich MIL OF/DH 136 $12
16 Byron Buxton MIN OF/DH 84 $14
17 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 99 $11
18 Jarren Duran BOS OF 84 $8
19 Michael Harris II ATL OF 94 $15
20 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF/DH 84 $15
21 George Springer TOR OF/DH 107 $13
22 Andy Pages LAD OF 145 $14
23 Roman Anthony BOS OF/DH 65 $9
24 Cody Bellinger 1B/OF 85 $16
25 Riley Greene DET OF/DH 78 $16
26 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 151 $9
27 Jackson Merrill SDP OF 80 $14
28 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF/DH 130 $10
29 Steven Kwan CLE OF 166 $10
30 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 143 $12
31 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF/DH 102 $13
32 Jo Adell LAA OF 126 $16
33 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 162 $9
34 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 145 $3
35 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 132 $7
36 Tyler Soderstrom ATH 1B/OF 102 $13
37 Jurickson Profar ATL OF 183 $8
38 Luis Robert Jr. CHW OF 124 $10
39 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF/DH 180 $13
40 Taylor Ward BAL OF 162 $10
41 Adolis Garcia PHI OF/DH 240 $7
42 Jasson Dominguez NYY OF/DH 200 $4
43 Ian Happ CHC OF 184 $6
44 Dylan Crews WSN OF 169 $8
45 Chandler Simpson TBR OF 171 -$6
46 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF/DH 201 $8
47 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 219 $9
48 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 136 $7
49 Oneil Cruz PIT OF 105 $7
50 Kyle Stowers MIA OF/DH 138 $6
51 Daylen Lile WSN OF/DH ▲16 203 $3
52 Brenton Doyle COL OF 171 $5
53 Colton Cowser BAL OF 250 $0
54 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF ▲12 229 $3
55 Ramon Laureano SDP OF/DH 226 $2
56 Sal Frelick MIL OF 201 -$2
57 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF/DH 248 $1
58 Evan Carter TEX OF 317 -$7
59 Kerry Carpenter DET OF/DH 224 $2
60 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF/DH 266 $1
61 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 285 $2
62 Mike Trout LAA OF/DH 220 $4
63 TJ Friedl CIN OF 266 $0
64 Jordan Beck COL OF/DH 226 $2
65 Anthony Santander TOR OF/DH 241 $2
66 Daulton Varsho TOR OF 196 $3
67 Josh Lowe TBR OF 276 -$2
68 Ryan O'Hearn PIT 1B/OF/DH ▲11 282 $2
69 Trent Grisham NYY OF 267 -$1
70 Victor Scott II STL OF 337 -$4
71 Mickey Moniak COL OF/DH 253 $1
72 Brendan Donovan STL 2B/SS/OF 282 $1
73 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF/DH 227 $2
74 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 348 -$6
75 Kody Clemens MIN 1B/2B/OF 384 -$23
76 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF 201 -$3
77 Jesus Sanchez HOU OF 327 -$4
78 Harrison Bader OF 323 -$3
79 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 224 -$16
80 Matt Wallner MIN OF/DH 319 -$2
81 Austin Hays OF/DH 421 -$5
82 Tommy Edman LAD 2B/3B/OF 298 $1
83 Dominic Canzone SEA OF/DH ▲25 327 -$7
84 Lars Nootbaar STL OF 376 -$2
85 Cedric Mullins TBR OF 308 -$6
86 Trevor Larnach MIN OF/DH 393 -$11
87 Jeff McNeil ATH 2B/OF/DH 388 -$4
88 Victor Robles SEA OF 338 -$15
89 Willi Castro 2B/3B/SS/OF 398 -$6
90 Jonathan India KCR 2B/3B/OF/DH 390 -$11
91 Gavin Sheets SDP 1B/OF/DH 369 -$3
92 Parker Meadows DET OF 401 -$8
93 Jake Meyers HOU OF ▲17 449 -$8
94 Dylan Beavers BAL OF 303 -$11
95 Wenceel Perez DET OF 413 -$7
96 Andrew Benintendi CHW OF/DH 418 -$5
97 Nick Castellanos PHI OF 367 -$23
98 Jorge Soler LAA OF/DH 396 -$1
99 Luis Rengifo 2B/3B/OF 428 -$14
100 Mike Yastrzemski ATL OF ▼18 420 -$10
101 Cam Smith HOU OF 353 -$12
102 Isaac Collins KCR OF ▲12 338 -$13
103 Tyler Freeman COL 2B/OF/DH 424 -$12
104 Jake Mangum PIT OF 374 -$13
105 Josh Smith TEX 1B/3B/SS/OF/DH ▼17 352 -$12
106 Jordan Walker STL OF ▲12 342 -$4
107 Alek Thomas ARI OF 570 -$12
108 Tyler O'Neill BAL OF/DH 400 -$10
109 Gavin Lux CIN 2B/3B/OF/DH 592 -$17
110 Kyle Isbel KCR OF 728 -$10
111 Lourdes Gurriel Jr. ARI OF/DH 617 -$10
112 Richie Palacios TBR 2B/OF 609 -$26
113 Christopher Morel MIA OF/DH 509 -$18
114 Max Kepler OF 575 -$10
115 Hyeseong Kim LAD 2B/SS/OF 474 -$16
116 Zach McKinstry DET 2B/3B/SS/OF 344 -$14
117 C.J. Kayfus CLE 1B/OF 458 -$13
118 Blaze Alexander ARI 2B/3B/OF 529 -$14
119 Miguel Andujar 3B/OF/DH 495 -$10
120 Tyrone Taylor NYM OF 730 -$14


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 into the player pool more (been finalizing The Process).

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.

Ranking Methodology

  • ADP is based on 30-day rolling NFBC Draft Champions 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 $41
2 Aaron Judge NYY OF/DH 2 $42
3 Bobby Witt Jr. KCR SS 3 $37
4 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $38
5 Jose Ramirez CLE 3B/DH 5 $34
6 Elly De La Cruz CIN SS 9 $28
7 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 12 $33
8 Corbin Carroll ARI OF 9 $31
9 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 14 $32
10 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 8 $31
11 Gunnar Henderson BAL SS/DH 15 $29
12 Francisco Lindor NYM SS 17 $23
13 Kyle Tucker OF/DH 17 $26

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 $
15 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. TOR 1B/DH 19 $34
16 Junior Caminero TBR 3B/DH 14 $35
21 Nick Kurtz ATH 1B/DH 19 $23
24 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 32 $22
26 Brent Rooker ATH OF/DH 53 $22
27 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF/DH 45 $25
31 Pete Alonso BAL 1B 26 $24
32 James Wood WSN OF/DH 30 $19
33 Matt Olson ATL 1B 56 $20
50 Rafael Devers SFG 1B/DH 68 $16

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 $
18 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 21 $21
19 Trea Turner PHI SS 29 $20
20 Zach Neto LAA SS 34 $22
22 Jazz Chisholm Jr. NYY 2B/3B 23 $16
23 Manny Machado SDP 3B/DH 41 $20
28 Ketel Marte ARI 2B/DH 38 $18
29 Josh Naylor SEA 1B/DH 72 $16
30 Bryce Harper PHI 1B 57 $24
35 Mookie Betts LAD SS 60 $19
36 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 54 $18
38 Christian Yelich MIL OF/DH 135 $12
39 Brice Turang MIL 2B 67 $8
42 Byron Buxton MIN OF/DH 83 $14
47 Michael Harris II ATL OF 94 $15
49 Geraldo Perdomo ARI SS 84 $15
51 Jarren Duran BOS OF 82 $8

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 $
17 Kyle Schwarber PHI OF/DH 24 $25

