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Rotoworld

  • MLB Relief Pitcher #69
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    Yankees selected RHP Reggie McClain from the Phillies in the Triple-A Phase of the Rule 5 Draft.
    McClain is one of the few players selected on Thursday who has MLB experience. It hasn’t been positive, however, as the right-hander owns a career 5.81 ERA in 26 1/3 innings for the Phillies and Mariners. He’ll be organizational depth for the Yankees in 2021.

  • HOU Starting Pitcher #41
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    Spencer Arrighetti is making a rehab start Saturday for Double-A Corpus Christi.
    Arrighetti will throw 45-50 pitches in his first rehab start since fracturing his thumb in early April. He’ll likely need to make multiple rehab starts before being a candidate to rejoin the Astros’ rotation in the middle of August.
    Alvarez looking 'more like himself' in Triple-A
    Francisco Alvarez has found his bat in Triple-A after a "shocking," yet deserved demotion, and James Schiano details how the Mets catcher is looking "more like himself" after significant regression.
  • HOU Shortstop #1
    Brendan Rodgers suffered a nasal fracture and a concussion during a rehab game Saturday for Triple-A Sugar Land.
    Rodgers is rehabbing from a left oblique strain, and this obviously counts as a setback. It occurred when ran headfirst into the knee of shortstop Edwin Diaz. The 28-year-old will assuredly be sitting until he passes the concussion protocol, and isn’t likely to be rejoining the Astros in the coming days.
  • MIA 2nd Baseman #6
    Otto Lopez drove in all of the Marlins’ runs with a groundout and a double Saturday in a 3-1 victory over the Royals.
    The double, a 108-mph liner to left that would have been a homer in 12 ballparks, broke a 1-1 tie in the eighth. Lopez has two homers and eight RBI in his last five games. There isn’t a whole lot of middle-infield help available, so Lopez should be in demand at the deadline. The Marlins, though, will see him as part of the 2026 plans and won’t give him away. After all, he won’t even be arbitration eligible until after next season.
  • MIA Starting Pitcher #47
    Cal Quantrill shut out the Royals for six innings in a no-decision Saturday.
    Quantrill, who hadn’t previously completed six innings this season, left with a 1-0 lead, but the Royals later tied it on a Salvador Perez homer before the Marlins ultimately won 3-1. Technically, this is Quantrill’s first quality start, since he’d never met the innings threshold previously. It’s the seventh time in 19 outings that he’s allowed two runs or fewer over five innings. He’s 3-8 with a 5.24 ERA, and he’ll get the Brewers next.
  • MIA Relief Pitcher #37
    Anthony Bender picked up his third save in the ninth after Ronny Henríquez blew one in the eighth Saturday against the Royals.
    Henríquez has been the Marlins’ primary closer of late, but the Marlins had him come in with a 1-0 lead in the eighth today and watched him give up a solo homer to Salvador Perez. Fortunately, they came back with two in the bottom of the inning, and since Bender closed it out, Henríquez picked up his sixth win. Henríquez still seems like the pitcher worth rostering in the Marlins pen. Bender is about as much of a lock as anyone to be traded at the deadline.
  • KC Starting Pitcher #52
    Michael Wacha limited the Marlins to one run and three hits over six innings on Saturday.
    That should have been good enough for a dub, but the Royals couldn’t score against Cal Quantrill today. Wacha, who had just one strikeout despite recording 11 whiffs, at least avoided the loss, but he’s still 4-9 with a 3.62 ERA. He’ll face the Guardians next week.
  • KC Relief Pitcher #60
    Lucas Erceg took a loss to the Marlins after giving up two runs in the eighth Saturday against the Marlins.
    Ironically, this might actually help Erceg’s future prospects, since Royals losses now make it more likely that Carlos Estévez will be traded at the deadline. Not that Mr. Erceg himself was looking at it that way. Pitching in a 1-1 game, Erceg went walk, double, intentional walk before a two-run double broke open the game. Erceg escaped from there after one more intentional walk, but the damage was done. He’s now issued three intentional walks in two days after never being asked to issue one previously this season. The Marlins are just that intimidating.
  • LAD Relief Pitcher #45
    Michael Kopech (knee) has resumed a throwing program.
    Kopech underwent surgery last week to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee, and was placed on the 60-day injured list. The right-hander will be eligible to return in August, and could be a high-leverage option for the Dodgers’ bullpen by the end of 2025.
  • TOR Catcher #55
    Tyler Heineman had a two-run homer and an RBI double Saturday in leading the Blue Jays past the Giants 6-3.
    He was also hit by a pitch. The oft-DFA’d Heineman has been a revelation this season, hitting .341/.396/.518 in 98 plate appearances while playing behind All-Star Alejandro Kirk. His three homers are two more than he had in 287 career plate appearances coming into the year.
  • TOR Starting Pitcher #56
    Eric Lauer pitched six innings of two-run ball and struck out seven Saturday against the Giants.
    Lauer actually faced just two over the minimum today; Willy Adames homered off him in the fifth, and the Giants scored once more on a leadoff double and two flyballs in the sixth. Those were the only two hits, and there were no walks. It’s just the second time in nine starts that Lauer has been given a chance to finish six innings. The Jays seems to be increasingly confident in him, and it’s easy to see why, as he’s now 5-2 with a 2.80 ERA and a 26% strikeout rate. He’s a mixed-league option at this point, but he’s not a great play with the Tigers next on the schedule.