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Rotoworld

  • LAD 1st Baseman
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    First baseman Aaron Bates had a four-homer game Saturday for Single-A Lancaster.
    Just a crazy place to play baseball. Lancaster bounced back from Friday’s 30-0 debacle to beat Lake Elsinore 14-12 at home tonight. The 23-year-old Bates is up to 13 homers and is hitting .294/.436/.634 overall. However, that drops to .253/.436/.453 in road games. A 2006 third-round pick, he is something of a prospect. However, the Red Sox have higher hopes for their first baseman in low-A, Lars Anderson.
  • CHC Left Fielder #27
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    Seiya Suzuki finished 3-for-5 with a homer, a double, four RBI and a walk as the Cubs crushed the Marlins 14-1 on Tuesday.
    The final five runs of the game came off position player Javier Sanoja in the ninth. The Cubs ended up with 21 hits from 11 different players. 10 guys scored at least one run, and nine had an RBI. Suzuki’s homer was his 12th of the year. He entered the night in a 10-for-65 slump in his previous 16 games.
    Birdsong set to replace Hicks in Giants rotation
    The San Francisco Giants are shaking up their starting rotation by replacing Jordan Hicks with Hayden Birdsong, and Eric Samulski examines what to expect from the 23-year-old starter in fantasy baseball.
  • CHC Starting Pitcher #50
    Jameson Taillon allowed one run and four hits over seven innings in a win over the Marlins on Tuesday.
    Taillon had only two strikeouts and four whiffs, all on his changeup, in the contest, but he induced a bunch of lazy flyballs from Marlins hitters. The one real exception was Nick Fortes’s solo homer in the third. The win makes him 3-3 with a 4.13 ERA. He’s not recommended in mixed leagues most weeks, but his easy run in the schedule here will continue next time out with a home start against the Rockies.
  • MIA Starting Pitcher #35
    Ryan Weathers limited the Cubs to one run in five innings in a no-decision Tuesday.
    The Marlins went on to lose 14-1 tonight, but that was hardly Weathers’ fault. He struck out four and walked none while throwing 80 pitches in his second start back from the IL. The only damage came on Kyle Tucker’s homer in the first. He’ll likely make his next start in San Diego on Monday.
  • MIA Relief Pitcher #53
    After coming into a 1-1 game in the sixth, Calvin Faucher gave up six runs without retiring a batter Tuesday against the Cubs.
    That’s two nightmare outings in two days from the Marlins’ preferred closing options in Jesús Tinoco and Faucher. It’d seem to be good news for Anthony Bender, who got the Marlins’ first save back on Apr. 1 but has none since. He has a 1.89 ERA in 19 innings this season, compared to 6.60 for Tinoco, who has four saves, and 5.63 for Faucher, who has two saves.
  • CHC Left Fielder #30
    Kyle Tucker went 3-for-4 with a homer and a walk in the blowout of the Marlins on Tuesday.
    Tucker got his first RBI in eight days and his first 11 homer in 11. He was hitting a modest .186/.314/.349 in 23 games since his previous three-hit game on Apr. 22.
  • DET Center Fielder #31
    Riley Greene went 3-for-4 with a homer, double and four RBI on Tuesday evening as the Tigers eked out a 5-4 victory over the Cardinals in St. Louis.
    Greene lined an RBI single into right field off of Erick Fedde in the opening inning, increasing the Tigers’ early lead to 2-0. He did more damage in the third inning, crushing a first-pitch sweeper from Fedde for a 375-foot (108.3 mph EV) two-out, two-run blast that increased the Tigers’ advantage to 4-0. The 24-year-old outfielder then delivered the biggest hit of the game with a go-ahead RBI double off of Kyle Leahy in the ninth that proved to be the difference. Greene has completely overcome his early-season struggles and is now slashing .286/.337/.535 with 12 homers and 34 RBI on the season.
  • DET Right Fielder #30
    Kerry Carpenter blasted a leadoff home run on Tuesday night, helping to power the Tigers to victory over the Cardinals in St. Louis.
    Carpenter victimized Cardinals’ right-hander Erick Fedde for his 412-foot (108.9 mph EV) solo shot to open the game on Tuesday, giving the Tigers an early lead. That would be his only hit in four at-bats on the evening. The 27-year-old slugger is off to another strong start atop the Tigers’ lineup, slashing .283/.310/.512 with 10 homers and 22 RBI in his first 175 plate appearances.
  • DET Relief Pitcher #43
    Tommy Kahnle retired the Cardinals in order in the ninth inning on Tuesday, preserving a one-run lead to notch his sixth save of the season.
    Tigers’ manger A.J. Hinch called upon Will Vest to face the heart of the Cardinals’ lineup with the score tied in the eighth inning, leaving Kahnle to handle the ninth after the Tigers scored in the top half of the frame. Kahnle needed just 12 pitches (eight strikes) to retire the Cardinals in order — getting Victor Scott II on strikes, Lars Nootbaar on a fly ball to center and Masyn Winn on a fly out to left to end it. He has been spectacular for the Tigers this season, registering a 1.37 ERA, 0.81 WHIP and a 20/6 K/BB ratio over 19 2/3 innings to go with his six saves.
  • DET Starting Pitcher #29
    Tarik Skubal wasn’t quite at his best in a no-decision against the Cardinals on Tuesday, allowing three runs on five hits over his 5 2/3 frames.
    On the plus side for fantasy managers, Skubal did manage to record eight strikeouts in the ballgame while issuing only one walk. He dominated the Cardinals through the first four innings, but ran into trouble in the fifth and ultimately gave up a two-run blast to Nolan Arenado. The Cardinals scratched out another run while chasing him in the sixth inning. Still, he exited with a one-run lead intact and in line for a victory, but the Tigers’ bullpen couldn’t hang on for him. Skubal got nine whiffs on 94 pitches on the night, registering a CSW of 31 percent. The 28-year-old southpaw will carry an impressive 2.87 ERA, 0.94 WHIP and 79/7 K/BB ratio (59 2/3 innings) into Sunday’s divisional showdown against the Guardians.
  • STL 3rd Baseman #28
    Nolan Arenado went 2-for-4 and clubbed a two-run homer on Tuesday night, but it wasn’t enough to lead the Cardinals past the visiting Tigers.
    Arenado got the Cardinals on the board in the fifth inning with a 387-foot (102.9 mph EV) two-run blast off of Tigers’ ace Tarik Skubal. He also singled off of Brennan Hanifee in the sixth inning, but the Cardinals were unable to cash him in. With his two-hit attack, the 34-year-old slugger is now hitting .247/.320/.391 with just five homers and 21 RBI on the season.