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 $
14 Cal Raleigh SEA C/DH 20 $31
25 William Contreras MIL C/DH 52 $23
34 Ben Rice NYY C/1B/DH 51 $23
37 Hunter Goodman COL C/DH 75 $25
40 Shea Langeliers ATH C/DH 60 $20
45 Ivan Herrera STL C/DH 178 $22
46 Agustin Ramirez MIA C/DH 81 $17
48 Salvador Perez KCR C/1B/DH 101 $23
70 Yainer Diaz HOU C/DH 114 $15
79 Samuel Basallo BAL C/DH 171 $6
80 Drake Baldwin ATL C/DH 92 $15
85 Will Smith LAD C 114 $12

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 $
41 CJ Abrams WSN SS 56 $13
44 Freddie Freeman LAD 1B 70 $19
52 Jeremy Pena HOU SS 94 $14
53 Trevor Story BOS SS 110 $13
54 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF/DH 83 $15
57 George Springer TOR OF/DH 108 $13
59 Andy Pages LAD OF 144 $14
60 Cody Bellinger 1B/OF 86 $16
63 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 149 $9
66 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF/DH 128 $10
67 Steven Kwan CLE OF 168 $10
69 Roman Anthony BOS OF/DH 64 $9
71 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF/DH 102 $13
74 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 159 $9
82 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 132 $7
86 Jurickson Profar ATL OF 186 $8
95 Luke Keaschall MIN 2B/DH 152 $2
99 Jasson Dominguez NYY OF/DH 199 $4
100 Ian Happ CHC OF 185 $6
102 Ozzie Albies ATL 2B 180 $4
104 Ezequiel Tovar COL SS 192 $10
108 Xander Bogaerts SDP SS/DH 223 $6
109 Jackson Holliday BAL 2B/SS 146 $3
110 Caleb Durbin MIL 2B/3B 239 $1
112 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 221 $9
113 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 135 $7
115 Otto Lopez MIA 2B/SS 220 $4
117 Daylen Lile WSN OF/DH ▲41 205 $5
119 Brenton Doyle COL OF 167 $5
131 Royce Lewis MIN 3B/DH 200 $8
134 Masyn Winn STL SS 263 $4
136 Ramon Laureano SDP OF/DH 225 $2
138 Andres Gimenez TOR 2B/SS 313 $3
152 TJ Friedl CIN OF 265 $0
159 Joey Ortiz MIL SS 397 $1
180 J.P. Crawford SEA SS 370 -$6
183 Connor Norby MIA 3B 348 -$7
185 Harrison Bader OF 321 -$3
194 Austin Hays OF/DH 417 -$5
200 Lars Nootbaar STL OF 375 -$2

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 $
56 Bo Bichette SS/DH 113 $17
58 Vinnie Pasquantino KCR 1B/DH 92 $15
64 Corey Seager TEX SS/DH 105 $13
65 Jackson Merrill SDP OF 78 $14
76 Yandy Diaz TBR 1B/DH 141 $17
83 Alex Bregman 3B 127 $13
84 Tyler Soderstrom ATH 1B/OF 101 $13
90 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF/DH 183 $13
92 Jordan Westburg BAL 2B/3B/DH 134 $10
111 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF/DH 202 $8
120 Jonathan Aranda TBR 1B/DH 185 $8
128 Gleyber Torres DET 2B/DH 244 $2
140 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF/DH 249 $1
153 Jordan Beck COL OF/DH 225 $2
164 Carlos Correa HOU 3B/SS 275 $4
166 Nolan Schanuel LAA 1B 300 $5
175 Josh Bell MIN 1B/DH 353 $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 $
61 Austin Riley ATL 3B 82 $18
62 Riley Greene DET OF/DH 78 $16
68 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 140 $12
72 Jo Adell LAA OF 126 $16
78 Eugenio Suarez 3B 124 $10
89 Michael Busch CHC 1B 108 $8
94 Taylor Ward BAL OF 163 $10
97 Christian Walker HOU 1B 190 $6
103 Willson Contreras BOS 1B/DH 202 $8
114 Spencer Torkelson DET 1B/DH 199 $4
116 Brandon Lowe PIT 2B/DH 194 $1
122 Kyle Stowers MIA OF/DH 137 $6
126 Jake Burger TEX 1B/DH 277 $6
129 Isaac Paredes HOU 3B/DH 215 -$4
141 Marcell Ozuna DH ▼28 312 -$2
144 Jorge Polanco NYM 2B/3B/DH 237 $4
147 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF/DH 266 $1
151 Mike Trout LAA OF/DH 216 $4
155 Anthony Santander TOR OF/DH 242 $3
156 Daulton Varsho TOR OF 197 $3
157 Mark Vientos NYM 3B/DH 267 $8
161 Andrew Vaughn MIL 1B/DH 302 $1
162 Trent Grisham NYY OF 268 -$1
169 Josh Jung TEX 3B/DH 328 $0
171 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF/DH 224 $2
176 Miguel Vargas CHW 1B/3B 278 $0
177 Kody Clemens MIN 1B/2B/OF 378 -$23
179 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF 202 -$3
186 Colson Montgomery CHW 3B/SS 245 $0
187 Max Muncy LAD 3B 264 -$5
191 Brooks Lee MIN 2B/3B/SS 320 $0
196 Kazuma Okamoto TOR 3B ▼25 $4

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 $
77 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 147 $3
163 Victor Scott II STL OF 339 -$4
178 Chase Meidroth CHW 2B/SS 340 -$1
182 Ha-seong Kim ATL 2B/SS 252 $3

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 $
106 Jacob Wilson ATH SS 168 $10
118 Luis Arraez 1B/2B/DH 284 $3
148 Ernie Clement TOR 1B/2B/3B/SS 298 $3
150 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 285 $2
154 Alec Bohm PHI 1B/3B 266 $6
168 Brendan Donovan STL 2B/SS/OF 282 $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 $
43 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 99 $11
73 Willy Adames SFG SS 132 $9
75 Oneil Cruz PIT OF ▼23 103 $7
81 Dansby Swanson CHC SS 143 $8
87 Luis Robert Jr. CHW OF 124 $10
93 Matt Shaw CHC 3B 186 $8
98 Adolis Garcia PHI OF/DH 247 $7
101 Dylan Crews WSN OF 167 $8
105 Matt Chapman SFG 3B 171 $10
121 Colton Cowser BAL OF 247 $0
124 Munetaka Murakami CHW DH ▲28 $6
127 Matt McLain CIN 2B/SS 225 $2
149 Marcus Semien NYM 2B 246 $1
188 Anthony Volpe NYY SS 328 -$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 $
55 Nico Hoerner CHC 2B/SS 99 $9
88 Chandler Simpson TBR OF 168 -$5
91 Bryson Stott PHI 2B/SS 185 $4
96 Xavier Edwards MIA 2B/SS 171 $3
137 Sal Frelick MIL OF 198 -$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 $
107 Adley Rutschman BAL C/DH 172 $13
123 Alejandro Kirk TOR C/DH 170 $11
125 Austin Wells NYY C 225 $8
132 Gabriel Moreno ARI C/DH 177 $7
133 J.T. Realmuto C 226 $4
135 Ryan Jeffers MIN C/DH 246 $10
139 Kyle Teel CHW C/DH 187 $3
145 Francisco Alvarez NYM C 180 $10
170 Dillon Dingler DET C 222 -$1
172 Logan O’Hoppe LAA C/DH 242 $3
184 Tyler Stephenson CIN C/DH 241 -$2
192 Bo Naylor CLE C 345 $2
198 Carlos Narvaez BOS C 290 -$3
199 Carter Jensen KCR C/DH -$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 $
130 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF 231 $3
142 Evan Carter TEX OF 312 -$7
143 Kerry Carpenter DET OF/DH 224 $2
146 Luis Garcia Jr. WSN 2B 228 $2
158 Josh Lowe TBR OF 274 -$2
160 Ryan O’Hearn PIT 1B/OF/DH ▲29 287 $2
165 Kyle Manzardo CLE 1B/DH 232 $5
167 Mickey Moniak COL OF/DH 253 $1
173 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 348 -$6
181 Jesus Sanchez HOU OF 323 -$4
193 Matt Wallner MIN OF/DH 324 -$2
195 Tommy Edman LAD 2B/3B/OF 296 $1
197 Dominic Canzone SEA OF/DH 326 -$7

