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Rotoworld

  • MLB Outfield #22
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    Josh Reddick said he plans to retire after his upcoming stint in the Australian Baseball League.
    Reddick signed on with the Perth Heat earlier this year, and he will begin playing in games for them when the ABL season opens in November. “That’ll be it for me,” he told Mark Berman of Fox 26 in Houston on Wednesday. “I’ll ride off into the sunset once that’s all over.” Reddick, 35, appeared in 1,305 major league games between 2009-2021, tallying 1,157 hits and 146 home runs with an overall .262/.321/.426 career slash line.

  • COL 3rd Baseman #24
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    Ryan McMahon drove in two runs and reached three times in a win over the Yankees on Friday.
    McMahon walked twice, but the big blow was a two-run double that gave the Rockies a 3-2 lead and their ninth victory of the season. The 30-year-old has swung the bat better in May, but is still slashing just .211/.337/.368 over the first 51 games of the year. It’s possible McMahon could be on the move for a team that needs to start over. Again.
    Top prospect Clarke to be called up by Athletics
    Following the Atheltics' announcement that they are calling up prized outfield Denzel Clarke, James Schiano discusses what the toolsy prospect with "blazing speed" will bring to the pro level.
  • NYY Right Fielder #99
    Aaron Judge hit a solo homer in a loss to the Rockies on Friday.
    Judge also singled to raise his average back up to .398 on the season. The homer is his 17th, and it ties him with Cal Raleigh for the American League lead. He’s also getting on at a .498 clip and a .754 slugging percentage, and typing these kind of stats in the latter part of May seems ridiculous.
  • COL Relief Pitcher #36
    Zach Agnos picked up a save with a scoreless inning of relief against the Yankees on Friday.
    It’s just the third save of the season for Agnos, and the first since May 2. The 24-year-old been very effective with a 1.29 ERA on the season, but the Rockies don’t have an assigned closer, and don’t win enough baseball games to recommend a reliever on the team, anyway. He’s someone to keep an eye on for the future.
  • NYY Starting Pitcher #36
    Clarke Schmidt gave up three runs in 4 2/3 innings while taking a loss to the Rockies on Friday.
    Schmidt did strike out eight, but he allowed six hits and issued a pair of walks. He cruised through the first three innings, but he gave up a run in the fourth and two more in the fifth in a game where the Yankees didn’t provide offensive support against Tanner Gordon. Weird. Schmidt now has a less-than-desirable 4.58 ERA, but it’s nice to see some missed bats. He’ll look to lower that mark against the Angels next week.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #29
    Tanner Gordon allowed just two runs and struck out five to pick up a win in against the Yankees on Friday in a 3-2 victory for the Rockies.
    Sure, why not. Gordon has been atrocious in his time with Colorado, but the 6-foot-5 right-hander was able to handle the Yankees without many issues. He did allow a solo homer to Aaron Judge, but credit to Gordon for limiting the traffic with five hits allowed with two walks against five strikeouts. Gordon now has a 4.38 ERA, and the Rockies improve to 9-42. He likely earned a start against the Cubs next week, but fantasy managers can’t possibly trust this.
  • HOU 3rd Baseman #15
    Isaac Paredes hit a two-run homer in a loss to the Mariners on Friday.
    The homer from Paredes would have only been a homer in two parks — Houston and Boston — and it had an expected batting average of .060. Still counts. Paredes still hasn’t homered to the opposite field yet, but he can certainly pull the ball out of the park with 11 homers in 2025 and a slugging percentage of .487.
  • SEA Relief Pitcher #75
    Andrés Muñoz fired a scoreless ninth to pick up a save against the Astros on Friday.
    Another night, another outing where Muñoz doesn’t give up an earned run. He has yet to allow one in 2025, and his 0.00 goes along nicely with his 17 saves in 2025. If Muñoz isn’t the best closer in baseball, he’s way, way up there.
  • SEA Catcher #29
    Cal Raleigh broke a 3-3 tie with a two-run homer to give the Mariners a 5-3 win over the Astros on Friday.
    Big Dumper come through in the clutch. Again. With the score tied at 3-3 after Julio Rodriguez blistered a run-scoring double, Raleigh bombed a homer to right off the normally dominant Bryan Abreu to give Seattle the lead and ultimately the win. That’s now 17 homers for the switch-hitting catcher, and he’s driven in 35 runs with an OPS of .966. If not for that one guy in New York, Raleigh might be the favorite for MVP of the American League.
  • SEA Starting Pitcher #26
    Emerson Hancock fired six innings of three-run baseball in a no-decision against the Astros on Friday.
    Two of the runs came on a homer by Isaac Paredes that would have only been a homer in Houston or Boston, and had an expected batting average of .060. The right-hander did allow nine hits, but he pitched solidly for the most part while not issuing a walk and striking out three. Hancock will lose his rotation spot when Logan Gilbert gets back, but for now, he’ll stay in the rotation and face the Nationals next week.
  • HOU Starting Pitcher #67
    Ryan Gusto allowed two runs over 4 2/3 innings against the Mariners on Friday.
    Gusto allowed two solo homers to the Mariners, and while he he did strike out a solid six, he also walked three. The right-hander was able to throw 60 pitches in the contest, 38 of those for strikes. Gusto isn’t likely to work deep into games while he sticks in the Houston rotation, and that makes him hard to recommend against the Rays on Friday.