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 $
174 Sal Stewart CIN 1B/3B 208 -$3
190 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 224 -$16

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 $
189 Ke’Bryan Hayes CIN 3B 459 -$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 $41
2 Aaron Judge NYY OF/DH 2 $42
3 Bobby Witt Jr. KCR SS 3 $37
4 Juan Soto NYM OF 4 $38
5 Jose Ramirez CLE 3B/DH 5 $34
6 Elly De La Cruz CIN SS 9 $28
7 Julio Rodriguez SEA OF 12 $33
8 Corbin Carroll ARI OF 9 $31
9 Fernando Tatis Jr. SDP OF 14 $32
10 Ronald Acuna Jr. ATL OF 8 $31
11 Gunnar Henderson BAL SS/DH 15 $29
12 Francisco Lindor NYM SS 17 $23
13 Kyle Tucker OF/DH 17 $26
14 Cal Raleigh SEA C/DH 20 $31
15 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. TOR 1B/DH 19 $34
16 Junior Caminero TBR 3B/DH 14 $35
17 Kyle Schwarber PHI OF/DH 24 $25
18 Jackson Chourio MIL OF 21 $21
19 Trea Turner PHI SS 29 $20
20 Zach Neto LAA SS 34 $22
21 Nick Kurtz ATH 1B/DH 19 $23
22 Jazz Chisholm Jr. NYY 2B/3B 23 $16
23 Manny Machado SDP 3B/DH 41 $20
24 Pete Crow-Armstrong CHC OF 32 $22
25 William Contreras MIL C/DH 52 $23
26 Brent Rooker ATH OF/DH 53 $22
27 Yordan Alvarez HOU OF/DH 45 $25
28 Ketel Marte ARI 2B/DH 38 $18
29 Josh Naylor SEA 1B/DH 72 $16
30 Bryce Harper PHI 1B 57 $24
31 Pete Alonso BAL 1B 26 $24
32 James Wood WSN OF/DH 30 $19
33 Matt Olson ATL 1B 56 $20
34 Ben Rice NYY C/1B/DH 51 $23
35 Mookie Betts LAD SS 60 $19
36 Wyatt Langford TEX OF 54 $18
37 Hunter Goodman COL C/DH 75 $25
38 Christian Yelich MIL OF/DH 135 $12
39 Brice Turang MIL 2B 67 $8
40 Shea Langeliers ATH C/DH 60 $20
41 CJ Abrams WSN SS 56 $13
42 Byron Buxton MIN OF/DH 83 $14
43 Randy Arozarena SEA OF 99 $11
44 Freddie Freeman LAD 1B 70 $19
45 Ivan Herrera STL C/DH 178 $22
46 Agustin Ramirez MIA C/DH 81 $17
47 Michael Harris II ATL OF 94 $15
48 Salvador Perez KCR C/1B/DH 101 $23
49 Geraldo Perdomo ARI SS 84 $15
50 Rafael Devers SFG 1B/DH 68 $16
51 Jarren Duran BOS OF 82 $8
52 Jeremy Pena HOU SS 94 $14
53 Trevor Story BOS SS 110 $13
54 Maikel Garcia KCR 2B/3B/SS/OF/DH 83 $15
55 Nico Hoerner CHC 2B/SS 99 $9
56 Bo Bichette SS/DH 113 $17
57 George Springer TOR OF/DH 108 $13
58 Vinnie Pasquantino KCR 1B/DH 92 $15
59 Andy Pages LAD OF 144 $14
60 Cody Bellinger 1B/OF 86 $16
61 Austin Riley ATL 3B 82 $18
62 Riley Greene DET OF/DH 78 $16
63 Brandon Nimmo TEX OF 149 $9
64 Corey Seager TEX SS/DH 105 $13
65 Jackson Merrill SDP OF 78 $14
66 Jose Altuve HOU 2B/OF/DH 128 $10
67 Steven Kwan CLE OF 168 $10
68 Teoscar Hernandez LAD OF 140 $12
69 Roman Anthony BOS OF/DH 64 $9
70 Yainer Diaz HOU C/DH 114 $15
71 Seiya Suzuki CHC OF/DH 102 $13
72 Jo Adell LAA OF 126 $16
73 Willy Adames SFG SS 132 $9
74 Lawrence Butler ATH OF 159 $9
75 Oneil Cruz PIT OF ▼23 103 $7
76 Yandy Diaz TBR 1B/DH 141 $17
77 Jakob Marsee MIA OF 147 $3
78 Eugenio Suarez 3B 124 $10
79 Samuel Basallo BAL C/DH 171 $6
80 Drake Baldwin ATL C/DH 92 $15
81 Dansby Swanson CHC SS 143 $8
82 Ceddanne Rafaela BOS 2B/OF 132 $7
83 Alex Bregman 3B 127 $13
84 Tyler Soderstrom ATH 1B/OF 101 $13
85 Will Smith LAD C 114 $12
86 Jurickson Profar ATL OF 186 $8
87 Luis Robert Jr. CHW OF 124 $10
88 Chandler Simpson TBR OF 168 -$5
89 Michael Busch CHC 1B 108 $8
90 Alec Burleson STL 1B/OF/DH 183 $13
91 Bryson Stott PHI 2B/SS 185 $4
92 Jordan Westburg BAL 2B/3B/DH 134 $10
93 Matt Shaw CHC 3B 186 $8
94 Taylor Ward BAL OF 163 $10
95 Luke Keaschall MIN 2B/DH 152 $2
96 Xavier Edwards MIA 2B/SS 171 $3
97 Christian Walker HOU 1B 190 $6
98 Adolis Garcia PHI OF/DH 247 $7
99 Jasson Dominguez NYY OF/DH 199 $4
100 Ian Happ CHC OF 185 $6
101 Dylan Crews WSN OF 167 $8
102 Ozzie Albies ATL 2B 180 $4
103 Willson Contreras BOS 1B/DH 202 $8
104 Ezequiel Tovar COL SS 192 $10
105 Matt Chapman SFG 3B 171 $10
106 Jacob Wilson ATH SS 168 $10
107 Adley Rutschman BAL C/DH 172 $13
108 Xander Bogaerts SDP SS/DH 223 $6
109 Jackson Holliday BAL 2B/SS 146 $3
110 Caleb Durbin MIL 2B/3B 239 $1
111 Bryan Reynolds PIT OF/DH 202 $8
112 Heliot Ramos SFG OF 221 $9
113 Noelvi Marte CIN 3B/OF 135 $7
114 Spencer Torkelson DET 1B/DH 199 $4
115 Otto Lopez MIA 2B/SS 220 $4
116 Brandon Lowe PIT 2B/DH 194 $1
117 Daylen Lile WSN OF/DH ▲41 205 $5
118 Luis Arraez 1B/2B/DH 284 $3
119 Brenton Doyle COL OF 167 $5
120 Jonathan Aranda TBR 1B/DH 185 $8
121 Colton Cowser BAL OF 247 $0
122 Kyle Stowers MIA OF/DH 137 $6
123 Alejandro Kirk TOR C/DH 170 $11
124 Munetaka Murakami CHW DH ▲28 $6
125 Austin Wells NYY C 225 $8
126 Jake Burger TEX 1B/DH 277 $6
127 Matt McLain CIN 2B/SS 225 $2
128 Gleyber Torres DET 2B/DH 244 $2
129 Isaac Paredes HOU 3B/DH 215 -$4
130 Wilyer Abreu BOS OF 231 $3
131 Royce Lewis MIN 3B/DH 200 $8
132 Gabriel Moreno ARI C/DH 177 $7
133 J.T. Realmuto C 226 $4
134 Masyn Winn STL SS 263 $4
135 Ryan Jeffers MIN C/DH 246 $10
136 Ramon Laureano SDP OF/DH 225 $2
137 Sal Frelick MIL OF 198 -$2
138 Andres Gimenez TOR 2B/SS 313 $3
139 Kyle Teel CHW C/DH 187 $3
140 Spencer Steer CIN 1B/OF/DH 249 $1
141 Marcell Ozuna DH ▼28 312 -$2
142 Evan Carter TEX OF 312 -$7
143 Kerry Carpenter DET OF/DH 224 $2
144 Jorge Polanco NYM 2B/3B/DH 237 $4
145 Francisco Alvarez NYM C 180 $10
146 Luis Garcia Jr. WSN 2B 228 $2
147 Giancarlo Stanton NYY OF/DH 266 $1
148 Ernie Clement TOR 1B/2B/3B/SS 298 $3
149 Marcus Semien NYM 2B 246 $1
150 Jung Hoo Lee SFG OF 285 $2
151 Mike Trout LAA OF/DH 216 $4
152 TJ Friedl CIN OF 265 $0
153 Jordan Beck COL OF/DH 225 $2
154 Alec Bohm PHI 1B/3B 266 $6
155 Anthony Santander TOR OF/DH 242 $3
156 Daulton Varsho TOR OF 197 $3
157 Mark Vientos NYM 3B/DH 267 $8
158 Josh Lowe TBR OF 274 -$2
159 Joey Ortiz MIL SS 397 $1
160 Ryan O’Hearn PIT 1B/OF/DH ▲29 287 $2
161 Andrew Vaughn MIL 1B/DH 302 $1
162 Trent Grisham NYY OF 268 -$1
163 Victor Scott II STL OF 339 -$4
164 Carlos Correa HOU 3B/SS 275 $4
165 Kyle Manzardo CLE 1B/DH 232 $5
166 Nolan Schanuel LAA 1B 300 $5
167 Mickey Moniak COL OF/DH 253 $1
168 Brendan Donovan STL 2B/SS/OF 282 $1
169 Josh Jung TEX 3B/DH 328 $0
170 Dillon Dingler DET C 222 -$1
171 Jac Caglianone KCR 1B/OF/DH 224 $2
172 Logan O’Hoppe LAA C/DH 242 $3
173 Brandon Marsh PHI OF 348 -$6
174 Sal Stewart CIN 1B/3B 208 -$3
175 Josh Bell MIN 1B/DH 353 $2
176 Miguel Vargas CHW 1B/3B 278 $0
177 Kody Clemens MIN 1B/2B/OF 378 -$23
178 Chase Meidroth CHW 2B/SS 340 -$1
179 Addison Barger TOR 3B/OF 202 -$3
180 J.P. Crawford SEA SS 370 -$6
181 Jesus Sanchez HOU OF 323 -$4
182 Ha-seong Kim ATL 2B/SS 252 $3
183 Connor Norby MIA 3B 348 -$7
184 Tyler Stephenson CIN C/DH 241 -$2
185 Harrison Bader OF 321 -$3
186 Colson Montgomery CHW 3B/SS 245 $0
187 Max Muncy LAD 3B 264 -$5
188 Anthony Volpe NYY SS 328 -$6
189 Ke’Bryan Hayes CIN 3B 459 -$2
190 Jose Caballero NYY 2B/3B/SS/OF 224 -$16
191 Brooks Lee MIN 2B/3B/SS 320 $0
192 Bo Naylor CLE C 345 $2
193 Matt Wallner MIN OF/DH 324 -$2
194 Austin Hays OF/DH 417 -$5
195 Tommy Edman LAD 2B/3B/OF 296 $1
196 Kazuma Okamoto TOR 3B ▼25 $4
197 Dominic Canzone SEA OF/DH 326 -$7
198 Carlos Narvaez BOS C 290 -$3
199 Carter Jensen KCR C/DH -$2
200 Lars Nootbaar STL OF 375 -$2

Mining the News (1/5/26)


John Jones-Imagn Images

• At MLB.com, there was an article on each team’s breakout candidate. It’s a solid read for fantasy managers looking for upside. Here is the blurb about Jasson Domínguez working on his defense and right-handed swing.

YANKEES: OF Jasson Domínguez

“The Martian” could finally be ready to live up to the immense potential the Yankees have touted for years. Still just 22, the switch-hitting Domínguez lost critical development time to the pandemic and Tommy John surgery, spending most of the second half on the bench in 2025. He went to winter ball to focus on sharpening his defense in left field and his swing from the right side of the plate, which is his natural side. It would be no surprise if Domínguez’s touted blend of speed and strength all comes together in a big way. — Bryan Hoch

Read the rest of this entry »


Digital Download of the 2026 The Process Available

The 2026 edition of The Process is now available in PDF form. The appendix edition includes 148 pages and over 25 new studies from Jeff and other contributors! The research covers NFBC draft theory and strategy, hitter evaluation, and pitcher evaluation.

Considering the historic turnaround times (all out of our hands), the paper copy will be available on Amazon in about a month. Read the rest of this entry »


Mining the News (12/24/25)


Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

American League

Astros

Ryan Weiss 와이스 will get a shot at the rotation.

Weiss, who spent the last two seasons pitching in Korea, will slot into the rotation with Hunter Brown, Cristian Javier, Spencer Arrighetti, Lance McCullers Jr. and others. Nate Pearson, who signed a one-year deal in October, will be built up as a starter, but he could wind up in the bullpen.

“What I like about [Weiss] is this guy is dedicated to his craft,” Dana Brown said. “He went over to Korea and turned his career around and got to the point where he’s back up to 97 [mph], sitting 94 [with] pretty good secondary stuff. The guy’s got a journey and he’s got a story, so we’re fired up about him. We’re hoping that he comes into camp and competes for a job at the back end of the rotation.”

Jake Meyers is the team’s centerfielder.

Speaking of Meyers specifically, Brown said “it’s a really good deal, we may consider it. But right now, Meyers is going to be a guy for us that’s going to play center field and it looks like he’s the frontline guy as of today.”

Brice Matthews will get take outfield reps.

“[Brice Matthews is] going to get some run in the outfield, but second base is still going to be his main position,” Brown said. “We project he’ll turn the corner with the bat and get maybe some run in the outfield a little bit, as well.”

Athletics

Max Muncy, Darell Hernaiz, and Brett Harris will get a shot at the third base job.

General manager David Forst told Martín Gallegos of MLB.com that the A’s view McNeil as their primary second baseman. They’re planning to leave the third base job open for a Spring Training competition among a few players already on the roster.

“We’ll probably look internally at third base,” Forst told Gallegos. “Max Muncy did a really nice job there in his limited time. Darell Hernaiz has shown he can play the position. Brett Harris has a lot of experience at third base. So I like our internal options.”

Orioles

Coby Mayo could see some time in the outfield.

Elias said on Saturday that the Orioles had use for Mayo, who spent last year working on his first base skills.

“He had, I think, a very successful stretch run last year, he looked really good and is in a really good spot,” he said. “And there is still a lot of playing time available for him on a team that has Pete Alonso now. We have first base reps, we have designated hitter reps, as you mentioned, and the exploration of other positions — whether it’s third or something in the corner outfield — has been something we’ve always talked about with him. So the path remains open for him.”

Rays

• The team’s management said that Richie Palacios is now the team’s second baseman.

Trading Lowe creates a clear opening at second base, where the Rays don’t have an obvious replacement. Neander mentioned Richie Palacios as an internal candidate, although Palacios has been limited by injuries each of the past two years and has bounced around the field during his time with Tampa Bay.

The Rays like a lot about Palacios, from his on-base skills and speed to his quality defense at second base, so he could be an option there. But they’re not giving the job to anyone yet.

Steven Matz will get a shot at the rotation.

Matz’s selfless success earned him the respect of his former clubs, caught the Rays’ attention and ultimately led to another opportunity to start. Tampa Bay signed Matz to a two-year, $15 million contract on Tuesday with the intent to slot him into its rotation next season.

“We’re going to give him the opportunity to prepare as a starter, to come in and try to lock down a day. The investment was made with that in mind,” Rays president of baseball operations Erik Neander said. “Believe that’s something that he’s going to be able to do, and we believe he’s going to be able to do it well.”

Red Sox

• The team’s goal for Payton Tolle is to improve his secondaries.

“This offseason will be essential for [Tolle’s] developmentally,” said Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow. “There is no secret he put on quite a bit of velocity last offseason, and there will be a focus this offseason on developing some of those secondaries. So, we’ll see what that looks like when we get to Spring Training.”

White Sox

• Catchers Kyle Teel, Edgar Quero, and Korey Lee are not working on other positions.

The switch-hitting Quero has also been mentioned in offseason trade inquiries, while Lee offers the option of the White Sox keeping three catchers as they did at the end of the 2025 regular season. In that scenario, manager Will Venable could play Teel or Quero behind the plate, use the other player as designated hitter and still be covered by a third catcher.

None of the three is presently working at other positions, according to Venable.

• Top prospect, Braden Montgomery, will not be a part of the MLB team once Spring Training is over, according to their GM.

“We’re always open-minded,” White Sox general manager Chris Getz said. “I see Braden getting into the mix for being on the Major League club [in 2026], but I don’t anticipate that happening out of Spring Training.

“I don’t want anyone to get ahead of themselves. I want them to just have a dominant offseason, taking care of their bodies, going through a proper throwing program. Once you get to Spring Training and baseball action really picks up, you get a real idea of where these players and pitchers are.”

National League

Brewers

Logan Henderson wants to add a curveball.

Henderson is focused on his secondary pitches beyond his bread-and-butter fastball and changeup, including a curveball he’s carefully reintroducing this winter. Henderson threw more cutters last year and intends to continue that progress. And his slider is a usable fifth pitch.

“I want a full arsenal instead of just using two pitches,” Henderson said. “I know there’s still a lot of ways for me to grow.”

Cardinals

Dustin May’s elbow is healthy, and he’s bulking up.

May said he doesn’t expect the elbow neuritis to be an issue in 2026.

“Arm feels great, back to normal,” May said on Thursday. “As I’ve reiterated to a lot of people, I was going to be ready for the [Division Series] if [Boston] had advanced. My arm was in a better spot toward that time. … I took some time off and got the body right.”

“[The sweeper] was kind of the only thing working, and my fastball was getting hit kind of hard, so I had to shy away from that,” said May, who has gone from 202 pounds in 2025 to 220 pounds now, with a target goal of 225 pounds. “Hopefully, bouncing back and re-tweaking my arsenal, I won’t be so reliant on that [sweeper] and so predictable.”

Diamondbacks

• Mike Soroka cleared up a health issue causing inflammation

Soroka is a different pitcher than he was in 2019, and he recently made changes to his delivery and arsenal. Pairing these changes with solutions to undisclosed, underlying health issues that have impacted his ability to stay on the field he believes will set him up for a resurgence.

“There were some things as far as internal health that I think we’d kind of figured out that I’d rather not completely dive into, but we’d had some things I’ve been dealing with for a long time that I didn’t really understand until this past year,” Soroka said.

“I think that’s gonna be one really big key is just being able to actually recover and not deal with a ton of inflammation at all times. Ultimately that’s where injuries have added up for me is just chronic inflammation and the ability to clear that. … Obviously working on delivery, you change things, you work on new ways to do things efficiently. I think that all kind of started to come into place and this was kind of the last key. Moving forward, I really feel confident.”

… and will add a cutter, sweeper, and a gyro slider.

Soroka credited Cubs vice president of pitching Tyler Zombro with some of the adjustments.

“It’s gonna be traditional cutter,” Soroka said. “I’d already at times tended to cut the ball a little bit just naturally being a little bit supinated* through release. … Tyler Zombro was able to kind of show me some things with just the way I was able to stay supinated with certain pitches and throw the cutter, as well as a sweeper. It’s thrown the same way as my slurve or curveball, just with a different grip and it kind of stays on that straight horizontal axis. It’s gonna be useful for giving guys a different look.

“Then the last one’s a traditional gyro slider.** It is basically the curveball grip thrown like a fastball. So, that was the key with all three of these, is that I really didn’t need to do too much. I didn’t need to manipulate anything. I was already set up right to throw it. Tyler was able to show me exactly how all that worked.”

Giants

• Rule 5 pick, Daniel Susac, will get a chance to be the team’s backup catcher.

The Giants had a clear need for more catching depth after non-tendering Andrew Knizner last month. They quickly identified the 24-year-old Susac as someone who could plug a hole on their roster.

“Plus defender behind the plate, power,” general manager Zack Minasian said of Susac, who is now ranked as the Giants’ No. 15 prospect by MLB Pipeline. “History with him back to high school through the Draft. Bay Area ties. It’s a position of need. We’re always looking to build depth. Still young, still upside. So a lot of positives, a lot of boxes checked. We’re excited to give him this opportunity.”

While Susac was acquired via trade, he’ll still be subject to the usual Rule 5 stipulations, which means the Giants will have to keep him on their 26-man roster for the entire 2026 season or offer him back to the A’s. That should make the right-handed-hitting Susac the clear frontrunner to serve as Patrick Bailey’s backup next year.

“I think he’s a candidate,” Minasian said. “Obviously he’s going to have to come in and earn it, but obviously to take him shows what we think of him. We definitely see him as a really strong candidate. We’re excited about where our catching depth is with him.”

“We’re very excited about Jesus Rodriguez but also understand that the amount of games that he’s caught is somewhat limited,” president of baseball operations Buster Posey said. “But we’re really excited about his future. I think what excites me is when I hear our manager or a coach on the staff in Triple-A just talk about his makeup and how well he’s worked with the pitchers and his desire to get better defensively.”

Mets

Jorge Polanco will play first base.

Jorge Polanco has never logged a major-league inning at first base, where the New York Mets are expecting to play him, but the position isn’t entirely unfamiliar to him.

However, over two months starting in the middle of June, Polanco worked out at first base several times before games. He spent time with Mariners infield coach Perry Hill and bench coach Manny Acta, among others, learning the intricacies of the position. The lessons included how to hold a runner on, how to get to the base without getting stepped on, how to position himself, how to throw to second base on a grounder using his backhand and how to get back to the bag in case a catcher made a snap throw.

“He knows how to do all that stuff,” Hill said in a recent phone interview.

Padres

Miguel Mendez, the team’s top starting pitcher prospect, will not be competing for a rotation spot during Spring Training.

“[Miguel Mendez is] going to continue to start and come in and build innings,” Preller said. “Again, a lot of guys have broken into the big leagues coming into the bullpen. We’ll see. Right now, he’s more a prospect coming in to continue his development than he is competing for the team coming into Spring Training. But the player is going to tell us. Those things can change.”

Pirates

Carmen Mlodzinski will transition back to being a starter.

Right now, Cherington says they have a lot of confidence in a group that still has some depth, which includes Carmen Mlodzinski preparing for a starter’s workload again. Cherington says they’re open to adding a backend starter, but as far as trading another starting pitcher, a deal would have to clear a high bar.

Brandon Lowe is preparing to play second base

The key when it comes to what positions the Pirates can target lies with Lowe. If he can play his position, the Pirates could add a third baseman, designated hitter or even any other position to provide depth. Injuries have limited Lowe’s ability to stay on the field in the past, but he is preparing this offseason to play second.

“The fact that he can play second, we believe, also keeps options open for us to add another bat in another spot,” Cherington said.

… so Nick Gonzales will need to find another position.

Adding Lowe doesn’t mean the Pirates are giving up on Gonzales — Cherington referred to him as “an important player for us” — but it’s probably going to be in a different role. We’ve seen him play on the left side of the infield before, and with third base currently open and shortstop up in the air until Pittsburgh’s No. 1 prospect Konnor Griffin arrives, perhaps that could be explored again.

“The biggest thing about Nick, we can go back to his amateur days in the Draft, he’s just always met the challenge in front of him,” Cherington said. “So we acquired a player who we believe in, who we expect to play some second base, in Brandon Lowe. This is an opportunity for Nick to continue to push for an opportunity on the Major League team.


Mining the National League Managers


Michael McLoone-Imagn Images

The following are excerpts from the managers’ press conferences from the Winter Meetings.

Braves

Ronald Acuña Jr. could lead off again.

Q. I know you haven’t necessarily got to the point of making lineup cards, but he moved down a bit in the order. Do you anticipate [Acuna] moving back up?

WALT WEISS: That’s a good conversation. I’m looking forward to that with him. I want to pick his brain with that. It’s enticing to have him at the top of the order because I’m I really like when a lineup turns over that there’s teeth right away. Your pitcher — you’ve got to run through a gauntlet as soon as that lineup turns over.

So there’s some incentive to — he was prolific in that position. The other argument is, you could put him in a more RBI position in the lineup and hit him third.

Those are conversations we’re going to have, we’re going to talk about. Like you said, we’re a ways away from the lineup, talking about lineups and that type of thing. But it’s on my radar.

Reynaldo López and Grant Holmes will get a shot at making the rotation.

Q. As healthy as Reynaldo López stayed as a reliever, and then last year, even though two years ago even though he pitched so well, he hasn’t stayed healthy as a starter. Are you tempted to move him back to relief since you have some other guys?

WALT WEISS: Not so much tempted but it’s a nice fallback plan. These guys are going to be built up. I know I get those questions about Grant Holmes and this and that. These guys are going to be built up as starters in Spring Training, but it’s really nice to know that, whatever, because of acquisitions, because of health, whatever, somebody all of a sudden steps up and opens your eyes, it’s nice to know those guys can do that. They’ve done it before and they’ve been really good at it. But sitting here today, those guys are, we’re looking at them as starters.

Bryce Elder and Hurston Waldrep are being considered for the rotation.

Q. You’ve got some options questions, too, obviously, right, this year complicates some things with a couple of the starters?

WALT WEISS: Yeah, look, Bryce, I was really encouraged by the way Bryce finished. I mean, the stuff ticked up. He was good against some really good teams, playoff teams in September. And he had another run, I think, early, I want to say May, maybe, where he had a nice run. Then he had some hiccups. That’s the thing about Bryce, he’s pretty unflappable. If he has a tough one or a clunker or two, demeanor doesn’t change, confidence doesn’t change, and here he is showing up and posting again and righting the ship. A lot to be said about that.

I’m excited about Bryce. I’m excited about Waldrep. I think the ceiling for Waldrep is pretty high, man. He’s got a wipeout pitch. And it’s hard to find where it’s a legitimate wipeout pitch at the Major League level. He’s got that. There’s some things to be excited about. We talked about Grant already.

Brewers

• No usable fantasy information.

Cardinals

• No usable fantasy information.

Cubs

• Sounds like Moisés Ballesteros will not catch many games.

Q. With Moises, how were you thinking about balancing the need for continued development at the catching position versus his Major League-ready bat?

CRAIG COUNSELL: I think he’s at the point where if he can help the Major League team, he’s going to be in the Major Leagues. There’s not an every day catching job in the Major Leagues for him. But as constructed right now, we’ve got room for at-bats, and I think — I would prioritize the Major Leagues right now. But that can change with roster stuff.

Q. You mentioned Ballesteros not having an opportunity to catch a lot. If the opportunity did pop up, if he was forced into action, how comfortable are you with that?

CRAIG COUNSELL: Yeah, then he’ll catch. Yeah. Simple as that. I think he’s absolutely going to catch games.

Q. Do you feel like he’s made real progress there and you’re comfortable with him as a semi-regular catcher?

CRAIG COUNSELL: Yeah, he’s got to be better than the other two guys. But yeah, I’m comfortable with that.

Diamondbacks

Lourdes Gurriel Jr. should be back around mid-season.

Q. Do you have any sense on Gurriel with the —

TOREY LOVULLO: The timing?

Q. The window, yes.

TOREY LOVULLO: I haven’t been in touch with him in probably three weeks. I don’t know how he’s doing right now. Last time I talked to him he’s really, really encouraged about how he’s feeling. He’s in a good routine. Timing-wise, I’ve been generically told midseason, something along those lines. Like, head’s up, it could be that long, a little bit longer.

We want to be patient with him, make sure he heals right. He’s in a good space. That’s the most important thing. He’s back in Miami doing his rehab there. He’s in good hands and taking care of himself the best that he possibly can.

Dodgers

Tommy Edman expects to be healthy to start the season and the injury will not limit the position he plays.

Q. Do you have any more details like Tommy, the timetable for him to be back on the field?

DAVE ROBERTS: Talking to the training staff, feeling like he should be with some limitations once we start Spring Training, but talking to Tommy, he’s expecting to be ready at the outset of the season.

Q. Do you see him as infield/outfield type or is that ankle going to limit him?

DAVE ROBERTS: I don’t think the ankle will limit him. I think that’s going to be contingent more on the roster and where guys are at.

Tanner Scott was never really healthy last season.

Q. What [is] your confidence in Tanner [Scott]?

DAVE ROBERTS: I think there were just some things he kept under wraps about his body, and I think the transition to LA, and he just kind of — anything that could go wrong went wrong. I just feel — he works his tail off. He’s too talented. And his track record was nothing like last year. So I just think it was an outlier of a season.

Q. [Scott] after he came back after the forearm?

DAVE ROBERTS: There was some stuff that he just, honestly, he never felt right all year. And there were moments where it looked right, he felt okay, but he just never felt comfortable. But he’s never going to use that as an excuse, though. To have a regular offseason to kind of prepare for ’26, he’s going to be on a mission next year.

Shohei Ohtani will get extra rest but the rest of the rotation will try to remain five-man as much as possible.

Q. You expect Shohei to be used like in a normal rotation starting the season, what ways are you guys going to be creative with him?

DAVE ROBERTS: I think the thought is to have Shohei being used as a regular starter, but it’s not going to be a regular five-man rotation. I just think that — I don’t want to go down the six-man rotation road, but I do feel that giving him six, seven, eight days off to kind of allow him to continue to stay rested and build up, I think that’s in our process. But again we have a long way to go but we’ve got some viable candidates seriously.

Dalton Rushing will back up Will Smith and maybe play a little first base or DH.

Q. What role do you envision for Dalton Rushing next season? Do you think he could play any other positions possibly?

DAVE ROBERTS: We ran him out there a little bit at first base, but Freddie is a guy that wants to be out there every day. But if there’s an opportunity to get Freddie off his feet, I can see Dalton playing a little bit of first base to spell Freddie.

I also see with Will Smith last year — I think last year you saw — we cut back a little bit on his playing time, and I felt that he stayed strong throughout the entire season. I think there could be some more of that to give Dalton a little bit of runway and some opportunity. I thought he did a great job with the pitching staff. Dalton did. And I think that there’s a lot more bat in there that he’ll show in 2026.

Giants

• What a waste of an interview, not a single question about the players, it was all questions about Vitello and his staff.

Marlins

Agustín Ramírez will start the season as the team’s main catcher

Q. [Agustin] and (indiscernible) working the academy, what do you see from him and expectation?

CLAYTON MCCULLOUGH: Our expectation for Gus is he comes in and Gus is going to be a catcher. Still believe in that. Saw Gus for a couple of days down in the Dominican. He was working hard.

And it wasn’t just the work that he was doing. I think speaking with Gus and talking to him, how he was able to reflect on that season. It’s hard to get a breath during the season. So I think Gus had a chance to self-reflect some on the year, take a breath.

One thing that he mentioned physically he felt okay, but mentally, it’s quite the grind. And I asked him to hit in the top of the lineup almost every day. Having to go back there and catch, probably played more than he ever has.

Gus was saying all the right things. He was embracing and taking on this offseason different than he did the last season, which is fair. He has a different perspective on what’s ahead and what’s expected.

Gus knows the narrative. Gus is smart. He knows what’s said and he’s not backing away from it and we’re right behind him because we believe in the person, number one, and believe in the ability that Gus has a real shot to catch the big leagues.

• Some prospects the manager is “looking forward to seeing” are Joe Mack (C), Josh White (RP), Robby Snelling (SP), Thomas White (SP), and (Riley) Kemp Alderman (OF).

Q. What’s the prospect you’re most looking forward to seeing in the Spring Training and why?

CLAYTON MCCULLOUGH: The most exciting part is we have a lot of very talented players in our system coming up. Much has been written about Joe Mack and should be. He’s a young catcher at a premium position that I feel like eventually can impact on both sides of the ball.

I think the year that Josh White had last year in Triple-A from a performance standpoint was spectacular. So excited to get to see Josh more this year. And certainly Robby Snelling, Thomas White, with the type of seasons they have, their youth, the ceiling they have.

Pitching is always going to be what drives this thing. Excited to see them as well, as Kemp Alderman, Minor League Player of the Year. Kemp had a really big year. Our group in Petey loves him. The tenacity, the toughness, the edge he brings, which is something I value as well. Excited to see Kemp get a chance to come to camp and get comfortable around our group.

Mets

Brett Baty will be the team’s third baseman.

Q. When Semien now occupying second base, how do you view third base? Obviously second base you could use that to get some of the other guys playing time, but now you don’t have that much of a luxury.

CARLOS MENDOZA: I think Brett Baty took that step forward last year. We had tryouts there between Mark Vientos, Brett Baty, Ronny Mauricio at times. I think Brett Baty got comfortable and played really well on both sides of the field, defensively, offensively.

Going into camp, I think as we sit here right now, you can say that Brett will get the majority of the playing time.

That doesn’t mean that Mark Vientos won’t get any reps there. He’s preparing for everything. We know how much he means to the team, and we’ll see what happens. But as of right now, Brett Baty will get a lot of the opportunities.

Nationals

• Nothing fantasy relevant.

Padres

• Nothing fantasy relevant.

Phillies

• Nothing fantasy relevant. All Schwarber talk.

Pirates

Jhostynxon Garcia could play any outfield position, and the manager seems excited to play him.

Q. You mentioned Garcia. What do you kind of like about just the possibility of him adding some power to the lineup in ’26 and just the impact that he could potentially make?

DON KELLY: Yeah. Some big-time power that he brings and just the ability to play all three outfield positions. Looks like he’s an above average outfielder. Just the way — I saw that double that he hit in his first at-bat down there in winter ball, and the way that he hustled and ran into second. All the reports we’ve gotten back and the video we’ve gotten to watch, we’re really excited to add a young project of his caliber to this team.

Q. Do you think he could handle center if needed?

DON KELLY: I think so. He definitely could go to center field.

Spencer Horwitz is now the team’s first baseman, nothing more.

Q. We saw Horwitz bounce around a little bit at the end of the year. You guys have been connected to a couple of first basemen. Is second base or another position an option for him, or would you like to keep him at first?

DON KELLY: I think ideally we’d like to keep him at first base. He’s such a good defensive first baseman. But totally open to other ways. We played him at second last year at the end of the season. He’s played second for Toronto.

Just looking at any way to impact the team. Ideally he’ll be at first.

• Sounds like a small chance Joey Bart will get any reps at first base.

Q. With your catchers right now, will you explore another option with Joey Bart? Is first base an option for him to get both bats in the lineup? How do you view the delineation of duties?

DON KELLY: Last year in practice Joey’s taken some ground balls at first. Really see Joey as a catcher, but as it goes, we were able to get him in last year at DH a little at the end. I think that first base, if he continues to take some ground balls, something that we could explore down the line.

• The manager still says they are undecided on Konnor Griffin.

Q. Do you anticipate seeing Konnor in the mix for the shortstop position in Spring Training?

DON KELLY: Konnor’s going to get — yeah, we’re still talking about a lot of that. It’s too early to say exactly what’s going to happen there. But as far as a 19-year-old guy that just came out of high school, the year that he had to go through three levels and play the way that he played, the sky’s the limit for him. The talent that you see, the wiring, the way he goes about it, he’s really, really impressive.

Reds

Sal Stewart still doesn’t have a place on an MLB team.

Q. How does someone like Sal Stewart fit in your plans? Knowing obviously you have more roster choices coming up, but how do you see him fitting and growing within the month?

TERRY FRANCONA: I think Freddie went down to visit with him for a couple of days in Miami, just to help him defensively at first base. It’s going to be interesting because we love, love the hitter. I remember all the way back last year in Spring Training — I think I told you guys I thought he was one of the most advanced young hitters I’d seen, and I believe that. Rarely do you see guys come to the Big Leagues like that late in the year, and he wasn’t overwhelmed.

Where his game goes defensively, we’re still trying to figure that out. I talked to him at length — it’s been a while now — but about being agile. People talk about his weight. I said, I don’t want to talk about your weight. I want you to be athletic. Because he’s a baseball player. Where that fits, we’ll see.

Rockies

Blaine Crim was the only person mentioned for the first base job.

Q. A lot of turnover at first base so far this off-season. Where do you kind of see the position? A lot of time still before Spring Training, but where do you see it right now?

WARREN SCHAEFFER: We’ve got Crim coming in to battle for that job. I feel like guys are going to come out here in competition for that spot. Just like a lot of spots in the diamond and the pitching, we’re going to have a lot of competition.

Hunter Goodman will continue to get DH at-bats.

Q. Following up on that, you did this quite a bit the second half last year. Could [Goodman] be your full-time DH when he’s not behind the plate?

WARREN SCHAEFFER: Yeah, that’s something we’re going to talk about big time, because I personally think that’s a yes, that he can. We pushed him last year at the end. We tried to get him through that knee injury, had a little bit going on there. I think there was something else, hamstring was barking. So we wanted to keep him healthy.

I do believe that he’s got the makeup and the physical toughness and ability and durability to be able to do that. We’ll see where that goes, but I think that’s maybe the initial plan.


Mining the American League Managers


Matt Marton-Imagn Images

The following are excerpts from the managers’ press conferences from the Winter Meetings.

• With the new automated strike zone, the exact height of hitters will be needed.

Q. Do you have any other early team-wide strategies you’re thinking about when it comes to using it?

A.J. HINCH: I’ve spent some time talking to our P.D. group and even some of the players who have gone up and down. Right now we’re locked in on measurements and making sure that we have everybody in camp at the time in which they’re going to make those measurements get done. And we’ll adapt accordingly.

I think, similar to the replay, the subtle little adjustments that everybody’s had to make around some new rules. It will fall into a good rhythm and a good understanding of the — I think the first month will probably be the hardest month.

I wonder which hitters will shrink the most.

Read the rest of this entry »


Mining the News (12/11/25)


John Jones-USA TODAY Sports

American League

Angels

• The team is considering using Christian Moore, Kyren Paris, or Denzer Guzman at third base.

But with Rendon not expected to play due to injury again in 2026, the Angels are in the market for a third baseman. Minasian also said they could be open to moving youngster Christian Moore to third base from second if they find a better fit for a second baseman. Kyren Paris and Denzer Guzman (Angels’ No. 8 prospect, per MLB Pipeline) also have been getting in work at third this offseason.

Astros

• The team is backing off from previous comments about Yordan Alvarez playing more outfield. The manager now wants him to DH as much as possible.

The Astros’ latest solution, according to Espada, is for Alvarez to “spend most of his season” at designated hitter. The manager did not divulge a specific division of playing time, but it stands to reason that Alvarez won’t match the 57 games he started in left field in 2022 or the 53 games he played there in 2024.

Last month, general manager Dana Brown attempted to squash any idea of trading Walker or Paredes, saying that both would “hit somewhere between one and six” in Houston’s lineup. Brown added that Alvarez could “get a lot more games in left field” to free the DH spot for either of the two infielders to occupy.

Monday’s about-face makes this setup impossible. Declarations made in December aren’t final, but if Alvarez is indeed the Astros’ full-time designated hitter, the flexibility to juggle Paredes and Walker will decrease. It also means Jose Altuve will be asked to play defense full-time during his age-36 season, making it even more difficult to find regular at-bats for both Paredes and Walker.

Blue Jays

Shane Bieber dealt with forearm fatigue to end the season, and he might not be ready for Opening Day.

Bieber dealt with forearm fatigue at the end of the season, a person briefed on the matter said, but has since begun offseason recovery and rehab work. It’s not entirely clear if the forearm ailment entirely caused Bieber to pick up his player option and avoid the unknowns of free agency, but it likely factored into his decision.

When asked about Bieber’s status at the Winter Meetings, Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins said “he’s in a strong position,” though he noted the Jays are taking things week to week with Bieber and could stagger his workload in early spring. Atkins said Bieber being ready for Opening Day is “a very realistic outcome,” but reiterated the team is taking things week to week.

Though Atkins didn’t explicitly state Bieber’s injury in Orlando, his answers didn’t indicate the righty was entirely healthy after a return from surgery and long postseason push.

Anthony Santander is back to normal.

Anthony Santander is “finally feeling normal,” Schneider said, after back and shoulder injuries sidetracked his first season with the Blue Jays.

Guardians

Brayan Rocchio will play shortstop while Gabriel Arias will maintain more of a utility role.

One potential nugget of interest on the position player side: Vogt mentioned Brayan Rocchio will patrol shortstop with regularity this spring, while Gabriel Arias will bounce around defensively, “just to be ready for it.” What is “it,” you ask? Well, it’s the eventual presence of Brito and, especially, Bazzana, or even an external addition, a placeholder at the position until the 2024 No. 1 draft pick is ready for the big leagues.

• Since the end of the season, Kyle Manzardo added 14 pounds of muscle.

Kyle Manzardo has gained 14 pounds of muscle since the end of the season. The Guardians want him to hold up better physically and be a candidate for more reps at first base.

Rangers

• The team might move Wyatt Langford to center field in the hope that Evan Carter will stay healthier playing in a corner spot.

Carter has struggled with back issues throughout his professional career, and he missed the last month of the 2025 season with a broken right wrist. Langford, on the other hand, has experienced a number of soft tissue injuries over his two years in the big leagues, including three oblique strains this past season.

“Trying to get these guys healthy, on the field and productive for 150-plus is the most ideal situation for us,” Schumaker added. “Trying to figure out how we can do that with Carter is a big thing for us. I don’t know if everyone has the answers right now to keep him healthy the entire year, but I know he’s absolutely trying to do everything he can this offseason to prove that he [can get] back to where he was in 2023.”

Rays

• MLB.com reporter said that Cedric Mullins will be the team’s primary center fielder.

Mullins will be their primary center fielder.

Tigers

Max Anderson lines up to be part of a third base platoon.

Anderson could get a chance to compete for a platoon role at third base, complementing Colt Keith or Zach McKinstry.

Yankees

Cam Schlittler is working on adding a splitter or changeup.

The right-hander isn’t satisfied. After showcasing triple-digit heat and emerging as a second-half force in the Bronx, Schlittler is working to add a sixth pitch to his repertoire this winter — either a changeup or a splitter, as he said during an appearance Wednesday on the YES Network.

“I’m probably more leaning toward a changeup, which might be easier for me,” Schlittler said on Yankees Hot Stove. “I think that’s an important pitch to include, just because I didn’t have that option down to lefties, or even to righties as well.”

National League

Braves

Reynaldo López will be stretched out as a starter in Spring Training.

Is Weiss tempted to move Reynaldo López back to a relief role?

“Not so much tempted, but it’s a nice fallback plan,” Weiss said. “I get these same questions about Grant Holmes. These guys will be built up as starters in Spring Training. But it’s really nice to know that whatever – because of acquisitions, because of health or somebody all of a sudden steps up and opens your eyes – it’s nice to know those guys can [be relievers]. They’ve done it before, and they’ve been really good at it. But sitting here today, we’re looking at them as starters.”

Chris Sale, Spencer Strider and Spencer Schwellenbach are targeted to fill the rotation’s first three spots. López is currently slotted into the fourth spot. Holmes, Bryce Elder, Joey Wentz and Hurston Waldrep are fifth starter candidates. Holmes, Elder and Wentz are out of options. So if there’s a need to preserve depth, Waldrep could begin the season with Triple-A Gwinnett.

Ronald Acuña Jr. could go back to leading off, according to the guy who writes the lineup cards.

Now that Ronald Acuña Jr. is further distanced from his latest knee surgery, Braves manager Walt Weiss is open to the possibility of moving the 2023 National League Most Valuable Player back to the leadoff spot.

“It’s enticing to have him at the top of the order,” Weiss said. “I really like when a lineup turns over and there’s teeth right away. If you’re a pitcher, you’ve got to run through a gauntlet as soon as the lineup turns over.”

But the six stolen bases he has recorded through his first eight games in the Venezuelan Winter League are an indication he’s feeling more confident about his two surgically repaired knees.

Joe Jiménez might not be healthy by Opening Day.

With Anthopoulos saying Joe Jiménez’s left knee issue prevents the team from relying on him to be a setup man next year, adding a high-leverage reliever now seems to possibly be an even greater necessity.

Cubs

• The organization sees Ben Brown as a starter.

Brown had 121 strikeouts overall last season, including 40 against nine walks in 30 2/3 innings as a reliever.

“For me, I 100% see him as a starter,” Hottovy said. “He’s got the upside to be a really good power pitcher in the back end of the bullpen, but you don’t want to just crown that. You want that to kind of happen. Sometimes it happens, because it’s what the team needs. Sometimes it happens because the player shows you that’s his best role.”

Giants

Casey Schmitt might not be healed for the season’s start after having wrist surgery.

The Giants announced that infielder Casey Schmitt underwent surgery on Tuesday to remove the carpal boss in his left wrist. The procedure was performed by Dr. Steven Shin in Los Angeles and will require an eight-to-10-week recovery process.

The 26-year-old landed on the 10-day injured list with left wrist inflammation after he was drilled by a 95 mph sinker from the Marlins’ Calvin Faucher on June 25, which made it difficult for him to swing without pain.

Schmitt batted .276 with a .799 OPS and four homers over his first 34 games of the year, but his production dipped after he returned from the IL on July 7. He hit .220 with a .663 OPS and eight homers over his final 61 games, though he still ended the season as the Giants’ primary second baseman after Tyler Fitzgerald lost his grip on the starting spot at the position.

Padres

• The GM guy sees Miguel Mendez as a rookie who will contribute to the major league team.

Meanwhile, 23-year-old righty Miguel Mendez was recently added to the team’s 40-man roster to be protected from the Rule 5 Draft. At the GM Meetings, Preller named him as a prospect who could make an impact with the big league club this season. That won’t stop the Padres from adding multiple starting pitchers. But after the season Mendez had in 2025 — a 3.22 ERA with 118 strikeouts over 95 innings — he’s a name to watch.

Phillies

Gabriel Rincones Jr. could contribute this year, but only as a platoon bat.

Dombrowski has mentioned outfielder Gabriel Rincones Jr. as a potential 2026 contributor. But he’s a strict platoon player, struggling mightily in the Minor Leagues against left-handed pitching.

Reds

• The manager plans on giving Elly De La Cruz more off days.

Manager Terry Francona wants to give De La Cruz more days off next season after the All-Star shortstop played all 162 regular-season games.

“I need to find ways to get him off his feet from time to time, and I didn’t do a very good job of that, and I own up to that,” Francona said.